@article{oai:serve.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000334, author = {近藤, 存志}, issue = {第3号}, journal = {聖学院大学論叢, The Journal of Seigakuin University}, month = {Mar}, note = {The Gothic Revivalism of Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-52), a giant of nineteenth-century English Gothic Revivalism and an Anglican converted to Catholicism, was a profound architectural development propelled by Pugin’s passion for reviving the Catholic church and pre-Reformation ecclesiastical art. This development naturally lent itself to empathy for and support of the Oxford movement, which aimed to strengthen the Catholic tradition within the nineteenth-century Church of England. This paper examines the relation of Pugin to the Oxford movement, both in agreement and in conflict. Particular focus is placed upon the writings of Pugin and John Henry Newman, which vividly reveal their views of each other: e.g., Pugin’s letter to John Rouse Bloxam and John Henry Newman’s commentaries on Pugin’s views of Gothic architecture, written both before and after Newman’s conversion to Catholicism in 1845.}, pages = {65--83}, title = {A・W・N・ピュージンとオックスフォード運動}, volume = {第18巻}, year = {2006}, yomi = {コンドウ, アリユキ} }