Mary Jean Stone

{{Short description|English historical writer (1853–1908)}}

{{One source|date=December 2023}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{infobox writer

|name=Mary Jean Stone

|birth_date={{birth year|1853}}

|birth_place=Brighton, Sussex, England

|death_date={{death date and age|1908|5|3|1853|df=y}}

|death_place=Battle, East Sussex, England

|occupation=Writer

|nationality=English

|genre=Non-fiction

}}

Mary Jean Stone (born at Brighton, Sussex, in 1853; died at Battle, Sussex, 3 May 1908) was an English historical writer.

Life

She was educated in Paris and at Aschaffenburg in Germany, where she acquired a knowledge of French, German, and Italian. In Germany she became a Roman Catholic convert, and was received into the Catholic Church by Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler, then Bishop of Mainz.

On her return to England, she was encouraged as a historian by Jesuit contacts.

Works

  • Faithful unto Death, a study of the martyrs of the Order of St. Francis during the Reformation period (1892);
  • Eleanor Leslie, a memoir of a Scottish convert (1898);
  • Mary the First, Queen of England (1901);
  • Reformation and Renaissance (1904), studies;
  • Studies from Court and Cloister, reprinted essays, including "Margaret Tudor", "Sir Henry Bedingfeld", and a "Missing Page from the Idylls of the King" (1905);
  • The Church in English History, a textbook for teachers of history (1907).

Her Cardinal Pole, begun for the St. Nicholas Series, was interrupted by her death. She was a frequent contributor to periodicals including the Dublin Review, The Month, Blackwood's Magazine, and Cornhill Magazine, and contributed several articles to the Catholic Encyclopedia.

References