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JOANNA SOUTHCOTT (1750–1814)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 506 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOANNA SOUTHCOTT (1750–1814)  ,
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English religious fanatic, was born at Gittisham in Devonshire . Her
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father was a farmer and she herself was for a considerable time a domestic servant . She was originally a Methodist, but about 1792, be-coming persuaded that she possessed supernatural gifts, she wrote and dictated prophecies in
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rhyme, and then announced herself as the woman spoken of in Rev. xii . Coming to
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London at the request of William Sharp (1749–1824), the engraver, she began to " seal" the 144,000 elect at a charge varying from twelve shillings to a
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guinea . When over sixty she affirmed that she would be delivered of Shiloh on the 19th of
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October 1814, but Shiloh failed to appear, and it was given out that she was in a trance . She died of brain disease on the 29th of the same month . Her followers are said to have numbered over 100,000, and only became
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extinct at the end of the 19th century . Among her sixty publications, all equally incoherent in thought and grammar, may be mentioned: Strange Effects of Faith (18o1–1802),
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Free Exposition of the Bible (1804), The
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Book of Wonders (1813–1814), and Prophecies announcing the Birth of the Prince of Peace (1814) . A lady named Essam
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left large sums of
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money for printing and
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publishing the Sacred Writings of Joanna Southcott . The will was disputed by a niece on the ground that the writings were blasphemous, but the court of
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chancery sustained it . See D . Roberts, Observations on the Divine
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Mission of Joanna Southcott (1807) ; R .

Reece, Correct Statement of the Circumstances attending the

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Death of Joanna Southcott (1815) .

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