| MORAVIANS | Members of a Protestant Church originating in 1772 as a revival of the Bohemian Brethren |
| BAPTISTS | Members of a Protestant church who believe in immersion as part of a religious ceremony (8) |
| PRESBYTERIAN | Of a Protestant Church with a system of government by elders (12) |
| MAYO | Simon _, DJ who hosted a revival of the game show Blockbusters (4) |
| BALFE | Composer of "The Bohemian Girl" |
| ARLINES | Namesakes of the "Bohemian Girl" |
| NONCONFORMISTS | Members of a Protestant body separated from the Church of England (14) |
| ORANGEMAN | In Northern Ireland, a member of a Protestant fraternal lodge; historically, a follower of William III (9) |
| MENNONITES | Members of a Protestant sect that rejects infant baptism and the doctrine of transubstantiation |
| METHODIST | A member of a Protestant Christian denomination that derives from John Wesley's system of faith and practice (9) |
| MAHOGANY | The importation of what wood in the 1720s led to a revival of carving on English furniture? (8) |
| METHODISM | Nonconformist branch of the Protestant church derived from the teachings of 18th-century English preacher John Wesley (9) |
| LEEMEAD | Actor who found fame as Joseph in the 2007 revival of the Lloyd Webber/Rice musical (3,4) |
| SHAKERS | Members of a Protestant denomination |
| PRESBYTERIANS | Members of a Protestant denomination |
| METHODISTS | Members of a Protestant denomination (10) |
| RICARDO | David ___, British economist born in 1772 who authored The Principles of Political Economy and Taxat |
| FOURIER | Charles ?, French social reformer born in 1772 who advocated a reorganisation of society into self-sufficient units |
| MICHAELBALFE | Irish composer (1808 - 1870) of Come into the Garden, Maud and the opera The Bohemian Girl |
| VILLAGE | West side downtown area of New York, once considered the Bohemian heart of the city, Greenwich ... |