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  1. Thomas Cranmer (2 iulie 1489 - 21 martie 1556) a fost arhiepiscop de Canterbury în timpul domniilor regilor Angliei Henric al VIII-lea și Eduard al VI-lea. Lui se pare că i se datorează scrierea și compilarea primelor două Cărți de rugăciune obștească , care au stabilit structura de bază a liturghiei anglicane pentru secole și au influențat limba engleză prin expresiile și ...

  2. 9 de may. de 2024 · Thomas Cranmer (1489 - 1556) was the Archbishop of Canterbury in the reign of Henry VIII and launched the English Reformation. Cranmer the Archbishop Few people have played so important a part in shaping the course of English history or had a more profound influence on England’s language and literature than Thomas Cranmer.

  3. Thomas Cranmer (July 2, 1489 – March 21, 1556) was the Archbishop of Canterbury during the reigns of the English kings Henry VIII and Edward VI. He is credited with writing and compiling the first two Books of Common Prayer , which established the basic structure of Anglican liturgy for centuries and influenced the English language through its phrases and quotations.

  4. Thomas Cranmer, the architect of the Anglican Book of Common Prayer, was the archbishop of Canterbury who guided England through the early Reformation-and Henry...

  5. 21 de mar. de 2022 · Thomas Cranmer, (1489 – 1556) Fue el primer arzobispo protestante de Canterbury (1533-56), consejero de los reyes ingleses Enrique VIII y Eduardo VI. Como arzobispo, puso la Biblia en inglés en las iglesias parroquiales, redactó el Libro de Oración Común y compuso una letanía que permanece en uso hoy en día.

  6. Thomas Cranmer (1489-1556) was an Archbishop of Canterbury and one of the founders of the Church of England under Henry VIII. He helped the king to get rid of Catherine of Aragon and wrote the Book of Common Prayer. He was killed by Mary I of England when he refused to return to Catholicism . He was born in Nottinghamshire and died in Oxford .

  7. THOMAS CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury, born at Aslacton or Aslockton in Nottinghamshire on the 2nd of July 1489, was the second son of Thomas Cranmer and of his wife Anne Hatfield. He received his early education, according to Morice his secretary, from "a marvellous severe and cruel schoolmaster," whose discipline must have been severe ...