Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 18 de nov. de 2019 · John Knox (1514 - 1572) preventing the destruction of the Abbey of Scone, the Scottish coronation church (1559). ZU_09 / Getty Images During his time in Geneva, Knox wrote his First Blast of the Trumpets Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women (1556–58), a notorious work opposing the female monarchy and firing directly at Catholic Mary Tudor.

  2. Hace 4 días · El nombre de John Knox, fundador del presbiterianismo (la Kirk, como se conoce en Escocia), fallecido hace exactamente 450 años, el 24 de noviembre de 1572 [2], parecería ubicarse en un segundo ...

  3. John Knox, engraving from Icones, by T. Beza, 1580. John Knox, (born c. 1514, near Haddington, East Lothian, Scot.—died Nov. 24, 1572, Edinburgh), Scottish clergyman, leader of the Scottish Reformation and founder of Scottish Presbyterianism. Probably trained for the priesthood at the University of St. Andrews, he was ordained in 1540.

  4. Reformation becomes a reality. John Knox, the most famous Scottish Reformer, was born near Edinburgh in 1505. He went to his local school and then to university in St Andrews, before becoming a deacon and a priest in the (Roman Catholic) Church. From 1542, Scotland was governed by Regent Arran as Mary Queen of Scots [link to First Reformation ...

  5. John Knox, em português: João Canox (c. 1514 — 24 de novembro de 1572 [1]), foi um ministro, teólogo e escritor escocês que liderou a reforma protestante na Escócia. Ele foi o reformador da Igreja da Escócia , e o fundador do Presbiterianismo .

  6. 11 de mar. de 2023 · Dans l'Angleterre du XVIe siècle, le passage du pouvoir politique d'un régent masculin à un régent féminin, compliqué par la question de la religion, suscita de nombreuses critiques de la part des partis religieux et laïques. Le théologien écossais John Knox (1514-1572) passa une grande partie de sa vie à lutter contre ce qu'il ...

  7. Protestantism - John Knox, Reformation, Scotland: In Scotland the Reformation is associated with the name of John Knox, who declared that one celebration of the mass is worse than a cup of poison. He faced the very real threat that Mary, Queen of Scots, would do for Scotland what Mary Tudor had done for England. Therefore, Knox defied her in person on matters of religion and, though a commoner ...

  1. Otras búsquedas realizadas