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  1. Robert Persons (Nether Stowey, 24 de junio de 1546-Roma, 15 de abril de 1610), posteriormente también conocido como Robert Parsons, y en España como Roberto Personio, fue un sacerdote jesuita inglés y figura importante en el establecimiento de la llamada Misión de Inglaterra donde participó activamente la Compañía de Jesús ...

  2. Robert Persons SJ (24 June 1546 – 15 April 1610), [1] later known as Robert Parsons, was an English Jesuit priest. He was a major figure in establishing the 16th-century "English Mission" of the Society of Jesus . Early life. Robert Persons was born at Nether Stowey, Somerset, to yeoman parents.

  3. Convaleciente de malaria, Robert Persons murió el 15 de abril de 1610. A lo largo de su vida, escribió casi una treintena de obras, en latín y en inglés, sobre temática religiosa, política y de naturaleza controversista.

  4. 11 de abr. de 2024 · Robert Parsons (born June 24, 1546, Nether Stowey, Somerset, England—died April 15, 1610, Rome [Italy]) was a Jesuit who, with Cardinal William Allen, organized Roman Catholic resistance in England to the Protestant regime of Queen Elizabeth I.

  5. Overview. Robert Parsons. (1546—1610) Quick Reference. (1546–1610). Jesuit missionary. Born in Somerset to protestant parents, he resigned his Balliol fellowship and was received into the Roman church at Louvain, before offering himself to the Society of Jesus (1575). He was sent to England with Campion in 1580, and stayed a year in great danger.

  6. 23 de oct. de 2022 · Parsons needs to be distinguished firstly from the Jesuit priest Robert Persons (1546-1610) and secondly from the apparently unrelated younger composer Robert Parsons II (1596-1676) who was a lay vicar at Exeter Cathedral. List of choral works. For works at CPDL sorted alphabetically by title, see Robert Parsons compositions. English works.

  7. Robert Persons wrote his Treatise tending to Mitigation (1608). No one was more closely identified with the Jesuit role in the English mission than Parsons, and he was already a central figure in the polemics around it. William Barlow made mischief by suggesting Parsons in any case was second fiddle to Robert Bellarmine.