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  1. 9 de feb. de 2010 · Among those who found a haven in the religious and political refuge of the Rhode Island Colony were Anne Hutchinson—like Williams, she had been exiled from Massachusetts for religious reasons ...

  2. 8 de feb. de 2021 · After Hutchinson was expelled, another religious dissenter, Roger Williams (l. 1603-1683 CE), who had been banished in early 1636 CE, began a literary duel with John Cotton over religious freedom and persecution which addressed a number of points raised by the Antinomian Controversy.

  3. Anne Marbury Hutchinson was born in England, the daughter of dissident minister Francis Marbury and Bridget Dryden. She grew up in Alford in Lincolnshire, where her father taught her scripture. In 1612, she married William Hutchinson, a merchant and member of a prominent family. From 1614 to 1630, she gave birth to more than a dozen children.

  4. 2 de abr. de 2014 · Anne Hutchinson was a Puritan woman who spread her own interpretations of the ... she joined a colony in what is now Portsmouth, Rhode Island, joining Roger Williams. Her husband died in 1642, ...

  5. Anne Hutchinson (baptized July 20, 1591, Alford, Lincolnshire, England—died August or September 1643, Pelham Bay, New York [U.S.]) was a religious liberal who became one of the founders of Rhode Island after her banishment from Massachusetts Bay Colony. Anne Marbury was the daughter of a silenced clergyman and grew up in an atmosphere of ...

  6. 29 de oct. de 2009 · Roger Williams (1603-1683) was a political and religious leader who settled the state of Rhode Island in 1636 and advocated for the separation of church and state in Colonial America.

  7. Although many people assume Puritans escaped England to establish religious freedom, they proved to be just as intolerant as the English state church. When dissenters, including Puritan minister Roger Williams and midwife Anne Hutchinson, challenged Governor Winthrop in Massachusetts Bay in the 1630s, they both were banished from the colony.