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  1. 17 de ene. de 2022 · Archbishop William Laud, 1573-1645. Archbishop of Canterbury whose attempts to bring uniformity of worship and the “beauty of holiness” into the Anglican liturgy precipitated the slide into Civil War. Born at Reading in Berkshire, William Laud was the tenth son of a prosperous clothier.

  2. Como consejero de Carlos I, William Laud se había hecho partidario del absolutismo del rey, quien gobernaba sin Parlamento desde 1629. Después del levantamiento presbiteriano de Escocia en 1638 (movimiento que se apoya en la teología calvinista que enfatiza la salvación por medio de la fe), Carlos I se vio obligado a convocar al Parlamento, el cual mostraba gran animadversión hacia los ...

  3. William Laud. Archbishop William Laud (October 7, 1573 - January 10, 1645) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1633 to 1645 after serving successively as Bishop of St. David's, Bath and Wells and London. Previously, he was Dean of Gloucester. He pursued a High Church course and opposed radical forms of Puritanism.

  4. 8 de may. de 2018 · Laud, William (1573–1645) English cleric, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633–45). As religious adviser to King Charles I, whom he supported during his period of non-parliamentary rule (1629–40), Laud imposed press censorship, enforced a policy regulating wages and prices, and sought to remove Puritans from important positions in the Church.

  5. In 1644, Laud was put on trial for treason, declared guilty (despite a lack of evidence) and executed on 10 January 1645. Did you know? William Laud’s trial was managed by William Prynne, a Puritan whom Laud had imprisoned (and whose ears had been cut off) in the 1630s for publishing pamphlets which attacked Laud’s religious reforms.

  6. The trial of William Laud, archbishop of Canterbury, took place in stages in the first half of the 1640s, and resulted in his execution on treason charges. At first an impeachment, the parliamentary legal proceedings became an act of attainder . Arrested in late 1640, Laud was held initially for tactical reasons in the struggle between Charles ...

  7. 10 de ene. de 2023 · William Laud was born in 1573 and became Archbishop of Canterbury in 1633, having been Charles I’s principal ecclesiastical adviser for several years before. He was the most prominent of a new generation of church leaders who disliked many of the more Protestant ritual practices that had developed during the reign of Elizabeth I, and who were bitterly opposed by the Puritans.

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