Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 1 día · People weren't so sniffy when it was first built. Indeed, they got a bit of a celebrity in to consecrate the brick church: William Laud, the Bishop of London, who dedicated the new-build to St ...

  2. Hace 2 días · The first reverse for the city's puritan leaders came in 1617. William Laud, newly appointed dean of Gloucester, moved the communion table from the middle of the cathedral choir to the east end.

  3. Hace 2 días · 1616–1621 William Laud holds the office of Dean of Gloucester; 1649–1660 Abolition of dean and chapter, reinstated by Charles II; 1666 Installation of Great Organ by Thomas Harris; 1735–1752 Martin Benson, Bishop of Gloucester, carried out major repairs and alterations to the cathedral.

  4. Hace 5 días · Obviously William Laud and Charles I pushed their ceremonial agenda too far, with disastrous consequences, but at the same time the royal touch was increasing in popularity. This was because, as mentioned, it was a reformed practice whereas Laudianism was castigated as being akin to popery.

  5. Hace 3 días · On the advice of the two men who had replaced Buckingham as the closest advisers of the king— William Laud, archbishop of Canterbury, and the earl of Strafford, his able lord deputy in Ireland—Charles summoned a Parliament that met in April 1640—later known as the Short Parliament—in order to raise money for the war against Scotland.

  6. Hace 6 días · He was baptised on 27 June in the Chapel Royal by William Laud, a future archbishop of Canterbury, and during his infancy was supervised by the Protestant Countess of Dorset. His godparents included his maternal uncle Louis XIII and maternal grandmother, Marie de' Medici , the Dowager Queen of France, both of whom were Catholics. [3]

  7. Hace 2 días · William Laud, translated afterward to Canterbury. 1633: William Juxon, translated from Hereford, was deprived by the parliament in 1641, but being reinstared at the restoration of Charles II. was soon afterward removed to Canterbury. 1660: Gilbert Sheldon, chaplain and dean of the closet to the king, afterward removed to Canterbury. 1663

  1. Búsquedas relacionadas con William Laud

    William Lauder
    arzobispo William Laud
  1. Otras búsquedas realizadas