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  1. Thomas Cranmer - Archbishop, Martyr, Reformation: But Mary’s government was not done with him yet. The burning of the archheretic would be an even more useful deed if he could be made to renounce his errors in public, and so a number of ways were tried to break him down. The previous October he had been forced to witness the martyrdom of Ridley and Latimer; now he was temporarily removed ...

  2. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Thomas Cranmer. The English ecclesiastic Thomas Cranmer (1489-1556) was the first Protestant archbishop of Canterbury. Thomas Cranmer was born in Aslacton, Nottinghamshire, on July 2, 1489, the son of a village squire. He went to Cambridge University at the age of 14; though of indifferent scholarship, he received a bachelor's degree in 1511 ...

  3. 21 de mar. de 2022 · Thomas Cranmer, (1489 – 1556) Fue el primer arzobispo protestante de Canterbury (1533-56), consejero de los reyes ingleses Enrique VIII y Eduardo VI. Como arzobispo, puso la Biblia en inglés en las iglesias parroquiales, redactó el Libro de Oración Común y compuso una letanía que permanece en uso hoy en día.

  4. Hace 5 días · When Edward died, Cranmer was proved right, Northumberland wrong. With untypical ineptitude, Northumberland failed to apprehend Princess Mary; she escaped into Norfolk whence she advanced on London, to be welcomed as Harry’s daughter. Northumberland threw up his cap at Cambridge for the queen – to no avail.

  5. 6 de may. de 2024 · Thomas Cranmer was born in 1489, at Aslacton in Nottinghamshire. He was a gentleman by birth and, in spite of an excessive timidity in his youth, he won for himself the reputation of being an intrepid horseman. At Cambridge he distinguished himself, first by gaining a Fellowship at his own College and then by forfeiting it through an ...

  6. Before we look briefly at the principal means by which Cranmer would reform the Church of England, it is necessary to consider the moral and religious climate at that time. England in 1520 was firmly in the grip of Rome. The Pope had two faithful servants here to suppress Gospel truth and to oppress the people on his behalf.

  7. Thomas Cranmer - Reformation, Anglican Church, Martyr: The year 1532 proved to be a critical one altogether, for William Warham, the aged archbishop of Canterbury, died in August. At first the usual practice of extending the vacancy for the benefit of the king’s finances was followed, but by the end of the year it was apparent that the see would have to be filled because the divorce question ...