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Topic: Henrician Reformation


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


  
 Rex - Henry VIII
From Henry VIII's reign, the legislation of Leviticus 20, rather than the medieval canon law sanctioned by the papacy, became the foundation of matrimonial law in England: a concrete example of how, in the jargon of the Henrician Reformation, the `word of God' was displacing `human traditions'.
The fascinating feature about the Henrician interpretation of what was now the second commandment was that it did not read as a wholesale prohibition of religious images: `By these words we be utterly forbidden to make or to have any similitude or image to the intent to bow down to it or worship it'.
Since a pioneering article by Pamela Tudor-Craig alerted us to Henry VIII's identification of himself with King David, historians of the English Reformation have seen a model of Old Testament kingship as a crucial element in Henry's understanding of his role after 1534 as supreme head of the Church of England.
gracewood0.tripod.com /henryrex.html

  
 King or Minister?: The Man Behind the Henrician Reformation. - Elton, G R.:
Title: King or Minister?: The Man Behind the Henrician Reformation.
King or Minister?: The Man Behind the Henrician Reformation.
Note; this is an extracted article from the collected volume, not an offprint or reprint.
www.booksets.com /si/75595.html

  
 H-Net Review: Janice Liedl on Dangerous Talk and Strange Behavior: Women and Popular Resistance to the Reforms of Henry VIII
Sharon L. Jansen, building off of these new trends in historical scholarship, proposes to study the political actions of women during the Henrician Reformation.
A renewed interest in popular attitudes and actions during the English Reformation has resulted in a wealth of new books and articles examining popular piety and local practice.
As Jansen notes, Henrician legislation, particularly the 1534 Treason Act and the 1536 Succession Act, dramatically broadened the definition of treason.
www.h-net.org /reviews/showrev.cgi?path=12990870699298

  
 walker / English / University of Leicester
Greg is currently working on a monograph entitled Writing Under Tyranny: English Literature and the Henrician Reformation, funded by a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship.
He has reviewed books on literary and historical subjects for, among others, the Times Higher Education Supplement, English Historical Review, Modern Language Review, Comparative Drama, Reformation, The European Legacy, and History of European Ideas, and reviews work on medieval drama for Year's Work in English Studies and contemporary theatrical productions for Cahiers Élisabéthains.
He is also writing a number of articles on late medieval and Tudor literature and drama, political and religious history and culture.
www.le.ac.uk /ee/dept/staff/walker.html

  
 Histories of 'Covent Garden Market'
During the Henrician Reformation of the 1540s this church land was confiscated by the Crown which occupied the site.
Covent Garden derives its name from an old medieval Benedictine Convent Garden or pasture land of the Convent of St Peter at Westminster.
The land passed to the Earl of Bedford whose descendent the fourth Earl commissioned Inigo Jones to design houses there "fit for the habitations of gentleman" in 1630 to 1633.
www.covent-garden.co.uk /Histories/coventgardenmarket.html

  
 Edwardian Church
Archbishop from 1533-56, he was responsible for most of the key measures: the crucially important 1552 Prayer Book; the 42 Articles; the new Canon lawcode; the New Ordinal; The Book of Homilies etc. He steered the English Reformation in a distinctly Zwinglian direction during Edward’s reign.
It may be that Edward himself played a role; it may be that Northumberland was personally committed although this is debated amongst historians.
mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk /mrgreenonline/page4.html

  
 SPECIAL SUBJECT: THE HENRICIAN REFORMATION
The aim of this Special Subject is to increase students' knowledge and understanding of the Henrician Reformation, a period of crucial importance in English political and religious history.
Students are encouraged to work up from the sources, comparing their own understanding of them with what historians who have published books and articles have made of them.
In this respect, the Special Subject is a crucial development of the work they have done earlier on the degree, and thus marks the culmination of the intellectual progression which we seek to foster among our students through the pyramidical structure of our degree.
www.soton.ac.uk /~gwb/henrefcoursedescription.htm

  
 MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Tudor Period
Religious debate centred on how to create a “godly commonwealth” and how to “complete” the Protestant Reformation, which “puritans” or “precisionists” thought had been imperfectly accomplished by the Act of Uniformity (1559) and the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion (1563).
Editor of The Tudor Monarchy; The Reign of Elizabeth I: Court and Culture in the Last Decade; Christopher St German on Chancery and Statute; Reassessing the Henrician Age (with Alistair Fox).
His successor, John Whitgift, insisted that the clergy subscribe to royal supremacy, the Prayer Book, and the Thirty-Nine Articles, or else be deprived.
uk.encarta.msn.com /text_781539549___6/Tudor_Period.html

  
 Alliance Council Page - Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, Inc
Pastor Jones has contributed articles for Modern Reformation and publishes a monthly newsletter called the "Lyceum".
A prolific author, Dr. Bray has published many scholarly articles and books, including The Doctrine of God in the Contours of Christian Theology series (of which he is also the general editor) and Creeds, Councils, and Christ (Christian Focus Publications).
Most recently, he is the author of Christianity in a Dot.Com World (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2000), and a number of articles for magazines, journals, and collections of essays.
www.christianity.com /partner/Article_Display_Page/0,,PTID307086CHID581338CIID1498700,00.html

  
 Le schisme d'Henri VIII
Timeline of the Henrician Reformation (1536-1547) on "activehistory.co.uk"
Essays and Articles on Sixteenth Century Renaissance English Literature (includes a comprehensive list of essays on Sir Thomas More):
For one of the monasteries he closed--Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire--was apparently the site of a prototype blast furnace built about 200 years before later blast furnaces ushered in the industrial revolution."
agreg-ink.com /2005/henryVIII.html

  
 The English Reformation II
Elizabethan Settlement II many as entend to be partakers of the holye Communion, shall sygnifye theyr names to the Curate over nyghte, or els in the morning, afore the begynninge of mornynge prayer, or immediatly after.
• Thirty-Nine Articles spells out theology (see Janz)
faculty.uml.edu /ccarlsmith/teaching/43.231/outlines/english_ref2.htm

  
 Scott Clark's Glossary of the Medieval and Reformation Church
Built upon the Henrician Ten Articles (1536), Bishop's Book (1537), King's Book (1543) and first formulated in Forty-Two articles by Thomas Cranmer under the Calvinist King Edward VI.
Helvetic Confession, First (1536) A confession in 28 articles written in response to the Pope Clement VII's call for an ecumenical council to be convened at Mantua (later moved to Trent).
Five articles drafted and adopted by an international Reformed Synod convened at Dordtrecht by the Dutch Reformed Church in response to the five points of the Remonstrant (Arminian) theologians.
public.csusm.edu /public/guests/rsclark/Glossary.html

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