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Topic: John Aylmer


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
  John Aylmer
John Aylmer (1521 - June, 1594), English divine, was born at Aylmer Hall, Tivetshall St Mary, Norfolk.
His first preferment was to the archdeaconry of Stow, in the diocese of Lincoln, but his opposition in convocation to the doctrine of transubstantiation led to his deprivation and to his flight into Switzerland.
While there he wrote a reply to John Knox's famous Blast against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, under the title of An Harborowe for Faithfull and Trewe Subjects, etc., and assisted John Foxe in translating the Acts of the Martyrs into Latin.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/jo/John_Aylmer.html   (285 words)

  
 Sir Fenton John Aylmer - LoveToKnow 1911
The urgency of the situation obliged Aylmer to push up the Tigris with little preparation; but he inflicted two severe defeats upon the Turks before being brought up, 23 m.
But one of his divisions did not arrive on time, and when delivered the attack failed; Aylmer was thereupon replaced by another general.
Aylmer was the author of an important tactical study on Protection in War (1912).
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Sir_Fenton_John_Aylmer   (334 words)

  
 Veryan - pafg15 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
John Ball [Parents] was born on Aug 20 1724 in Veryan, Cornwall.
John Ball was born on Jul 15 1757 in Veryan, Cornwall.
John Gwatkin was born in 1785/1786 in Truro, Cornwall.
webhome.idirect.com /~djtrounce/veryanres/pafg15.htm   (522 words)

  
 [No title]
The significance of this connection lies in the fact that Aylmer’s views were part of a new discourse of the Protestant common weal, one which although it drew deeply on the legacy of ‘imperial’ religious reform under Henry VIII, broke with that legacy in respect of the relations of Crown and parliament.
Aylmer is, I believe, an unacknowledged architect of the ‘cult’ of Elizabeth insofar as he is the first to associate Elizabeth’s rule with the traditional role of the Virgin Mary as a ‘Second Eve.’ Of course it was necessary to render such an allusion suitable to the official political culture of English Protestantism.
Aylmer’s tract, presumably composed at Strasbourg soon after Elizabeth’s accession, was published in London in April 1559, probably by John Daye. It is possible, though not certain, that Aylmer had returned to London from exile in time to witness the pageant or obtain Mulcaster’s pamphlet.
www.wfu.edu /~caron/ssrs/hoak.doc   (3143 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - - Calendar Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
The latter group, led by John Knox, was supported by Foxe; the former was led by Richard Cox.
Many errors due to carelessness, time constraints, and the collaborative nature of the project have been exposed, and there is no doubt that Foxe, like many of his contemporaries, was ready to believe evil of the Catholic opposition, but he cannot always be exonerated from the charge of wilful falsification of evidence.
He had assistance from two clerics of widely differing opinions--from Edmund Grindal, who was later, as Archbishop of Canterbury, to maintain his Puritan convictions in opposition to Elizabeth; and from John Aylmer, afterwards one of the bitterest opponents of the Puritan party.
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /cgi-bin/encyclopedia.pl?p=John_Foxe   (3530 words)

  
 Aylmer, John. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
In 1553 he was deprived of his church preferments for opposing the doctrine of transubstantiation, and he fled to Switzerland.
There he aided John Foxe in making a Latin translation of the Book of Martyrs and wrote An Harborowe for Faithfull and Trewe Subjects (1559) in answer to a tract by John Knox.
Returning to England after the accession of Elizabeth I, he rose in the Church of England to be (1577) bishop of London.
www.bartleby.com /65/e-/E-Aylmer-J.html   (172 words)

  
 Luminarium Encyclopedia: John Aylmer, Bishop of London (1521-1594)
JOHN AYLMER, English divine, was born in the year 1521 at Aylmer Hall, Tivetshail St Mary, Norfolk.
While there he wrote a reply to John Knox's famous Blast against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, under the title of An Harborowe for Faithfull and Trewe Subjects, &c.
, and assisted John Foxe in translating the Acts of the Martyrs into Latin.
www.luminarium.org /encyclopedia/aylmer.htm   (367 words)

  
 John Guy - history
As John Watts has argued for an adjacent century, the essence of monarchy was the concept of the sovereign ruler who was obliged to rule in the interests of the respublica, and who therefore needed 'counsel' and advice.
Often cited as a 'defence' of her régime, it is improbable that Aylmer's was an 'official' apologia or that it met with royal approval.
Aylmer's thesis of 'mixed polity' was almost identical to that invoked during the Admonition Controversy by Thomas Cartwright, the presbyterian leader, whom Aylmer, as bishop of London, imprisoned.
www.johnguy.co.uk /history.php?&content=elizpol.html   (7907 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - John Aylmer (Protestant Christianity, Biography) - Encyclopedia
John Aylmer[Al´mur] Pronunciation Key, 1521–94, bishop of London.
In 1553 he was deprived of his church preferments for opposing the doctrine of transubstantiation, and he fled to Switzerland.
There he aided John Foxe in making a Latin translation of the Book of Martyrs and wrote An Harborowe for Faithfull and Trewe Subjects (1559) in answer to a tract by John Knox.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/E/E-Aylmer-J.html   (230 words)

  
 JOHN FOXE : Encyclopedia Entry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
John Foxe (1516–April 8, 1587) is remembered as the author of the famous Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
The latter group was led at that time by John Knox (Gilby was also a principal figure) and supported by Foxe; the former was then led by Richard Cox.
Foxe was ordained priest by Edmund Grindal, now Bishop of London, on January 25, 1560, and he moved to Norwich to live with its bishop, John Parkhurst, where he preached and engaged in research before returning to Norfolk's residence in London in the fall of 1562.
www.bibleocean.com /OmniDefinition/John_Foxe   (3092 words)

  
 The Tenth Day of Lady Jane Grey: A Novel in Seven Parts by Ann Veronica Chesworth   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
John Aylmer was able to attend University through the generosity of Lady Jane Grey's father, and in return tutored the family in a variety of subject matter.
John Calvin (1509-1564) was a French theologian and reformer.
John de Feckenham, was born as John Howman in 1515, at Feckenham in Worcestershire.
www.pulpskeptic.com /tenth_day/glossary.html   (10754 words)

  
 John Foxe — FactMonster.com
John FOX - FOX, John (1835—1914) FOX, John, a Representative from New York; born in Frederickton, New...
John Fox POTTER - POTTER, John Fox (1817—1899) POTTER, John Fox, a Representative from Wisconsin; born in...
John Aylmer - Aylmer, John Aylmer, John, 1521–94, bishop of London.
www.factmonster.com /ce6/people/A0819389.html   (214 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - John Freke Aylmer and others
     John Aylmer married Margaret Susan Aylmer, daughter of John Freke Aylmer and Anna Parrish, on 29 December 1828.
He was the son of Captain Fenton John Aylmer and Isabella Eleanor Darling.
She married, secondly, Lt.-Gen. Sir Fenton John Aylmer, 13th Bt., V.C., son of Captain Fenton John Aylmer and Isabella Eleanor Darling, in 1913.
www.thepeerage.com /p12792.htm   (1032 words)

  
 Aylmer of Lyons
This family originates with John Aylmer, background unknown, who was living in Ireland at the end of the 14th century.
In the eighteenth century the Aylmers went bankrupt and lost the castle to Dublin banker Nicholas Lawless, whose descendants (the Lords Cloncurry) owned it until the title went extinct in 1903.
John Aylmer and Helen Tyrrell had a son Richard (c1419-1455) who married Margaret Bathe (daughter of Bartholomew Bathe of Dollardstown).
martinrealm.org /genealogy/aylmer.htm   (240 words)

  
 Memoirs of the Puritans: John Fox
JOHN FOX, A. THIS celebrated author, better known by the title of Martyrologist, was born at Boston in Lincolnshire, in 1517.
Owing to the early death of his father, and the second marriage of his mother, he was put under the guardian care of his fatherinlaw.
John Aylmer, bishop of London, Edmond Grindal, afterwards archbishop of Canterbury, and Thomas Norton, a highly celebrated lawyer, who married archbishop Cranmer's only daughter.
www.apuritansmind.com /MemoirsPuritans/MemoirsPuritansJohnFox.htm   (2163 words)

  
 Ron Heisler - John Dee and the Secret Societies
Man of science and magus extraordinary, and for two decades England's leading mathematician, it is only in recent years that John Dee's reputation has begun to properly recover from the obloquy attached by an age of militant rationalism to those notorious angel raising episodes in which he engaged in the 1580s.
The apocalyptic ethos of the 1580s was exceptionally intense at the time – or virulent, for the overcoming of Antichrist, the Pope in Rome, was the cardinal priority in the scheme of things, coupled with the defeat of Spain.
Brocardo is rightly considered an important forerunner of the Rosicrucians: the 120 years that elapsed between the legendary Christian Rosenkreutz's death and the finding of his tomb is anticipated by Brocardo with his theory of three stages leading to the overthrow of Antichrist.
www.levity.com /alchemy/h_dee.html   (3749 words)

  
 Aylmer John: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
John Aylmer wrote in 1559 that monarchs are subject to...presentations at the annual conference of the John Donne Society in Gulfport, Mississippi.
Namier-like, Aylmer is apt to leave the scaffolding...tone is valedictory: Gerald Aylmer died a few days after putting...
JOHN AYLMER of Massey Ferguson took in the Longford Marathon in Ireland...
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/aylmer-john.jsp?l=A&p=8   (1496 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - John George Thomson and others
     John George Thomson married Lucy Catherine Aylmer, daughter of Justin John Aylmer and Caroline Slatter, in 1879.
She married Justin John Aylmer, son of Reverend William Josiah Aylmer and Elizabeth Frances Bayly, in 1869.
She married Justin Arthur Aylmer, son of Justin John Aylmer and Sarah Anne Cockerill Beswick, in 1895.
www.thepeerage.com /p12781.htm   (613 words)

  
 John Knox --  Encyclopædia Britannica
One of the most famous and successful writers of his generation, John Updike was a prolific and gifted author.
John F. Kennedy is still considered one of the most popular U.S. presidents.
Learn about the Presidency of John Adams, who was the second man to hold the office of U.S. President and the first to occupy the newly constructed White House.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9045813   (741 words)

  
 Elizabeth I
John Knox's condemnation of women deeply offended Elizabeth, even though it was not aimed at her personally.
In contrast, John Aylmer praised the new queen as the safe harbor for England after the storms of Mary's tyrannous reign.
Thirty years later, Henry Howard and John Case argued that women could indeed hold power, but they believed that she should be guided by her male counselors.
www.newberry.org /Elizabeth/exhibit/elizabeththequeen/ruleofwomen.html   (160 words)

  
 Knox to Mary
It was beside his text, and was a very untimely admonition.' But we heard this same John Knox, in the audience of the same men, recite the same words again in the midst of troubles.
At departing, John Knox said unto her: 'I pray God, Madam, that ye may be as blessed within the Commonwealth of Scotland, if it be the pleasure of God, as ever Deborah was in the Commonwealth of Israel.'
The godly, thinking at least that the Queen would have heard the preaching, rejoiced; but they were all utterly deceived, for she continued in her Massing, and despised and quietly mocked all exhortation.
www.reformed.org /documents/knox/knox_to_mary/knox_to_mary.html   (5885 words)

  
 The Life of John Foxe (1516-1587)
JOHN FOXE, the author of the famous Book of Martyrs, was born at Boston, in Lincolnshire, in 1516.
At the age of sixteen he is said to have entered Brasenose College, Oxford, where he was the pupil of John Harding or Hawarden, and had for room-mate Alexander Nowell, afterwards dean of St. Paul's.
He pleaded for the despised Dutch Anabaptists, and remonstrated with John Knox on the rancour of his First Blast of the Trumpet.
www.luminarium.org /renlit/foxebio.htm   (1017 words)

  
 Aylmer Coat of Arms
The surname Aylmer is derived from the Anglo-Saxon personal name Ædelmær, which literally means noble famous.
The Gaelic form of the surname Aylmer is Aighlmear.
First found in Essex where they were tenants in chief and Lords of the manor of Aylmer.
www.houseofnames.com /xq/asp.c/qx/aylmer-coat-arms.htm   (1597 words)

  
 Descendants of John Bolton Murgittroyd   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Obituary of daughter Amelia states that John had ten children and had moved to Madison County, NY from Connecticut.
One was John W. Murgittroyd on Jan 19 and the other Catherine W. Murgittroyd on Jan 29.
John served in the Philipines during the Spanish American war.
home.comcast.net /~bobmurgittroyd/descendants_of_john_bolton_murgi.htm   (1494 words)

  
 Calvin in the Hands of the Philistines: or, Did Calvin Bowl on the Sabbath? by Chris Coldwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Calvin deemed the Sabbath to have been a Jewish ordinance, limited to that sacred people with their other ceremonial laws, and only typical of the spiritual repose of the advent of Christ, which abolished the grosser, rejected its rigours, and reproaches those whose Sabbatical superstitions were carnal and gross as the Jewish.
Also, as useful as a direct appeal to the tale would have been, the story was not repeated by Laud or Aylmer, eager as they were to appeal to the general practice of Geneva in defense of their Sabbath recreations.
John Calvin’s Doctrine of Christian Liberty and Some Implications for Pastoral Care: A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Calvin Theological Seminary for the Degree of Master of Theology, May, 1992.
www.fpcr.org /blue_banner_articles/calvin_bowls.htm   (14569 words)

  
 John Aylmer — Infoplease.com
Though he was a man of great learning, his harsh treatment of his foes made him generally disliked.
John Strype - Strype, John Strype, John, 1643–1737, English ecclesiastical historian and biographer.
The donkey vote: a VC for Simpson--the case against.(does John Simpson Kirkpatrick deserve a Victoria Cross?)(Viewpoint essay)
www.infoplease.com /ce6/people/A0805517.html   (195 words)

  
 JOHN AYLMER (1521-1594) - Online Information article about JOHN AYLMER (1521-1594)
JOHN AYLMER (1521-1594) - Online Information article about JOHN AYLMER (1521-1594)
MAR, JOHN ERSKINE, 1ST OR 6TH EARL OF (d.
MAR, JOHN ERSKINE, 6TH OR 11TH EARL OF (1675-1732)
encyclopedia.jrank.org /AUD_BAI/AYLMER_JOHN_1521_1594_.html   (530 words)

  
 [No title]
Note, comments may take some time to be approved.
AYLMER, JOHN (1521-1594), English divine, was born in the year 1521 at Aylmer Hall, Tivetshall St Mary, Norfolk.
While there he wrote a reply to John Knox's famous Blastagainst the Monstrous Regiment of Women, under the title of An Harborowe for Failhfull and Trove Subjects, and'c., and assisted John Foxe in translating the: Acts of the Martyrs into Latin.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?locale=en&content_id=6019   (318 words)

  
 Lady Jane Grey: Early Life
In 1549, when she was 12 years old, John Aylmer became her tutor.
Based on some correspondence that Aylmer wrote to Jane, some scholars feel he may have fallen in love with her, while teaching her.
In 1546, when Jane was 9 years old, she was sent to Court under the guardianship of Queen Katherine Parr, the sixth wife and eventual widow of Henry VIII.
www.ladyjanegrey.org /early_life/index.html   (406 words)

  
 Lady Jane Grey: Biography, Portraits, Primary Sources
Aylmer was a friend of Roger Ascham, the former tutor of Princess Elizabeth.
In one, Aylmer is concerned that she is taking too much of an interest in music and her appearance.
It was serious enough to warrant mention from Aylmer (in a letter to Ascham.) After her recovery, Jane's parents persuaded her to devote less time to study and more to social concerns.
www.englishhistory.net /tudor/relative/janegrey.html   (12779 words)

  
 Lady Jane Grey: John Aylmer
In 1553, when Mary I became Queen, Aylmer fled to the Continent where he made contact with the European Protestant reformers.
In 1566 Aylmer was consecrated Bishop of London.
Aylmer wrote "A Harbour for Faithful Subjects" in which he gives the following account of Jane's piety;
www.britannia.com /history/ladyjane/aylmer.html   (309 words)

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