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Topic: John Strype


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In the News (Tue 15 Dec 09)

  
  John Strype - LoveToKnow 1911
JOHN STRYPE (1643-1737), English historian and biographer, was born in Houndsditch, London, on the 1st of November 1643.
He was the son of John Strype, or van Stryp, a member of a Brabant family who, to escape religious persecution, settled in London, in a place afterwards known as Strype's Yard in Petticoat Lane, as a merchant and silk throwster.
The younger John was educated at St Paul's School, and on the 5th of July 1662 entered Jesus College, Cambridge; thence he proceeded to Catherine Hall, where he graduated B.A. in 1665 and M.A. in 1669.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /John_Strype   (517 words)

  
 John Strype - Encyclopedia.com
John Strype, 1643-1737, English ecclesiastical historian and biographer.
Imagining Early Modern London: Perceptions and Portrayals of the City from Stow to Strype, 1598-1720.
Heretic hunting beyond the seas: John Brett and his encounter with the Marian exiles.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-Strype-J.html   (896 words)

  
 Eighteenth-Century London
John Stow (John Strype, editor, and Richard Blome, engraver), maps and plans from the 1720 edition of The Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster.
John Carey's beautiful Actual Survey of the Country Fifteen Miles Around London, 1786 (which now, of course, includes most of London).
John Fairburn's Plan of Westminster and London, 1801
www.oldlondonmaps.com /18thclondon.html   (288 words)

  
  John Lightfoot - Biography and Commentary - SwordSearcher Bible Software
John Lightfoot 's Gospel commentaries (part of From the Talmud and Hebraica) are part of the SwordSearcher Bible Software Deluxe study library.
LIGHTFOOT, JOHN: English Biblical critic and Hebraist; born at Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, Mar. 29, 1602; died at Ely, Cambridgeshire, Dec. 6, 1675.
Lightfoot was a prolific writer and is noteworthy as the first Christian scholar to call attention to the importance of the Talmud.
www.swordsearcher.com /christian-authors/john-lightfoot.html   (461 words)

  
 John Strype Information
John Strype (November 1, 1643 - December 11, 1737) was an English historian and biographer.
Born in Houndsditch, London, he was the son of John Strype, or van Stryp, a member of a Brabant family who, to escape religious persecution, had settled in London.
The younger John was educated at St Paul's School, and on July 5 1662 entered Jesus College, Cambridge; he went on from there to Catharine Hall, where he graduated B.A. in 1665 and M.A. in 1669.
www.bookrags.com /John_Strype   (573 words)

  
 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)

  
 Victorian London - Education - Schools - St. Paul's School
Strype has left a very interesting account of this school in his annotations upon Stow.
Paul’s School (Founded 1512 by John Colet, DD., Dean of St. Paul’s), St. Paul’s-churchyard—There are 153 scholars on the foundation, who are entitled to entire exemption from school fees.
Perry in 1696, of the value of £10 a year; two exhibitions at St. John’s, founded by Dr. Gower in 1711, of the value of £10 a year, for the sons of clergymen.
www.victorianlondon.org /education/stpaulsschool.htm   (720 words)

  
 Place Search 1674 to 1714: Strype's London Map
London in 1720: Ward and Parish Maps from Strype's Stow, by Ralph Hyde
Place names that appear on John Strype's ward and parish maps of 1720 have been transcribed and indexed.
Strype's maps of the City of London were divided up by ward, while the rest of the metropolis was divided into parishes.
www.oldbaileyonline.org /search/place/strype.html   (1056 words)

  
 John Whitgift
At an early age his education was entrusted to his uncle, Robert Whitgift, abbot of the neighbouring monastery of Wellow, by whose advice he was afterwards sent to St Anthony's school, London.
In 1549 he matriculated at Queens' College, Cambridge[?], and in May 1550 he migrated to Pembroke Hall, where he had the martyr John Bradford[?] for a tutor.
It was embodied by John Strype in his Life and Acts of Whitgift (1718).
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/jo/John_Whitgift.html   (762 words)

  
 Marian exiles at AllExperts
During the reign of Mary I, John Strype says more than 800 English protestants fled to the continent (predominantly the Low Countries, Germany, Switzerland, and France) and joined with reformed churches there or formed their own congregations.
According to A Brief Discourse, John Knox was sent as a minister to Frankfurt from Geneva by John Calvin in 1554; he led the opposition to the prayerbook faction.
Notably John Hooper had just been burned at the stake in February, and his wife and children were among the Frankfurt exile community.
en.allexperts.com /e/m/ma/marian_exiles.htm   (2534 words)

  
 Notes to "Wrong Side of the River: London's disreputable South Bank in the sixteenth and seventeenth century." Jessica ...
John Strype, The Survey of London, quoted in Pearl, London and the Outbreak of the Puritan Revolution, 14; Victoria County History of Surrey, IV, 150.
John Strype, The Survey of London, quoted in Pearl, London and the Outbreak of the Puritan Revolution, 14; C[alendar of] S[tate] P[apers] D[omestic], 1638-1639, 562-63, 579.
John Northbrooke, A treatise wherein dicing, dauncing, vaine playes, or enterluds, with other idle pastimes, &c., commonly used on the Sabboth day, are reproued by the authoritie of the word of God and auntient writers (1577), ed.
etext.lib.virginia.edu /journals/EH/EH36/browner2.html   (2613 words)

  
 info: John_Strype   (Site not responding. Last check: )
John Stow's 1720 edition of the Survey of LondonThe Parish, Ward and locality maps and plans within John Stow (John Strype, editor), Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster
John StowJohn Stow (John Strype, editor), Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster London, 1720, 2 volumes.
John StowA second edition appeared in his lifetime in 1603, a third with additions by Anthony Munday in 1618, a fourth by Munday and Dyson in 1633, a fifth with interpolated amendments by John Strype in 1720...
www.napoli-pizza.net /John_Strype.html   (901 words)

  
 Project pages
John Stow (c1525-1605), chronicler and antiquary, devoted his life "to the search for our faour [fair] antiquaries".
His final work, A Survey of London and Westminster (1598), was re-published by John Strype (1643-1737), the ecclesiastical historian and biographer, in 1720.
The project has produced a full-text electronic edition of John Strype's enormous two-volume 1720 edition, with its celebrated maps and plates.
www.shef.ac.uk /hri/projects/projectpages/stuartlondon.html   (98 words)

  
 H-Net Review: Barrett L. Beer on Imagining Early Modern London: Perceptions and Portrayals of the City ...
The first is the issue of continuity: "to what extent did contemporaries perceive a disjunction between the physical size, culture, and social relationships of London past and present?" The second question relates to the nature of metropolitan experience while the third examines the evaluation of London's urbanization.
Strype's support of the Revolution of 1688 led to his appointment as rural dean of Barking and lecturer in the parish of Hackney.
But Strype's edition was nothing less than a resounding success, and it re-established Stow as "the hero of the metropolis, and a Londoner for all seasons" (p.
www.h-net.msu.edu /reviews/showrev.cgi?path=6401028163279   (1043 words)

  
 Calvin in the Hands of the Philistines: or, Did Calvin Bowl on the Sabbath? by Chris Coldwell   (Site not responding. Last check: )
There is no excuse for the statement by Professor John Murray of Westminster Seminary, in a desperate attempt to avoid the thrust of Calvin’s view of the sabbath, that Calvin’s views have simply been misinterpreted.
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.
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   (14578 words)

  
 [No title]
John Hunt was born on June 13, 1812 in Hykeham Moor near Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
John and Hannah departed for Fiji on April 29, 1838 and after a stop in Sydney, Australia arrived on December 23.
John Hunt The Crowns of Joshua and the Kingdom of Christ the Branch, MSS 220, Archives and Manuscripts Dept., Pitts Theology Library, Emory University.
callimachus.library.emory.edu /jbwhite/pitts.xml   (4033 words)

  
 John Strype
John Strype’s edition of John Stow’s Survey of London.
Ward and Parish Maps from John Strype's edition of John Stow's Survey of London (1720) John Rocque's Survey of London, Westminster and Southwark (1746) Christopher and John Greenwood's, Map of London...
A second edition appeared in his lifetime in 1603, a third with additions by Anthony Munday in 1618, a fourth by Munday and Dyson in 1633, a fifth with interpolated amendments by John Strype in 1720...
www.logicjungle.com /John_Strype.html   (353 words)

  
 JOHN STRYPE BIOGRAPHY - LIFE - HISTORY - BOOKS - FACTS   (Site not responding. Last check: )
A short biography of JOHN STRYPE, including life and history; from the Biographical Dictionary of English Literature by John Cousin
This summary of interesting facts about JOHN STRYPE is taken from A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature by John William Cousin.
Shows when JOHN STRYPE was born and when died.
www.321books.co.uk /gutenberg/cousin/p1181.htm   (249 words)

  
 Wrong Side of the River: London's disreputable South Bank in the sixteenth and seventeenth century. Jessica A. Browner
Sir John Fastolf, the famous captain in the French wars, was among the well-known inhabitants of Southwark and maintained a considerable establishment there during the fourteenth century.
John Strype notes in his list of areas beyond the jurisdiction of the City that they were places where "strangers" chiefly inhabited.
51 For antiquarian sentimentalists, such as John Stow, as well as to the central government itself, unlawful games were coupled with the decline of archery, with all its implications of national degeneracy and military enfeeblement;52 for the Puritans, they signified a moral degeneracy.
etext.lib.virginia.edu /journals/EH/EH36/browner1.html   (8998 words)

  
 Edmund_Bonner - Thagodz Wiki   (Site not responding. Last check: )
So completely had the state dominated the church that religious persecutions had become state persecutions, and Bonner was acting as an ecclesiastical sheriff in the most refractory district of the realm.
Bonner's detractors, beginning with his Protestant contemporaries John Foxe and John Bale and continuing through most English historiography of the period, paint a different picture.
Bonner, they point out, was one of those who brought it to pass that the condemnation of heretics to the fire should be part of his ordinary official duties, and he was represented as hounding men and women to death with merciless vindictiveness.
www.thagodz.com /search/wiki/?title=Edmund_Bonner   (2591 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "John Stow": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: )
In the words of the "Apologie of the Cittie of London;' with which John Stow concludes his Survey of London, the early modern city was "a mighty arme and instrument to bring any great desire...
John Stow's copy of part of the manuscripts of John Leland notes that the tomb of the fourteenth-century bishop John Dalderby in...
John Stow was to continue to produce such works, and his various sextodecimo chronicles were made in the pattern of their predecessors.
www.amazon.com /phrase/John-Stow   (577 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "John Strype": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: )
William Smith, for example, apologized for criticizing some of his friend John Strype's work, but added that this was necessary: For I think one end of writing history as well as reading it,...
His later admirers, John Foxe and John Strype, tried to improve her image by calling her the daughter of a gentleman, but her pedigree has not emerged from...
Thomas Brightman, A Revelation of the Apocalyps (Amsterdam, 1611), 45; John Strype, Annals of the Reformation, 4 vols.
amazon.com /phrase/John-Strype   (0 words)

  
 JOHN STRYPE (1643-1737) - Online Information article about JOHN STRYPE (1643-1737)
The most important of Strype's works are the Memorials of Thomas See also:
Strype also published, besides a number of single sermons, an edition of John See also:
Lightfoot's Works (1684); and in 1700 Some genuine Remains of John Lightfoot.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /STE_SUS/STRYPE_JOHN_1643_1737_.html   (0 words)

  
 London Old Maps
Londinium Augusta.(London in the Reign of Augustus) 1722 John Stukely
John Rocque (26 inches to a mile, first edition) 1500 name index.
John Fairburn (3 3/4 inches to the mile 7th edition) with commentary by Ralph Hyde and 2000 name index.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~genmaps/genfiles/COU_Pages/ENG_pages/lon.htm   (0 words)

  
 Columbia Encyclopedia- Stow John - AOL Research & Learn   (Site not responding. Last check: )
He was a tailor in his youth, but after 1560 he came under the patronage of Archbishop Matthew Parker, whose Society of Antiquaries he joined, and began collecting historical documents and manuscripts.
In 1598 there appeared his Survey of London, an immensely valuable account of the city in Elizabethan times.
John Strype issued a new edition in 1720 (repr.
reference.aol.com /columbia/_a/stow-john/20051207134609990007   (177 words)

  
 ANNALS OF THE REFORMATION AND ESTABLISHMENT OF RELIGION AND OTHER VARIOUS OCCURRENCES IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND DURING ...
And lastly, that your royal issue, that God hath blessed you and us with, may be enriched with all heavenly graces, and prosper in all earthly happiness; and, after you, may happily reign over these kingdoms in a long succession of after-ages.
And before him John Fox intended his last labours that way, and had prepared very considerable materials for that purpose; some whereof are fallen into my hands; many are dispersed elsewhere; and not a few lost.
And I have been told, great heaps of collections were in and after the times of that queen got together, in order to write her ecclesiastical history; but that this good work and the collections themselves were stifled, and lost in the civil wars.
www.godrules.net /library/strype/96strype_a0.htm   (1477 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "John Strype": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: )
William Smith, for example, apologized for criticizing some of his friend John Strype's work, but added that this was necessary: For I think one end of writing history as well as reading it,...
His later admirers, John Foxe and John Strype, tried to improve her image by calling her the daughter of a gentleman, but her pedigree has not emerged from...
Thomas Brightman, A Revelation of the Apocalyps (Amsterdam, 1611), 45; John Strype, Annals of the Reformation, 4 vols.
www.amazon.com /phrase/John-Strype   (573 words)

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