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Topic: Thomas Cartwright (churchman)


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In the News (Wed 16 Dec 09)

  
 [No title]
Churchman, and her diligent attendance added unto it, enabled him to perform the office of the day, which was in or about the year 1581.
Cartwright either was, or was persuaded to be, satisfied, for he wrote no more, but left the Reader to be judge which had maintained their cause with most charity and reason.
Thomas Stapleton was a Romish Divine, born in 1536, at Henfield, in Sussex, and educated at Winchester, and New College, Oxford.
www.ibiblio.org /pub/docs/books/gutenberg/1/3/1/3/13139/13139-8.txt   (8712 words)

  
 US Bazaar.com : Encyclopedia Pages : Thomas Cartwright (churchman)
1535–December 27, 1603) was an English Puritan churchman.
Visit the US Bazaar.com Shop to find great items related to Thomas Cartwright (churchman).
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encyclopedia.us-bazaar.com /?title=Thomas_Cartwright_(churchman)   (566 words)

  
 Woburn Sands Quaker Meeting House - Hogstye House
Thomas and Elizabeth Marshall were pioneers at North Crawley, and added five notable birthright members, viz: John in 1665, Doyle in 1666, Richard in 1668, Sara 1670 and William in 1672.
Thomas How and his wife spent much of their time in London as his business was centred there, and in the year 1722 Ann, his wire, died.
Thomas Gurney, the shorthand writer, possessed a pocket knife with the initials “T.G” and the inscription “Given to me by George Fox at Lichfield.” The “me” was the shorthand writer’s grandfather, Thomas Gurney, a Quaker who at one time travelled with George Fox, and who was father of John Gurney, the miller of Crawley Mills.
www.mkheritage.co.uk /wsc/docs/quakerhistory.html   (10089 words)

  
 Cartwright Hotel
Cartwright holds the rank of Admiral and is an officer in Starfleet.
Peter Cartwright (exhorter) was a "hellfire and brimstone" preacher born in Amherst County, Virginia.
Cartwright was educated at the free school of Cirencester, at Westminster School, and at Christ Church, Oxford, where he took his M.A. degree in 1635.
www.artistbooking.com /trips/33/cartwright-hotel.html   (1377 words)

  
 English Dissenters: Puritans
Thomas Stapleton, a Catholic in exile, is sometimes credited as a possible source for the the term puritan in 1565.
Cartwright was advocating that the true church administration and structure should be based on a model similar to John Calvin's Church in Geneva (Switzerland) which is what most presbyterians would probably endorse.
An answere to a certen libel entituled an admonition to the Parliament
www.exlibris.org /nonconform/engdis/puritans.html   (15379 words)

  
 National Portrait Gallery A-Z of Portrait Sitters (C)
Thomas Inskip, 1st Viscount Caldecote (1876-1947), Lawyer and statesman.
Thomas Carey (1597-1634), Younger son of 1st Earl of Monmouth.
Thomas Carter (died 1763), Master of the Rolls in Ireland.
www.npg.org.uk /live/search/a-z/sitC.asp   (2517 words)

  
 An Exodus: History of the American Commonwealth - Alternate History Discussion Board
It was during this period that Thomas Cartright, Elizabeth’s largest critic, would begin preaching a form of Puritan separation..
While Thomas Cartright did not officially take the role of Governor until 1600 he was unofficially the one to whom the Virginians looked to for leadership.
Thomas Cartright at the behest of the Sir Walter Raleigh establish Queenstown as a success commercially before any further settlement would be justified by the fairly financially weary Elizabethan Government.
www.alternatehistory.com /Discussion/showthread.php?t=21454   (3492 words)

  
 Gwatkin2
He reproached those represented by Cartwright as being the only party of Christians in the world that had framed an ecclesiastical polity in which the civil ruler was not supreme.
Whitgift, who answered Cartwright before Hooker did, found no Church polity in the New Testament, and maintained that the civil ruler should be supreme in the government of the Church.
The Churchman’s idea of a Nonconformist is generally taken from Nonconformist newspapers, where the predominant spirit is that of political or militant Nonconformity.
www.anglicanbooksrevitalized.us /Oldies/gwatkin2.htm   (16947 words)

  
 The King James Bible Translators
THOMAS RAVIS, Dean of Christ Church and later Warden of New College, was head of the New Testament translators at Oxford.
THOMAS BILSON, Bishop of Winchester, worked with the Cambridge translators and was one of the two final editors.
The Chartwright reference was serious because Cartwright had been the boldest of those who stormed against bishops; he thought the Church should have only elders.
www.barr-family.com /godsword/translate.htm   (3945 words)

  
 Robert Browne
Thomas Cartwright was made Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity in 1569, and attracted crowds of students by his fiery genius and dialectic skill, until he was deprived of his post in 1571.
Greenham had doubtless listened to Cartwright in the Lady Margaret lectures, and would urge, as he did, that since the bishops both preached the Word of God and had the Sacraments, they must needs have the Church and the people of God.
He poured torrents of abuse upon Cartwright for his “fond and blasphemous” notions, and twisted his arguments about until they were unrecognisable.
website.lineone.net /~gsward/pages/rbrowne1.html   (5275 words)

  
 The Rhode Island Cavaliers
His father, Thomas Brinley, was an auditor of the revenues under King Charles I and owner of various estates in other counties than Bucks.
The father, Thomas Brinley, did not come to America, and seems to have been restored to his office of auditor on the accession of Charles II., in 1660, but died the next year.
Thomas Mumford was an opponent of Cromwell and was a Church of England man, though Sherman had joined the Friends.
www.newrivernotes.com /ri/ricav.htm   (7640 words)

  
 Lagden SEAX info   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Thomas Littlechild, wife Mary, leaves his tenement in Wimbish to Mary, and after decease to his son John, else to Thomas, else to William.
Lease by Thomas Pennynge, master of the Almshouse, with the consent of John Morgan, gentleman, mayor, Richard Reynolds, gentleman, and the rest of the Aldermen to Richard Archer of Walden, Bottlemaker, all the pieces of arable land late in the occupation of Jonathan Powell, containing 5 acres, vizt.
Lease by James Raymond, gentleman, Thomas Pennistone, gentleman, Charles Wale, gentleman, Thomas Martin, draper, Robert Churchman, barker, John Harvey, chirurgion, Thomas Fuller the younger, webster Edward Ball the younger, butcher and John Archer the younger butcher, all of Waldern.
www.essex1841.com /Lagden-SEAX-info.htm   (7441 words)

  
 [No title]
Thomas More, his Prime Minister and author of "Utopia", and John Fisher, saintly bishop of Rochester, refuse to swear.
Tyndale's last words are "Lord, open the King of England's eyes." 1536 Henry VIII ensures the permanent popularity of the English reformation by abolishing the monasteries and sharing the loot with almost everyone.
Thomas Ken, bishop of Bath and Wells, refuses to swear allegiance to King William III and is deprived of his see.
www.pathguy.com /francisc/timeline.txt   (7552 words)

  
 Commission Book Of Govenor John Sevier   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Thomas Temple of the county of Greene commissioned Lieutenant in the regiment of Cavalry of the district of Washington during good behaviour, January 27th 1801.
Thomas McCorry commissioned Cornet of the volunteer troop of cavalry of Knox County, during his good behaviour November 8th 1796, provided the General Assembly, shall at their next session by a Legislative act, approve and sanction the same.
Thomas Henry of the County of Robertson, commissioned Lieutenant in the regiment of cavalry of the district of Mero, during his good behaviour, October 4th 1796.
www.sevierlibrary.org /genealogy/state/commbook.htm   (16278 words)

  
 ARTICLES FROM THE TIMES RELATING TO THE COASTGUARD SERVICE 1785 - 1850
Thomas Morris of Brookland was also committed to Dymchurch gaol for 6 months, with hard labour, for having hired a person to assist in landing a cargo of contraband goods.
Inspecting-commander of the station was Captain Deare, who had been informed that a boatman named Thomas had asccepted a bribe.
Lieutenants Cartwright and Coombes of Standgate Coast Guard station directed that the troops and others should leave the vessel, which they did, with a view to lightening her to get her off.
www.angelfire.com /ga/BobSanders/Coastguards.html   (10955 words)

  
 Outlines of the History of the Theological Literature of the Church of England (1897)
We possess, for example, sermons such as those of Andrewes, of Sanderson, of Thomas Jackson, of Bull, and of Barrow, which are of real theological importance, and marked by learning, exact thought, and speculative power.
This was Thomas Bilson, then Warden of Winchester, and afterwards Bishop, successively, of Worcester and of Winchester, who in 1585 published the volume entitled The True Difference between Christian Subjection and un-Christian Rebellion.
[Thomas Cartwright, the "T. C." of Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity, also wrote at this time in reply to Martin; but his work was not published till 1618.] Much use was in the next century made of Martin's book by Thomas Ward, who in the reign of James II.
anglicanhistory.org /scotland/jdowden/paddock/01.html   (7886 words)

  
 History in Focus: Elizabeth I and James VI and I - review of Politics, Law and Counsel
As against Scarisbrick, moreover, Guy demonstrates how Wolsey's reforming rhetoric was a hostage to his need to raise money for the expensive foreign policy he directed, and it is hard to disagree with the conclusion of the fine paper on 'Wolsey and the Parliament of 1523', that the cardinal was 'both good and bad'.
In a lengthy paper on 'The Elizabethan establishment and the ecclesiastical polity', he asserts that until the 1590s, the personalities and complexion of the Queen's regime made it possible for all of the strands in Tudor political thought to co-exist in relative harmony.
But when the Presbyterian leader Thomas Cartwright combined non-conformity with the propagation of 'Polybian "mixed" polity' as the ideal form of constitution in church and state, there was a powerful reaction from the second-generation of Elizabethan governors, most notably Archbishop Whitgift, one that was unsuccessfully resisted by older and more 'liberal' counsellors such as Burghley.
www.history.ac.uk /ihr/Focus/Elizabeth/revguy.html   (819 words)

  
 Early modern Chester 1550-1762: Religion, 1662-1762 | British History Online
The appointment of Bishop Thomas Cartwright (1686-9) brought to Chester an active supporter of James II, tainted for loyal Anglicans by suspicions of popish sympathies.
17) Cartwright mixed socially with certain aldermen and especially recusant gentry, and was in frequent contact with the papal vicar-apostolic, Father John Leyburn.
5) His successor, Nicholas Stratford (1689-1707), was a High Churchman who revitalized the diocesan administration, aided the repair of the cathedral, and shared in the foundation of the Blue Coat school.
www.british-history.ac.uk /report.asp?compid=19200   (2082 words)

  
 The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, London 1674 to 1834
I am a pawnbroker, and live in Grafton-Street; the coat, waistcoat, and breeches mention'd in the indictment were brought by Mr.
Thomas Clark, Thomas Newton, Charles Gorley and Elizabeth his wife, Charles Gorley, theft : simple grand larceny, theft : receiving stolen goods, theft : receiving stolen goods.
This is put down by my hand; Sunday, the 18th of January, put down by Thomas Wilson, minister; and on the 25th of January, by my hand.
www.oldbaileyonline.org /html_sessions/T17580113.html   (12681 words)

  
 Creeds of Christendom, with a History and Critical notes. Volume I. The History of Creeds.
The Smectymnuans were Stephen Marshall, Edmund Calamy, Thomas Young (the chief author), Matthew Newcomen, and William Spurstow.
They all had to consult him; in every strait and conflict he had to be appealed to, and came in at the last as the man of supereminent composure, comprehensiveness, and breadth of brow.
There Sir Thomas More was confined (1534), and urged by the abbot to acknowledge the king's ecclesiastical supremacy; and there probably he wrote his appeal to a general council which never met, but may yet meet at some future day.
www.ccel.org /ccel/schaff/creeds1.ix.viii.ii.html?bcb=0   (8657 words)

  
 HISTORY OF CINCINNATI AND HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
Thomas B. Estep was educated in the common schools of Cincinnati, which he attended until his twelfth year.
He has been, since 1866 a trustee of the estate of 'Thomas Hughes, by whom Hughes High School was endowed; was appointed a director of Longview Asylum, October 5, 1889, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon.
THOMAS HUNT, secretary and treasurer of the Cincinnati, Portsmouth and Virginia Railroad Company, was born January 22, 1834, in Belmont county, Ohio.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Hamilton/HamiltonBio771.htm   (20906 words)

  
 Famous Presbyterians
Thomas Mowbray (minister and educator) Mary McConnel (squatter's wife) John Mortimer (squatter) Sir Hugh Nelson and his father (Premier/elder and Minister) A.J. Proudfoot (lawyer) James Semple Kerr (educator) Andrew Fisher (politician) Rev.
Thomas Harris Maccaule (pre-1756-ca.1796) Charles Macalester (1798-1873) Samuel Eusebius Maccorkle, D.D. Rev. Elisha Macurdy (1763-1845) James Magraw, D.D. Rev. William Mahon (1760-1818) Rev.
Thomas Poage (pre 1770-1793) (grandson of an ancestor) Rev.
www.adherents.com /largecom/fam_pres.html   (3261 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Jan 04 - Article - Thomas Cartwright - the father of Puritanism Biography of Cartwright, including his six propositions of opposition to the Anglican Church.
This was a result of the use which Cartwright had made of his position; he criticised the hierarchy
The sermons of Thomas Cartwright (1667) are contained in one volume with a date use which Cartwright had made of his position; he criticised the hierarchyThomas CARTWRIGHT Brandy dahl
broker.ref.money.90.neo0exchange.org   (207 words)

  
 The 16th Centurey English Reformation - Resources
Thomas Cromwell(1485-1542) Henry's "man" during the 1530's - engineering the break with Rome and dismantlement of the monestaries.
Thomas Cranmer (1489-1556) Principle architect of the Protestant Anglican Church during the reigns of Henry 8 and Edward 6, Wrote the Book of Common Prayer.
Thomas Cartwright (1535-1603) and Walter Travers (1548-1635), were prominent Puritan/ Presbyterian leaders during Elizebeth's reign
www.eldrbarry.net /heidel/englrsc.htm   (787 words)

  
 Cartwright resource page - alexander cartwright   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The Rev. Thomas Cartwright went the extra mile.
GOLD Coast coach John Cartwright says lessons learned from the death of Penrith teammate Ben Alexander in 1992 will help him guide Mat Rogers whenever he joins the Titans.
As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for Cartwright.
www.wordipedia.com /C7a-to-Cho/Cartwright.php   (648 words)

  
 The Englsih Puritan's Beginnings
Their first forceful representative was Thomas Cartwright, who in 1570 lectured at Cambridge on the Book of Acts from a Presbyterian standpoint.
This theology, which emphasized the free will of man and the conditionality of all God's grace, was appealing to the new brand of high churchman serving under the third Anglican king.
As I said earlier, Baxter tried to short-circuit the whole proposal at the beginning by saying that nothing was necessary but the Apostle's Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the Commandments.
www.apuritansmind.com /PuritanArticles/MarkRitchieEnglishPuritans.htm   (3434 words)

  
 Quotations that Support the Separation of State and Church
All, too, will bear in mind this sacred principle, that though the will of the majority is in all cases to prevail, that will, to be rightful, must be reasonable; that the minority possess their equal rights, which equal laws must protect, and to violate which would be oppression.
But a short time elapsed after the death of the great reformer [Jesus] of the Jewish religion, before his principles were departed from by those who professed to be his special servants, and perverted into an engine for enslaving mankind, and aggrandizing their oppressors in Church and State.
In our Governments, the real power lies in the majority of the Community, and the invasion of private rights is chiefly to be apprehended, not from the acts of Government contrary to the sense of its constituents, but from acts in which the Government is the mere instrument of the major number of the constituents.
www.infidels.org /library/modern/ed_buckner/quotations.html   (18874 words)

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