Edward vi Sentence Examples
It was the birthplace of Henry VIII., Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, and here Edward VI.
Presbyterian principles and ideas were entertained by many of the leading ecclesiastics in England during the reign of Edward VI.
He early adopted Protestant views, a fact which brought him into prominence when Edward VI.
Two members were summoned to parliament by Edward VI.
It never received any authoritative sanction, Edward VI.
Sebastian afterwards made a voyage to Rio de la Plata in the service of Spain, but he returned to England in 1548 and received a pension from Edward VI.
For his services against Sir Thomas Wyat he was created (March i 1, 1553/4) Lord Howard of Effingham, the title being taken from a Surrey manor granted him by Edward VI.
It is presumed that he conformed with the change of religion, for he retained under Edward VI.
Portions of the abbey buildings, including the Lady chapel of the church, now converted into a dwelling-house, are incoporated in those of Sherborne grammar school, founded (although a school existed previously) by Edward VI.
Mary of Lorraine was approached by the English commissioner, Sir Ralph Sadler, to induce her to further her daughter's marriage contract with Edward VI.
AdvertisementOn her way back to Scotland she was driven by storms to Portsmouth harbour and paid a friendly visit to Edward VI.
The castle and lordship descended by heirship, male and female, through the families of De Clare, Despenser, Beauchamp and Neville to Richard III., on whose fall they escheated to the Crown, and were granted later, first to Jasper Tudor, and finally by Edward VI.
Thirty years after the Ridsdale judgment, the ritual confusion in the Church of England was worse than ever, and the old ideal expressed in the Acts of Uniformity had given place to a desire to sanctify with some sort of authority the parochial "uses" which had grown up. In this respect the dominant opinion in the Church, intent on compromise, seems to have been expressed in the Report presented in 1908 to the convocation of the province of Canterbury by the sub-committee of five bishops appointed to investigate the matter, namely, that under the Ornaments Rubric the vestments prescribed in the first Prayer Book of Edward VI.
The governing charter till 1835 was that of Henry VIII., granted in 1545 and confirmed by Edward VI.
In March 1548 the Order of the Communion was published and commanded to be used by royal proclamation in the name of Edward VI.
AdvertisementThe Yorkists had many adherents in Ireland, and thither Lambert Simnel was taken by Symonds early in 1487; and, gaining the support of the earl of Kildare, the archbishop of Dublin, the lord chancellor and a powerful following, who were, or pretended to be, convinced that the boy was the earl of Warwick escaped from the Tower, Simnel was crowned as King Edward VI.
A conservative Book of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments and other Rites and Ceremonies after the Use of the Church of England - commonly called the First Prayer Book of Edward VI.
Nevertheless it was raised to the rank of a free borough by Henry VII I.'s charter of 1546, confirmed by Edward VI.
Agnes, Cambs., but the greater part of his life was given up to teaching, as headmaster of Helston grammar school from 18J5 to 1859 and of King Edward VI.
They were there when Henry's death called Edward VI.
AdvertisementIt appears that he afterwards went to London, and acted as physician to Edward VI.
Westcott was educated at King Edward VI.
This was a revival, as the office was in existence from 1534 till the death of Edward VI.
His eldest daughter, Margaret (1505-1544), married to William Roper (1496-1578), an official of the court of king's bench and a member of parliament under Henry VIII., Edward VI.
In England the name " altar " 2 "was retained in the Communion Office in English, printed in 1549, and in the complete English Prayer-book of the following year, known to students as the First Book of Edward VI.
AdvertisementThe religious affairs of England especially engaged his attention; and the nomination of Cardinal Pole as his legate to that country, on the death of Edward VI.
Latimer, however, besides possessing sagacity, quick insight into character, and a ready and formidable wit which thoroughly disconcerted and confused his opponents, had naturally a distaste for mere theological discussion, and the truths he was in the habit of inculcating could scarcely be controverted, although, as he stated them, they were diametrically contradictory of prevailing errors both in The only reasons for assigning an earlier date are that he was commonly known as " old Hugh Latimer," and that Bernher, his Swiss servant, states incidentally that he was " above threescore and seven years " in the reign of Edward VI.
Bad health and anxieties probably made him look older than his years, but under Edward VI.
Henry died before his final trial could take place, " and the general pardon at the accession of Edward VI.
His Sermon on the Ploughers and Seven Sermons preached before Edward VI.
The tithes of tithable cattle pasturing in any waste or common ground, whereof the parish is not certainly known, were made payable to the parson of the parish where the cattle dwell by a statute of Edward VI.
There is an Edward VI.
The benevolent institutions include the hospital and the Edward VI.
The grammar school, founded by Edward VI.
A borough seal dated 1469 is extant, but the corporation is not mentioned in the grant made by Edward VI.
His mother, the second wife of Sir Nicholas, was a daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke, formerly tutor to Edward VI.
He then retired to Magazzano on the Lake of Garda and occupied himself by editing his book Pro unitate ecclesiae, with an intended dedication to Edward VI.
It was probably to this relation that the burgesses owed the privilege of parliamentary representation, conferred by Edward VI.
The archbishop of Canterbury, in whose court the case was heard (1889), decided that the mere presence of two candles on the table, burning during the service but lit before it began, was lawful under the first Prayer-Book of Edward VI.
The church was made collegiate in 1484, and Edward VI.
In 1564 a new and enlarged edition was printed in Edinburgh, and the Assembly ordered that "every Minister, exhorter and reader" should have a copy and use the Order contained therein not only for marriage and the sacraments but also "in Prayer," thus ousting the hitherto permissible use of the Second Book of Edward VI.
In 1J52 he preached before King Edward VI.
The invading army was welcomed by almost all the lords, and the spurious Clarence was crowned at Dublin by the name of Edward VI.
Somersets own brother, Thomas Seymour, jealous of the protector, intrigued against the government; he sought to secure the hand of Elizabeth, the favor of Edward VI.
But his ambition and violence made him deeply unpopular, and the failing health of Edward VI.
The Act of Uniformity (559) restored with a few modifications the second prayer-book of Edward VI.
The work was actually undertaken and finished in the reign of Edward VI.
In 1204 John granted the manor of Wolverhampton to the church, and at the Reformation it was held by the dean of the collegiate body; in 1553 Edward VI.
The able opportunist Sir Anthony St Leger, who was accused by one party of opposing the Reformation and by the other of lampooning the Sacrament, continued to rule during the early days of Edward VI.
But little was done under Edward VI.
He was crowned as Edward VI.
The statute was preceded by tentative provisions of the same kind enacted in the reigns of Edward VI.
He was presented with a silver casket on a visit to his old school, King Edward VI Grammar School.
Sent members in 1307 and permanently enfranchised by King Edward VI.
This was a foundation in connexion with the gild of the Holy Cross, but was refounded after the dissolution by King Edward VI.
Its dissolution was the cause of the incorporation charter of Edward VI.
The present Christ's Hospital originally belonged to the Gild of the Holy Cross, on the dissolution of which Edward VI.
In about 1550, King Edward VI 's commissioners ransacked the room.