-
Laudianism was an
early seventeenth-century
reform movement within the
Church of England,
promulgated by
Archbishop William Laud and his supporters. It...
- The
position of
Laudian Professor of Arabic, now
known as the
Abdulaziz Saud
AlBabtain Laudian Professor, at the
University of
Oxford was
established in...
- The 1630s
conflict between Puritans and
traditional Episcopalians over
Laudianism in the
Church of
England was
preceded by
similar arguments in the 1620s...
- from
Catholics for
Protestant settlement at the same time as
promoting a
Laudian Anglicanism that was
anathema to presbyterians. As a result, all three...
- by
contestants studied (such as the
dichotomies Protestant-"Popish" or "
Laudian"-"Puritan") at face value.
Since the late 1960s,
these interpretations...
- south.
Roger of
Wendover wrote that Edgar, King of the
English granted Laudian to
Kenneth II, King of
Scots in 973 on
condition that he come to court...
- sensitivity; by the late 1630s,
instituting Personal Rule in 1629,
enforcing Laudian reforms on the
Church of England, and
ruling without Parliament led to...
- good wine; boil it. Add good ****es and
whole raisins.
Dress it;
decorate it with
pomegranate seeds on top. —
Laudian M****cript 553,
Bodleian Library...
- re****erting the
placement of the
altar in its
medieval position.Matthew Wren,
Laudian Bishop of Ely, was
imprisoned during the
whole of the
English Commonwealth...
- Laud, were imprisoned. Laud was
executed in 1645.: 75
Matthew Wren, a
Laudian bishop locked in the
Tower of
London by the
Parliamentarian Roundheads...