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Apr 8, 2017 · Clarendon, writing in the sixteen-forties, characterized the alliance between Charles and Laud as one in which the archbishop's ‘heart was set upon the advancement of the church’, an endeavour in which ‘he had the king's full concurrence’. 11 To less appreciative contemporaries, Laud was the ‘evil counsellor’, pushing an irresolute monarch into implementing policies that spoke to ...
- Leonie James
- 2017
Oct 25, 2022 · ‘The Truth is’, Clarendon reflected later, that he and Laud were alike in one crucial respect, for ‘the Chancellor [Clarendon] was guilty of that himself which He had used to accuse the Archbishop Laud of, that He was too proud of a good Conscience. He knew his own Innocence, and had no Kind of Apprehension of being publickly charged with any Crime’.
Clarendon implied, gave corrupt and malicious men another opportunity to do ill. For another example, he portrayed Laud, whose friend and even protege he had been in the late 1630s, as a martyr in the History, but at the same time he asserted that Laud's aggressiveness in promoting the polit-
William Laud. William Laud (LAWD; 7 October 1573 – 10 January 1645) was a bishop in the Church of England. Appointed Archbishop of Canterbury by Charles I in 1633, Laud was a key advocate of Charles I's religious reforms; he was arrested by Parliament in 1640 and executed towards the end of the First English Civil War in January 1645. Laud ...
Laud was ordained deacon on 4 Jan. 1601, and priest on 5 April in the same year. On 4 May 1603 he was one of the proctors for the year. On 3 Sept. 1603 he was made chaplain to Charles Blount , earl of Devonshire [q.v.], and on 26 Dec. 1605 he married his patron to the divorced wife of Lord Rich, an action for which he was afterwards bitterly penitent ( Works , iii. 81, 131, 132).
Apr 4, 2024 · William Laud. William Laud (7 October 1573 – 10 January 1645) was an English archbishop and academic. He was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1633, during the personal rule of Charles I. Arrested in 1640, he was executed in 1645. In matters of church polity, Laud was autocratic. Laudianism refers to a collection of rules on matters of ritual, in ...
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The book was not published until after Clarendon’s death, but large parts of it were composed between 1646 and 1648, when the events described remained fresh in the author’s memory. Clarendon belonged to the Royalist party and took an active part in political and military affairs during the stirring age of the Puritan Revolution.