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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’.
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
Cressy is the only contemporary divine to be referred to other than in passing in Clarendon’s essay. 51 The themes it handles – in particular the small extent of the differences between the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church, and the tendency of theologians to exaggerate them – were also Clarendon’s. 52 His interest in the book may be amply explained by his interest in the ...
LAUD, WILLIAM (1573–1645), archbishop of Canterbury, born at Reading 7 Oct. 1573, was the only son of William Laud, a clothier. His mother, whose maiden name was Lucy Webbe, was widow of John Robinson, who, as well as her second husband, was a clothier of Reading. The younger William Laud was educated at the free borough school of that town.
Sep 5, 2024 · Edward Hyde, later earl of Clarendon, dismissed the Lambeth attack as ‘this infamous, scandalous, headless insurrection’. 170 Clarendon’s dismissal doubtless drew on the Baconian distinction between popular risings and the greater threat posed by risings headed by elements of the elite. 171 Predictably, the Privy Council’s initial response to the Lambeth attack had been to try to ...
Aug 21, 2009 · Clarendon is considered the first to design a ‘ related bold ’ for emphasizing text (as seen above). Many variations of the typeface, including the popular French Clarendon, appeared in the second half of the nineteenth century. “The reason it was so widely copied is simple: it was extremely useful. It provided the attention-getting ...
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May 8, 2018 · Actions like these further alienated Puritans and moderates alike, and Laud found few ready allies, even in those court circles that were friendly to his ambitions. At the same time, Laud undertook to solve certain problems of church finance and raise the level of benefices, that is, the incomes that Anglican priests relied upon to support themselves.