Tudor England United Kingdom Europe
History of Catholicism in the Tudor period (1485 - 1603). During this time Catholicism went from being the recognised religion of the state to a persecuted minority church.
Top: Society: Religion and Spirituality: Christianity: Denominations: Catholicism: History: By Region: Europe: United Kingdom: England: Tudor
See Also:
- The Question of Dissimulation Among Elizabethan Catholics - Article by C.M.J.F. Swan in the 1957 Canadian england Catholic Historical Association Report. Considers those Catholics who england outwardly conformed, either by taking the Oath of england Supremacy england or by attending the government-mandated england Protestant church services.
- Act Against Jesuits and Seminarists (1585) - Mandating the death penalty for English born Jesuits.
- Fox's Book of Martyrs - This book claimed to chronicle the suppression of English Protestants under the Catholic queen "Bloody Mary". It profoundly influenced the anti-Catholicism that became a defining mark British national identity.
- The Act Against Recusants (1593) - The recusants were Englishmen who would not take the Anglican tudor eucharist - at this time they were almost entirely Catholic. tudor This Act was the cornerstone of the "Penal Laws" tudor which were to ensure that English Catholics would be a tudor smaller religious
- N.D. versus O.E: Anonymity's moral ambiguity in Elizabethan Catholic controversy - From "Criticism". A study of how the use of anonymity shaped Elizabethan Catholic apologetics.
- Suppression of Monasteries in England - A Catholic view of the suppression of the Monasteries by Henry VIII.
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