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| | Prayer Book Rebellion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In 1548 the Book of Common Prayer in English replaced the old prayer book in Latin. |  | | Proposals to translate the Prayer Book into Cornish were also suppressed. |  | | In the 1540s the government of Edward VI introduced a range of measures as part of the Reformation to remove certain practices from the church which were perceived as being too Catholic. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_Book_Rebellion
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| | Book of Common Prayer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Under Elizabeth I of England, a restoration of the Anglican Church was undertaken, and a new prayer book was published in 1559. |  | | is the prayer book of the Church of England and also the name for similar books used in other churches in the Anglican Communion. |  | | Since the Church of England is a state church, a further step—sending the proposed revision to Parliament—was required, and the book was rejected in December of that year when the MP William Joynson-Hicks argued strongly against it on the grounds that the proposed book was "papistical" and insufficiently Protestant. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Common_Prayer
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| | PRAYER - LoveToKnow Article on PRAYER |
 | | The prayer in the burial service, as in the Communion service, contained distinct intercessions for the departed; and a form of Holy Communion was provided for use at funerals with proper introit, collect, epistle and gospel. |  | | Morning and Evening Prayer were directed to be used in the accustomed place of the church, chapelor chancel, instead of in such place as the people may best hear. |  | | The result was that a conference was held in 1661, known from its place of meeting as the Savoy Conference, the church being represented by twelve bishops and the Nonconformists by twelve eminent Presbyterian divines, each side accompanied by nine coadjutors. |
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http://92.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PR/PRAYER.htm
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| | 11 |
 | | The Compendium of Spirituality is a valuable source book and text for those who wish to delve into the major emphases of the traditional schools of spirituality. |  | | This uprising, as Caraman notes throughout the book, was the largest and most successful of a number of uprisings and acts of resistance that were caused by the imposition of the Book of Common Prayer. |  | | In this book Newman gives answers to questions about God, ourselves, evil in the world, sin, grace, heaven, faith, love, happiness, peace, prayer, the purpose of life, the Mass, the Church, Christ, Mary, death and other such topics. |
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http://www.catholic.net/rcc/Periodicals/Homiletic/02-97/11/11.html
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| | Sampford Courtenay - Saint Andrew's Church - 3 |
 | | The use of the first English Prayer Book of 1549 on Whit Sunday 1549 marked the beginning of the Prayer Book Rebellion of that year, which started in Sampford Courtenay. |  | | This caused trouble with the magistrates and in the ensuing argument, one Wiliam Hellyons was killed on the steps of the Church House. |  | | A map, from the Prayer Book Rebellion display in the church, showing the movement of the troops |
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http://www.sampfordcourt.freeuk.com/Pages/Church3.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Bishoprics continued to exist, and the Book of Common Prayer was followed. |  | | Her mother had been executed by order of her father; she had had to adjust herself to numerous changes in the official religion; and during the reign of her half sister she had been in mortal danger. |  | | The economic grievances included resentment at enclosures, while the religious motivation was the introduction of a new service book, the Book of Common Prayer, the work of Cranmer. |
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http://www.colorado.edu/English/Ball/tudorhist.html
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| | New Oxford Review |
 | | Reading his church book it is hard to see what else such a man in such a time and place could have done. |  | | Recently I received a letter from an English Catholic friend in which he commented that while The Voices of Morebath was not so melancholic a book for him as The Stripping of the Altars had been, it was, given the “bitter ironies” in which the book abounds, even more poignant. |  | | For him, religion was, above all, local and particular, ‘rooted in one dear perpetual place,’ his piety centered on this parish, this church, these people. |
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http://www.newoxfordreview.org/reviews.jsp?did=0502-tighe
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| | Edward VI & Somerset |
 | | Resentment of the new Prayer Book was particularly pronounced in this region. |  | | The prayer book introduced Protestant doctrine whilst retaining old ceremonies. |  | | : expressing Protestant opposition to belief in Purgatory and prayers for the dead, and seizing the proceeds. |
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http://history.wisc.edu/sommerville/361/361-11.htm
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| | Just Cornwall |
 | | Their uprising in defence of their religion and language is reviewed by some as part of the Prayer Book Rebellion and was the third time in 50 years that the Cornish had marched upon England in anger. |  | | Proposals to translate the Prayer Book into Cornish were also suppressed. |  | | Those that had led the ethnic slaughter on England's behalf were richly rewarded. |
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http://www.bavidge.co.uk/just_cornwall.htm
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| | The Book of Common Prayer, Cambridge, 1771 |
 | | The Book of Common Prayer: Its Origins and Growth. |  | | A Form of Prayer and Thanksgiving to Almighty God to be used in all Churches and Chapels within this Realm, every Year, upon the Twenty-fifth day of October; being Day on which His Majesty began his happy Reign. |  | | 1559, Book of Common Prayer (the Elizabethan prayer book) |
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http://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/bcp/bcp.htm
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| | Spero Forum - Baptist, Protestant, and Catholic Discussion - How a village changed from Catholic to Protestant |
 | | This book should be assured of a place in the library of every Catholic school, primary as well as secondary. |  | | His previous books include The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England 1400—1580, and Saints and Sinners: A History of the Popes, both published by Yale University Press. |  | | "Duffy’s book provides a poignant account of a priest and his parish struggling to adapt to a world that is changing too quickly. |
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http://www.speroforum.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=1055
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| | prayer |
 | | The Prayer Book was first used on Whitsunday. |  | | Notes on the Praybook Rebellion (an information folder for Schools and others who wish to commemorate the event or to study the history) by Grand Bard Ann Trevenan Jenkin. |  | | The western justices could do nothing, but help soon came from the eastern gentry and the incipient revolt was crushed. |
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http://homepages.tesco.net/~k.wasley/prayer.htm
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| | Sidwell |
 | | At the time of the Prayer Book Rebellion and great siege of Exeter in 1549 it was in the hands of the insurgents and became a prison. |  | | A book entitled "Exeter Churches" by B. Creswell (1908) in the Westcountry Studies Library (Exeter) contains several pages on St Sidwell's including transcriptions of memorial tablets and brasses inside the pre-war church. |  | | Farington noticed many people sitting during the prayers "with as much cold indifference as their posture could indicate". |
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http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/JBrannan/sidwell.htm
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| | index |
 | | Next year thousands of Cornishmen took part in the so-called `Prayer Book Rebellion', one of the most serious popular disturbances of the Tudor century. |  | | Soon afterwards Body was stabbed to death in Helston market-place, his killers proclaiming that anyone else who dared to embrace `new fashions' (might they have been referring to cultural/linguistic fashions here, as well as religious ones?) would perish in the same manner. |  | | This did not mean that the Cornish people had relinquished their separate identity, however. |
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http://www.geocities.com/azelb
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| | Cultural imperialism article - Cultural imperialism culture Empires imperialism Etruscan language Roman Empire Greek - ... |
 | | A revealing instance of cultural imperialism is the Prayer Book rebellion of 1549, where the English state sought to suppress non-English languages with the English language Book of Common Prayer. |  | | Many Cornish people protesting against the imposition of an English Prayer book were massacred by the King's army. |  | | In replacing Latin with English, and under the guise of suppressing Catholicism, English was effectively imposed as the language of the Church, one of the societal focal points of the time. |
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http://www.what-means.com/encyclopedia/Cultural_imperialism
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| | «SOME OLD DEVON CHURCHES» BY J. STABB; 217-228 |
 | | In Domesday Book [1086] it is called «Saint Marie Churche». |  | | She stands elevated on a pedestal, and both have their hands joined in prayer. |  | | This parish church is said to have been the earliest in Devon. |
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http://www.wissensdrang.com/stabb217.htm
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| | Shedding further light on the English Reformation under Edward VI |
 | | On the other hand, the Western, or "Prayer Book" rebellion, did constitute an armed struggle to defend traditional religion against the Book of Common Prayer and required the intervention of foreign mercenaries to quell. |  | | Such interpretations, however, fail to consider the legacy the Edwardian Reformation bequeathed to the Church of England. |  | | Similarly, the furnishing of churches under Elizabeth I reflected furnishings mandated under Edward VI's reign. |
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http://www.ad2000.com.au/articles/2000/jun2000p10_248.html
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| | Galw Links |
 | | 900 unarmed and bound Kernewek prisoners of war had their throats cut in the space of ten minutes during the "Prayer Book Rebellion". |
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http://sianioan.tripod.com/links.html
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| | Battles and Rebellions |
 | | Rising in the West of England against the Prayer Book and Edward VI's religious policies. |  | | They also expressed problems with the clergy but adopted the new Prayer Book. |  | | Robert Kett (a Norfolk tanner and landowner) and his followers camped near Norwich in protest against enclosures and exploitation. |
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http://www.tudorhistory.org/calendar/battles.html
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| | Britannia History: Overview of Devon |
 | | More famous in the West, however, is the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549. |  | | A priest at Sampford Courtenay was persuaded to read the old Mass the very next day and the insubordination quickly spread. |  | | Following the Reformation of the Church of England by Henry VIII - unpopular in Devon - there were serious disturbances in the county upon the introduction, by his son, Edward VI, of the Protestant Prayer Book. |
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http://www.britannia.com/history/devon/devon.html
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| | File 4 - 1500-1550 - Merchants and Bankers Listings |
 | | It was with traditions formed from these four themes, that the British from 1786 possessed Australia - and the existence of the traditions shows as much in British genealogy as it does in books - maybe more clearly, as we shall see... |  | | What is less clear with the rise of "new" English commerce in pre-Elizabethan days, is the influence of upper-class and/or aristocratic families, particularly in the light the "new learning" of Protestantism, where, say, one might also read Tawney's book, Religion and the Rise of Capitalism. |  | | Useful books arising include: The Decades, by Peter Martyr (who never went to America). |
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http://www.danbyrnes.com.au/merchants/merchants4.htm
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| | Cornish people in Cornish books - v 1 Letter B |
 | | Barrett, Roger; a 'stirrer' in prayer book rebellion ; [19]284 |  | | Bochym, Robert; a 'stirrer' in prayer book rebellion ; [19]284 |  | | Bennett, John; supplied prayer book to church 1809 ; [5]58 |
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http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/jon_rees/corbookB.htm
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| | An Early Modern Chronology, 1453-1715 |
 | | Clergy enjoined to instruct youth in Lord’s Prayer |  | | Papal bull orders burning of books against Church authority |  | | adopted by Convocation; came to be called The King's Book |
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http://www.columbia.edu/~tdk3/chronology.html
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| | Family Ancestry |
 | | Whilst some see him as a high-minded idealist, his stay in power culminated in a crisis in 1549 when many counties of the realm were up in protest. |  | | Mary, a devout Catholic who had been influenced greatly by the Catholic King of Spain and Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, tried to reimpose Catholicism on the realm. |  | | The reign of Elizabeth restored a sort of order to the realm following the turbulence of the reigns of Edward and Mary when she came to the throne following the death of the latter in 1558. |
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http://www.family-ancestry.co.uk/Tudor-England.htm
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| | Celtic League American Branch - Cornwall |
 | | Most famous was the bloodily-suppressed Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549 against the imposition of the Protestant (and English-language) Book of Common Prayer. |  | | The spirit of Cornish separateness has been maintained in a variety of ways, including the existence of a Stannary Parliament that governed the Cornish tin-mining industry, and whose continued legal existence was recently invoked to nullify Margaret Thatchers Poll Tax in the 1980s. |
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http://www.celticleague.org/cornwall.html
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| | Francis Drake |
 | | and during the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1948, was forced to flee with his family to Chatham in Kent. |  | | Drake was apprenticed to a Thames captain in the 1550s, and in 1563 joined his cousin, John Hawkins, on a voyage to Africa. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/TUDdrakeF.htm
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| | Michael Treharne Davies |
 | | Davies similarly brought the story of the Prayer Book rebellion in Cornwall and Devon in 1549 to a wider audience. |  | | He wrote a book on the Counter-Revolution in the Vendée in the 1790s which was a neglected aspect of French history in English language texts, yet the repeat of this in 1815 diverted troops to Mayenne that would have given Napoleon a victory at Waterloo. |  | | At a later time, he also wrote articles and delivered lectures on the French Revolution. |
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http://www.uvoc.org/MichaelTreharneDavies.html
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| | Sampford Courtenay village home page |
 | | It is famous for the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549 and for being a consistent winner of the 'Britain in Bloom' competition. |  | | Sampford Courtenay took its name 'Sampford' from the sandy ford (now replaced by a road bridge) next to the New Inn. |  | | Sampford Courtenay is situated close to the northern edge of Dartmoor. |
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http://www.sampfordcourt.freeuk.com
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| | WHKMLA : Cornwall Rebellion 1549 |
 | | also referred to as the "Prayer Book Rebellion" and the "Western Rebellion" |  | | The suggestion to translate the Book of Common Prayer into Cornish was rejected; Cornwall forcefully reintegrated into the Kingdom of England. |  | | The brutal suppression of the rebellion of 1549 is said to have broken the spirit of the Cornish people. |
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http://www.zum.de/whkmla/military/16cen/cornwall1549.html
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| | RussD.com - Welcome |
 | | I started showing friends the Kaczynski quote fromThe Age of Spiritual Machines; I would hand them Kurzweil's book, let them read the quote, and then watch their reaction as they discovered who had written it. |  | | That is Carl Sagan, writing in 1994, inPale Blue Dot, a book describing his vision of the human future in space. |  | | In the book, you don't discover until you turn the page that the author of this passage is Theodore Kaczynski - the Unabomber. |
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http://www.russd.com/othersrants.asp
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| | English |
 | | The Scots reacted explosively when it was introduced in the spring of 1638, and sought to purge bishops from the Scots church altogether. |  | | To make matters worse, Laud and Charles both agreed that a necessary first step to true unification of Scotland and England was to introduce a common prayer book. |  | | After a disastrous skirmish he decided to seek a truce, the Pacification of Berwick, and was humiliated by being forced to agree not only to not to interfere with religion in Scotland, but to pay the Scottish war expenses as well. |
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http://www.websters-online-dictionary.net/definition/english...
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| | Opera Directory |
 | | Mass times, directions to various chapels, St Ives in the prayer book rebellion. |  | | Regularly updated news and views with the facility to add comments, plus archives. |  | | Project collecting local memories offers free workshops in art, video, mentoring and photography. |
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http://portal.opera.com/directory?cat=68027
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| | Life in Tudor Times |
 | | - Daily Life - Contemporary Documents - Acts and Laws - Titles and Offices - Battles and Rebellions |  | | Letter by Cardinal Castelli to Henry VII (1504) |
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http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/LifeinTudorTimes.htm
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