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  2. List of Catholic martyrs of the English Reformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Catholic_martyrs...

    Responding to Pius V's action, Elizabeth I's government passed anti-Roman Catholic decrees in 1571 forbidding anyone from maintaining the jurisdiction of the pope by word, deed or act; requiring use of the Book of Common Prayer in all cathedrals, churches and chapels, and forbidding criticism of it; forbidding the publication of any bull ...

  3. English Reformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Reformation

    The English Reformation took place in 16th-century England when the King wished to divorce his Spanish wife (who had delivered no male children) and marry Anne Boleyn. The English Church then broke away first from the authority of the Pope and bishops over the King and then from some doctrines and practices of the Catholic Church.

  4. Forty Martyrs of England and Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forty_Martyrs_of_England...

    The Forty Martyrs of England and Wales [1] or Cuthbert Mayne and Thirty-Nine Companion Martyrs are a group of Catholic, lay and religious, men and women, executed between 1535 and 1679 for treason and related offences under various laws enacted by Parliament during the English Reformation.

  5. Catholic Church in England and Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_in_England...

    Under Queen Mary I, in 1553, the fractured and discordant English Church was linked again to continental Catholicism and the See of Rome through the doctrinal and liturgical initiatives of Reginald Pole and other Catholic reformers. [49] [50] Mary was determined to return the whole of England to the Catholic faith. This aim was not necessarily ...

  6. Timeline of the English Reformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_English...

    The last Catholic coronation of a British monarch: 1558-59 Elizabethan Religious Settlement, a compromise which secured Protestant reforms but allowed some Catholic traditions to continue. 1559 Act of Supremacy 1558 confirmed Elizabeth as Head of the Church of England and abolished the authority of the Pope in England. Final break with the ...

  7. Elizabethan Religious Settlement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabethan_Religious...

    Henry VIII had broken from the Catholic Church and the authority of the Pope, becoming the supreme head of the Church of England. During Edward's reign, the Church of England adopted a Reformed theology and liturgy. In Mary's reign, these religious policies were reversed, England was re-united with the Catholic Church and Protestantism was ...

  8. List of former Catholic priests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_Catholic...

    Menso Alting – Dutch Calvinist preacher and reformer; was a Catholic diocesan priest until joining the Protestant Reformation in 1565; Caspar Aquila – German theologian and reformer during the Protestant Reformation; diocesan priest since 1514 and imprisoned in either 1520 or 1522 for openly adopting Lutheran beliefs

  9. Counter-Reformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter-Reformation

    A primary emphasis of the Counter-Reformation was a mission to reach parts of the world that had been colonized as predominantly Catholic and also try to reconvert nations such as Sweden and England that once were Catholic from the time of the Christianisation of Europe, but had been lost to the Reformation. [1]