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This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. The Martyrs' Monument, St Andrews, which commemorates Patrick Hamilton, Henry Forrest, George Wishart and Walter Milne Two people were executed under heresy laws during the reign of James I (1406–1437). Protestants were then executed ...
The Scottish Reformation was the process whereby Scotland broke away from the ... prayer to the Virgin ... while avoiding the creation of Catholic martyrs, to carry ...
List of Protestant martyrs of the Scottish Reformation; A. William Anderson (martyr) B. John Beveridge (martyr) ... Margaret Wilson (Scottish martyr) George Wishart
Hamilton was the second son of Sir Patrick Hamilton of Kincavil and Catherine Stewart, daughter of Alexander, Duke of Albany, second son of James II of Scotland.He was born in the diocese of Glasgow, probably at his father's estate of Stanehouse in Lanarkshire, and was most likely educated at Linlithgow [citation needed].
Pages in category "Scottish Reformation" ... List of Protestant martyrs of the Scottish Reformation; M. ... Scottish Prayer Book (1929)
The Martyrs' Monument, St Andrews, which commemorates Milne and three other martyrs: Patrick Hamilton, Henry Forrest, and George Wishart. Walter Milne (died April 1558), also recorded as Mill or Myln, was the last Protestant martyr to be burned in Scotland before the Scottish Reformation changed the country from Catholic to Presbyterian.
Change began to develop around the church as the Scottish Reformation emerged. ... The controversial efforts prompted a riot after Charles I attempted to introduce a new prayer book in St Giles ...
Millais' illustration of Wilson's martyrdom, published in Once A Week, July 1862. The Covenanter movement to maintain the reforms of the Scottish Reformation came to the fore with signing of the National Covenant of 1638 in opposition to royal control of the church, promoting Presbyterianism as a form of church government instead of an Episcopal polity governed by bishops appointed by the Crown.