Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • John Whitgift (born c. 1530, Grimsby, Lincolnshire, Eng.—died Feb. 29, 1604, London) was the archbishop of Canterbury who did much to strengthen the Anglican church during the last years of Elizabeth I and to secure its acceptance by her successor, James I.
      www.britannica.com/biography/John-Whitgift
  1. People also ask

  2. Mar 17, 2015 · John Whitgift was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury in 1583 by Elizabeth I. She knew that Whitgift was anti-Puritans and that he would spearhead a royal desire for religious conformity in England and Wales. In this task, John Whitgift was not to disappoint.

  3. John Whitgift was the archbishop of Canterbury who did much to strengthen the Anglican church during the last years of Elizabeth I and to secure its acceptance by her successor, James I. He was the first bishop to be appointed to the Privy Council by Elizabeth, who entirely trusted and supported.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. John Whitgift produced the 'Three Articles' that reinforced the 1559 Religious Settlement and clergymen who did not agree were dismissed from their posts.

  5. Overview. John Whitgift. (c. 1530—1604) archbishop of Canterbury. Quick Reference. (probably 1532–1604), Abp. of Canterbury from 1583. He had held high office at Cambridge, where his opposition to T. Cartwright brought him to the notice of Elizabeth I.

  6. Whitgift, whose religious views were Calvinistic, found Puritan writings heretical, seditious and dangerous as harming the uniformity of the Church of England. He drew up Articles Touching Preachers , to which all clergy were required to subscribe.

  7. John Whitgift, born in Lincolnshire around 1530, was Queen Elizabeth's last and favourite Archbishop of Canterbury. She and Whitgift got on well and they shared many of the same views and aspirations. Like Elizabeth, he was suspicious of Puritans, and passionately defended the established Church.

  8. Mar 17, 2015 · In 1583 John Whitgift, the new Archbishop of Canterbury, introduced a document known as the Three Articles. This was an attempt to bring into line nonconformists who were unwilling to follow the Elizabethan Church.

  1. People also search for