「laud」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

laud

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  • enth century manuscript associated with William Laud, an English archbishop who was the former owner
  • In 1633 it was purchased by William Laud, and became part of his collection.
  • The lectures attracted the notice of Laud, and Bagshaw was prohibited from continuing the
  • Later Chappell was in favour with William Laud, and received preferments in Ireland.
  • wes, whose Ninety-one Sermons were published by Laud and Buckeridge in 1629.
  • Archbishop Laud and King Charles were in favour of bringing the
  • Burdett corresponded with Archbishop William Laud, and when this was discovered by his political
  • ull Calendar Rounds, and two codices, the Codex Laud and Codex Mexicanus also records the 1508 Haab
  • His correspondence with Laud and with Sir Dudley Carleton and Sir Francis Wi
  • the ire of Church of England Archbishop William Laud, and he was forbidden to preach.
  • , the Club had at least one Black member, Derek Laud, and in 1988 the Students' Group Chairman was a
  • 1636) was dedicated to Laud and written at the command of Charles I. White
  • t or near a place called Fort Dick, where U. S. laud and good water can be found in abundance.
  • on 16 February at Lambeth by Archbishop William Laud, and enthroned on 14 April.
  • s 'Appeale'; it was later suppressed by William Laud; and he appears to have himself taken part in t
  • Archbishop Laud and his Work, 1905
  • f the church, was on good terms with Archbishop Laud, and, although convinced of the guilt of Straff
  • 10 January: William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury 1633- 1645
  • 10 January - William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (born 1573)
  • politician who opposed the policies of William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, and had his ears cut
  • -chancellor's duties he came into conflict with Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, who was beginning to
  • , by command of Charles I, he waited on William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, to explain the views
  • While at Rochester he appointed William Laud as his chaplain and gave him several valuable p
  • He was as relentless in the prosecution of Laud as he had been in that of Strafford.
  • edition of this reply was revised by Archbishop Laud at the express direction of King Charles I, as
  • Laud, at his trial a decade later, referred to this
  • William Laud, bishop and archbishop: consecrated church in 1
  • I've uploaded a number of engravings of William Laud by Wenceslas Hollar at William Laud; feel free
  • her form of religion which, like that upheld by Laud, called in the power of the State to enforce it
  • The revival of ritualism under William Laud discomposed him.
  • Laud exploited his secular and religious roles to im
  • th the help of Earl Auye, he became the king of Laud for a short time, until Sean returned and put t
  • Duck was associated with the future Archbishop Laud for some years - an opinion of his that a statu
  • K. Meyer, "The Laud Genealogies and Tribal Histories."
  • Laud handed the letter to the attorney-general as ma
  • sing his Church of England status under William Laud, he spent time as a minister in the Netherlands
  • they call him abba benignus (benign abbot) and laud his unaffected piety.
  • uage was condemned in later years by Archbishop Laud, his views were regarded as orthodox at the tim
  • clashes with their local party leader, Howling Laud Hope.
  • Laud hoped that his new, Arminian Church of England
  • Sociologist Laud Humphreys cited the Knights as an example of th
  • late of Righteousness": Twenty-Five Years After Laud Humphreys' Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Pub
  • iography was published in 2004, under the title Laud Humphreys: Prophet of Homosexuality and Sociolo
  • 18 December - Archbishop Laud impeached for treason.
  • He assisted in prosecuting Archbishop Laud in 1643.
  • tains the chapel originally added by Archbishop Laud in 1625, when he was Bishop of St David's.
  • He was an ally of William Laud in his time as Chancellor of the University of
  • Archbishop William Laud, in his account of his archiepiscopate addresse
  • Pink was a close ally of Laud in his measures for the reorganisation of the u
  • Oxford, Bodleian Library, Laud misc.
  • In July 1634 Laud nominated Pink to succeed Brian Duppa as vice-c
  • mentary side to be greater than that of William Laud on the royalist.
  • Dudley Digges, and Caesar consulted Archbishop Laud on whether he might obtain it, but was warned "
  • The Codex Laud, or Laudianus, (catalogued as MS.
  • These included Laud Place, a block of tenements built in 1813 on th
  • In 1636 William Laud presented the manuscript to the Bodleian Librar
  • n Wallace, Gary Bushell, Lawrie McMenemy, Derek Laud, Ray Santilli, and others.
  • Laud refused to abandon Reading, and the house passe
  • rbet of Merton College, a presbyterian, on whom Laud repeatedly refused to confer the living of Char
  • tworth saw the political dangers of Puritanism, Laud saw the threat to the episcopacy.
  • to Execution, depicting the English Archbishop Laud stretching his arms out of the small high windo
  • In an attempt to laud such scientists as visionaries, the context in
  • William Laud, The Autobiography of Dr William Laud - Collect
  • Metromix, Fodor's and Frommer's all laud the location of the restaurant, which serves Ne
  • UK, plus critics such as Mark Kermode began to laud the film as an important piece of work.
  • till has) a cult-like following among those who laud the figurative, creative style that embody his
  • By direction of Charles I, William Laud, then a prisoner in the Tower of London, gave R
  • In 1642 he was presented by William Laud to the rectory of Allhallows, Bread Street; Lau
  • r's influence, he was then appointed by William Laud to be Collector of the University of Oxford, an
  • Laud used his authority over the prerogative courts
  • Laud used his authority as Archbishop of Canterbury
  • Laud was born in a house on Broad Street in Reading,
  • time that the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud was seeking to impose uniformity upon the churc
  • Laud Weiner (2001)
  • He later came into conflict with William Laud, who regarded him as a suspect Calvinist.
  • It also impeached archbishop William Laud, who had been supported by Charles I. Laud's ne
  • nce Charles and Prince Rupert for degrees, when Laud, who had become Chancellor of the University of
  • e had several personal discussions with William Laud, who paid tribute to his scholarship, but, afte
  • w of his college, and acted as tutor to William Laud, whose opinions were perhaps shaped by him.
  • ty granted him a D.D. at the request of William Laud, without the formalities, a move criticized by