- De
heretico comburendo or the
Suppression of
Heresy Act 1400 (2 Hen. 4. c. 15) was a law p****ed by
Parliament under King
Henry IV of
England in 1401 for...
-
punishments were enacted. In 1401,
Parliament p****ed the De
heretico comburendo Act,
which can be
loosely translated as "Regarding the
burning of heretics...
-
Lollard uprisings,
heresy had been
linked to
sedition (see De
heretico comburendo and
Suppression of
Heresy Act 1414.)
Ackroyd and
MacCulloch agree that...
- this advice,
Henry obtained from
Parliament the
enactment of De
heretico comburendo in 1401,
which prescribed the
burning of heretics, an act done mainly...
- later.[clarification needed] The anti-Lollard
statute of 1401 De
heretico comburendo classed heresy as a form of
sedition or treason, and
ordered that Lollard...
- The
Liber Ignium ad
Comburendos Hostes (translated as On the Use of Fire to
Conflagrate the Enemy, or Book of
Fires for the
Burning of Enemies, and abbreviated...
-
technology emerged with a
short m****cript
entitled Liber Ignium ad
Comburendos Hostes (abbreviated as The Book of Fires). The m****cript is composed...
- was made a
capital offence in
England under the
statute of De
haeretico comburendo even
though Henry could not
afford to
overly antagonize his supporters...
- In
eventual response to the
revolting Lollards, the law De
heretico comburendo was
enacted in 1401
during the
reign of
Henry IV;
traditionally heresy...
-
later claimed he had seen a do****ent that she was
burned De
heretico comburendo. She was
burned at the
stake in
Smithfield Market on 27
October 1441....