-
Laudianism, also
called Old High Churchmanship, or
Orthodox Anglicanism as they
styled themselves when
debating the Tractarians, was an
early seventeenth-century...
- (1629–1640). This
period saw the
ascendancy of
Laudianism in England. The
central ideal of
Laudianism (the
common name for the
ecclesiastical policies...
-
details of
liturgy and ritual; and in the
hands of the
Puritan opponents of
Laudianism, to a
wider range of
perceived or
actual ecclesiastical policies, especially...
- The
position of
Laudian Professor of Arabic, now
known as the
Abdulaziz Saud
AlBabtain Laudian Professor, at the
University of
Oxford was
established in...
- by
contestants studied (such as the
dichotomies Protestant-"Popish" or "
Laudian"-"Puritan") at face value.
Since the late 1960s,
these interpretations...
-
January 1645. Laud
believed in episcopalianism, or rule by bishops. "
Laudianism" was a
reform movement that
emphasised liturgical ceremony and clerical...
-
leadership of the High
Church Archbishop of Canterbury,
William Laud, (see
Laudianism), and
government policy to
curtail the
growth of
Protestant Dissent in...
- sensitivity; by the late 1630s,
instituting Personal Rule in 1629,
enforcing Laudian reforms on the
Church of England, and
ruling without Parliament led to...
- from
Catholics for
Protestant settlement at the same time as
promoting a
Laudian Anglicanism that was
anathema to presbyterians. As a result, all three...
-
towards Laudianism.
These policies united Catholic and
Protestant opposition against him.
Personal Rule
Royal prerogative in the
United Kingdom Laudianism Council...