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John Gerard was born 4 October 1564, the second son of Sir Thomas Gerard of Bryn Hall, and Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Port of Derbyshire.In 1569, when John Gerard was five years old, his father was imprisoned for plotting the rescue of Mary, Queen of Scots, from Tutbury Castle.
According to Father John Gerard, John's involvement with Essex coincided with his conversion to Catholicism. Gerard also noted that John's household, Twigmoor Hall in Lincolnshire, was a place where "he had Priests come often, both for his spiritual comfort and their own in corporal helps", [ 9 ] although the government's description, "a Popish ...
The Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George is a Roman Catholic Congregation of consecrated women whose spirituality is derived from St. Francis of Assisi.Mother M. Anselma Bopp and Father John Gerard Dall founded the Order in Thuine, Germany, in 1869.
Erdmann Rudolph Fischer, The Life of John Gerhard, translated by Richard J. Dinda and Elmer Hohle (Malone, TX: Repristination, 1999). Erdmann Rudolph Fischer, Vita Johannis Gerhardi (Leipzig, 1723). Glenn K. Fluegge, Johann Gerhard (1582–1637) and the Conceptualization of Theologia at the Threshold of the "Age of Orthodoxy": The Making of the ...
John Gerard (also John Gerarde, 1545–1612) was an English herbalist with a large garden in Holborn, now part of London. His 1,484-page illustrated Herball, or Generall Historie of Plantes , first published in 1597, became a popular gardening and herbal book in English in the 17th century.
His brother Fr. John Gerard, was later ordained a Roman Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and operated an underground ministry in Elizabethan England. Thomas Gerard matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford on 20 July 1578, aged 18. In 1579 he was a student of the Inner Temple. [1]
In his eulogy, her father described the circumstances he believes led to his daughter's death. "Mandisa fell down in her bedroom," he told the congregation , as seen in a YouTube video of the service.
John Gerrard or Gerard may refer to: John Gerard (c. 1545–1612), English herbalist; John Gerard (Jesuit) (1564–1637), English Jesuit priest; John Gerard (Royalist) (1632–1654), Royalist during the English Civil War; John Gerrard (1720–1787), American Baptist preacher and church founder, after whom Gerrardstown, West Virginia is named