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The title page of the Cavaliero Pasquill's "Countercuffe to Martin Junior," 1589, one of the anti-Martinist tracts.. The Marprelate Controversy was a war of pamphlets waged in England and Wales in 1588 and 1589, between a puritan writer who employed the pseudonym Martin Marprelate, and defenders of the Church of England which remained an established church.
Elizabeth Hussey (died c. 1606), later Elizabeth Crane and Elizabeth Carleton, was a religious activist with strong Puritan sympathies. She and her second husband, George Carleton , were prosecuted for involvement in the Marprelate controversy .
Martin Marprelate (sometimes printed as Martin Mar-prelate and Marre–Martin) [1] [2] was the name used by the anonymous author or authors of the seven Marprelate tracts that circulated illegally in England in the years 1588 and 1589.
The title page of Pasquill's "Countercuffe to Martin Junior," 1589. Pasquill ("the renowned Cavaliero") is the pseudonym adopted by a defender of the Anglican hierarchy in an English political and theological controversy of the 1580s known as the "Marprelate controversy" after "Martin Marprelate", the nom de plume of a Puritan critic of the Anglican establishment.
Elizabeth Appleton is a novel by John O'Hara written in 1960 and first published in 1963. [1] The story is set mostly in Pennsylvania, and the time of the narrative ...
George Carleton (1529 – January 1590) was a lawyer, landowner and Member of Parliament with strong Puritan sympathies. It has been suggested that he was the secret author of the Marprelate tracts, and both he and his third wife were prosecuted for their involvement in the Marprelate controversy.
A photo shared by the Prince and Princess of Wales on what would've been Queen Elizabeth's 97th birthday shows the late monarch with some of her great-grandchildren and two of her grandchildren at ...
October–November – the Marprelate Controversy, a war of pamphlets between Presbyterians and supporters of the established church, breaks out with publication of the Epistle by "Martin Marprelate" on Robert Waldegrave's secret press at Molesey and Fawsley. [4] [27] George Gower paints the Armada Portrait of Queen Elizabeth.