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  1. Edmund Grindal (St Bees, Cumberland, v. 1519 – Londres, 6 juillet 1583) est un ecclésiastique anglais, et le soixante-douzième archevêque de Cantorbéry. Son aumônier personnel est Thomas Drant.

  2. Edmund Grindal (c. 1519 – 6 July 1583) was Bishop of London, Archbishop of York, and Archbishop of Canterbury during the reign of Elizabeth I. Though born far from the centres of political and religious power, he had risen rapidly in the church during the reign of Edward VI, culminating in his nomination as Bishop of London.

  3. 20 juil. 1998 · Edmund Grindal was an English archbishop of Canterbury whose Puritan sympathies brought him into serious conflict with Queen Elizabeth I. Educated at Magdalene and Christ’s colleges, Cambridge, he became a royal chaplain and prebendary of Westminster in 1551 and, during the reign of Mary I, went to.

  4. 20 déc. 2023 · Edmund Grindal (vers 1519 - 6 juillet 1583) étudia au Magdalena College et au Christs College jusqu’en 1538. Puis, il étudia au Pembroke College et c’est là qu’il embrassa la Réforme. En 1549, il apprit à connaître Martin Bucer, le réformateur de Strasbourg et devint son élève.

  5. stbees.org.uk › archbishop-grindal › edmund-grindalEdmund Grindal – St Bees

    Remarkably, the small West Cumbrian village of St. Bees produced two of the Archbishops of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I; Archbishop Edmund Grindal of Canterbury and Archbishop Edwin Sandys of York. This article describes the life of Grindal and the founding of St. Bees School.

  6. Edmund Grindal was a prominent figure in the English Reformation, who became Archbishop of Canterbury in 1576. He defended the freedom and plurality of preaching in the church, and wrote a bold letter to Queen Elizabeth to protest her order to suppress the "prophesyings".

  7. Grindal was an archbishop for thoroughgoing protestants, one of the very few Elizabethan bishops who enjoyed the full approval of the protestant governing class and the equal confidence of all but a small embittered minority of the godly preaching ministers.