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history of famelys
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... Johns and Harbour Grace, wrote in his History of the Island of Newfoundland (1819): "A considerable colony, composed chiefly of Puritans, accompanied to Newfoundland Captain Edward Wynne, whom Sir George [Calvert] had sent with the commission of Governor, to prepare every thing necessary for his reception . ... Johns, Newfoundland, in his History of the Churches in Newfoundland (1895), a supplement to the influential History of Newfoundland (1895), popularized from fact and fiction the most comprehensive picture of Puritanism on the island. ... Howley in his sketch on "The Roman Catholic Church in Newfoundland" in Prowses History of the Churches in Newfoundland, where the Anglican priest in Calverts plantation is simply referred to as "the Puritan divine". ... (6) Prowse, in his voluminous documentary companion History had Stourton also come out with Guy on his second voyage, but in 1612, and return after his "collision" with Lord Baltimore in 1628. ...
The Early Anglican Presence in Newfoundland
While Anspach was still unaware of Erasmus Stourtons presence in Newfoundland, since the publication of Howleys Ecclesiastical History, but especially since the appearance of Prowses Histories, he is credited with being the first minister in Newfoundland and also associated with John Guys plantation in Conception Bay. ... (36) But Richard James remained theologically and ecclesiastically clearly within the pale of conformity and ends his largest and still unpublished work, "De canonizatio Thomae Cantuariensis et suorum," a history of Archbishop Becket, with an invocation that sees Englands enemies from without and within--Pope, Jesuits, and Puritans--equally perish on the rock of a Britain aware of its legitimate imperial presence. ... (51) The Buckingham connection explains, however, Stourtons subsequent rectorate in Wallesby and his fleeting albeit anonymous inclusion into the literary history of seventeenth-century England. ... "(55) But also the subsequent history of the Avalon settlement under Sir David Kirke,(56) who attempted a rejuvenation of the plantation after he and his associates had wrested it from the Calverts, does not show any features of nonconformity and Puritanism.
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Title: history of famelys
Words: 4924 Rating: None Pages: 19.7 submitted by: behemoth
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