Site banner
.
Home Forums Blogs Articles Photos Videos Contact FAQ                    
.
.
Wisdom Archive
Body Mind and Soul
Faith and Belief
God and Religion
Law of Attraction
Life and Beyond
Love and Happiness
Peace of Mind
Peace on Earth
Personal Faith
Spiritual Festivals
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Guidance
Spiritual Inspiration
Spirituality and Science
Spiritual Retreats
More Wisdom
Buddhism Archives
Hinduism Archives
Sustainability
Theology Archives
Even more Wisdom
2012 - Year 2012
Affirmations
Aura
Ayurveda
Chakras
Consciousness
Cultural Creatives
Diksha (Deeksha)
Dream Dictionary
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpreter
Dreams
Enlightenment
Essential Oils
Feng Shui
Flower Essences
Gaia Hypothesis
Indigo Children
Kalki Bhagavan
Karma
Kundalini
Kundalini Yoga
Life after death
Mayan Calendar
Meaning of Dreams
Meditation
Morphogenetic Fields
Psychic Ability
Reincarnation
Spiritual Art, Music & Dance
Spiritual Awakening
Spiritual Enlightenment
Spiritual Healing
Spirituality and Health
Spiritual Jokes
Spiritual Parenting
Vastu Shastra
Womens Spirituality
Yoga Positions
Site map 2
Site map


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum





Bookmark and Share
.

1566

A Wisdom Archive on 1566

1566

A selection of articles related to 1566

We recommend this article: 1566 - 1, and also this: 1566 - 2.
More material related to 1566 can be found here:
YouTube Videos
related to
1566
Index of Articles
related to
1566
1566, 1566, 1566 - Births, 1566 - Deaths, 1566 - Events

ARTICLES RELATED TO 1566

1566: Encyclopedia - 1566

1566 - Events. January 7 - Pius V becomes Pope Selim II succeeds Suleiman I as Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Religious rioting in the Netherlands signifies the beginning of the Eighty Years War in the Netherlands. The first bridge crossing the Neretva river at Mostar (in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) is completed by the Ottoman Empire. The white marble bridge is now known as Stari Most (or "Old Bridge"). Spanish Doubloon first made during the rein of Phillip II ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1566: Encyclopedia - 1566

1566: Encyclopedia - Vestments controversy
The vestments controversy arose in the English Reformation, ostensibly concerning vestments, but more fundamentally concerned with English Protestant identity, doctrine, and various church practices. First initiated by John Hooper's rejection of clerical vestments in the Church of England under Edward VI and revived under Elizabeth I, the controversy sheds much light on the development of English forms of Puritanism and Anglicanism, though both of these are problematica ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vestments controversy: Encyclopedia - Vestments controversy

1566: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism

In the summer and fall of 1566, conformists and nonconformists exchanged letters with continental reformers. The nonconformists looked to Geneva for support, but no real opportunity for change was coming, and the anti-vestments faction of the emerging Puritan element split into separatist and anti-separate wings. Public debate turned into more and less furtive acts of direct disobedience, with the exception of a brief recurrence of the original issue in communications between Horn and Bullinger, Jerome Zanc ...

See also:

Vestments controversy, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI, Vestments controversy - The Hooper–Ridley debate, Vestments controversy - The outcome of the Edwardian controversy, Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I, Vestments controversy - Reactions of protest in 1566, Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism, Vestments controversy - Sources, Vestments controversy - Primary, Vestments controversy - Secondary

Read more here: » Vestments controversy: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism

1566: Encyclopedia - 1560s

1530s 1540s 1550s - 1560s - 1570s 1580s 1590s 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 Events and Trends In 1564 William Shakespeare was born. In 1565 St. Augustine is founded by the Spanish admiral Pedro Menéndez de Avilés on August 28 in modern-day Florida. The city is the oldest continually occupied European settlement in the continental United States. In 1569 Poli ...

Read more here: » 1560s: Encyclopedia - 1560s

1566: Encyclopedia - 1501

1501 - Births. January 16 - Anthony Denny, confidant of Henry VIII of England (died 1559) January 17 - Leonhart Fuchs, German physician and botanist (died 1566) May 6 - Pope Marcellus II (died 1555) July 18 - Isabella of Burgundy, queen of Christian II of Denmark (died 1526) September 24 - Gerolamo Cardano, Italian mathematician, physician, astrologer and gambler (died 1567) November 25 - Yi Hwang, Korean Confucian scholar (died 1570) Girolamo da Carpi, ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1501: Encyclopedia - 1501

1566: Encyclopedia - 1510

1510 - Events. Conquest of Pskov by Grand Prince Vasili III of Muscovy. Formation of the Holy League to defend the Italian States. Peter Henlein builds the first pocketwatch. 1510 - Births. March 30 - Antonio de Cabezón, Spanish composer and organist (died 1566) April 2 - Ashikaga Yoshiharu, Japanese shogun (died 1550) July 22 - Alessandro de' Medici, Duke of Florence (died 1537) October 6 - Rowland Taylor, Englis ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1510: Encyclopedia - 1510

1566: Encyclopedia - Bartolomé de Las Casas

Bartolomé de Las Casas, O.P. (1484 – July 17, 1566) was a 16th century Spanish priest, and the first resident Bishop of Chiapas. As a settler in the New World, he was galvanized by witnessing the brutal torture and genocide of the Native Americans by the Spanish colonists. He became famous for his advocacy of the rights of Native Americans, whose cultures especially in the Caribbean he describes with care. His first hand interpretations of Taíno cultures as feudal have been criticized 500 years later by Marx-influenced historians ...

Read more here: » Bartolomé de Las Casas: Encyclopedia - Bartolomé de Las Casas

1566: Encyclopedia - August 23

August 23 is the 235th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (236th in leap years), with 130 days remaining. August 23 - Events. 1305 - William Wallace is executed. 1328 - Battle of Kassel: French troops stop an uprising of Flemish farmers 1328 - King Philip VI of France is crowned. 1541 - French explorer Jacques Cartier lands near Quebec City in his third voyage to Canada. 1566 - Calvinists are granted rights in the NetherlandsIncluding:

Read more here: » August 23: Encyclopedia - August 23

1566: Encyclopedia - Alessandro Piccinini

Alessandro Piccinini (1566-1638), Italian lutenist and composer. Born in Bologna, Piccinini was taught to play the lute by his father, Leonardo Maria Piccinini. He held appointments at the Este court in Ferrara and with Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini. Piccinini is best known for his two volumes of lute music: Intavolatura di Liuto et di Chitarrone, libro primo (Bologna, 1632) and "Intavolaturo di Liuto" (Bologna, 1639), the latter ...

Read more here: » Alessandro Piccinini: Encyclopedia - Alessandro Piccinini

1566: Encyclopedia - Alessandro Valignano

Alessandro Valignano, (Chinese: 范禮安 Fan Li'an) born in 1539 in Chieti, kingdom of Naples, was an Italian Jesuit missionary who helped supervise the introduction of Catholicism to the Far East, and especially to Japan. He joined the Society of Jesus in 1566 and was sent to the Far East in 1573. The nomination of an Italian to supervise Portugal-dominated Asia was at the time quite controversial, and his nationality, as well as his adaptationist and expansionist policies, led to many conflicts with mission personnel. Including:

Read more here: » Alessandro Valignano: Encyclopedia - Alessandro Valignano

1566: Encyclopedia - Akechi Mitsuhide

Akechi Mitsuhide (明智 光秀 Akechi Mitsuhide, October 19, 1528 – July 2, 1582), nicknamed Jubei, was a samurai who lived during the Sengoku period of Feudal Japan. He was a general under Daimyo Oda Nobunaga, although he later betrayed Nobunaga and caused him to commit seppuku. Born in Mino province (now Gifu prefecture) as a descendant of the shugo Toki clan, Mitsuhide began serving Nobunaga after Nobunaga's conquest of Mino province in 1566 and received Sakamoto (in Omi, 100,000 koku) in 1571. Although Nobu ...

Read more here: » Akechi Mitsuhide: Encyclopedia - Akechi Mitsuhide

1566: Encyclopedia - Nostradamus

Nostradamus, (December 14, 1503 – July 1, 1566) born Michel de Nostredame, is one of the world's most famous authors of prophecies. He is most famous for his book Les Propheties, which consists of rhymed quatrains (4‑line poems) grouped into sets of 100, called Centuries. Nostradamus - Biography. Born in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence in the south of France in December 1503, Michel de Nostredame was the son of a grain dealer who was also a prosperous home-grown notary. His family wa ...

Including:

Read more here: » Nostradamus: Encyclopedia - Nostradamus

1566: Encyclopedia - William Jones

William Jones is a common name, especially in Wales, and there have been several well-known individuals of this name, including: William Jones (judge) (1566–1640) William Jones (Great Britain statesman), Attorney General for England and Wales during the 17th century Sir William Jones (mathematician) (~1675–1749), father of Sir William Jones (philologist) William Jones (translator) (1726–1795) William Jones (ecclesiastic) (1726–1800) Sir William Jones (philologist) (1746

Read more here: » William Jones: Encyclopedia - William Jones

1566: Encyclopedia - William Camden

William Camden (May 2, 1551 – November 9, 1623) was an English antiquarian and historian. He wrote the first topographical survey of Britain and the first detailed historical account of the reign of Elizabeth I. William Camden - Early years. Camden was born in London. His father, Sampson Camden, was a member of the Company of Painter-Stainers. He attended Christ's Hospital and St Paul's School, and in 1566 entered Oxford (Magdalen College, Broadgates Hall and finally Christ Church). At Christ Church, he b ...

Including:

Read more here: » William Camden: Encyclopedia - William Camden

1566: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI

A Henrician exile, on his return to England in 1549 from the churches in Zurich that had been reformed by Zwingli and Bullinger in a highly iconoclastic fashion, John Hooper became a leading Protestant reformer under the patronage of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset and subsequently John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland (later the Earl of Warwick), Hooper's fortunes were unchanged, as Warwick favoured his reformist agenda. When Hooper was invited to give a series of Lenten sermons before the king in February 1550, he spoke against the ...

See also:

Vestments controversy, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI, Vestments controversy - The Hooper–Ridley debate, Vestments controversy - The outcome of the Edwardian controversy, Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I, Vestments controversy - Reactions of protest in 1566, Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism, Vestments controversy - Sources, Vestments controversy - Primary, Vestments controversy - Secondary

Read more here: » Vestments controversy: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI

1566: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles

In the controversy among the Marian exiles, principally those in Frankfurt, church order and liturgy were the main issues of contention, though vestments were related and debated in their own right. At several points, opponents of the English prayerbook in John Knox's group maligned it by reference to John Hooper's persecution under the Edwardian prayerbook and vestments regulations. On the other side, that of Richard Cox, the martyrdom of Hooper and others was blam ...

See also:

Vestments controversy, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI, Vestments controversy - The Hooper–Ridley debate, Vestments controversy - The outcome of the Edwardian controversy, Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I, Vestments controversy - Reactions of protest in 1566, Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism, Vestments controversy - Sources, Vestments controversy - Primary, Vestments controversy - Secondary

Read more here: » Vestments controversy: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles

1566: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I

With the accession of the new queen, many Marian exiles hoped for further reform upon their return to England and for the final removal of vestments from mandatory church use. The new queen, however, sought unity with her first parliament in 1559 and did not want to encourage nonconformity. Under her Act of Uniformity, backed by the Act of Supremacy, the 1552 Prayer Book was to be the model for ecclesiastical use but with an even more conservative stance on vestments that went back to the second year of Edward VI's reign. The alb, cope, and ...

See also:

Vestments controversy, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI, Vestments controversy - The Hooper–Ridley debate, Vestments controversy - The outcome of the Edwardian controversy, Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I, Vestments controversy - Reactions of protest in 1566, Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism, Vestments controversy - Sources, Vestments controversy - Primary, Vestments controversy - Secondary

Read more here: » Vestments controversy: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I

1566: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - Sources

Vestments controversy - Primary. Digital facsimiles of many of the primary sources listed in this entry can be accessed through Early English Books Online (EEBO). John Hooper "Ex libro D. Hoperi, Reg. Consiliarijs ab ipso. exhibiti. 3. octobr. 1550. contra vsum vestium quibis in sacro Ministerio vitur Ecclesia Anglicana. quem librum sic orditur". Text printed in C. Hopf, "Bishop Hooper's 'Notes' to the King's Council", Journal of Theological Studies 44 (January–April, 1943): 194–99. ...

See also:

Vestments controversy, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Edward VI, Vestments controversy - The Hooper–Ridley debate, Vestments controversy - The outcome of the Edwardian controversy, Vestments controversy - Vestments among the Marian exiles, Vestments controversy - The controversy during the reign of Elizabeth I, Vestments controversy - Reactions of protest in 1566, Vestments controversy - The emergence of separatism and Presbyterianism, Vestments controversy - Sources, Vestments controversy - Primary, Vestments controversy - Secondary

Read more here: » Vestments controversy: Encyclopedia II - Vestments controversy - Sources

1566: Encyclopedia II - Lithuanian Jews - Early history

As early as the eighth century Jews lived in parts of the Lithuanian territory. Beginning with that period they conducted the trade between South Russia, i.e., Lithuania, and the Baltic, especially with Danzig, Julin (Vineta or Wollin, in Pomerania), and other cities on the Vistula, Oder, and Elbe. The origin of the Lithuanian Jews has been the subject of much speculation. It is now almost certain that they were made up of two distinct streams of Jewish immigration. The older of the two entered Lithuania by way of South Russia, where ...

See also:

Lithuanian Jews, Lithuanian Jews - Etymology of term, Lithuanian Jews - Ethnicity religious customs and heritage, Lithuanian Jews - Early history, Lithuanian Jews - Increasing prosperity and the great charter 1320-1432, Lithuanian Jews - The Charter of 1388, Lithuanian Jews - The union with Poland, Lithuanian Jews - Expulsion of the Jews in 1495 and return in 1503, Lithuanian Jews - The Act of 1566, Lithuanian Jews - Effect of the Cossacks' Uprising in Lithuania, Lithuanian Jews - Jewish culture in Lithuania, Lithuanian Jews - Items from the Responsa, Lithuanian Jews - Identified with Vilna Gaon, Lithuanian Jews - Lithuanian Jews today, Lithuanian Jews - Famous Jews with Lithuanian parentage

Read more here: » Lithuanian Jews: Encyclopedia II - Lithuanian Jews - Early history

1566: Encyclopedia II - Lithuanian Jews - Increasing prosperity and the great charter 1320-1432

With the campaign of Gedimin and his subjection of Kiev and Volhynia (1320-21) the Jewish inhabitants of these territories were induced to spread throughout the northern provinces of the grand duchy. The probable importance of the southern Jews in the development of Lithuania is indicated by their numerical prominence in Volhynia in the thirteenth century. According to an annalist who describes the funeral of the grand duke Vladimir Vasilkovich in the city of Vladimir (Volhynia), "the Jews wept at his funeral as at the fall of Jerusalem, or ...

See also:

Lithuanian Jews, Lithuanian Jews - Etymology of term, Lithuanian Jews - Ethnicity religious customs and heritage, Lithuanian Jews - Early history, Lithuanian Jews - Increasing prosperity and the great charter 1320-1432, Lithuanian Jews - The Charter of 1388, Lithuanian Jews - The union with Poland, Lithuanian Jews - Expulsion of the Jews in 1495 and return in 1503, Lithuanian Jews - The Act of 1566, Lithuanian Jews - Effect of the Cossacks' Uprising in Lithuania, Lithuanian Jews - Jewish culture in Lithuania, Lithuanian Jews - Items from the Responsa, Lithuanian Jews - Identified with Vilna Gaon, Lithuanian Jews - Lithuanian Jews today, Lithuanian Jews - Famous Jews with Lithuanian parentage

Read more here: » Lithuanian Jews: Encyclopedia II - Lithuanian Jews - Increasing prosperity and the great charter 1320-1432

More material related to 1566 can be found here:
YouTube Videos
related to
1566
Index of Articles
related to
1566



Bookmark and Share
Search the Global Oneness web site
Global Oneness is a huge, really huge, web site. Almost whatever you are searching for within health, spirituality, personal development and inspirationals - you will find it here!
Google
 
 

Rate this archive!

Please rate this archive with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.

.



Bookmark and Share

  » Home » » Home »