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Page "Lord Chief Justice of Ireland" ¶ 54
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1559 and John
However, when John Knox returned to Scotland in 1559, he continued to use the Form of Prayer he had created for the English exiles in Geneva, and in 1564, this supplanted the Book of Common Prayer under the title of the Book of Common Order.
Both the 16th Earl and the Countess of Oxford had established court connections: John accompanying Princess Elizabeth from house arrest at Hatfield to the throne, and Margery being appointed a Maid of Honor in 1559.
In 1559 John Knox returned from ministering in Geneva to lead the Calvinism | Calvinist reformation in Scotland
* 1559John Knox returns from exile to Scotland to become the leader of the beginning Scottish Reformation.
* May 29 – John Penry, Welsh Protestant martyr ( b. 1559 )
** John Overall, English bishop ( b. 1559 )
" He was also a history enthusiast, and in 1559 suggested to the tailor John Stow to become a chronicler ( as Stow recalled in 1604 ).
The Scottish Reformation also played a big role in the town with the sacking of the Houses of the Greyfriars and Blackfriars, after a sermon given by John Knox in St John's Kirk in 1559.
She was buried at the Carthusian Priory of St John in Perth ( demolished during the Reformation, 1559 ).
* John Jewel, Bishop of Salisbury ( 1559 to 1571 )
Other confessions had acquired popular, if not legal, legitimacy in the intervening decades and by 1555, the reforms proposed by Luther were no longer the only possibilities of religious expression: Anabaptists, such as the Frisian Menno Simons ( 1492 – 1559 ) and his followers ; the followers of John Calvin, who were particularly strong in the southwest and the northwest ; and the followers of Huldrych Zwingli were excluded from considerations and protections under the Peace of Augsburg.
* John Williams, 1st Baron Williams of Thame ( 1500 – 1559 ), Lord Chamberlain
In 1559, John Knox returned from ministering in Geneva to lead the Reformation in Scotland.
In England Frisius's method was included in the growing number of books on surveying which appeared from the middle of the century onwards, including William Cunningham's Cosmographical Glasse ( 1559 ), Valentine Leigh's Treatise of Measuring All Kinds of Lands ( 1562 ), William Bourne's Rules of Navigation ( 1571 ), Thomas Digges's Geometrical Practise named Pantometria ( 1571 ), and John Norden's Surveyor's Dialogue ( 1607 ).
** John Spenser, editor and translator ( born 1559 )
After John was beheaded, the Crown owned the estate until it was acquired in 1559 by Sir Arthur Champernowne, Vice-Admiral of the West under Elizabeth I.
In 1559 John became an affeeror, an officer responsible for assessing fines for offenses carrying penalties not explicitly defined by existing statutes.
By 1555, the reforms proposed by Luther were no longer the only possibilities of religious expression: Anabaptists, such as the Frisian Menno Simons ( 1492 – 1559 ) and his followers, the followers of John Calvin, who were particularly strong in the southwest and the northwest, or those followers of Huldrych Zwingli, were excluded from considerations and protections under the Peace of Augsburg.
It was founded in 1559 by John Calvin, as a theological seminary and law school.
* Isabella Jagiellon ( 18 January 1519 – 15 September 1559 ), wife and widow of King John I of Hungary.
The title page from the 1559 edition of John Calvin's Institutio Christianae Religionis
* John Hall ( Scotland ) ( c. 1559 – 1627 ), Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland
In 1559 the executors of Sir John Port's will purchased from the Thacker family, for £ 37. 10s (£ 37. 50 ), the land which had once housed a twelfth-century Augustinian Priory, and the accompanying buildings which had survived Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries and subsequent upheavals, namely, the Guest Chamber and Prior's Lodging ( which as the Old Priory currently houses the School Library and Common Room ), Overton's Tower ( now part of School House ), the Tithe Barn, and the Arch, which is all that now remains of the priory's original gatehouse and which helped inspire the School's motto: porta vacat culpa.
* John Spenser or Spencer ( 1559 – 1614 ), one of the translators of the authorized version ( 1611 ) of the Bible and president of Corpus Christi College, Oxford

John and Plunket
* 1562 John Plunket, by a new patent
* John Span Plunket, 3rd Baron Plunket ( 1793 – 1871 )
Plunket was married to Catherine MacCausland, daughter of John MacCausland ( Irish parliamentarian ) of Strabane and Elizabeth Span, daughter of Rev.
Born in Dublin, he was the eldest son of John Plunket, 3rd Baron Plunket and Charlotte Bushe.
Plunket was the third son of John Plunket, 3rd Baron Plunket, second son of William Plunket, 1st Baron Plunket, Lord Chancellor of Ireland.
Katherine Frances Plunket, daughter of John Plunket, 3rd Baron Plunket.

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