recusant$552303$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το recusant$552303$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι recusant$552303$ - ορισμός

REFUSAL TO ATTEND MANDATED ANGLICAN SERVICES IN THE PERIOD FOLLOWING THE ENGLISH REFORMATION
Recusant; Recussant; Recusants; Recusants, English; English Recusants; Recusance; Persecution of Recusants
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  • [[William Shakespeare]] came from a family background of English Catholic recusants.

British Catholic History         
ACADEMIC JOURNAL
Recusant History; Biographical Studies, 1534-1829; Br Cathol Hist; Br. Cathol. Hist.; Brit. Cathol. Hist.; Brit Cathol Hist
British Catholic History is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Catholic Record Society. In its early years it was known as Biographical Studies of English Catholics, and then from 1959 to 2015 as Recusant History.
recusant         
n.
Dissenter, nonconformist.
recusant         
['r?kj?z(?)nt]
¦ noun a person who refuses to submit to authority or comply with a regulation.
?historical a person who refused to attend services of the Church of England.
¦ adjective of or denoting a recusant.
Derivatives
recusance noun
recusancy noun
Origin
C16: from L. recusant-, recusare (see recuse).

Βικιπαίδεια

Recusancy

Recusancy (from Latin: recusare, lit. 'to refuse') was the state of those who remained loyal to the Catholic Church and refused to attend Church of England services after the English Reformation.

The 1558 Recusancy Acts passed in the reign of Elizabeth I, and temporarily repealed in the Interregnum (1649–1660), remained on the statute books until 1888. They imposed punishments such as fines, property confiscation and imprisonment on recusants. The suspension under Oliver Cromwell was mainly intended to give relief to nonconforming Protestants rather than to Catholics, to whom some restrictions applied into the 1920s, through the Act of Settlement 1701, despite the 1828-1829 Catholic emancipation.

In some cases those adhering to Catholicism faced capital punishment, and some English and Welsh Catholics who were executed in the 16th and 17th centuries have been canonised by the Catholic Church as martyrs of the English Reformation.