William Tyndale - meaning and definition. What is William Tyndale
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What (who) is William Tyndale - definition


William Tyndale         
William Tyndale (também chamado de Tindall ou Tyndall; Gloucestershire, Inglaterra, c. 1484 - perto de Bruxelas, Dezessete Províncias, 6 de outubro de 1536) Foi um estudioso Inglês, que se tornou uma figura de liderança na Reforma protestante nos anos que antecederam sua execução.
William Halsey         
|nascimento_local = Elizabeth, Nova Jérsei,Estados Unidos
William Allen         
|nascimento_local = Rossall, Fleetwood, Lancashire, Inglaterra
Examples of use of William Tyndale
1. After national service and a spell as an industrial chemist, he became a teacher, experiencing the William Tyndale affair first hand.
2. He founded Tyndale House Publishers in 1'62, naming the company after the 16th–century Christian reformer William Tyndale, who was burned at the stake for translating the Bible into English.
3. Three years later, he moved to London and worked first at the John Milton primary school, Battersea, and then at the William Tyndale school, in Islington, then a hotbed of educational radicalism.
4. The school was founded in 1480 and has produced a string of illustrious alumni including Protestant reformer William Tyndale, who made the first English translation of the Bible, and the Catholic martyr Sir Thomas More.
5. Article continues Lady Plowden‘s inquiry in 1'67, which heralded an era of progressive child–centred teaching, had a huge impact but within about 10 years was being blamed by rightwing critics for sliding standards and debacles such as the William Tyndale affair, where a north London school descended in chaos as teachers clashed over how children should be taught.