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Tudor commonly relates to the Tudor period in English history, which refers to the period of time between 1485 and 1558/1603 when the Tudor dynasty held the English potty.

Tudor might besides refer to any of the as a consequence humans of that reigning personal:

King Henry VII of England King Henry VIII of England King Edward VI of England Queen Mary I of England Queen Elizabeth I of England

Arthur, Prince of Wales, eldest son of King Henry VII Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond, father of King Henry VII Jasper Tudor, 1st Duke of Bedford, uncle of King Henry VII Margaret Tudor, daughter of King Henry VII Mary Tudor, daughter of King Henry VII Owen Tudor, grandfather of King Henry VII

Tudor style refers to the style of architecture and decorative arts modelled on the original Tudor architecture produced in Engl& between 1485 and 1603.

The Tudor bonnet refers to a style of cap.

A Tudor rose combines the White Rose of York and the Red Rose of Lancaster.

A Tudor line of cars from either a Ford Company come far-famed in the globe of vintage classics (DML).

A family name Tudor, within a UK, originates from either a Welsh forename Tewdwr or Tudur. But, Tudor is as well the most common family name around Romania.

Tudor could likewise refer to any of the as a result humans: Anthony Tudor, British choreographer Corneliu Vadim Tudor, Romanian politician David Tudor, American pianist Edward Tudor-Pole, British singer Frank Tudor, Australian politician Igor Tudor, Croatian footballer Tasha Tudor, illustrator King Tewdrig of Morgannwg (Glamorgan)

Tudor will as well refer to the resulting place:

Tudor City, New York, USA

Act Against Jesuits and Seminarists (1585)
Mandating the death penalty for English born Jesuits.

The Act Against Recusants (1593)
The recusants were Englishmen who would not take the Anglican eucharist - at this time they were almost entirely Catholic. This Act was the cornerstone of the "Penal Laws" which were to ensure that English Catholics would be a smaller religious minority than virtually any other Protestant nation.

English Reformation Sources
A list of pivotal documents regarding the Tudors' religious policies.

Fox's Book of Martyrs
This book claimed to chronicle the suppression of English Protestants under the Catholic queen "Bloody Mary". It profoundly influenced the anti-Catholicism that became a defining mark British national identity.

N.D. versus O.E: Anonymity's moral ambiguity in Elizabethan Catholic controversy
From "Criticism". A study of how the use of anonymity shaped Elizabethan Catholic apologetics.

The Question of Dissimulation Among Elizabethan Catholics
Article by C.M.J.F. Swan in the 1957 Canadian Catholic Historical Association Report. Considers those Catholics who outwardly conformed, either by taking the Oath of Supremacy or by attending the government-mandated Protestant church services.

Suppression of Monasteries in England
A Catholic view of the suppression of the Monasteries by Henry VIII.


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