|
Перевод: laud
[существительное] хвала ; часы перед обедней; [глагол] хвалить; превозносить; прославлять; славить
Тезаурус:
- Then, "without acquainting any of his friends, fearing that they might be a hindrance to this determination", he was ordained Deacon by Bishop Laud.
- Charles I and his new Archbishop, Laud, were as anxious to reform ecclesiastical society as the growing numbers of Puritans, but their remedies were diametrically opposed.
- The Air Staff, hardly surprisingly, began to laud the TSR 2 as ideal for East of Suez operations, using island bases instead of expensive aircraft carriers like CVA 01.
- Later research shows this story to have been unlikely: the Court was not at Wilton at the time and the Earl of Pembroke was not on speaking terms with Laud.
- To many members of the Church of England, which for fifty years had been strongly influenced by Calvinism, Laud seemed to be introducing innovations, the most offensive of which was the doctrine that bishops derived their authority from God.
- Laud, in introducing ceremonial and surplices and in removing Communion tables from the body of the church to the chancel, claimed to be restoring the practices of the early Church.
- Walton describes a dramatic scene at Wilton, the seat of the head of the Herbert family, the Earl of Pembroke, when the King and court were there: the Earl offered George the presentation to the living of Bemerton nearby; his expressions of unworthiness to undertake a cure of souls were peremptorily overruled as sinful by Bishop Laud; a tailor was summoned to make his canonical clothes, and he was ordained priest and inducted as Vicar of Bemerton next day.
- The Scots rebelled and Charles I had to raise more money for an army to quell the uprising and for funds he had to resort to Parliament who demanded the removal of both Archbishop Laud and the Earl of Stafford.
- From 1629 to 1640, Charles I tried to rule without Parliament and his chief advisers were the Earl of Stafford and Archbishop Laud, who annoyed the Puritans in Parliament because he favoured outward ceremonial in religious observance.
- The King's religious policies, strictly applied by Archbishop Laud, gave offence to the Puritan merchants and artisans.
- But an awareness of what is involved in the purchase deed (called a conveyance where laud is unregistered, and a "transfer" if it is registered) can be very helpful.
- The point of those brief excursions down memory lane is not to laud Mr Healey's public spending cuts or to justify war-war rather than jaw-jaw.
- The lazy undergraduate who cannot be persuaded to read Trevor-Roper's magisterial life of Archbishop Laud might fruitfully be propelled in the direction of the 20-page retrospect reproduced here.
|
|
|