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  1. 22 de dez. de 2023 · 1532, and Cromwell is moving against the clergy. So Master Secretary Stephen Gardiner “feels obliged to lead” the loyal opposition. The king is furious with him. He goes in “like a mastiff being led towards a bear.” Afterwards, he looks weak. “Sweat trickles down his face.” Cromwell advises the king to keep him in his job.

  2. Gardiner, STEPHEN, Bishop of Winchester; b. at Bury St. Edmund’s between 1483 and 1490; d. at Whitehall, London, November 12, 1555. His father is believed to have been John Gardiner, a clothworker, the story attributing his parentage to Lionel Woodville being a later invention. He was educated at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and became doctor of ...

  3. 1 de jun. de 2019 · DOI: 10.1007/s13324-019-00325-7 Corpus ID: 195360501; Potential theory and approximation: highlights from the scientific work of Stephen Gardiner @article{Ghergu2019PotentialTA, title={Potential theory and approximation: highlights from the scientific work of Stephen Gardiner}, author={Marius Ghergu and Myrto Manolaki and Ivan Netuka and Hermann Render}, journal={Analysis and Mathematical ...

  4. 12 de set. de 2013 · The Letters of Stephen Gardiner. Stephen Gardner (c.1483-1555) was secretary to Cardinal Wolsey during the reign of King Henry VIII and later Lord Chancellor under Queen Mary I. In this first role, he was responsible for advancing the cause of Henry's divorce with Pope Clement VII, and remained a Roman Catholic throughout the reformations led ...

  5. Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester from 1531 to 1555, was not only a central figure in the English Reformation but also a man surrounded by contradictions. He led the early resistance to Henry VIII’s break with Rome and was involved in Mary’s burnings of Protestants, and yet he also wrote the most eloquent defence of Henry’s position ...

  6. Stephen M Gardiner Not to be moved by what one values – what one believes good, nice, right, beautiful, and so on – bespeaks a malady of the spirit. Michael Stocker.

  7. Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester 1531-55, is familiar as "Wily Winchester," the villain of Foxe's "Actes and Monuments". Foxe, however, was building on a long evangelical tradition which cast Gardiner as Antichrist's chief agent in England. This reputation was grounded less on Gardiner's own conduct than on the reformers' need for a scapegoat to explain the failure of their early hopes ...