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'''John Whitgift''' (c. 1530–1604) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583, serving Queen Elizabeth I until her death, and crowning [[James I]]. He was buried in [[Croydon]] and set up a charitable foundation which still supports three schools in Croydon. | '''John Whitgift''' (c. 1530–1604) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583, serving Queen Elizabeth I until her death, and crowning [[James I]]. He was buried in [[Croydon]] and set up a charitable foundation which still supports three schools in Croydon. | ||
Stephen Bates, in his book <cite>A church at war: Anglicans and homosexuality</cite> comments "Archbishop John WHitgift, the | Stephen Bates, in his book <cite>A church at war: Anglicans and homosexuality</cite> comments "Archbishop John WHitgift, the man who crowned James I, took as his close companion Dr Andrew Perne, the ex-Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge".<ref>Stephen Bates, <cite>A church at war: Anglicans and homosexuality</cite>, p.78 (accessible via Google Books)</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references> | <references> | ||
Revision as of 22:19, 18 October 2011
John Whitgift (c. 1530–1604) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583, serving Queen Elizabeth I until her death, and crowning James I. He was buried in Croydon and set up a charitable foundation which still supports three schools in Croydon.
Stephen Bates, in his book A church at war: Anglicans and homosexuality comments "Archbishop John WHitgift, the man who crowned James I, took as his close companion Dr Andrew Perne, the ex-Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge".[1]
References
<references>
- ↑ Stephen Bates, A church at war: Anglicans and homosexuality, p.78 (accessible via Google Books)