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Перевод: recusant speek recusant


[прилагательное]
отказывающийся подчиняться законам; отказывающийся подчиняться власти;
[существительное]
бунтарь ; нонконформист


Тезаурус:

  1. M. D. Petre, The Ninth Lord Petre or Pioneers of Roman Catholic Emancipation , 1928; B. Ward, The Dawn of the Catholic Revival in England 1781-;1803 , 2 vols., 1909; E. Duffy, "Ecclesiastical Democracy Detected", Recusant History , vol. x, 1970.
  2. Dictionary of Welsh Biography , 1959; "Worcester Recusant" in Journal of the Worcestershire Catholic History Society , no. 47, June 1986.
  3. Thomas, his elder brother, was fined as a recusant in 1646, and little by little the Brydges' fortune dwindled.
  4. Unlike many recusant families the Talbots had managed to retain most of their landed estates and for centuries they were the most important landowners in the midlands.
  5. Among its treasures are the cradle used by Mary, Queen of Scots, for her son James; a quilt woven by her and her "Four Maries"; a secret staircase used by recusant priests and Jacobite refugees; and a collection of Jacobite glass including one with a portrait of Prince Charles Edward.
  6. Although hailed by the leaders of the Catholic revival as their patron, "the good Earl John" (as he was known by them) retained something of the recusant Catholic families' suspicion of "enthusiasm", religious fervour, and triumphalism.
  7. In 1628, when his colleague, the senior revenue auditor of the Upper Exchequer, was savagely attacked, expelled from the House, and committed to the Tower, Pye's defence of Buckingham was limited to assuring the Commons that it was the favourite's mother and not his wife who was a recusant Catholic.
  8. This bull did irreparable harm to the Catholic cause in England; coming too late to assist the Northern rising, which had already collapsed by the time it was issued, in the long term it equated Catholicism closely with treason and made the recusant community the object of deepening fear and suspicion.
  9. Skinner's notes to the final disc in the Christchurch recordings of the Byrd masses skate over the exact reasons for this change of pitch and, although I would agree that the brighter sound of trebles has the greater immediate impact than men's voices alone, it could be argued that if this Mass was ever used, it would most likely have been performed by solo voices or a small and musically skinned ensemble gathered to celebrate a recusant Roman service, probably without the participation of boys.
  10. , Epiphanius (1570-; c. 1634), metal engraver, sculptor, tomb-maker, and painter, was born in 1570, perhaps on the feast of the Epiphany (6 January), either the ninth or the fourteenth and youngest son of William Evesham, probably a Catholic recusant of Wellington, near Hereford, and his wife Jane, daughter of Alexander Howarth of Burghill.
  11. The largest of all the manuscript collections, the nearly 300 pieces of the so-called "Fitzwilliam Virginal Book" compiled by a Catholic recusant, Francis Tregian, probably between 1609 and 1619, gives a very fair cross-section.
  12. He was sent back to England in 1595 and by 1605 he had set up an organization of recusant Welsh gentry, Welsh secular priests, and Jesuits (centred in Gwent and extending up the marches).
  13. Carvajal was also very active in the bullion trade by that time, importing as much as 100,000 per annum during the early 1650s, and thus made himself so indispensable to the parliamentary side that, when he was denounced as a recusant in 1645, a number of City merchants petitioned Parliament to have the charge dropped, and the House of Lords soon put an end to the prosecution.

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