. Beza's Icones, contemporary portraits of reformers of religion and letters; being facsimile reproductions of the portraits in Beza's Icones (1580) and in Goulard's edition (1581). nd, The whole Form and Method ofAdministration in the Church of the Strangers^ -par-ticularly of the German Section^ published at Frankfortin 1555. -^^ ^^ lengthy historical preface whichfollows the dedication there occurs this interestingpassage : When I was called by the King [EdwardVI. of England], and when certain laws preventedmuch that was in use under the Papacy from beingpurged out as he himself greatly des


. Beza's Icones, contemporary portraits of reformers of religion and letters; being facsimile reproductions of the portraits in Beza's Icones (1580) and in Goulard's edition (1581). nd, The whole Form and Method ofAdministration in the Church of the Strangers^ -par-ticularly of the German Section^ published at Frankfortin 1555. -^^ ^^ lengthy historical preface whichfollows the dedication there occurs this interestingpassage : When I was called by the King [EdwardVI. of England], and when certain laws preventedmuch that was in use under the Papacy from beingpurged out as he himself greatly desired, he securedfor me when I was solicitous about foreign Churches,that exiles who were not strictly nor to the sameextent bound by these laws, should have Churchesof their own in which they should freely regulateall things according to primitive methods, withoutany regard to existing rites : so that the EnglishChurches might be incited to embrace Apostolicpurity, with joint consent of all estates of the this project the young King himself was chiefauthor and prime defender. 242 GROUP VIII A PRINCIPAL RENEWER OF RENASCENT CHRIS-TIANITY AMONG THE SPANIARDS JOHN DIAZ. JOHN DIAZ. John Diaz (loannes Diasius) IN the sixteenth century there were Spaniardswho became Protestants when abroad, who,on that account, only indirectly influenced theReformation movement among their country-men at home. One of these was JaymeEnzinas, better known by the Grascised form ofthe name, Dryander, an oak. The son of a citizenof Burgos, in Old Castile, this youth was sent, alongwith two brothers, to study at Louvain, a celebratedseat of learning in Belgium to which Spanish studentshad been in the habit of resorting. From Louvainhe removed, in 1541, to Paris, where he becamea confirmed and avowed Protestant. Then he wentto Antwerp, and from Antwerp to Rome, underorders from his father, who had regard to his sonsadvancement in the Church. When about to quitItaly for Germany, Jayme Enzinas fell i


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