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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 51. Chapters: Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, Pietro Carnesecchi, Marin Dr i, Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse, Shane O'Neill, Gomez Pereira, Jiajing Emperor, Richard Rich, 1st Baron Rich, Juan Bautista de Toledo, Anne de Montmorency, Steven van Herwijck, Guido de Bres, Wilhelm von Grumbach, Marie of Brandenburg-Kulmbach, Thomas White, Cristobal de Onate, Pedro de la Gasca, Myeongjong of Joseon, Anthony Browne, Francis Robortello, Alonso de Reinoso, Sampieru Corsu, Jacobus Vaet, Cormac na Haoine MacCarthy Reagh, 10th Prince of Carbery, Nur ibn Mujahid, Paul Best, Elizabeth Leyburne, Nicholas Wotton, Moses Hamon, Michael Stifel, Pier Francesco Foschi, Florimond II Robertet, seigneur de Fresnes, John Cheney, Claude de l'Aubespine, baron de Chateauneuf, Lawrence Sheriff, Erasmus Oswald Schreckenfuchs, Shahghali of Kazan, Yan Song, Estacio de Sa, Juan Fernandez, Nicolaus Mameranus, Salvator of Horta, Sebastian Krelj, Cornelius van Cleve, Domenico Riccio, Johann Oldendorp, Jan Krzysztof Tarnowski, Girolamo Priuli, Peter Erd dy, Bernardo I of Kongo, Jacques Bourdin, Ligier Richier, Thomas Beccon, Robert Beaumont, Dirck Jacobsz., Jean du Thiers, Meir Ashkenazi, Takeda Yoshinobu, Akagawa Motoyasu, Pier Francesco d'Jacopo di Domenico Toschi, Enea Vico, Bartolomeo Trosylho, Jakob Seisenegger, Ali ibn Abd-al-Malik al-Hindi, Kunz Lochner. Excerpt: Philip I of Hesse, (13 November 1504 Marburg - 31 March 1567 Kassel), nicknamed der Grossmutige (the "magnanimous") was a leading champion of the Reformation and one of the most important German rulers of the Reformation. He was the son of Landgrave William II of Hesse and his second wife Anna of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. His father died when Philip was five-years-old, and in 1514 his mother, after a series of struggles with the estates of Hesse, succeeded in becoming regent for him. The controversies still co..