About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Myles Coverdale, Edmund Bonner, William Honnyng, Catherine Carey, Francois de Coligny d'Andelot, Philip II, Metropolitan of Moscow, Antonio Ferreira, Gilbert Bourne, John York, Janet Beaton, Aben Humeya, Miko aj Rej, Wolfgang, Count Palatine of Zweibrucken, Gracia Mendes Nasi, Louis, Prince of Conde, John of Avila, Hoste da Reggio, Ogasawara Ujioki, Otte Krumpen, Francis Babington, Mahinthrathirat, Richard Tracy, Maria Temryukovna, Richard Brooke, Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli, Juan de Guzman, Victorinus Strigel, William Tresham, James Somerville, 6th Lord Somerville, Vladimir of Staritsa, Florimond III Robertet d'Alluye, Bernardo Tasso, Yurii Chodkiewicz, Vincenza Armani, Dirk Willems, Daniel Rantzau, George Dacre, 5th Baron Dacre, Sixtus of Siena, Giacomo Nacchiante, John Man, Celio Secondo Curione, Ivan Lenkovi, Vincenzo Cartari, Georg Pictorius, Antonio Gardano, Irobe Katsunaga, Paul Eber, Pedro del Castillo, Kempe Gowda I, Miko aj Sieniawski, Hermann van Flekwyk, Ludovica Torelli, Brita Olofsdotter, Vidus Vidius, Diego de Losada, Cristoforo Rosa, Agostino Agostini, Joachim Westphal, Niccolo Massa, Margaret a Barrow, Hans von Rohr. Excerpt: Edmund Bonner (also Boner; c. 1500 - 5 September 1569), Bishop of London, was an English bishop. Initially an instrumental figure in the schism of Henry VIII from Rome, he was antagonized by the Protestant reforms introduced by Somerset and reconciled himself to Roman Catholicism. He became notorious as Bloody Bonner for his role in the persecution of heretics under the Catholic government of Mary I of England, and ended his life as a prisoner under Queen Elizabeth. He was the son of Elizabeth Frodsham, who was married to Edmund Bonner, a sawyer of Hanley in Worcestershire. John Strype (Eccles. Mem. III. i.17 2-173) printed an account, with many circumsta...