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BROWNISTS

  • Brownists
  • Group of English Dissenters or early Separatists from the Church of England

    Mayflower in 1620 were Brownists, and the Pilgrims were known into the 20th century as the Brownist Emigration. The Brownists were eventually absorbed

    Brownists

    Brownists

  • English Dissenters
  • Protestant Separatists from the Church of England

    emigrated to the New World, especially to the Thirteen Colonies and Canada. Brownists founded the Plymouth Colony. The English Dissenters played a pivotal role

    English Dissenters

    English Dissenters

    English_Dissenters

  • Massachusetts
  • U.S. state

    New Age (1.00%) Other (1.00%) Massachusetts was founded and settled by Brownist Puritans in 1620, and soon after by other groups of Separatists/Dissenters

    Massachusetts

    Massachusetts

    Massachusetts

  • John Robinson (pastor)
  • English pastor (1576–1625)

    imprisonment, like other Brownists, and in the autumn of 1607, the Scrooby Congregation decided to emigrate to the Netherlands. A large Brownist congregation, the

    John Robinson (pastor)

    John Robinson (pastor)

    John_Robinson_(pastor)

  • Pilgrims (Plymouth Colony)
  • Early settlers in Massachusetts

    England. The Pilgrims' leadership came from religious congregations of Brownists or Separatists who had fled religious persecution in England for the tolerance

    Pilgrims (Plymouth Colony)

    Pilgrims (Plymouth Colony)

    Pilgrims_(Plymouth_Colony)

  • William Brewster (Mayflower passenger)
  • English colonist in North America (1560 – 1644)

    existing stature with those immigrating from the Netherlands, being a Brownist (or Puritan Separatist). William Brewster was born in 1566 or 1567, most

    William Brewster (Mayflower passenger)

    William Brewster (Mayflower passenger)

    William_Brewster_(Mayflower_passenger)

  • Robert Browne (Brownist)
  • English religious leader (d. 1633)

    Robert Browne (1550s – 1633) was the founder of the Brownists, a common designation for early Separatists from the Church of England before 1620. In later

    Robert Browne (Brownist)

    Robert_Browne_(Brownist)

  • Henry Jacob
  • English clergyman

    the first true congregational church in England. Associated with the Brownists, he asserted the autonomy of the church, and advocated for ecclesiastical

    Henry Jacob

    Henry_Jacob

  • List of Mayflower passengers
  • separatist Puritan congregation in Leiden, the Netherlands (also known as Brownists), who were seeking to establish a colony in the New World where they could

    List of Mayflower passengers

    List of Mayflower passengers

    List_of_Mayflower_passengers

  • Francis Johnson (Brownist)
  • English separatist, or Brownist, minister, pastor (1562 – 1618)

    December 1610. The 'Ainsworthian Brownists' as they were popularly termed, were excommunicated by the 'Franciscan Brownists.' Ainsworth began a lawsuit for

    Francis Johnson (Brownist)

    Francis_Johnson_(Brownist)

  • Henry Barrowe
  • English Separatist Puritan (c. 1550 – 1593)

    Barrowe) (c. 1550 – 6 April 1593) was an English Separatist Puritan, or Brownist, who was executed for his views. He led the London underground church from

    Henry Barrowe

    Henry Barrowe

    Henry_Barrowe

  • Plymouth Colony
  • English colonial venture in America (1620–1691)

    well as to English custom. Plymouth Colony was founded by a group of Brownists (a sect of English Protestant dissenters) who came to be known as the

    Plymouth Colony

    Plymouth Colony

    Plymouth_Colony

  • Puritans
  • Subclass of English Reformed Protestants

    considered it to be no Christian church at all. These groups, such as the Brownists, would split from the established church, and become known as Separatists

    Puritans

    Puritans

    Puritans

  • John Greenwood (divine)
  • English minister and divine (1556–1593)

    or Brownist, minister who was executed for his faith. He led the London underground church from 1587 to 1593 and wrote several works of Brownist apologetics

    John Greenwood (divine)

    John Greenwood (divine)

    John_Greenwood_(divine)

  • Henry Ainsworth
  • English Nonconformist clergyman and scholar (1571–1622)

    After associating with the Puritan party in the Church, he joined the Brownists, but submitted to the Church of England after being arrested in London

    Henry Ainsworth

    Henry_Ainsworth

  • Christopher Lawne
  • English merchant and Puritan (fl. 1590)

    returned to London. There he had published The prophane schisme of the Brownists or Separatists With the impietie, dissensions, lewd, and abhominable vices

    Christopher Lawne

    Christopher_Lawne

  • London underground church
  • Radical fringe group of Church of England

    London put together a team of 42 ministers and academics to visit the Brownists twice a week and engage in theological debate in order to win them back

    London underground church

    London_underground_church

  • Robert Harrison (Brownist)
  • English lay schoolmaster and religious leader

    became a religious leader as a Protestant Separatist, one of the original Brownists. Harrison matriculated as a pensioner of St John's College, Cambridge

    Robert Harrison (Brownist)

    Robert_Harrison_(Brownist)

  • Protestantism in the United States
  • The country's history is often traced back to the Pilgrim Fathers whose Brownist beliefs motivated their move from England to the New World. These English

    Protestantism in the United States

    Protestantism in the United States

    Protestantism_in_the_United_States

  • Congregationalism
  • Religious denomination

    concern. Short lifespans were typical of Separatist churches (also known as Brownist congregations), small congregations who met in secret and faced persecution

    Congregationalism

    Congregationalism

    Congregationalism

  • Richard Clyfton
  • English church minister (d. 1616)

    Church at Amsterdam, 1612. The book attacked is The prophane Schism of the Brownists or Separatists, with the impiety, dissensions, lewd and abominable vices

    Richard Clyfton

    Richard_Clyfton

  • Scrooby
  • Village in Nottinghamshire, England

    English Ambassador to the Netherlands, a hotbed for exiled Separatists and Brownists, for 12 years prior to taking up the role of bailiff and postmaster at

    Scrooby

    Scrooby

    Scrooby

  • Apostolic succession
  • Continuous succession from the apostles

    Presbyterians and non-separating Congregationalists excluding the Separatist Brownists, who had formerly been seen as being Puritans inside and outside Puritan

    Apostolic succession

    Apostolic succession

    Apostolic_succession

  • Familia Caritatis
  • Sixteenth-century religious sect

    impartial in their repudiation of all other churches and sects, including Brownists and Barrowists. Nicholis's message is said to have appealed to the well-educated

    Familia Caritatis

    Familia Caritatis

    Familia_Caritatis

  • Myles Standish
  • English military officer (1584–1656)

    another ship to be hired in England. This initial group included the mostly Brownist congregation. Myles and Rose Standish were aboard, along with the Bradfords

    Myles Standish

    Myles Standish

    Myles_Standish

  • Vlooienburg
  • timber traders arrived. The name Vlooienburg first appeared in 1609. The Brownists settled there as well. For the Jewish population the change came in 1614

    Vlooienburg

    Vlooienburg

    Vlooienburg

  • Tolethorpe Hall
  • Country house near Stamford, Lincolnshire

    Robert Browne (c. 1550-1633), born at Tolethorpe, became the leader of the Brownists, early advocates of a congregational form of organisation for the Church

    Tolethorpe Hall

    Tolethorpe Hall

    Tolethorpe_Hall

  • 17th-century denominations in England
  • Grindletonians Muggletonians Ranters Quakers Seekers Anglicanism Anglo-Catholicism Brownists Diggers The Caroline Divines Congregational church English Baptists English

    17th-century denominations in England

    17th-century_denominations_in_England

  • Thomas Cartwright (theologian)
  • English Puritan churchman (c. 1535 – 1603)

    impulsive. His views were distinctly Presbyterian, and he stoutly opposed the Brownists or Independents. He never conceived of a separation between church and

    Thomas Cartwright (theologian)

    Thomas Cartwright (theologian)

    Thomas_Cartwright_(theologian)

  • Stamford School
  • Public school in Lincolnshire, England

    Iwan Thomas, Olympic athlete Robert Browne, clergyman and founder of the Brownists Walter Douglas William Dugard, headmaster of Merchant Taylors' School

    Stamford School

    Stamford School

    Stamford_School

  • Conservative Congregational Christian Conference
  • Congregationalist denomination in the United States

    cooperation with similar congregations). As early as the 16th century, the Brownists advocated for independent congregations. New England ministers formalized

    Conservative Congregational Christian Conference

    Conservative_Congregational_Christian_Conference

  • Schism in Christianity
  • Type of religious schism

    Kingdom of Scotland August 1560 – Catholic Church Church of Scotland Brownist schism London, City of London, Kingdom of England March 1566 – Church of

    Schism in Christianity

    Schism_in_Christianity

  • Baleine, Nova Scotia
  • Community in Nova Scotia, Canada

    encouraged by Sir Robert Gordon of Lochinar. Ochiltree arrived at Baleine with Brownists and built Fort Rosemar. It was a military colony, that owed its origins

    Baleine, Nova Scotia

    Baleine,_Nova_Scotia

  • Middleborough, Massachusetts
  • Town in Massachusetts, United States

    and economic powerhouse. The English religious dissenters known as the Brownists developed their governing institutions in Middelburg before emigrating

    Middleborough, Massachusetts

    Middleborough, Massachusetts

    Middleborough,_Massachusetts

  • John Paget (Puritan minister)
  • English clergyman (1574–1638)

    one another & from all reformed churches, as expressely that some are Brownists, some Brownistically affected in particular opinions, as 1. in allowing

    John Paget (Puritan minister)

    John_Paget_(Puritan_minister)

  • An Apologeticall Narration
  • conciliatory tone accounts for the harsh judgements on the separatists and the Brownists. Despite the book deliberately seeking a moderate, indeed "apologeticall

    An Apologeticall Narration

    An Apologeticall Narration

    An_Apologeticall_Narration

  • Little Casterton
  • Village in Rutland, England

    Museum & Art Gallery. Robert Browne (1550s – 1633), the founder of the Brownists, was born at Tolethorpe Hall. A rector Thomas Nowell Twopeny was later

    Little Casterton

    Little Casterton

    Little_Casterton

  • Henry Nicholis
  • 16th-century German mystic

    impartial in their repudiation of all other churches and sects, including Brownists and Barrowists. Nicholis's principal disciple in England was Christopher

    Henry Nicholis

    Henry Nicholis

    Henry_Nicholis

  • History of the Puritans under Elizabeth I
  • Earliest Puritan history, 1558–1603

    lack of proper church discipline. Browne and his followers, known as the Brownists, were forced into exile in the Low Countries. There, they were encouraged

    History of the Puritans under Elizabeth I

    History of the Puritans under Elizabeth I

    History_of_the_Puritans_under_Elizabeth_I

  • Timeline of the English Reformation
  • a radical puritan movement known as the Brownists. A majority of those onboard the Mayflower were Brownists. They are considered an antecedent to the

    Timeline of the English Reformation

    Timeline_of_the_English_Reformation

  • Joseph Hall (bishop)
  • British bishop and writer (1574–1656)

    Censorious Epistle; and Hall published (1610) A Common Apology against the Brownists, a lengthy treatise answering Robinson paragraph by paragraph. It set

    Joseph Hall (bishop)

    Joseph Hall (bishop)

    Joseph_Hall_(bishop)

  • Timeline of the 17th century
  • defeats the Bohemian rebels in the Battle of White Mountain. 1620: The Brownist Pilgrims arrive in the Mayflower at Cape Cod. 1620–1621: Polish-Ottoman

    Timeline of the 17th century

    Timeline_of_the_17th_century

  • John Penry
  • Welsh protestant martyr (1563–1593)

    Returning to England in September 1592, he joined the separatist, or Brownist, congregation in London, in which he declined to take office, though after

    John Penry

    John_Penry

  • John Stubbs
  • English pamphleteer

    Cartwright, who married his sister Alice. Anne Stubbs, John's wife, was a Brownist. Mears, Natalie (2001). "Counsel, Public Debate, and Queenship: John Stubbs's

    John Stubbs

    John Stubbs

    John_Stubbs

  • Westminster Assembly
  • 1643–1653 English church reform council

    The congregationalist divines cannot be equated with separatists and Brownists, as they had accepted episcopal ordination and remained in the Church

    Westminster Assembly

    Westminster Assembly

    Westminster_Assembly

  • Scatarie Island
  • Island in Nova Scotia, Canada

    the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1632). Ochiltree arrived with 60 Brownists and built Fort Rosemar. It was a military colony, one that owed its origins

    Scatarie Island

    Scatarie_Island

  • John Bull (prophet)
  • English self-proclaimed prophet

    this present [...] sundrie sorts of Separatists and sectaries, as namely Brownists, Anabaptists, Arrians, Thraskists, Famalists, Sensualists, Antinomians

    John Bull (prophet)

    John Bull (prophet)

    John_Bull_(prophet)

  • Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Quebec
  • Municipality in Quebec, Canada

    islands in 1534. The first concerted settlement attempt was made by English Brownist (a group of English Dissenters or separatists) Francis Johnson in 1597

    Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Quebec

    Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Quebec

    Les_Îles-de-la-Madeleine,_Quebec

  • John Whitgift
  • Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583 to 1604

    movement in return for freedom. Whitgift took a strong line against the Brownist movement and their Underground Church in London led by Henry Barrow and

    John Whitgift

    John Whitgift

    John_Whitgift

  • History of Reformed Christianity
  • Pilgrims. Most of them were of a Calvinistic separatist group known as the Brownists. Other Calvinistic Puritans settled in the nearby Massachusetts Bay Colony

    History of Reformed Christianity

    History of Reformed Christianity

    History_of_Reformed_Christianity

  • Robert Browne
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    (1809–1895), English Anglican priest Robert Browne (Brownist) (1550–1633), founder of the Brownists Robert Charles Browne (born 1952), American serial

    Robert Browne

    Robert_Browne

  • Katherine Chidley
  • English Puritan activist and religious controversialist (fl. 1616–1653)

    none of the Independents, either in New England or Holland, neither the Brownists of Amsterdam, did ever give unto any women any publike Ecclesiastick power

    Katherine Chidley

    Katherine_Chidley

  • Thorpe Waterville
  • Village in Northamptonshire, England

    Additions, Northamptonshire p. 283: Robert Brown, founder of the sect of the Browniſts, [...] resided in a little thatched house in Thorpe Waterville which is

    Thorpe Waterville

    Thorpe Waterville

    Thorpe_Waterville

  • Achurch
  • Village in Northamptonshire, England

    separate civil parishes. Robert Browne who had previously founded the Brownists, a forerunner of Congregationalism, was rector here from 1591 to 1631

    Achurch

    Achurch

    Achurch

  • Miles Sandys (died 1601)
  • 16th-century English politician

    urging stricter provisions in legislation against recusants, including Brownists, as well as involvement in poor law measures. In his final Parliament

    Miles Sandys (died 1601)

    Miles_Sandys_(died_1601)

  • Henry Jessey
  • English scholar and minister

    church developed within the Particular Baptists: Led by Henry Jacob of the Brownists from Zealand, these Particular Baptists in 1633 started a new church under

    Henry Jessey

    Henry Jessey

    Henry_Jessey

  • Timeline of London
  • period. 1593 6 April: Henry Barrowe and John Greenwood, leaders of the Brownist London Underground Church, are hanged at Tyburn. 5 May: "Dutch church libel":

    Timeline of London

    Timeline_of_London

  • William Burton (priest)
  • English Anglican priest and writer

    took a Puritan line in rejecting ceremonies, but was firm against the Brownist separatists. He left Norwich after troubles which befell him about some

    William Burton (priest)

    William_Burton_(priest)

  • Thomas Herbert (seaman)
  • Welsh seaman and author

    the description of a Revd. Coachman which preached before a company of Brownists, London, 1641, 4to. Vox Secunda Populi. Or the Commons Gratitude to the

    Thomas Herbert (seaman)

    Thomas_Herbert_(seaman)

  • Pilgrim Tercentenary half dollar
  • US commemorative coin

    more than one piece in order to have a complete set. The Pilgrims were Brownist English Dissenters; they sought a version of the Christian religion without

    Pilgrim Tercentenary half dollar

    Pilgrim Tercentenary half dollar

    Pilgrim_Tercentenary_half_dollar

  • History of the Puritans under King James I
  • Puritan Protestant history 1603–1625

    Progress." Henry Jacob (1563–1624) a separatist Puritan associated with the Brownists and the congregationalist movement. He became a friend and associate of

    History of the Puritans under King James I

    History of the Puritans under King James I

    History_of_the_Puritans_under_King_James_I

  • Matthew Slade
  • and Joseph Justus Scaliger. Slade became one of the first elders of the Brownist congregation in Amsterdam, with Daniel Studley and George Knyviton. This

    Matthew Slade

    Matthew_Slade

  • Edwin Sandys (1561–1629)
  • English politician

    Nathaniel Rich of having republican sympathies and of trying to establish a 'Brownist Republic' in Virginia. This was an accusation not entirely without foundation

    Edwin Sandys (1561–1629)

    Edwin Sandys (1561–1629)

    Edwin_Sandys_(1561–1629)

  • Brian Sterling-Vete
  • English actor, stuntman and martial artist (born 1958)

    actually known for the 1st 200 years after settling Plymouth colony as the Brownist Emigration. It also how reveals how the core values of the United States

    Brian Sterling-Vete

    Brian Sterling-Vete

    Brian_Sterling-Vete

  • Wilbur G. Zeigler
  • identify the body as Marlowe's. Meanwhile, Richard Bame, a puritanical Brownist, has accused Marlowe of atheism. Convinced that Marlowe is still alive

    Wilbur G. Zeigler

    Wilbur_G._Zeigler

  • Robert Harrison
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Robert Harrison may refer to: Robert Harrison (Brownist) (died 1585), English Protestant separatist Robert Alexander Harrison (1833–1878), Ontario lawyer

    Robert Harrison

    Robert_Harrison

  • Samuel Chidley
  • Political activist (b. 1616)

    part of Gangraena: There is one Katherine Chidly an old Brownist, and her sonne a young Brownist, a pragmaticall fellow, who not content with spreading

    Samuel Chidley

    Samuel_Chidley

  • John Canne
  • answered in 1642 by John Ball, who styles Canne 'the leader of the English Brownists in Amsterdam.' Richard Baxter said: 'Till Mr. Ball wrote for the Liturgy

    John Canne

    John_Canne

  • 1580s in England
  • with two other priests at Tyburn. 1582 May–August – Robert Browne and his Brownist congregationalist companions are obliged to leave England and go to Middelburg

    1580s in England

    1580s_in_England

  • Thomas Bilson
  • Anglican bishop (1547–1616)

    of His Descent to Hades Or Hell for Our Deliverance (1604) against the Brownist Henry Jacob W. Richardson, 'Bilson, Thomas (1546/7–1616)', Oxford Dictionary

    Thomas Bilson

    Thomas Bilson

    Thomas_Bilson

  • John Row (minister, born 1598)
  • Scottish Presbyterian minister (1598?–1672)

    save him from such scandals. Colonel Lockhart was likewise infected with Brownist views, and proposed to start a congregation in Aberdeen. John Menzies and

    John Row (minister, born 1598)

    John_Row_(minister,_born_1598)

  • Willem Sewel
  • Dutch Quaker historian of English background (1653–1720)

    Amsterdam where he was born. His paternal grandfather, William Sewel, a Brownist of Kidderminster, emigrated from England to escape religious persecution

    Willem Sewel

    Willem_Sewel

  • William Crashaw
  • English cleric, academic, and poet

    Crosse, Feb. xiiij. 1607. Justified by the Authour, both against Papist and Brownist, to be the truth: Wherein this point is principally followed; namely, that

    William Crashaw

    William_Crashaw

  • Robert Parker (minister)
  • English Puritan clergyman and scholar

    Richard Clyfton, however, attacked Parker as being identified with the Brownist Christopher Lawne. In around 1611 Parker and Jacob moved to Amsterdam,

    Robert Parker (minister)

    Robert_Parker_(minister)

  • Francis Johnson
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Francis Johnson (architect) (1911–1995), English architect Francis Johnson (Brownist) (1562–1618), English Presbyterian separatist minister Francis Johnson

    Francis Johnson

    Francis_Johnson

  • Briget Paget
  • restrictive norms. Francis Johnson, an early rival of Paget as leader of a Brownist congregation in Amsterdam, faced a sustained campaign of disruption, instigated

    Briget Paget

    Briget_Paget

  • The Parson's Wedding
  • Play by Thomas Killigrew

    that is typical of the drama of the age. The minor character Crop is a Brownist who is given rough treatment; and the thoroughly-humiliated Parson is compared

    The Parson's Wedding

    The_Parson's_Wedding

  • Joseph Boyse
  • Presbyterian minister

    Hicks) in Lincoln's Inn Fields. For six months in 1682 he ministered to the Brownist church at Amsterdam, in the absence of the regular minister, but he did

    Joseph Boyse

    Joseph_Boyse

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Online names & meanings

  • Dearden
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Lancashire)

    Dearden

    English (Lancashire) : habitational name from a place near Edenfield named Dearden, from Old English dēor ‘beast’, ‘deer’ + denu ‘valley’.

  • Umran
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Umran

    Prosperity. Populousness.

  • Alexine
  • Girl/Female

    Latin Greek English

    Alexine

    Defender of man.

  • Fenton
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, British, Christian, English, Shakespearean

    Fenton

    Marshland Dweller; Marsh Settlement

  • Kaal
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Kaal

    Time

  • Pranavi
  • Girl/Female

    Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu

    Pranavi

    Goddess Parvati

  • PHUENG
  • Female

    Thai/Siamese

    PHUENG

    Thai name PHUENG means "bee."

  • Manvir
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Punjabi, Sikh

    Manvir

    Brave at Heart

  • Nahleejah
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Nahleejah

    Down to Earth; Cool

  • Mahisa
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Mahisa

    Goddess Durga

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  • Brownism
  • n.

    The views or teachings of Robert Brown of the Brownists.