释义 |
Henrician, a. and n. Eccl. Hist.|hɛnˈrɪʃ(ɪ)an| [ad. med.L. Henrīciān-us, f. Henrīcus Henry.] A. adj. 1. Pertaining to Henry VIII of England or the ecclesiastical measures of his reign.
1893R. W. Dixon Hist. Ch. Eng. xv. III. 39 The chief articles of the Henrician settlement of religion. 2. Of or pertaining to the Henricians (B. 1).
1894Dublin Rev. Apr. 317 Many of the citizens had embraced the Henrician heresy. B. n. 1. One of the followers (in Switzerland and Southern France) of Henry of Lausanne, a religious and moral reformer of the 12th century.
1579Fulke Heskins' Parl. 115 Petrobrusians, and Henricians, that denied the body of Christe to be consecrated, and giuen by the priestes, as it was by Christe him selfe. 1889S. J. Eales St. Bernard I. 61 The zeal of Bernard..was exercised chiefly against the heresy of the Henricians. 2. A supporter of the opinion and practice of the Emperor Henry IV of Germany, in opposition to Pope Gregory VII.
1874J. H. Blunt Dict. Sects (1886) 183/2 note. 3. A supporter of the ecclesiastical policy of Henry VIII. Hence Henricianism |hɛnˈrɪʃ(ɪ)ənɪz(ə)m|, the ecclesiastical policy of Henry VIII.
1828E. Nares Mem. Ld. Burghley I. iv. 53 The king's supremacy, which, like a true Henrician, he was very careful to maintain. 1900F. W. Maitland Coll. Papers (1911) III. 159 Calvin had spoken ill of Henricianism. 1903― in Camb. Mod. Hist. II. 555 A Reformed religion, or some northern version of Henricanism [sic]. 1946A. L. Rowse Use Hist. 180 Yet we cannot be grateful enough to the (sometimes unattractive) Henricians and Elizabethans who pushed us through it. |