Other Definitions
recusancy (dict)

Recusancy

  Recusant 
From Elizabeth I to George III laws in force in England required regular (annual?) attendance at services of the established Church of England. Conviction of failure to do so could lead to fines and imprisonment. The laws were not always enforced, but they were always a threat against Catholics. Some of those convicted of recusancy were non-Catholic, but the term is in general use of the survival of a Catholic resistance to Protestantism in England. Protestants who refused to participate in the Church of England -- Puritans, Presbyterians, Baptists, Quakers, and the later Methodists -- are more typically referred to as Nonconformists, that is those refusing to conform with the practices and beliefs of the Church of England. There is a move among Catholics in England formerly known as sedevacantists to wish to be known as recusants.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
richard smalley
robert curl
roman republic
rickenbacker
romeo and juliet
rube goldberg
robert stickgold
religion and mythology
red
retention
ragnarok
rosencrantz & guildenstern are dead
rc4
ringo starr
rn (newsreader)
rolf ekus
robert menzies
renaissance music
richard hooker (theologian)
rhine
rhein
random access memory
rungholt
ralph merkle
richard kimble
rice's theorem
regular grammar
radiation
rodolphus agricola
rexx
rutherford b. hayes
ruth gordon
richard dawkins
refactoring
rape
relational database
rule of st benedict
rheumatoid arthritis
anastasius i (emperor)
anastasius ii (emperor)
roman missal
roger bacon
refractive index
ran (goddess)