CRISIS OF FAITH: An Interview with Father Jérôme Maurand

Jérôme Maurand

We meet with the troubled French cleric to talk about about his controversial voyage and its devastating aftermath RENAISSANCE WEEKLY: Father Maurand, you’ve recently returned from what many are calling an unprecedented diplomatic mission. How has this experience affected you? FATHER MAURAND: [staring into his wine cup, voice barely above a whisper]  Affected me? Mon … Read more

1549 Prayer Book: Cranmer’s Clever Religious Compromise

The 1549 Book of Common Prayer, compiled primarily by Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, replaced Latin Mass with English services but was so ambiguous about transubstantiation that both Catholics and Protestants could interpret it favourably – the communion prayer ‘may be unto us the body and blood’ deliberately avoided defining how this occurred.

The Tudor Crown: Henry VII’s Heraldic Legacy in Royal History

The Tudor Crown, first used heraldically by Henry VII and distinct from the actual St. Edward’s Crown used in coronations, featured alternating crosses pattée and strawberry leaves and became the standard heraldic crown for English sovereigns, remaining in use until George I replaced it with the more elaborate St. Edward’s Crown design in royal heraldry.