True. Supporters of Queen Elizabeth I were primarily Protestants, as she was the leader of the Church of England, which broke away from the Roman Catholic Church. Elizabeth's reign was marked by the establishment of Protestantism as the dominant faith in England, and her supporters generally aligned with Protestant beliefs and practices.
No, Mary Tudor (sometimes called 'Bloody Mary' for the number of protestants she had burned at the stake) was queen for 5 years before dying of cancer. Elizabeth then ascended the throne and ruled for 45 years. Sometimes people confuse Mary Tudor (ie Elizabeth's older sister) with Mary Queen of Scots (Elizabeth's cousin).
John Proctor 's wife Elizabeth is called to back up his testimony.
The time during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I was called the Elizabethan period.
About 400 years earlier there was a Queen Elizabeth
conway had called crittenden a liar
Elizabeth I had a lot of support from Protestants. During her sister Mary's reign Catholicism was the official religion and Protestantism was outlawed. One of Elizabeth's first acts as Queen was to outlaw Catholicism and make Protestantism the official religion.
Royalists.
Supporters of Royal power are called Tories.
Supporters of Royal power are called Tories.
The supporters of Napoleon are called Bonapartists.
Protestants are called protestants because they PROTESTED against the catholic church because Henry viii was catholic but he wanted a divorce but the catholics would not let him, so he started his own church( church of England) and they were called the protestants, also you can not be protestant and catholic.
Because they protested against the Catholic church.
Queen Mary Tudor (1516-1558), who burned Protestants like Latimer and Ridley, and nearly had her own sister Elizabeth executed.
they were known by the names "huguenots" or "protestants"
Supporters of the Constitution were called Federalists.
They are called Kopites
The French Protestants were called the "Huguenots"