There is some discussion as to whether it was written by a Committee from the Canterbury Convocation, which I think is most likely.
Or it was written by Cramner with the help of a Committee from that Synod!
The Prayer Book Rebellion took place in 1549 during the reign of Edward VI in England. It was a popular uprising against the imposition of the Book of Common Prayer, which sought to enforce Protestant religious practices.
The Book of Common Prayer was written during the reign of King Edward VI in England. It was first introduced in 1549 and has since undergone various revisions.
Shakespeare was clearly familiar with the Book of Common Prayer (1549 and 1552) and includes allusions to it in many of his plays. A monograph on this subject by Margot Thompson, The Prayer Book, Shakespeare, and the English Language (ISBN 0 9535668 2 X) is available from the UK Prayer Book Society.
Nicholas Pocock has written: 'Troubles connected with The Prayer Book of 1549' -- subject(s): Church of England, Reformation 'Troubles connected with the prayer book 1549' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Reformation, Church of England
The NICENE Creed was written in 325 and revised in 381 and was in Latin and Greek. The first English translation, I believe, was under Edward VI in the Book of Prayer in the year 1549. In the Catholic Church, where Mass was always in Latin, the Creed was first translated for the people in English in 1971 and revised a couple of times (changing I believe to we believe), and the current version in 2011 back to "I believe".
Edward VI in 1549 and 1552 and Elizabeth I in 1559.
In the 1549/1759
In the modern version it is now DCXLIX but the ancient Romans wrote it out quite differently
The first bench was invented in 1549 by Sir Charles Percy Ricardo Bench, and was named after its inventor. The bench has since become an integral part of our lives.
1549 is MDXLIX
In todays modern notation of Roman numerals it is: MDXLIX but the Romans themselves probably wrote it out differently
1549 to the nearest hundred is 1500.