Thomas Cranmer was Archbishop of Canterbury under Henry VIII and Edward VI, and briefly under Mary I, and was seen as a leader of the English Reformation. He was responsible for the Book of Common Prayer in 1549 and supported many reformers from England and abroad. Cranmer was arrested on the orders of Mary I for heresy, and initially recanted before dismissing his recantation and being burned alive in 1556.
Name: Thomas Cranmer
Title/s: Archbishop of Canterbury
Birth: 2 July 1489 in Aslockton, Nottinghamshire, England
Death: 21 March 1556 in Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Buried: Martyr’s Memorial, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Spouse: None (unofficially, Margarete Hetzel 1511-1576)
Children: Margaret Cranmer 1536-1568 / Thomas Cranmer 1538-1598
Parents: Thomas Cranmer 1467-1501 & Agnes Hatfield 1469-1556
Siblings: Agnes Andrews 1491-1556
Noble Connections: Cranmer was patronised by Anne Boleyn, Queen to Henry VIII. He was close to both Henry VIII and Edward VI and was instrumental in allowing Jane Grey to take the throne in 1553.
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