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Thomas Cranmer

Thomas Cranmer (July 2, 1489–March 21, 1556) was an English Anglican preacher, theologian, and Archbishop of Canterbury, a pivotal figure in the English Reformation who shaped the Church of England’s doctrine and liturgy. Born in Aslockton, Nottinghamshire, to Thomas Cranmer, a modest landowner, and Agnes Hatfield, he was the second of three sons in a gentry family. Educated at Jesus College, Cambridge, he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1511 and a Master of Arts in 1515, becoming a fellow and studying divinity until a brief marriage to Joan (d. 1516) cost him his fellowship. Reinstated after her death in childbirth, he was ordained around 1520 and earned a Doctor of Divinity by 1526, gaining notice as a scholar. Cranmer’s preaching career transformed England’s religious landscape after he entered King Henry VIII’s service in 1529, tasked with securing papal approval for Henry’s annulment from Catherine of Aragon. His 1532 treatise justifying the king’s supremacy over the church led to his appointment as Archbishop of Canterbury in 1533, despite initial reluctance—he hid in Ford Palace to avoid the role. He preached and legislated the break with Rome, annulling Henry’s marriage, crowning Anne Boleyn, and crafting the Ten Articles (1536) and Book of Common Prayer (1549, 1552), embedding Protestant theology into English worship with phrases like “ashes to ashes.” Under Edward VI, he advanced Reformation ideals, but Mary I’s Catholic restoration in 1553 saw him tried for treason and heresy. After recanting under pressure, he recanted his recantations, famously thrusting his writing hand into the flames as he was burned at the stake in Oxford in 1556, aged 66. Married twice—Joan, then Margaret Regius in 1532—he had three children with Margaret. Cranmer’s legacy as a preacher of reform endures in Anglican liturgy and his martyrdom’s enduring symbol of faith.