Ten Articles (1536)

E650199

Ten Articles (1536) was an early doctrinal statement of the English Reformation that sought a compromise between traditional Catholic teachings and emerging Protestant ideas under Henry VIII.

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Observed surface forms (1)

Surface form Occurrences
Ten Articles of 1536 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Reformation-era text
doctrinal statement
religious document
affirmsDoctrineOf Apostles' Creed NERFINISHED
Athanasian Creed NERFINISHED
Baptism
Eucharist NERFINISHED
Incarnation of Christ
Justification by faith and charity
Nicene Creed NERFINISHED
Penance NERFINISHED
Trinity NERFINISHED
aimedTo seek compromise between Catholic and Protestant doctrines
appliesTo Church of England NERFINISHED
associatedWith Thomas Cranmer NERFINISHED
Thomas Cromwell NERFINISHED
authorizedBy Henry VIII of England NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Kingdom of England
date 1536
describedAs first official doctrinal statement of the Church of England
doctrineType via media between Catholicism and emerging Protestantism
followedBy Bishops' Book (1537) NERFINISHED
Six Articles (1539) NERFINISHED
historicalPeriod Tudor period NERFINISHED
historicalSignificance marked an intermediate stage between Roman Catholicism and later Anglican doctrine
influencedBy Lutheran theology
traditional Catholic theology
issuedBy Henry VIII of England NERFINISHED
language English
Latin
legalStatus royally authorized but not a parliamentary statute
modifiesDoctrineOf indulgences
saintly intercession
numberOfArticles 10
partOf English Reformation NERFINISHED
placeOfIssue England NERFINISHED
rejectsDoctrineOf purgatory as defined in late medieval Catholicism
religiousTradition Anglicanism
Christianity
retainsPracticeOf ceremonies and rites of the medieval church with modifications
use of images with restrictions
veneration of saints with limitations
topic Christian doctrine
church practices
justification
sacraments

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Bishops’ Book relatedWork Ten Articles (1536)
Anglican confessional documents includes Ten Articles (1536)
this entity surface form: Ten Articles of 1536