Excerpt from The Apology for the Church of England, Vol. 3: And a Treatise of the Holy Scriptures
The first edition appeared toward the close of the year 1562, probably just before the meeting of the Convocation in January 1563, (then reckoned 1562 and was almost immediately followed by an English translation, published by the direction of Archbishop Parker, if not made by him. Both were sedulously circulated, at home and abroad, and in a very short space of time, foreign editions of the original, and several translations into other languages, had made the work extensively known upon the continent.
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John Jewel was an English bishop of Salisbury. He studied at Oxford, and in 1546 openly professed the tenets of the Reformers. Having obtained the living of Sunningwell, Berks, he distinguished himself by his zeal and assiduity as a parish priest, but at the accession of Queen Mary, to avoid persecution as a heretic, he escaped to the Continent and became vice-master of a college at Strasbourg.
... Show moreOn the death of Mary he returned to England, and was received with great favour by Queen Elizabeth, who in 1560 appointed him to the Bishopric of Salisbury. He wrote several works against popery; the principal 'An apology for the Church of England', was translated into every European language, and had more effect, it was said, in promoting the Reformation than any other book ever published. Jewell died in 1571.