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could. And thus endured this constant witness and faithful servant of God the extremity of the fire, being therein cruelly handled, by reason that to his burning little wood was brought; so that for lack of faggots, there being not sufficient to burn him, they were fain to strike him down into the fire; where he lying along (which was doleful to behold) upon the ground, his nether part was consumed in the fire, whilst his upper part was clean without the fire, his tongue in all men's sight still moving in his mouth.
89:, but arriving at the cathedral he had not the resolve to do so. This time, however, he entered the church of Saint Margaret armed with a wood-knife (a large cleaver used by hunters for disjointing carcasses). He struck the priest administering the sacrament on the head and again on his arm, wounding him grievously and causing his blood to spill into the chalice containing the consecrated hosts. A great tumult ensued and Flower was seized and taken to
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And thus fire was set unto him, who burning therein, cried with a loud voice, "O the Son of God, have mercy upon me! O the Son of God, receive my soul!" three times; and so his speech being taken from him, he spake no more, lifting up, notwithstanding, his stump with his other arm, as long as he
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at the consistory court, Flower eventually repented for injuring the priest but refused to repent for the reason why he had done so. Bonner excommunicated him and then turned him over to the secular court whereupon he was sentenced to have his hand cut off and then be burnt at the stake.
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to Alice Pulton with whom he had three children. He worked for some time as a doctor and surgeon, despite lacking any qualifications to do so, and also as a schoolmaster in
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On 24 April 1555 Flower was brought to St
Margaret's Church and outside the churchyard was tied to a stake and his right hand cut off. Flower did not flinch at this:
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81:. On Easter Day 1555, intending to assault the celebrant at what he saw as a Popish mass, he made his way across the Thames to
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he began working as priest. He then lived in various places around the country. He was married in
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Flower was a
Protestant, and for many years had rejected the doctrine of
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29:. He was burnt to death on 24 April 1555 at St. Margaret's churchyard,
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85:. He had intended to do the same on the previous Christmas Day at
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with his family, although spent much of his time away from home.
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Actes and monuments of these latter and perillous dayes
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Actes and monuments of these latter and perillous dayes
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People executed by the
Kingdom of England by burning
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53:to live as a Benedictine monk. Upon the
220:People executed under Mary I of England
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186:John Foxe (1841). John Cumming (ed.).
137:Charles Smyth Sunday (22 April 1955),
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235:Executed people from Cambridgeshire
156:. Vol. 11. pp. 1785–1788.
49:. While still a boy he was sent to
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83:St Margaret's Church, Westminster
23:martyr. His story is recorded in
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215:16th-century Protestant martyrs
105:The execution of William Flower
73:Attack at St Margaret's Church
55:suppression of the monasteries
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245:Protestant martyrs of England
139:"Sacrilege at St. Margaret's"
19:was a 16th-century English
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225:People executed for heresy
164:The Diary of Henry Machyn
230:Executed British people
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65:. Finally he moved to
26:Foxe's Book of Martyrs
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97:Trial and execution
87:St Paul’s Cathedral
41:Flower was born in
150:John Foxe (1570).
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79:transubstantiation
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63:Northamptonshire
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210:1555 deaths
31:Westminster
204:Categories
173:References
37:Early life
33:, London.
21:Protestant
43:Snailwell
67:Lambeth
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