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Although a formal
break with the Papacy came about during the time of Henry VIII, the Church
of England continued to use liturgies in Latin throughout his reign, just as
it always had. However, once Henry died and the young Edward VI attained the
throne in 1547, the stage was set for some very significant changes in the
religious life of the country. And so a consultation of bishops met and
produced the first Book of Common Prayer. It is generally assumed that this
book is largely the work of Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, but, as no records of
the development of the prayer book exist, this cannot be definitively
determined.
This Book of Common Prayer was not created in a vacuum, but derives from
several sources. First and foremost was the Sarum Rite, or the Latin liturgy
developed in Salisbury in the thirteenth century, and widely used in
England. Two other influences were a reformed Roman Breviary of the Spanish
Cardinal Quiñones, and a book on doctrine and liturgy by Hermann von Wied,
Archbishop of Cologne.
This prayer book was in use only for three years, until the extensive
revision of 1552. However, much of its tradition and language remains in the
prayer books of today.
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