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John Cardmaker (alias Taylor), (d. 1555) was an English Protestant martyr. ==Franciscan and preacher== He was originally an Observant friar, who, after the dissolution of his order under the persecution which Henry VIII specially directed against it, lapsed into the world, and became a married minister. His name is found in the list of licensed preachers of Edward VI〔Richard Watson Dixon, (History of the Church of England from the Abolition of the Roman Jurisdiction ), Vol 3, P 485 note〕 He was vicar of St. Bridget's in Fleet Street, and one of the readers or lecturers at St. Paul's, where he read three times a week. Some of his sayings against Bishops Stephen Gardiner and Edmund Bonner, and concerning the sacrament, are preserved,〔John Gough Nichols, (Chronicle of the Grey Friars of London ): Camden Society old series, volume 53〕 On Somerset's first fall, when a religious reaction was vainly expected, he spoke strongly in his lecture against the victorious faction of Warwick. ‘Cardmaker said in his lecture that, though he had a fall, he was not undone, and that men should not have their purposes; and also he said that men would have set up again their popish mass'.〔 Soon after this he was made prebendary and chancellor of Wells, where he ejected a schoolmaster, preached and lectured often, and shared the troubles of the new appointed dean, William Turner〔Patrick Fraser Tytler, (England under the Reigns of Edward VI. and Mary ), Vol. I, P. 878〕
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