A Cardinal, King Henry VIII and Anne Bolyen

Pope Gregory XIII
Saint Edmund Campion
Queen Mary Tudor
Queen Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester
The Privy Council
Saint Edmund Campion on trial
Saint Charles Borromeo and Saint Edmund Campion
Saint Edmund Campion and a Catholic servant
SAINT EDMUND CAMPION
SAINT CUTHMAN OF STEYNING

Saint Cuthman of Steyning and his mother

Saint Cuthman of Steyning

BLESSED MARGARET POLE

Blessed Margaret Pole - Countess of Salisbury
Blessed Margaret Pole - Roman Catholic Martyr - Last of the Plantagenets
A section of Cowdray House Ruins, Midhurst
SAINT MARGARET CLITHEROW

Saint Margaret Clitherow in prison

John Clitherow in prison
Saint Margaret Clitherow and Isabel Porter

Saint Margaret Clitherow and Edmund Bunney

John Clitherow visits his wife Saint Margaret Clitherow in prison
SAINT ETHELDREDA

Saint Etheldreda, Saxon Princess

Prince Tonbert and Saint Etheldreda
Saint Etheldreda, Abbess of Ely
SAINT WILFRID - APOSTLE OF SUSSEX
Ralph Hurlestone - Councillor at St. Margaret's Trial
The Earl of Huntingdon

Janet Geldard arrested for refusing to pay fines for not attending Protestant services

Henry May - St. Margaret's step-father

Thomas Middleton - St. Margaret's father, whose candle trade was damaged when Queen Elizabeth outlawed lighting candles for devotional reasons

John Clench - judge at St. Margaret's trial and Giles Wigginton in the background who visited St. Margaret in her cell to convince her to plead.

John Clench, Francis Rodes (seated) and Ralph Hurelstone
Michael Mudd (left), the Earl of Huntingdon and John Clitherow

Anne Wedell, recusant Catholic who refused to pay fines and was imprisoned with Saint Margaret

Margaret Tailor, pressured into paying fines for missing the Protestant Services

Sheriff Roland Fawcet who arrested St. Margaret Clitherow
St. Margaret and her daughter Anne Clitherow
St. Margaret and her son young Henry Clitherow

Anne Tesh, arrested and imprisoned with St. Margaret.

William Calvert, St. Margaret's brother-in-law

Thomas Cranmer, who wrote the Common Book of Prayer and despised the Catholic Church and the Blessed Sacrament

Edward Plantagenet, brother of Margaret Pole, imprisoned in the Tower of London and executed

Blessed Margaret in the Tower of London

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Young Wilfrid. 
As a young boy, Saint Wilfrid had a deep love of his Faith and studied and prayed.  He suffered at the hands of his stepmother and soon left to live at the Court of King Owsy.

Bishop Wilfrid. 
Saint Wilfrid's story sees him travelling across England, converting pagans, spreading the Gospel, teaching the South Saxons to fish, all the while preaching obedience to and unity with Rome and the Pope.

King Oswy. 
Saint Wilfrid spent his early days in the Court of this great Northumbrian King. 

Queen Eanfelda. 
The wife of King Oswy, Queen Eanfelda was Saint Wilfrid's patron at the Court of King Oswy.  She encouraged his studies and vocation to the priesthood and helped him to travel to Rome.

King Ecgfrith. 
King Ecgfrith was married to Saint Etheldreda and was the son of King Oswy.  He was greatly impressed with Saint Wilfrid but soon disagreed with him and had him exiled from Northumbria.

King Caedwalla of Wessex.
A powerful King who took the Kingdom of the South Saxons and killed King Aethelwealh, King Caedwalla was a pagan who listened to Saint Wilfrid preach and converted to the Catholic Faith.

The Queen.
King Cardwalla's Queen listened to the Gospel preached by Saint Wilfrid and like her husband renounced paganism and became a Christian.

Queen Eafe.
The wife of King Aethelweahl, she was a Christian before Saint Wilfrid came to Sussex.  She and her husband greeted Saint Wilfrid kindly when he came to their Court.

King Aethelwealh.
A Christian King of the South Saxons who recieved Saint Wilfrid eagerly and gave his permission for the Gospel to be preached to the South Saxons.