Puritan Lecturers and Anglican Clergymen during the Early Years of the English Civil Wars
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background to the Lectureships
3. Puritan Lecturers and Anglican Incumbents
4. Views of Lecturers and Incumbents
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Lecturers | Religious/Political Sympathies | Parish | Incumbent(s) | Charges against Incumbent | Date of Sequestration | Principal Sources for Lecturers/Incumbents |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Allen Joseph | St Thomas’s Hospital Southwark, London | Spencer, Benjamin, Curate | Ceremonialism; hostility to parliament | 16 March 1643 ‡ | /WR | |
Almond? | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | /WR | |
Annesley Samuel | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Chatham, Kent | Vaughan, Thomas, Curate | Ceremonialism; hostility to parliament; infrequent preaching; drunkenness | 1643 | CR; ODNB/WR; White |
Ashe? | Same person as below? | Ipswich, Suffolk | ||||
Ashe Simeon | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | St Bride’s, London | Palmer, James, Vicar | 18 October 1645 † | CR; ODNB/WR; ODNB | |
Asplen? | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Attle William | Harefield, Middlesex | |||||
Batchelor John | Puritan; Congregational/Parliamentarian | Lewisham, Kent | Colfe, Abraham, Vicar | Opposition to lecturer | ††† | CR; ODNB/WR; ODNB |
Bailie? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Balsome Robert | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Shipton Mallet, Somersetshire | Cooth, John, Rector | cited for holding Commission of Array; infrequent preaching | 17 December 1645 or before †††,‡ | Brook/WR |
Bariew? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | /WR | ||
Barnes? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | /WR | ||
Barry Nathaniel | Tenterden, Kent | Peake, Humphrey D. D., Vicar | Preaching seditious sermon | Before 7 June 1644? ‡ | CR/WR | |
Batt Timothy | Same person as below? | Bishop Wearmouth, Durham | Johnson, John/Gray, Robert, Curate | /Royalism | 16 December 1643 ††/27 October 1643 ††† | /WR; CJ, 3:343 |
Batt Timothy | Presbyterian/ | Ilminster, Somersetshire | Tarlton, John, Vicar | Before 7 July 1646? | CR/WR | |
Bedforde Isaac | Presbyterian/ | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | CR/ | |||
Belcher William | Puritan/ | St Dionis Back, London | Hume, George, Rector | 20 October 1643 | CR/WR; Shaw | |
Besbury Richard | Oundle, Northampton | |||||
Betts? | Brainford, Middlesex | |||||
Beverly? | Wendover, Buckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | /WR | |
Blackwell? | Same person as below? | Wendover, Buckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | /WR |
Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | ||||
Blackwell Elidad | St Botolph’s Aldersgate, London | Booth, Thomas, Curate | Keeping communion rails | 22 August 1643 | /WR | |
Boden Joseph | Presbyterian/1662 ** | Chertsey, Surrey | ||||
Laleham chapelry Middlesex | Soame, Thomas D. D. | Ceremonialism; royalism; pluralism | †††,‡ | CR/WR | ||
Ashford, Kent | Maccabee, John, Vicar | Before 28 November 1643 | /WR | |||
Bowles Nathaniel | Sandwich, Kent | Hall, Richard D. D., Rector | 28 September 1643 † | /WR | ||
Bowyer John | Dagenham, Essex | True, Charles, Vicar | 9 October 1643 | /WR | ||
Bridges Walter | Olave’s, Hart Street, London | Haines, Abraham, Rector | /WR | |||
Bright Edward | Puritan/ | Gowdhurst, Kent | Wilcocks, James, Vicar | 1642 | CR/WR | |
Brenchley and Cranbrook, Kent | Abbot, Robert, Vicar | 9 March 1643 | CR/WR; ODNB | |||
Brockett John | Basingstoke, Hampshire | Webb, Ambrose, Vicar | 22 September 1648 †† | /WR | ||
Broome Edmund | Presbyterian/1660 | St Peter’s, Cornhill London | Fairfax, William, Vicar; | Hostility to parliament; opposition to lecturer; scandalous curate | 22 August 1643 ‡ | CR/WR; White |
Burnand Nathaniel | Ovingham, Northumberland | |||||
Burton Henry | Puritan; Congregational/Parliamentarian | St Matthew Friday Street, London | Chestlin, Robert, Vicar | Anti-parliamentarian sermons | Before 1 October 1645? ‡ | ODNB/WR |
Byfield Richard | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | New Brentford, Middlesex | CR; ODNB/ | |||
Carpenter Henry * | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before January 1647 | SP; DD/WR | ||
Carre? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Carter Thomas * | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Wendover, Buckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | Dixhoorn; Carter/WR |
Case Thomas | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1660 | St Martin-in-the-Fields, London | Bray, William D. D., Vicar | Royalism; licensing inappropriate books | 1 December 1642 ‡ | CR; ODNB/WR; ODNB |
Chambers Humphrey | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before January 1647 | CR; ODNB/WR | |
Chatterton? | Dunstable, Bdfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Chester? | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Clendan? | Wendover, Bckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | /WR | |
Clerke Joseph | Congregational/1660 | Beales, Suffolk | Shardelow, John, Rector | Before December 1646 | CR/WR | |
Cokayn George | Congregational/Parliamentarian; 1660 | All Hallows Barking London | Layfield, Edward, Vicar/Nash, Curate | Ceremonialism; royalism; pluralism; scandalous curates/ | 2 February 1643 | CR; ODNB/WR |
Coombes? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before January 1647 | /WR | ||
Cooper? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before January 1647 | /WR | ||
Cooper William | St Michael the Belfrayes, City of York | Hodson, Phinehas D. D.? | /WR | |||
Crofts John | Waymouth, Dorset | Taylor, Ferdinando | Sequestration date unknown | /WR | ||
Crow John | Presbyterian/1662 | St Alphage, Canterbury | CR/ | |||
Cudworth Ralph * | Puritan/Parliamentarian | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | BDBR/WR |
Cummen Francis | 19 July 1642, Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Denne Henry | Puritan; Antinomian/Parliamentarian | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | ODNB; BDBR/ | |||
Durant John | Puritan; Congregational/Parliamentarian; 1660 | St Peter’s Sandwich Kent | CR; ODNB/ | |||
Dyer Robert | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | /WR | ||
Edwards William | Isleworth, Middlesex | Grant, William, Vicar | Royalism; opposition to lecturer; scandalous curate; drunkenness | 1643 | /WR; White | |
Eeles? | Same person as below? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | CR/WR | ||
Eeles Nathaniel | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1660 | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | CR/ | |||
Elliot James | St Vedast Foster Lane, London | Batty, James, Rector | 22 August 1643 | /WR | ||
Ellis John * | Congregational/Parliamentarian | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | ODNB; BDBR/WR |
Ellis, Thomas * | Baptist?/ | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | /WR |
Ellison William | Kirkby Lonsdale, Westmoreland | Buchanan, George, Vicar | Refusing the Covenant | Before 31 January 1646 | /WR | |
Evans Daniel | Broxborne, Hertfordshire | Parlett, Edmund, Vicar | Opposition to lecturer | Before 29 November 1643 | /WR | |
Everdine Robert | /1662 | Woodchurch, Kent | Boughen, Edward D. D. | Popish practices | Before 14 June 1645 | CR/WR; ODNB |
Faltingham Nicholas | Greenwich Parish Church, Kent | Creighton, John, Vicar | Royalism | Before 31 May 1645 | /WR | |
Fawcett Samuel | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector 1623 | WR | |||
Fenne George | Fressingfield, Suffolk | Fale, James, Vicar | Before 17 June 1645 | /WR | ||
Fisher Jasper * | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | ODNB/WR | |||
Fisher Samuel | Puritan; Quaker/ | Lidd, Kent | Aisgill Joshua, Vicar | 29 October 1643 | ODNB; DNB/WR | |
Fisher Samuel * | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Leighton, Bedfordshire | Slater, Christopher, Vicar | Superstitious innovations; scandalous life | CR; ODNB/WR | |
Francklyn Gracious | Presbyterian/1662 | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | CR/WR | |
Froizell Thomas | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | St Dunstan’s in the West, London | Marsh, James D. D., Vicar | Delinquency | 11 July 1643 | CR; ODNB/WR |
Gemmett William | Puritan/Parliamentarian | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | ODNB; DNB/WR | ||
Feversham, Kent | Jeffrys, John, Vicar | Clericalism; royalism; opposition to lecturer; absenteeism | 1643 ‡ | ODNB; DNB/WR; White | ||
Gibbs Thomas | Savoy, London | Balcanqual, Walter, Master/Featley, Daniel, Minister a | Royalism?/Ceremonialism | 7 June 1645/; 30 September 1643 | /WR; ODNB | |
Giles Nathaniel | Pilton, Devonshire | CR/ | ||||
Glenden? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Glisson? | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | /WR | |
Goodwyn Philip | Puritan/Parliamentarian; 1661 | Pinner, Middlesex | Edlin, Philip, Rector? | Opposition to lecturer by curate | CR; ODNB/WR; CJ, 2:723 | |
Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire | Taylor, John, Vicar | Hostility to parliament; opposition to lecturer; drunkenness | 14 March 1643 ‡ | CR; ODNB/WR | ||
Green George | /1662 | Bluntisham, Huntingdon | CR/ | |||
Sutton, Isle of Ely | CR/ | |||||
Gundrie Hugh | Parliamentarian/1662 | Martock, Somerset | Curtis, T. | Opposition to lecturer | CR/WR | |
Harecourt Vere | St Andrew Holborne | Hacket, John D. D., Rector | Superstition; opposition to Covenant; royalism; covetousness | October 1643 ‡ | /WR; ODNB | |
Herle Charles | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Tothill Fields | ODNB; Brook/ | |||
Holmes? | Same person as below? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | ||
Holmes Nathaniel | Puritan; Congregational/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Basingshaw, London | Gifford, John, Rector | Arminianism; ceremonialism; hostility to parliament; opposition to preaching | 3 March 1643 ‡ | CR; ODNB/WR |
How? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Hughes George | Puritan; Congregational/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Plymouth, Devon | Wilson, Aaron D. D. | 3 February 1644 ††,‡ | CR; ODNB/WR; ODNB | |
Hunton Philip * | /Parliamentarian; 1661 | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | CR; ODNB/WR | |
James Marmaduke | St Peter’s Cornhill London | Fairfax, William, Vicar; | Hostility to parliament; opposition to lecturer; scandalous curate | 22 August 1643 ‡ | /WR; White | |
Jenison Robert | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | All Hallows, Newcastle-on-Tyne | Alvey, Yeldard, Vicar? | Royalism | 5 December 1644 | ODNB; DNB/WR |
Kendall George | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Hemel Hempsted, Hertfordshire | Taylor, John, Vicar | Hostility to parliament; opposition to lecturer; drunkenness | 14 March 1643 ‡ | CR; ODNB/WR |
Kentish? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Kidner Thomas | /1662 | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | CR/WR | ||
King Benjamin | /1660 | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | CR/ | |||
Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | CR/WR | ||||
Langley Henry | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1660 | Watlington, Oxfordshire | CR; ODNB/ | |||
Langley Thomas | City of Chester, Cheshire | |||||
Langley Thomas | Hawkhurst, Kent | |||||
Lapthorne Anthony | Puritan | Minchinhampton, Gloucester | Fowler, Henry | ODNB/WR | ||
Lindall William * | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Lynford? | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | /WR | |
Marriatt? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | |||
Marshall Stephen | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | St Margaret’s, Westminster | Wimberly, Gilbert D. D. | 12 February 1644 | ODNB/WR | |
Masy Henry | Kirkby, Lonsdale Westmoreland | Buchanan, George, Vicar | Refusing the Covenant | Before 31 January 1646 | /WR | |
Maxwell? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | /WR | ||
Money John | Congregational/1661 | Wymondham, Norfolk | Mynne, Joshua, Vicar | CR/WR | ||
Moore Archibald * | /1660 | Muggleswick, Durham | Bradley, Richard, Parson | CR/WR | ||
Moore Richard * | Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | East Bergholt, Suffolk | Jones, William, Rector | Reading Book of Sports; opposition to the Covenant; non residence | CR/WR | |
Moreton William | All Hallows, Newcastle-on-Tyne | Alvey, Yeldard, Vicar? | Royalism | 5 December 1644 | /WR | |
St Nicholas, Newcastle | Alvey, Yeldard, Vicar/George Wishart, Lecturer b | Royalism/Delinquency; drunkenness | 5 December 1644/ | /WR | ||
Mostyn Ambrose | Pennard, Glamorgan | |||||
Owen Thomas * | St Leonard Shortditch, London | Squire, John, Vicar | Teaching false theology; teaching false political ideas; hostility to parliament | 17 March 1643 ‡ | /WR; White | |
Palmer Herbert | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | ODNB/ | |||
Pecke Francis | St Dunstan’s in the West, London | Marsh, James D.D., Vicar | Delinquency | 11 July 1643 | /WR | |
Phipp John | Presbyterian/1662? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | CR/WR | |
Piggott John | St Nicholas, City of Rochester | Lorkin, John, Vicar | 1643? | /WR | ||
Porter Michael | St Mary’s, Dover | Reading, John, Vicar | Royalism | Before August 1647 ‡ | /WR; ODNB | |
Porter Thomas | Presbyterian/1660 | City of Chester, Cheshire | CR/ | |||
Puller Abraham | All Saints, Hertfordshire | Tabor, Humphrey, Vicar | Hostility to parliament; pluralism; absenteeism; infrequent preaching | 16 March 1643 | /WR | |
Rawlinson John | Congregational?/1662 | St Anne and Agnes Aldersgate, London | Cluet, Richard D. D., Rector/Brothers, Thomas, Curate | /Hostility to parliament | 1644 or before/ | CR/WR |
Redman Thomas * | /Ejected but date unknown | St James Deeping Lincolnshire | Smith, Christopher, Vicar | Royalism | ‡ | CR/WR |
Roe John | Midhurst, Sussex | |||||
Rosewell Robert | /1660 | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | CR/WR | |
Rotheram Thomas * | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | ||||
Sadler John * | Congregational/1660 | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | CR/WR |
Sangar Gabriel | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1660 | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | CR; ODNB/WR | |
Scudder Henry | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | ODNB/WR | |
Sennatt? | Wendover, Buckingham | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalisn? | 9 October 1643 | /WR | |
Simpson John | Fifth Monarchist/Parliamentarian: 1660 | St Dunstan’s in the East, London | Childerly, John D. D., Rector | 29 April 1643 †† | CR; ODNB/WR; ODNB | |
St Botolph’s Aldgate, London | Swadlin, Thomas, Curate | Royalism | 1643? ‡ | CR; ODNB/WR; ODNB | ||
Smith Jeremiah | St Leonard Shortditch, London | Squire, John, Vicar | Teaching false theology; teaching false political ideas; hostility to parliament | 17 March 1643 ‡ | /WR; White | |
Spaldin William * | Saffron Walden, Essex | Baynard, Adiel, Vicar | Opposition to the Covenant | 1644 | /WR | |
Spurstow William | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1660 | Wendover Buckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | CR; ODNB/WR |
Stanton? | St Michael of Cosney, Norwich | King, Robert, Rector | Drunkenness; swearing | Before 13 November 1646 | /WR | |
Storer John | EjectedDate unknown | St Giles Cripplegate, London | Fuller, William D. D., Vicar/Hutton, Timothy, Curate | Scandalous sermons; royalism/Anti-parliamentarianism; drunkenness | 1644 or before ‡/4 August 1642 ‡ | CR/WR; ODNB |
Strickland John * | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | CR; ODNB/WR | |
Sudgwick? | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Symms? | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | ||||
Symonds Richard | Puritan; Congregational/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Andevor, Hampshire | Clarke, Robert, Vicar | Royalism; refusal to admit lecturer | 14 July 1646 ‡ | CR; ODNB/WR |
Tice? | Warminster, Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | /WR | ||
Tombes John | Puritan; Baptist/Parliamentarian; 1662 | All Saints, Bristol Gloucestershire | Williamson, George, Vicar | CR; ODNB/WR | ||
Tomllen? | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Tookey Job | Congregational/1662 | St Ives Huntingdonshire | Downhall, Henry, Vicar; | Royalism | 28 April 1643 | CR; BDBR/WR |
Trayherne? | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | |||||
Tutchin Robert | /1662 | Bridport, Dorset | Bushell, Silas, Rector | Before 4 April 1646 | CR/WR | |
Chideok, Dorset | Locket, Samuel, Vicar of Whitchurch Canonicorum | 29 April 1645 | CR/WR | |||
Valentine Thomas | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian; 1662 | Wendover, Buckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | CR; Dixhoorn/WR |
Vincent John | St James Apostle, Dover | |||||
Wardner? | Warminster Wiltshire | Maxwell, William, Vicar | Before 29 January 1647 | /WR | ||
Wetherall Brian | Fressingfield, Suffolk | Fale, James, Vicar | Before 17 June 1645 | /WR | ||
Whichcote Benjamin * | Cambridge Platonist | Cottenham, Cambridge | Manby, John D. D., Rector | Ceremonialism; clericalism; royalism; Swearing | 7 June 1643 ‡ | ODNB/WR |
Whitaker Jeremiah | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Bermondsey, Surrey | Paske, Thomas, Rector | Reading Prayer Book; infrequent preaching; pluralism | 2 May 1643 | ODNB; DNB/WR; ODNB |
Wickins William | Presbyterian/1660 | Dartford, Kent | Denn, John, Vicar | Infrequent preaching; increasing fees and tithes; drunkenness | 1643 | CR/WR; White |
Wilson Thomas | Puritan; Presbyterian/Parliamentarian | Maidstone, Kent | Barrell, Robert, Curate | Laudianism; seditious sermons against parliament; royalism; drunkenness | 26 April 1643 | ODNB; Dixhoorn/WR |
Woolfall? | Same person as below? | Dunstable, Bedfordshire | Pedder, William, Rector | /WR | ||
Woolfull? | Wendover, Buckinghamshire | Armitage, John, Rector | Royalism? | 9 October 1643 | /WR | |
Young John | /1661 | Hitchin, Hertfordshire | CR/ | |||
Livings Where Lectureship was Set Up but Lecturer not Specified | ||||||
Alton, Hampshire | Mason, Joseph, Vicar | /WR | ||||
Havant Hampshire | Ringsted, Francis, Rector | Delinquency | Before 20 September 1644 | /WR | ||
New Alresford Hampshire | Heylyn, Peter, Rector | Royalism | 31 July 1644 | /WR; ODNB | ||
Petersfield, Hampshire | ||||||
Reigate, Surrey | 6 February 1647 | /Shaw | ||||
Southampton, Hampshire | ||||||
Warley, Leicestershire | ||||||
Winchester, Hampshire | Goulson, Joseph, Prebend? | /WR |
References
Primary Sources
- An Order Made by the House of Commons for the Establishing of Preaching Lecturers. 1641. London: Printed by B. Alsop.
- Articles Exhibited in Parliament, against Master John Squire. 1641. London: s.n.
- Boden, Joseph. 1644. An Alarme Beat up in Sion, to War against Babylon. London: Printed by I. L. for Christopher Meredith. [Google Scholar]
- Boughen, Edward. 1637. A Sermon Concerning Decencie and Order in the Church. London: Printed by I. Raworth for I. Cowper. [Google Scholar]
- Boughen, Edward. 1645. Observations upon the Ordinance of Lords and Commons at Westminster. After Advice Had from Their Assembly of Divines, for the Ordination of Ministers pro Tempore. London: Printed by Leonard Lichfield. [Google Scholar]
- Bridges, William. 1643. Joabs Counsell and King Davids Seasonable Hearing It. London: Printed by R. Cotes for Andrew Crooke. [Google Scholar]
- Bruce, John. 1856. Charles I in 1646: Letters of King Charles the First to Queen Henrietta Maria. London: Camden Society, Old Series, vol. 63. [Google Scholar]
- Burton, Henry. 1636a. An Apology of Appeale. Amsterdam: Theatrum Orbis Terrarum. [Google Scholar]
- Burton, Henry. 1636b. For God and the King. Amsterdam: J. F. Stam. [Google Scholar]
- Burton, Henry. 1641a. England’s Bondage and Hope of Deliverance. London: s.n. [Google Scholar]
- Burton, Henry. 1641b. The Humble Petitions of Mr. Burton and Mr. Bastwicke Presented to the Honorable the Knights, Citizens, and Burgesses, of the Commons House of the Parliament. S.l.: s.n. [Google Scholar]
- Burton, Henry. 1641c. The Protestation Protested. London: s.n. [Google Scholar]
- Coates, William. 1942. The Journal of Sir Simonds D’Ewes: From the First Recess of the Long Parliament to the Withdrawal of King Charles from London. New Haven: Yale University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Coates, William H., Anne Steele Young, and Vernon F. Snow, eds. 1982. The Private Journals of the Long Parliament: 3 January to 5 March 1642. New Haven: Yale University Press. [Google Scholar]
- English Standard Version Study Bible. 2008. Wheaton: Crossway Bibles.
- Firth, Charles Harding, and Robert Sangster Rait, eds. 1911. Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum 1640–1660. London: H. M. Stationery Office. [Google Scholar]
- Heylyn, Peter. 1636. A Coale from the Altar. Or, An Answer to a Letter Not Long Since Written to the Vicar of GR. London: Printed by Augustine Mathewes for Robert Milbourne. [Google Scholar]
- Heylyn, Peter. 1637. Antidotum Lincolniense Or An Answer to a Book Entitutled, The Holy Table, Name and Thing. London: Printed by Miles Flesher, R. Bishop, and Thomas Harper for John Clark. [Google Scholar]
- Heylyn, Peter. 1642. The Historie of Episcopacie. London: Printed for Abel Roper. [Google Scholar]
- Heylyn, Peter. 1643. The Rebells Catechisme Composed in an Easy and Familiar Way. London: s.n. [Google Scholar]
- Heylyn, Peter. 1658. The Stumbling Block of Disobedience and Rebellion, Cunningly Laid by Calvin in the Subjects Way, Discovered, Censured, and Removed. London: Printed by E. Cotes for Henry Seile. [Google Scholar]
- Holmes, Clive, ed. 1970. The Suffolk Committees for Scandalous Ministers, 1644–1646. Ipswich: Suffolk Record Society. [Google Scholar]
- Hudson, Michael. 1647. The Royall, and the Royallists Plea. London: s.n. [Google Scholar]
- Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 2, 1640–1643. 1802. British History Online. 1802. London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, Available online: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/commons-jrnl/vol2 (accessed on 16 November 2020).
- Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 3, 1643–1644. 1802. British History Online. 1802. London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, Available online: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/commons-jrnl/vol3 (accessed on 16 November 2020).
- Journal of the House of Lords: Volume 5, 1642–1643. 1767–1830. London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, Available online: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/lords-jrnl/vol5 (accessed on 16 November 2020).
- Knappen, Marshall Mason, ed. 1933. Two Elizabethan Puritan Diaries. Chicago: American Society of Church History. [Google Scholar]
- Matthews, A. G. 1988. Walker Revised: Being a Revision of John Walker’s Sufferings of the Clergy during the Grand Rebellion, 1642–1660. Oxford: Clarendon Press. [Google Scholar]
- Nalson, John. 1683. An Impartial Collection of the Great Affairs of the State from the Beginning of Scotch Rebellion in the Year 1639 to the Murther of King Charles I. London: Thomas Dring, vol. 2. [Google Scholar]
- Palmer, Herbert. 1643. The Necessity and Encouragement of Utmost Venturing for the Churches Help. London: Printed for John Bellamie. [Google Scholar]
- Palmer, Herbert. 1644. The Glasse of Gods Providence toward His Faithful Ones. London: Printed by G.M. for Th. Vnderhill. [Google Scholar]
- Palmer, Herbert. 1646. The Duty and Honour of Church Restorers. London: Printed by R. W. for Thomas Underhill. [Google Scholar]
- Scripture and Reason Pleaded for Defensive Armes. 1643. London: Printed for Iohn Bellamy and Ralph Smith.
- Snow, Vernon F., and Anne Steele Young, eds. 1987. The Private Journals of the Long Parliament: 7 March to 1 June 1642. New Haven: Yale University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Snow, Vernon F., and Anne Steele Young, eds. 1992. The Private Journals of the Long Parliament: 2 June to 17 September 1642. New Haven: Yale University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Squire, John. 1641. An Answer to a Printed Paper Entituled, Articles Exhibited in Parliament against Mr. John Squire. London: s.n. [Google Scholar]
- Main Papers: Includes “The Incident”. 1641. HL/PO/JO/10/1/72. London: The House of Lords Record Office, October 25.
- Main Papers. 1642a. HL/PO/JO/10/1/124. London: The House of Lords Record Office, June 6.
- Main Papers. 1642b. HL/PO/JO/10/1/132. London: The House of Lords Record Office, September 10.
- Main Papers: Undated Items. 1642. HL/PO/JO/10/1/140. London: The House of Lords Record Office.
- The Humble Petition of Some of the Inhabitants of the Parish of Leonard Shoreditch against John Squire. 1942. London: Printed for Iohn Franke.
- Thomson, Christopher, ed. 1986. Walter Yonge’s Diary of Proceedings in the House of Commons, 1642–1645: Vol. 1 19 September 1642–7 March 1643. Wivenhoe: Orchard Press, September 19. [Google Scholar]
- Walker, John. 1714. An Attempt towards Recovering an Account of the Numbers and Sufferings of the Clergy of the Church of England. London: Printed by W. S. for J. Nicholson, R. Knaplock, R. Wilkin, B. Tooke, D. Midwinter, and B. Cowse. [Google Scholar]
- White, John. 1643. The First Century of Scandalous, Malignant Priests. London: George Miller. [Google Scholar]
Secondary Sources
- Baskerville, Stephen. 1993. Not Peace but a Sword: The Political Theology of the English Revolution. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Bowen, Lloyd. 2013. Royalism, Print, and the Clergy in Britain, 1639–1640 and 1642. Historical Journal 56: 297–319. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Braddick, Michael J. 2008. Mobilisation, Anxiety and Creativity in England during the 1640s. In Liberty, Authority and Formality: Political Ideas and Culture, 1600–1900. Edited by John Morrow and Jonathan Scott. Exeter: Imprint Academic. [Google Scholar]
- Braddick, Michael. 2009. God’s Fury, England’s Fire: A New History of the English Civil Wars. London: Penguin Books. [Google Scholar]
- Braddick, Michael J. 2011. History, Liberty, Reformation and the Cause: Parliamentarian military and ideological escalation in 1643. In The Experience of Revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland. Edited by Michael J. Braddick and David L. Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Calder, Isabel M. 1948. A Seventeenth Century Attempt to Purify the Anglican Church. American Historical Review 53: 760–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chung, Youngkwon. 2016. Puritans, Godly Diversity, and Religious Liberty in Civil War England. Parergon 33: 159–81. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Collinson, Patrick. 1975. Lectures by Combination: Structures and Characteristics of Church Life in 17th Century England. Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 48: 182–213. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cressy, David. 2002. The Protestation Protested, 1641 and 1642. Historical Journal 45: 263–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Donagan, Barbara. 1994. Did Ministers Matter? War and Religion in England, 1642–1649. Journal of British Studies 33: 119–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Eales, Jacqueline. 2002. Provincial Preaching and Allegiance in the First English Civil War (1640–1646). In Politics, Religion and Popularity in Early Stuart Britain: Essays in Honour of Conrad Russell. Edited by Thomas Cogswell, Richard Cust and Peter Lake. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Eales, Jacqueline, and Andrew Hopper, eds. 2012. The County Community in Seventeenth Century England and Wales. Hartfield: Hertfordshire University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Green, Ian. 1979. The Persecution of “Scandalous” and “Malignant” Parish Clergy during the Civil War. English Historical Review 94: 518–21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Halle, Simon. 2001. The Penguin Atlas of British & Irish History. Edited by Barry Cunliffe, Robert Bartlett, Joanna Bourke, Asa Briggs and John Morrill. London: Penguin Group. [Google Scholar]
- Hill, Christopher. 1986. Society and Puritanism in Pre-Revolutionary England. Bungay: Peregrine Books. [Google Scholar]
- Holmes, Clive. 1980. The County Community in Stuart Historiography. Journal of British Studies 19: 54–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Holmes, Clive. 2006. Why was Charles I Executed? London: Hambledon Continuum. [Google Scholar]
- Holmes, Clive. 2009. Centre and Locality in Civil War England. In The English Civil War: Conflict and Contexts, 1640–1649. Edited by John Adamson. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. [Google Scholar]
- Hughes, Richard T. 1974. Henry Burton: The Making of a Revolutionary. Journal of Church and State 15: 421–34. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hunt, Arnold. 2010. The Art of Hearing: English Preachers and Their Audiences, 1590–1640. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Lamont, William. 1964. Prynne, Burton, and the Puritan Triumph. Huntington Library Quarterly 27: 103–13. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- McCall, Fiona. 2013. Baal’s Priests: The Loyalist Clergy and the English Revolution. Farnham: Aldershot. [Google Scholar]
- McCall, Fiona. 2015. Scandalous and Malignant?: Settling Scores against the Leicestershire Clergy after the First Civil War. Midland History 55: 220–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Milton, Anthony. 2007. Laudian and Royalist Polemic in Seventeenth Century England: The Career and Writings of Peter Heylyn. Manchester: Manchester University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Morrill, John. 1993. The Ecology of Allegiance in the English Civil Wars. In The Nature of the English Revolution. London: Longman. [Google Scholar]
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 2004. Oxford: Oxford University Press, vol. 60, Available online: http://www.oxforddnb.com (accessed on 7 January 2021).
- Raymond, Joad. 1996. The Invention of the Newspaper: English News 1641–1649. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Reynolds, Matthew. 2008. Predestination and Parochial Dispute in the 1630s: The Case of the Norwich Lectureships. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 59: 407–25. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rivett, Gary. 2013. English Newsbooks, Storytelling and Political Criticism: Mercurius Aulicus and the Solemn League and Covenant, September–October 1643. Media History 19: 3–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Russell, Conrad. 1991. The Fall of the British Monarchies 1637–1642. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Scott, David. 2004. Politics and War in the Three Stuart Kingdoms, 1637–1649. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. [Google Scholar]
- Seaver, Paul. 1970. The Puritan Lectureships: The Politics of Religious Dissent 1560–1662. Stanford: Stanford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Shaw, William. 1900. A History of the English Church during the Civil Wars and under the Commonwealth 1640–1660. London: Longmans, 2 vols. [Google Scholar]
- Sheils, William. 2006. John Shawe and Edward Bowles: Civic Preachers at Peace and War. In Religious Politics in Post-Reformation England: Essays in Honour of Nicholas Tyacke. Edited by K. Fincham and P. Lake. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. [Google Scholar]
- Smith, David. 2011. Sir Benjamin Rudyerd and England’s Wars of Religion. In The Experience of Revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland. Edited by Michael Braddick and David Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Spurr, John. 1991. The Restoration Church of England, 1646–1689. London: Yale University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Trevor-Roper, Hugh. 1965. The Fast Sermons of the Long Parliament. In Essays in British History Presented to Sir Keith Feiling. Edited by Hugh Trevor-Roper. New York: St. Martin’s Press. [Google Scholar]
- Tyacke, Nicholas. 2001. Aspects of English Protestantism c. 1530–1700. Manchester: Manchester University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Underdown, David. 1985. Revel, Riot and Rebellion: Popular Politics and Culture in England 1603–1660. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Van Duinen, Jared. 2011. An Engine Which the World Sees Nothing Of: Revealing dissent under Charles I’s Personal Rule. Parergon 28: 177–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wilson, John. 1969. Pulpit in Parliament: Puritanism during the English Civil Wars 1640–1648. Princeton: Princeton University Press. [Google Scholar]
1 | This is as far as it appears in the official journals of the House of Commons and of the House of Lords. |
2 | This was with the exception of April 1643, when no appointment of weekly preachers was made by the parliament. |
3 | This suppression of godly preaching was among the chief grievances, as well as the roots of opposition, of the Puritans against Charles I’s government during the 1630s and early 1640s (Van Duinen 2011, pp. 177–96; Tyacke 2001, chps. 4, 5; Russell 1991, pp. 182–83, 251). |
4 | (Holmes 2006, chp. 3; Braddick 2009, chps. 6, 7). |
5 | For similar efforts from the royalist camp, see (Bowen 2013). |
6 | Alexander Rigby, responding to Rudyerd’s remark, observed that “yf wee suffer Arminianisme to be preched in pulpitts and yf wee suppresse them not the law against recusancie will be turned against us …” (Thomson 1986, p. 226). Also see (Braddick and Smith 2011, pp. 52–73). |
7 | For a similar observation by another royalist, see (Hudson 1647, p. 1). |
8 | Also see (Braddick 2008, pp. 175–94). |
9 | |
10 | Also see (Holmes 1970, pp. 9–14). |
11 | The first case of sequestration took place on 1 Dec. 1642 (Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 2 1640–1643 1802, pp. 870, 922; Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 3 1643–1644 1802, p. 181). A full list is given in (Shaw 1900, vol. 2, Appendix ii c). |
12 | This committee was ordered to find ways of ‘setting up and maintaining preaching ministers’. |
13 | As late as January 1643, the MPs were trying to find ways for securing monetary resources to support the lecturers. See (Thomson 1986, p. 231). |
14 | In my reading of all the entries in the journals of both Houses, I found very few exceptions to this pattern. On rare occasions, the parliament did not give their approval, as was the case with Thomas Coleman. It is not clear why the approval was not extended (Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 2 1640–1643 1802, p. 470; Snow and Young 1987, p. 5). |
15 | Similar instances also occurred on, among others, 22 April and 8 December 1642. |
16 | Given that generally petitions complaining about overt forms of obstruction found their way to the parliament, there may likely have been many more cases where such interferences took on subtler forms. |
17 | In the Journal of the House of Lords, there is only one recorded entry of a petition directed to the peers for a lecturer (Journal of the House of Lords: Volume 5 1642–1643 1767–1830, p. 95). |
18 | This motion was made on 12 February 1642. |
19 | I owe this point to Dr. Toby Barnard. |
20 | Between February and July 1642, twenty-six entries on the motion made for lecturers can be found in the diaries of Simonds D’Ewes, John Moore, Framlingham Gawdy, Roger Hill, and Sir Thomas Peyton. The dates the diarists cover in 1642 are: D’Ewes (3 January–26 December); Moore (12 January–28 February); Gawdy (14 January–28 July); Hill (3 January–13 July); Peyton (3 January–19 March). |
21 | For a background discussion to centre and locality relations during the English Civil Wars, see (Eales and Hopper 2012, Introduction; Holmes 2009, pp. 153–74; Holmes 1980, pp. 54–73). |
22 | The use of the term, “politicization” is itself somewhat problematic and betrays modern assumptions. Early modern people would not have considered preaching on political issues as politicization, since religious and political spheres overlapped considerably. |
23 | Absalom was the son of King David of Old Testament Israel. He led a failed coup against his father and was killed in the process by one of the king’s military generals (English Standard Version Study Bible 2008, pp. 566–72). |
24 | This tabulation is based on information collected in the Appendix A. Also see (Shaw 1900, vol. 2, Appendix ii b). Here a “parish” includes the town or city where a lecturer or a group of lecturers have been set up, presumably as a market day lecturer. |
25 | For a number of instances where a minister was appointed as a lecturer for a town or city such as one Mr. Ashe as town preacher of Ipswich or Thomas Langley as lecturer to City of Chester, it is naturally not possible to be precise about the parish or the incumbent. |
26 | The few incumbent lecturers such as Thomas Fuller and George Wishart have also been included here. |
27 | See Appendix A. It is not possible to identify Philip Goodwyn. It also needs to be noted that Goodwyn was instituted as lecturer at Hemel Hempstead on 6 June 1642, and George Kendall on 22 August 1642. It remains unclear whether Kendall succeeded Goodwyn or both served the parish together from latter August. |
28 | I use the term ‘theological’ here as inclusive of doctrinal, liturgical, and devotional issues. |
29 | See Appendix A. |
30 | See Appendix A. |
31 | Hacket seems to have falteringly followed the liturgical changes instituted by Archbishop Laud, however. |
32 | See Appendix A. |
33 | Also see Appendix A. |
34 | Also see Appendix A. |
35 | See Appendix A. |
36 | See Appendix A. |
37 | For a few lecturers, the classification “Puritan” is given if such religious sympathies were displayed during the Civil Wars but when their ecclesiological preference is not known. |
38 | Notwithstanding, we should also bear in mind that for most of the lecturers, the true essence of Reformed preaching was conversion of the heart by divine grace emanating from predestinarian election. The lacklustre performance of the Anglican clergymen in this respect owing to the tendency of their pulpit discourses to linger on civic moralism was an enduring source of discontent for the Puritans. Yet the peculiar circumstances of the Civil Wars brought other religious issues, namely polity and liturgy, to the foreground. |
39 | Also see (Lamont 1964; Cressy 2002). |
40 | Palmer delivered another sermon to the Commons a few years later. See (Palmer 1646). |
41 | Although published anonymously, the tract was the collaborative work of Palmer and several other divines. |
42 | Also see (Braddick 2011, pp. 117–34). |
43 | The counties are Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridge, Cheshire, Devon, Dorset, Durham, Essex, Glamorgan, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Huntingdon, Kent, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Middlesex, Norfolk, Northampton, Northumberland, Oxfordshire, Somerset, Suffolk, Surrey, Westmoreland, Wiltshire, and Yorkshire. A greater concentration of lecturers can be seen in the south and southeast of the country, however. |
1642–1643 | |
---|---|
Number of parishes where lectureship was set up | 101 |
Number of cases where incumbent or incumbents can be identified | 82 |
Number of sequestered incumbents | 58 |
1642–1643 | |
---|---|
Number of cases where the charges against the incumbent are known | 46 |
Number of charges for theological irregularity | 3 |
Number of charges for political irregularity | 13 |
Number of charges for theological and political irregularity | 6 |
Number of charges for behavior alone or in conjunction with religious and/or political irregularity | 24 |
1642–1643 | |
---|---|
Number of lecturers placed in parishes in London and provinces | 150 |
Number of cases with information on lecturer | 70 |
Number of lecturers with Puritan sympathies prior to 1642 | 36 |
Number of lecturers with Presbyterian, Congregationalist, Baptist, Antinomian, or Quaker sympathies | 49 |
Number of lecturers with parliamentarian sympathies | 40 |
Number of lecturers ejected from their livings in 1660 or 1662 | 43 |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2021 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Chung, Y. Puritan Lecturers and Anglican Clergymen during the Early Years of the English Civil Wars. Religions 2021, 12, 44. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010044
Chung Y. Puritan Lecturers and Anglican Clergymen during the Early Years of the English Civil Wars. Religions. 2021; 12(1):44. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010044
Chicago/Turabian StyleChung, Youngkwon. 2021. "Puritan Lecturers and Anglican Clergymen during the Early Years of the English Civil Wars" Religions 12, no. 1: 44. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010044
APA StyleChung, Y. (2021). Puritan Lecturers and Anglican Clergymen during the Early Years of the English Civil Wars. Religions, 12(1), 44. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010044