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A71276 Athenæ Oxonienses. Vol. 1. an exact history of all the writers and bishops who have had their education in the most ancient and famous University of Oxford, from the fifteenth year of King Henry the Seventh, Dom. 1500, to the end of the year 1690 representing the birth, fortune, preferment, and death of all those authors and prelates, the great accidents of their lives, and the fate and character of their writings : to which are added, the Fasti, or, Annals, of the said university, for the same time ... Wood, Anthony à, 1632-1695. 1691 (1691) Wing W3382; ESTC R200957 1,409,512 913

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treatise very exquisitely penn'd as one saith entituled Answers to certaine questions propounded by the Citizens of Waterford Also Divers Sermons Soon after he left his Country for the sake of Religion went to the University of Lovaine in Brabant where he was promoted to the Degree of Doctor of Divinity 23. June 1576 and afterwards as 't is said wrot and published divers other things See more in Peter White under the Year 1599. To him I now add his great friend and countryman Rob. Garvey of the Diocess of Kilkenny who was elected Fellow of Oriel Coll. 1563 proceeded Master of Arts three years after and became noted for his skill in both the Laws and for a volubility in the English and latin tongues as my Author an Irish Man tells me but whether he published any thing I know not nor any thing else of him only that he died in Ireland about 1579. MAWRICE CHAWNEY Chamney Chancy or Channy so many ways I find him written was from his juvenile years a Carthustan Monk in the house of that order near London now called by some the Charter-house and by others Suttons Hospital the Brethren of which place as of others in England did commonly study in an antient place of Literature near to London Coll. alias Burnells Inn within this University and no doubt there is but that this M. Chawney did receive instruction in Theological matters therein or at least in some other house of learning in Oxon. But so it was that at the dissolution of religious houses by K. Hen. 8. he with his brethren 18 in number being committed to custody for denying the Kings Supremacy over the Ch. of England did at length with much difficulty escape out of prison and so consequently death which all the rest suffered at several times before the Year 1539. At length settling himself at Bruges in Flanders became Prior of some of his English Brethren of the same order there And from him do our English Carthusians beyond the Sea at Neoport in Flanders derive their succession in the said house near London to this day having always been by them esteemed a most devout and pious Person He hath written a book entit Historia aliquot nostri saeculi Martyrum cum pia tum lectu jucunda nunquam antehaec typis excusa Printed at Mentz in Bavaria as it seems an 1550 in qu. and dedicated by Vitus à Dulken Prior of the Carthusians of St. Michael near to Mentz and William à Sittatis Procurator of the said house to Theodore Loher à Stratis Prior of the Carthusians house of St. Marie the Virgin in Buxia near to Memmingen in Schawben a Province of Germany This book contains 1 The Epitaph of Sir Tho. More written by himself in Latin fixed over his grave in Chelsey Church near to London 2 The captivity and martyrdom of John Fisher B. of Rochester 3 The capt and mart of the said Sir Th. More sometimes L. Chanc. of England 4 The martyrdome of Reynold Brigitt a pious Divine and of other 5 The passion of 18 Carthusians of London beginning with the life and passion of John Houghton the Prior of them all contained in 14 Chapters c. This passion and martyrdom of the said Carthusians was by the care of our Author represented in figures and being afterwards engraven on copper were printed at Colon. Ub. about 1608. He also reviewed corrected and put some additions to a book entit Vita Carthusiana written by Peter Sutor Prior of the Carthusians at Paris an 1522. Which being so done he wrot the Epistle dedicatory before it all printed together at Lovaine 1572. in oct Our Author Chancaeus as he writes himself in that book was then living in his Cell at Bruges before-mention'd with several English Carthusians under his government I have seen a MS. written by our Author Chancaeus bearing this title The divine clowde of unknowing The beginning of which is Goostly frende in God I pray the and besece the that thou wilt have a besy beholding to the course and manntr of thy calling c. It containeth 75 Chapters and with i is bound his Epistle of private counsel the beginning of which is Goostly frende in God as touching thy inward occupation c. And at the end of the book is this written Liber domus Salvatoris beatissimae virginis Mariae juxta London Ordinis Carthusiani per M. Chawncy quem exaravit secundum Willmum Exm●use The said Exmeuse or ex Mewe who had been bred in Christs Coll. in Cambridge did enter himself a Carthusian of the said house near London in the 28 year of his age being then sufficiently versed in the Gr. and Lat. tongues Afterwards he was made Vicar and thence removed to be Procurator thereof And being one of the number that denied the Kings Supremacy suffered death by hanging drawing and quartering 19. June 1535. As for our Author Chancy he submitted to fate on the 12. July in Fifteen hundred eighty and one year 1581 according to the accompt followed in Flanders Whereupon his body was buried as I suppose in the Chappel belonging to the Carthusians at Bruges before-mention'd He hath left behind him a most celebrated name for his rare piety which is preserved among those of his profession at Bruges Neôport in Flanders and at other places Neither is it denyed by any knowing and moderate Protestants but that his name is worthy to be kept in everlasting remembrance RICHARD DAVYES a Welsh Man born was educated as it seems in New Inn but what Degrees he took in Arts it appears not In Qu. Maries Reign he retired beyond the Seas upon account of Religion whence returning in the beginning of Qu. Elizabeth was elected Bishop of St. Asaph on the deprivation of Tho. Goldwell the temporalities of which See he receiving 29. March 1560 was the year following translated to the See of St. David and in 1566 was actually created Doctor of Divinity He hath published several things among which are Epistle to all the Welsh especially within his Diocess wishing a renewing of the antient Cath. faith by the light of the Gospel of Christ Printed and bound with the New Test in Welsh an 1567. It was printed also among other things and published by Charles Edwards a Welsh Man Ox. 1671. in oct Funeral Sermon preached 26. Nov. 1576. in the Parish Church of Caermerthen at the burial of Walt. Earl of Essex on Rev. 14. 13. Lond. 1577. qu. Whereunto is added a genealogical Epitaph with memorials on the said Count but these were made by other Men. This Bishop paid his last debt to nature about the month of Octob. in Fifteen hundred eighty and one year 1581 aged about 80 years and was buried in the Parish Church of Abergwilly in Caermerthenshire leaving then behind him a Widow called Dorothie and several Children JOHN TWYNE Son of William Son of John Son of Nicholas Son of Sir Brian Twyne of Long Parish in Hampshire Knight was
of the posterity and next in blood to our Author Sir Tho. More The said Utopia also was published in Italian at Venice 1548. Epigrammata Bas 1518. 1563. oct Lond. 1638 c. Progimnasmata Bas 1563. Responsio ad convitia Martint Lutheri written in the Year 1523. This I take to be the same with Vindicatio Henrici 8. Regis Angliae Galliae à calumniis Lutheri Lond. 1523. qu. published under the name of Gul. Rosseus Quod pro fide mors fugienda non est Written in the Tower of London 1534. Precationes ex Psalmis Collected there the same Year Imploratio divini auxilii contra tentationem cum insultatione contra Demones ex spe fiducia in Deum Lugd. 1572. He also translated from Greek into Lat. Dialogi Luciani with other matters of that Author Bas 1563. All which except Precationes ex psalmis beforemention'd together with his History of K. Rich. 3. and his Expositio passionis Domini were printed at Lovaine 1566. Epistolae Bas Lond. 1642. Epistola ad Acad. Oxon an 1519. Ox. 1633. qu. See in Tho. James under the Year 1638. History of the pitiful life and unfortunate death of Edward 5. and the then Duke of York his Brother Lond. 1651. oct This last being in English and published the last of all his Works I do therefore put it here At length this our worthy Author being brought to his trial in Westminster-hall was there for Treason for denying the King's Supremacy condemned to be hang'd drawn and quarter'd But that Sentence being mitigated by the K. he only lost his Head on Tower-hill 6. July in Fifteen hundred thirty and five year 1535 Soon after his Body was buried in the Chappel belonging to the Tower called St. Peter ad Vincula by the care of his Daughter Margaret to which place as 't is said she afterwards removed the Body of John Fisher B. of Rochester who being beheaded for the same matter on 22. June going before was buried in the Church-yard of Allhallows Barkin But More 's Body continuing not long in that Chappel was by the said Margaret removed to Chelsey Church near London and there deposited on the South side of the Choire or Chancel Over it is a large Epitaph made by himself after he had given up his Chancellorship which is printed in several Books and by several Authors As for his head it was set upon a pole on London-bridge where abiding about 14 days was then privily bought by the said Margaret and by her for a time carefully preserved in a leaden Box but afterwards with great devotion 't was put into a Vault the burying place of the Ropers under a Chappel joyning to St. Dunstans Church in Canterbury where it doth yet remain standing in the said Box on the Coffin of Margaret his Daughter buried there Much more as 't is probable I could say of his Death and Burial could I see a Book intit Expositio fidelis de morte Thomae Mori Printed in 8 vo in the Year 1536. but the Book is very scarce and I could never see no more of it than the bare title One More of Hertfordshire descended from him had one of his Chaps and was by his among other rarities carefully preserved till the Rebellion broke out in 1642. Jasper and Ellis Heywood Jesuits Sons of Joh. Heywood the noted Poet in the time of Hen. 8 had one of the teeth of the said Sir Tho. More but they being loth to part with their right to each other the tooth fell asunder and divided of it self The said Sir Thomas had issue by his first Wife Jane the Daughter of John Cowlt of Cowlts Hall in Essex three Daughters and one Son named John who being little better than an Ideot as 't is said took to Wife in his Fathers life time Anne Daughter and sole Heir of Edward Cressacre of Baronburgh in Yorkshire by whom he had issue 1 Thomas right Heir of his Father and Grandfather who had 13 Children of which Five were Sons The four eldest lived in voluntary contempt and loathed the World before the World fawned on them The first was Thomas born anew and baptized on that day of the Year 6. July on which Sir Thomas suffered death This Thomas having the Estate come to him married and had several Children but being a most zealous Catholick and constantly affected to the French Nation and Crown did at his own cost and charge with unwearied industry assemble all the English Persons of note that were then in and about Rome to supplicate his Holiness for a dispatch of a contract between the K. of England and Henrietta Maria of France an 1624-25 which being done the said Thomas who was the Mouth or Speaker for the said English Persons died XI April according to the accompt followed at Rome an 1625. aged 59. and was buried in the middle almost of the Church of St. Lewis in Rome leaving then behind him the life of his Gr. Grandfather Sir Tho. More 's incomparably well written published at London I think in 4to about 1627 and dedicated to Henrietta Maria beforementioned Over the said Tho. Mores Grave was soon after laid a monumental Stone at the charge of the English Clergy at Rome and an Epitaph engraven thereon a Copy of which was sent to me by I know not whom as several things of that nature are from other places running thus D. O. M. S. Thomae Moro dioc Ebor. Anglo magni illius Thomae Mori Angliae Cancellarii Martyris pronepoti atque haeredi viro probitate pietate insigni qui raro admodum apud Britannos exemplo in fratrem natu minorem amplum transcripsit patrimonium presbyter Romae factus inde fuisse sedis Apostolicae in patriam profectus plusculos annos strenuam fidei propagandae navavit operam postea cleri Anglicani negotia septem annos Romae 5 in Hispaniâ P. P. Paulo 5to Gregorio 15 summa cum integritate industria suisque sumptibus procuravit Tandem de subrogando Anglis Episcopo ad Urbanum 8 missus negotio feliciter confecto laborum mercedem recepturus ex hac vita migravit XI Apr. An. 1625. aet suae 59. Clerus Anglicanus moestus P. The second Son of the said Joh. More Son of Sir Thomas was Augustine who dyed unmarried The third was Thomas the second or Thomas junior born at Chelsey 8. Aug. 23. Hen. 8. who when he came to mans Estate degenerated from the Catholick Religion and lived and died a professed Minister leaving Issue several Children of whom the eldest Cressacre More who was born at Baronburgh in Yorkshire 3. July 1572. lived afterwards in no commendable fashion The fourth was Edward born after Sir Thomas his death and having not his blessing as Thomas the first and Augustin in bad degenerated from the Catholick Religion The fifth was Bartholomew who died young of the Plague in London The Pictures of most of these Mores mention'd here
Articles according to the order of the Creed of the Apostles Lond. 1581. oct 1584. qu. Annexed to John Baker's Lectures on the Creed These 100 Articles were before Printed viz. an 1550. in oct Declaration of the 10 holy Commandments of Almighty God Lond. 1550. and 88. oct With other things which I have not yet seen the trite or slender titles of which you may see in Baleus He also translated from Lat. into English Turtullians second Book to his Wife concerning the choice of a Husband or Wife Lond. 1550. oct and perhaps other things At length he suffered death in the flames near to the College of Priests in the City of Glocester on Saturday the ninth of Febr. in Fifteen hundred fifty and four 1. and 2. of Philip and Mary being then near sixty Years of Age and much lamented by those that pretended to Reformation EDWARD WOTTON Son of Rich. Wotton superior Beadle of Divinity of this University of Oxon by Margaret his Wife was born within the City of Oxon. particularly as I conceive in the Parish of St. Mary the Virgin wherein his Father lived and had Houses in Cat-street After he had been educated in the Grammar School joining to Magd. Coll. he was first made Semicommoner or Demie of that House and after he had taken the Degree of Bach. of Arts which was 1513. he was as I conceive made Fellow At length upon the desire of John Claymond and Rob. Morwent who knew the singular virtues and learning of the Person he left that Coll. and by the favour of that most worthy Person Bishop Fox Founder of that of Corp. Christi was made socius compar thereof with leave to travel into Italy for three Years an 1520. So that after he had read the Greek Lecture there for some time he journied into Italy studied Physick and took the Degree of Doctor in that faculty at Padöua After his return he was settled Greek Reader of his Coll. was incorporated in the same Degree in the latter end of 1525 was made Physician to K. Hen. 8. and not only became famous for his happy practice in that faculty in these parts and afterwards in London for he was one of the College of Physicians there but also for his great knowledge in Philosophy and things natural He hath transmitted to posterity De differentiis Animalium lib. 10. Par. 1552. fol. By the publishing of which he obtained a famous name among learned Men especially with Mich. Neander who saith that no Author hath written of Animals more learned and elegant than Wottonus See more in Thom Mouffet under the Year 1590. What other things the said Wotton hath published I know not nor anything else of him or his only 1 That he dying 5. Octob. year 1555 in Fifteen hundred fifty and five in the climacterical Year of his Age 63 was buried in St. Albans Church in Woodstreet in the City of London 2 That Catherine his Widow dying 4 Dec. 1558. was buried by him and both had a stone with an inscription thereon laid over their Graves But that part of it which remained an 100 Years after was totally consumed in the grand conflagration of London an 1666. 3 That he is much celebrated by the Antiquarian Poet John Leland under the name of Eadverdus Ododunus 4 That among the Children he left behind him for he had a numerous issue Brian Wotton LL. Bach. and Fellow of New Coll. was one who bequeathed his Body to be buried in the yard belonging to St. Albans Church before-mention'd Another was called Hen. Wotton first a Student of Ch. Ch. and afterwards Proctor of the University Greek Reader and Fellow of Corp. Chr. Coll. who proceeding in the faculty of Physick an 1567. became afterwards famous for the practice thereof NICHOLAS RYDLEY was born of an ancient and gentile Family at Willymondswyke in Northumberland educated in Grammatical Learning at Newcastle upon Tyne in Academical at Cambridge till he was Bach. of Arts. Afterwards going to Oxon he was elected into one of Walt. Skyrlaw's Fellowship of University Coll. 13. Apr. 1521. Which place he keeping but a little while and therefore the Members of that House can hardly lay claim to him he returned to Cambridge where he became D. of D. and Master of Pembroke Hall Afterwards he was made Chaplain to K. Ed. 6. and at length through Rochester the temporalities of which See were restored to him 27. Sept. 1547. became Bishop of London 1549. He was a Person small in stature but great in learning and profoundly read in Divinity quo viro as one who knew him saith nihil integrius omnibus egregiis dotibus ornatius Anglia nostra multis hisce retro saeculis habuit c. Among several things that he wrot were these Treatise concerning images not to be set up nor worshipped in Churches Written in the time of K. Ed. 6. Brief declaration of the Lords Supper Printed 1555. and 1586. oct Written by him while he was a Prisoner in Oxon. It was translated into Lat. by Will. Whittyngham bearing this title Assertio de coena Dominica Genev. 1556. Answered by another Book entit Confutatio Catholica Nich. Rydley de Eucharistia Par. 1556. qu. Written by Alban Langdale D. D. of St. John's College in Cambridge Certain godly and comfortable conferences between him and Mr. Hugh Latymer during the time of their imprisonment Lond. 1555. 56. and 74 in oct A friendly farewell written during his imprisonment at Oxford unto all his true Lovers a little before his death Lond. 1559. oct A piteous lamentation of the miserable state of the Church of England in the time of the late revolt from the Gospel Lond. in oct A comparison between the comfortable Doctrine of the Gospel and the traditions of Popish Religion Print with the former An account of a disputation at Oxford an 1554 Oxon. 1688. qu. Written in Latin and published from the Original MS by Gilb. Ironside D. D. Warden of Wadham Col. and then Vicehanc of the Univ. of Oxon. Treatise of the blessed Sacrament The beginning of which is Many things confound the real memory c. published with the former by the aforesaid Person from an original MS. to which he added A Letter written by Mr. Jo. Bradford the Martyr never before Printed Letter of reconciliation written to Bishop Hooper Lond. 1689. qu. published by Sam. Johnson Author of the Short account of the life of Julian the Apostate Lond. 1682. oct He the said Dr. Rydley had a hand also in the compiling of the Common Prayer-Book now in use among us has also disputations arguings communications and conferences about matters of Religion in the Book of Acts and Monuments of the Church written by John Fox In which Book under the Years 1554. and 55. you may see a full account of his sufferings and afterwards of his burning near to Balliol College in Oxon. year 1555 on the 16. of Oct in Fifteen hundred fifty and
violent and busie Person had got a license to read and preach it hapened that in a Lecture of his delivered at Thistleworth near to London he did therein inveigh much against the Poyson of Pelagius which had then infected the People very much in all parts of the Nation This Lecture of his being answered in print by one who was his auditor he staightway come out with a reply entit A Preservative or Triacle against the poyson of Pelagius lately renewed and stirred up again by the furious sect of the Anabaptists Lond. 1551. in tw which Book being dedicated to Hugh Latimer was usher'd into the world by several copies of Lat. and Eng. verses set before and at the end of it made by Nich. Grimoald of Merton Coll Tho. Norton of Sharpenhoe Randol Hurleston or Huddleston and Tho. Soame a Preacher Afterwards our Author Turner published A new Book of spiritual Physick for divers diseases of the Nobilitie and Gentlemen of England Said to be printed at Rome but false an 1555. oct by Marcus Antonius Constantius otherwise called Thraso miles gloriosus 'T is printed in an English Character and in the title are 4 Lat. verses directed by Turner ad nobilem Britannum The hunting of the Fox and the Wolfe because they did make havock of the Sheep of Jesus Christ printed in oct A Book of the natures and properties as well of the Bathes of England as of other Bathes in Germany and Italy Collen 1562. in a thin fol. and in an Eng. Char. Treatise of the Bath at Baeth in England Printed with the former Book Of the nature of all waters Printed with the former also The nature of wines commonly used here in England with a confutation of them that hold that Renish and other small Wines ought not to be drunken either of them that have the stone the rume or other diseases Lond. 1568. oct Of the nature and vertue of Triacle Printed with the next Book going before The rare treasure of English Bathes Lond. 1587. qu. Several things in this Book were published from his former Books of Bathes He also translated into English 1 A comparison between the old learning and the new Printed in Southwarke an 1538. originally written by Urb. Regius 2 The Palsgraves catechismi Lond. 1572. oct What else he hath written and translated you may see in Joh. Bale cent 8. nu 95. At length after all the rambles and troubles that our Author Turner had made and did endure he did quietly lay down his head and departed this life 7. year 1568 July in Fifteen hundred sixty and eight Whereupon his body was buried in the Chancel of the Church of St. Olaves in Hertstreet in London leaving then behind him several Children of whom Peter a Doctor of Physick was one Father to Samuel and Peter as I shall tell you elsewhere WILLIAM BARLOWE was bred a Canon Regular of the order of St. Austin in the Monastery of St. Osith in Essex and partly among those of his order in Oxon where besides a nursery for was an Abbey and Priory of that order and there obtained a competency in Theology of which faculty as 't is said he was a Doctor Afterwards he was made Prior of the Canons of his Order living at Bysham near Maydenhead in Berkshire and by that name and title he was sent in an Embassie to Scotland as I shall tell you elsewhere About the time of the dissolution of his Priory he was elected to the Episcopal See of St. Asaph the temporalities of which being delivered to him on the second day of Febr. 27. Hen. 8. Dom. 1535. he was consecrated to the said See 22. of the same Month. Thence he was translated to St. Davids in the Month of Apr. 1536. and thence to Bathe and Wells in 1547 being then a zealous Professor and Preacher of the reformed Religion In 1553 upon Qu. Maries coming to the Crown he was deprived of his Bishoprick for being married whereupon retiring with many others into Germany under pretence of Religion lived there in a poor and exile condition At length when Qu. Elizab. succeeded he was made Bishop of Chichester in Decemb. 1559 where he sate to the time of his death and in 1560 he was made the first Canon or Prebendary of the first stall in the collegiat Church of St. Peter in Westminster then founded by Qu. Elizabeth which Dignity he held with his Bishoprick five years His works are these A Dialogue describing the original ground of these Lutheran factions and many of their abuses Lond. 1553. in oct Printed in an English Char. Christian Homelies Cosmography which two last I have not yet seen He departed this mortal life in the Month of Aug. in Fifteen hundred sixty and eight year 1568 and was buried as I suppose in the Cath. Ch. at Chichester After this William Barlowe had been a Prior and a Bishop he took to Wife one Agatha Wellesbourne by whom he had issue five Daughters that were all married to Bishops viz. 1 Anne who after she had buried her first Husband named Austin Bradbridge bridge of Chichester sometimes Fellow of New College married Harbert Westphaling Bishop of Hereford 2 Elizabeth Wife of Will. Day Dean of Windsore afterwards Bishop of Winchester 3 Margaret Wife of Will. Overton B. of Lichf and Cov. 4 Frances who after she had buried her first Husband named Matthew Parker a younger Son of Dr. Matthew Parker Archb. of Canterbury was married to Tobie Mathew who died Archb. of York 5 Antonia the Wife of Will. Wykeham Bishop of Winchester The said Will. Barlowe had also a Son of both his names whom I shall mention in his proper place JOHN MAN being the next according to time to be mentioned I must tell you that he was born in the Parish of Lacocke in Wiltshire elected from Winchester School Probationer of New Coll. in 1529. and was made perpetual Fellow two Years after In 1537 he proceeded in Arts was the Southern Proctor of the University three years after and in 1547 he was made Principal of Whitehall since involved into Jesus Coll. After Qu. Elizabeth was settled in the Throne he became Chaplain to Dr. Parker Archb. of Canterbury who having a respect for did put him in Warden of Merton Coll. 1562. upon a dissent among the Fellows in an Election of one for that office as I have told you at large elsewhere In 1565 he was made Dean of Glocester in the place of Will. Jennings deceased who from being a Monk of that place was made the first Dean 1541. and in 1567. in the Month of Aug. he was sent by the Queen her Ambassador to the K. of Spain who the Year before had sent to our Queen his Ambassador called Goseman or Gooseman de Sylva Dean as 't was said of Toledo Of which Ambassadors Qu. Eliz. used merrily to say that as her Brother the K. of Spain had sent to her a Goos-man so she had sent to him a Man goose
Pauls cross on the second Sunday before Esther in the year 1560 which are also printed Disputation with Archb. Cranmer and Bish Rydley in the Div. School at Oxon an 1554 Printed in the Acts and Mon. of the Church Funeral Sermon at the burning of Dr. Tho. Cranmer Archb. of Canterbury He hath also other things extant which I have not yet seen After Qu. Elizab. came to the Crown he with Jo. Whyte B. of Winchester and five more most zealous Cath. Divines did dispute with as many Protestant Divines concerning matters of Religion when Qu. Elizab. was about to make a reformation in the Church of England But that disputation coming to nothing he was depriv'd of his Deanery to make room for Dr. Will May Master of Trin. Coll. in Cambridge who dying about the beginning of 1561. Alex. Nowell succeeded him About that time Dr. Cole was imprison'd but where I cannot tell Sure I am that he died in or near to the Compter in Woodstreet within the City of London in the month of Decemb. year 1579 in Fifteen hundred seventy and nine but where buried by his Executor Humph. Moseley Secondary of the said Compter I know not Joh. Leland the Antiquary was Dr. Cole's acquaintance and having had experience of his learning hath eterniz'd his memory among other learned Men of our Nation and of his time in his book of Encomia's to which the curious reader may recur if he please wherein he 'll find a just character of this our Author Dr. Cole and his learning PETER MORWYN or Morwyng a zealous reformer of his time was born in Lincolnshire made perpetual Fellow of Magd. Coll. in 1552 being then Bach of Arts and in the year after supplicating some few days before K. Edwards death that he might proceed in that faculty did obtain his desire But that King then dying and Morwyn foreseeing that Religion would alter he was not presented to that Degree Soon after he and others of his society consulting how to withdraw themselves in private obtained leave to be absent for a time but to what place Morwyn went beyond the Seas for he was a voluntary exile in Germany I find not Sure it is that after Qu. Elizab. came to the Crown he retired to his Coll. and in 1559 was presented to the Degree of Master and became renowned among the Academians for his great knowledge in the Lat. and Greek tongues and poetry When Dr. Bentham was promoted to the See of Lichfield he made him his Chaplain and upon the next vacancy Prebendary and Canon of the said Church and well beneficed near to that place He hath translated into English 1 A compendious and most marvellous history of the latter times of the Jews commune weale beginning where the Bible and Scriptures leave and continuing to the utter subversion and last destruction of that Country and People Lond. 1558-61 and 1593 in oct Written in Hebrew by Joseph Ben. Gorion 2 The treasure of Enonimus containing the wonderful hid secrets of nature touching the most apt times to prepare and distill Medicines Lond. 1565. qu. besides other books which I have not yet seen He was living at or near to Lichfield in the month of May in Fifteen hundred seventy and nine in which year he was appointed one of the administrators of the goods chattels c. of the said Bish Bentham but how long he lived after that year I cannot tell nor where his reliques were lodg'd JOHN LISTER was descended from those of his name in Yorkshire spent some years among the Oxonians and wrot A rule to bring up children wherein is declared how the Father opposeth the Son in the Holy Scripture whereby all Parents may be taught how to bring up their Children Printed at Lond. in oct about 1580. What other things he hath written and published I cannot yet JOHN ROGERS called by some Joh. Rogers the second because one of both his names of Pembr Hall in Cambr. was a writer in the Reign of Ed. 6. and a Martyr for the Protestant cause in the time of Qu. Mary was educated for some years in this University but whether in Qu. Coll. where one of both his names was Fellow and proceeded Master of Arts in 1556 or another Joh. Rogers of Mert. Coll. I think who was admitted Master in 1576 I cannot justly say Sure I am that Joh. Rogers of Oxon. wrot and published these treatises following The displaying of an horrible sect of gross and wicked hereticks naming themselves the Family of Love c. Lond. 1579. oct The lives of the Authors of the Family of Love Printed with the former Answer to certaine Letters maintaining the opinions of those of the Family of Love Printed also with the former and in the same year What else this Author hath published I cannot yet find nor when or where he died I find one John Rogers to be a Senior Student of St. Albans hall 1569 which perhaps may be the same with him of Mert. Coll. because that when any Postmaster or Student there taketh the Degree of Bach. of Arts they commonly receede to the said Hall which joyns to the Coll. of Merton ALAN COPE to whom the City of London gave his first breath was made perpetual Fellow of Magd. Coll. in 1549 and Master of Arts in 52 being that year Senior of the Act celebrated 18. July In 1558 he was unanimously chosen Senior Proctor of the University and in less than two years after when he saw that the R. Cath. Religion would be silenced in England he obtained leave to absent himself for a time from the said College Whereupon waiting for a prosperous gale ship'd himself beyond the Seas and at length went to Rome where tho he before had for the space of 5 years studied the Civil Law in this University he was actually created as 't is said Doctor or Bach. of Div. and became one of the Canons of St. Peters Church there Vir fuit eximii ingenii as one saith qui post magnos in Ecclesiâ dei per side Catholicâ tuendâ susceptos labores scripsit opus quoddam insigne intitulat Historiae Evangelicae veritas Seu singularia vitae Domini Jesu Christi eo ordine quo gesta fuerunt recensita ipsis quatuor Evangelistarum verbis contexta c. Lov. 1572 and at Doway 1603. qu. He also published under his name Sex Dialogi c. Antw. 1566. But those Dialogues were written by Nich. Harpesfeild as I shall tell you in my discourse of him As for A. Cope he surrendred up his last breath at Rome about Fifteen hundred and eighty year 1580 and was buried in the Chappel belonging to the English Hospital or Coll. there leaving behind him a most admirable exemplar of vertue which many did endeavor to follow but could not accomplish their desires DAVID de la HYDE was admitted Probationer-Fellow of Merton Coll. 1549 proceeded Master of Arts four years after being then admired and
two years after his Father did bequeath his body to be buried in the Chappel of the Bow built and erected by his ancestors wherein some of them were buried joyning to the Church of North Lydbury near to which place is the Village called Plowden situated in Shropshire The name and posterity of this Edm. Plowden do now remain at Shiplake in Oxfordshire PATRICK PLUNKET Baron of Dunsanie in Ireland Son of Rob. Plunket Baron of the same place who died 1. Elizab. was educated in Grammar learning at Ratough under one Staghens and from thence was sent to Oxon to obtain Logicals and Philosophicals but to what house there unless to Gloucester hall where many of his Countrymen and some of his Sirname studied in the time of Qu. Elizab. as I shall anon inform you I cannot justly tell or whether to Univ. Coll. when Richard Stanyhurst who calls him his Brother studied there I am as yet ignorant Howsoever it was sure I am that by the care of his Father-in-law Sir Christoph Barnwell Kt. he was maintained according to his condition for some years in this University where profiting much in several sorts of learning tho honored not or was honored with any Degree did afterwards compose several things fit for the press which by reason of his bashfull modesty or modest bashfulness were wrongfully imprisoned and in a manner stifled in shadowed couches I doubt not as my Author adds but what by his fame and renown in Learning he shall be answerable to his desert and value in writing c. This worthy Baron who was of ancient extract in Ireland and of the R. Cath. Religion was a Person noted in his Country for his great possessions there for his good natural parts and renowned therefore among the learned in Fifteen hundred eighty and four In which year and after he had books dedicated to him as being not only a learned Person himself but also a Patron of learning and learned Men. While he studied in this University were eight of his Countrymen of Glouc. hall matriculated in 1574 having been Students there some years before as Walter Henry and Joh. Talbot of gentile extraction the first of which was then 21 years of age and the other two 20. Edw. Plunket a Gentlemans Son of 20 years of age Christoph Galway and John Martill Sons of Plebeians the former 19 the other 20 years of age and one Pendergast and Whitty the Sons of Gent. the former 22 the other 21 years of age Besides these were several other Irish Men matriculated as members of that Hall during the Reign of Qu. Elizab. as 1 Rich. Whyte a Gentlemans Son aged 21. an 1578. 2 Giles Hovenden of Leis in Kings County the Son of a Gent. an 1582. aged 26. 3 Gerard Salwey of Dromore an Esq Son the same year aged 14. with others to the beginning of K. James his Reign which for brevity sake I now omit Of the said Baron Plunkets Family was descended that most ven and religious Dr. Oliver Plunket titular Primate of Ireland who being found by some Persons to have been deeply engaged in the Popish Plot in Ireland an 1678. 79 was brought over into England where receiving sentence to die in Westminster hall was accordingly hang'd drawn and quarter'd at Tyburn on the first day of July 1681 whereupon his quarters only not his head were buried in the yard of St. Giles Church in the Fields near to London by the bodies of the five Jesuits that were a little before executed and buried under the North wall of the said Yard In the said place Plunkets quarters continuing till the fanatical plot broke out in 1683 they were taken up and conveyed beyond the Sea to the Monastery of the Benedictines of which order he was a Brother at Lambspring in Germany where they were with great ceremony and devotion re-buried Before I speak of the next writer the reader may be pleased to know farther of this Plunket that when the Lady D. D. had borrowed 200 Crowns of an Irish Priest at Bologna she rather than repay that summ procured the Archbishoprick of Armagh to which the Primacy of Ireland is annex'd for the said Plunket by the means of Cardinal Rospigloisi who tho he would not be at the congregation that day wherein that matter was to be done yet he made Card. Chigi do it and when Card. Barbarini opposed the nomination Chigi told the said Cardinal that it must be so This was about 1669. JOHN de FECKENHAM was so called because he was born of poor Parents living in a cottage or poor house joyning to the Forest of Feckenham in Worcestershire tho his right name was Howman While he was a Child he was very apt to learn having a natural genie to good letters and to any thing that seemed good which being perceived by the Priest of his Parish he was by the endeavours and perswasions of one or more considerable Persons taken into Evesham Monastry in the said County the Abbat and Monks of which were of the Order of St. Benedict When he arrived to the age of about 18 he was sent by his Abbat to Glocester Coll. in this University where there was a particular apartment for the young Monks of that Abbey to lodge in and to continue there for certain years purposely to obtain Academical or at least Theological learning Afterwards he being called home by his Abbat to make room for other Monks to succeed in the said apartment his Abbey was soon after dissolved viz. 17 Nov. 1535 at which time he had an allowance made to him from the Exchecquer of an annual pension of 100 florens during his natural life Whereupon retiring to the said Coll. of Gloc. again I find him there in 1537 in which year he subscrib'd by the name of John Feckenham to a certain composition then made between Rob. Joseph Prior of the said Coll. and 29 Students thereof on the one part of which number Feckenham was one of the Seniors and threeof the Senior Bedells of the University on the other and in the Year 1539 he was admitted to the reading of the Sentences being about that time Chaplain to Dr. John Bell Bishop of Worcester But that Bishop giving up his place in few years after our Author Feckenham was entertained by Dr. Bonner B. of London with whom continuing till 1549 at which time he was deprived of his Bishoprick and put into the Marshalsea he was committed Prisoner to the Tower of London occasion'd as 't is said by Mr. Rob. Horne afterwards B. of Winchester Soon after he was released or rather borrowed thence for a time by Sir Philip Hobie for no other reason but to dispute about matters of Religion to satisfie Protestants who then thought that their Religion could not be denied The first disputation that he had with the chief of that party was at the Savoy in the house of the E. of Bedford The second in the house of
treatise of predestination Lond. 1581. oct De Christo gratis justificante contra Jesuitus Lond. 1583. oct Disputatio contra Jesuitas eorum argumenta quibus inhaeren●●n justitiam ex Aristotile confirmant Rupell 1585. oct Eicasmi seu meditation●s in Apocal. S. Johannis Apostoli Evangelistae Lond. 1587. fol. Genev. 1596. oct Papa consutatus vel sacra Apostolica Ecclesia papam confutans Translated into English by James Bell a great admirer of Joh. Fox pr. at Lond. in qu. Brief exhortation fruitful and meet to be read in the time of Gods visitation where Ministers do lack or otherwise cannot be present to comfort them Lond. in oct He translated also from English into Latin Concio funebris in obitum Augustae memoriae Ferdinandi Caesaris recens defuncti in Eccles Cath. S. Pauli habitae 3. Oct. 1564. Also from Latin into English 1 A Sermon of Joh. Oecolampadius to young Men and Maidens Lond. in tw 2 An instruction of Christian Faith how to lay hold upon the promise of God and not to doubt of our salvation Or otherwise thus Necessary instructions of faith and hope for Christians to hold fast and not to doubt c. Lond. 1579. sec edit in oct Written by Urbanus Regius He finished also and compleated An answer Apologetical to Hierome Osorius his slanderous invective Lond. 1577 and 1581. qu. began in Latin by Walt. Haddon LL D. and published The four Evangelists in the old Saxon tongue with the English thereunto adjoyned Lond. 1571. qu. What else he wrot and translated you may see in Baleus but the reader is to understand that several of those books that he mentions were never printed At length after our Author had spent 70 years or more in this vain and transitory world he yielded to nature on the 18. Apr. in Fifteen hundred eighty and seven and was buried in the Chancel of the Church of St. Giles without Cripplegate before-mention'd year 1587 Over his grave is set up an inscription to his memory on the South wall a copy of which you may see in Hist Antiq Univ. Oxon. lib. 2 p. 195. but not one word of him which is a wonder to me is mention'd in the Annalls of Q. Elizab. written by Will. Camden or by any Epigrammatist of his time only Joh. Parkhurst who was his acquaintance in this University He left behind him a Son named Samuel born in the City of Norwych made Demie of Magd. Coll. 1576. aged 15 afterwards Fellow of that House and Master of Arts who about 1610 wrot The life of his Father Joh. Fox which is set in Latin and English before the second Volume of Acts and Monuments printed at Lond. 1641. I find one Joh. Fox to be Author of Time and the end of time in 2 discourses printed at Lond. in 12 o but that Joh. Fox was later in time than the former While Joh. Fox the Martyriologist was Prebendary of Sarum he settled the Corps belonging thereunto which is the impropriation of Shipton Underwood near Burford in Oxfordshire on his Son whose Grand-daughter named Anne Heir to her Father Tho. Fox was married to Sir Ric. Willis of Ditton in Essex Knight and Baronet sometimes Colonel-general of the Counties of Linc. Nott. and Rutland and Governour of the Town and Castle of Newark who or at least his Son Tho. Fox Willis enjoyeth it to this day an 1690. JOHN FIELD was a noted Scholar of his time in this University but in what house he studied I cannot yet tell One of both his names was admitted Fellow of Lincoln Coll. in the Year 1555 but took no Degree if the register saith right Another took the Degree of Bach. of Arts 1564 and that of Master three years after And a third Jo. Field took the Degree of Bach. of Arts only in 1570. Which of these three was afterwards John Field the famous Preacher and Minister of St. Giles Cripplegate in London who saith in one of his books which I shall anon mention that he was educated in Oxon I cannot justly say unless it be he that was Mast of Arts. The works of that Joh. Field who saith that he was of the Univ. of Oxon are these Prayers and meditations for the use of private families and sundry other Persons according to their divers states and occasions Lond. 1581. 85. 1601. c. in tw Caveat for Persons Howlet and the rest of the dark brood Lond. 1581. oct Exposition of the Symbole of the Apostles Lond. 1581. oct Godly Exhortation by occasion of a late judgment of God shewed at Paris garden 13. Januar. 1583. upon divers Persons whereof some were killed and many hurt at a Beare-baiting c. Lond. 1583. oct Printed there again 1588 with this title A declaration of the Judgment of God shewed at Paris garden c. The said Jo. Field also hath translated into English 1 A treatise of Christian righteousness Lond. 1577. oct Written in French by Mr. J. de L'espine 2 Notable treatise of the Church in which are handled all the principal questions that have been moved in our time concerning that matter Lond. 1579. oct Written in French by Phil. de Mornay 3 Sermons on Jacob and Esau on Gen. 25. ver 12. to the 38. verse of 27. of Gen. Lond. 1579. qu. Written by Joh. Calvin 4 Four Sermons entreating of matters very profitable for our time the first of which is on Psal 16. 3. With a brief exposition of the 87 Psalm Lond. 1579. qu. Written in French by John Calvin 5 Second part of questions which is concerning the Sacraments Lond. 1580. Written by Theod. Beza 6 Com. on the Creed Lond. 1582. oct Written by Gasp Olevian 7 Prayers used at the end of the readings upon the Prophet Hosea Lond 1583. in 16. Which prayers were made and written by J. Calvin 8 Christian Meditations on the 6. 25 and 32 Psalmes Lond. in 16o. written by P. Pilesson c. besides other things which I have not yet seen At length our Author Field dying about his middle age in the latter end of the year after the 16. year 1586 Febr. Fifteen hundred eighty and seven was buried in the Church of St. Giles before mention'd leaving behind him several Children of which the eldest was named Theophilus Field educated in Cambridge afterwards Chaplain to King James the first Bishop of Landaff and at length of Hereford as I shall more at large tell you elsewhere WILLIAM HARRISON was a Londoner born educated in Grammar learning at Westminster under Mr. Alex. Nowell in the latter end of King Hen. 8. or beginning of King Edw. 6. sent to Oxon to obtain Academical learning but to what house therein unless Ch. Ch. I cannot justly tell From Oxon he went to Cambridge and making some stay there became at length domestick Chaplain to Sir Will. Brook Knight Lord Warden of the Cinque ports and Baron of Cobham in Kent who if I mistake not preferr'd him to a benefice He hath written
Historical description of the Island of Britain with a brief rehearsal of the nature and qualities of the People of England and such commodities as are to be found in the same In 3. books They were first published in the first and second volume of Chronicles that go under the name of Raphael Holinshed printed at Lond. 1577. in fol. and there again in 1587 with augmentations by Jo. Hooker alias Vowell The collection is made from divers choice Authors many of which were then in MS. A Chronologie Gathered and compiled with most exquisite diligence after the example of Gerardus Mercator and other late Chronoligers So saith Raph. Holinshed in his Preface to the third volume of Chronicles What he hath written besides I know not nor any thing else but that he was living in Fifteen hundred eighty and seven I find one Will. Harrison born in the Dioc. of London elected Bachelaur-Fellow of Merton Coll. 1557 admitted M. of Arts in 1560 being then beneficed near to Northampton but he dying 1564 cannot be understood to be the same with the writer Another Will. Harrison I find to be installed Canon of Windsore 1586. being about that time Rector of Radwynter in Essex who dying 1593 was buried at Windsore leaving behind him several Children which he had by his Wife Marian Daughter of Will. Isebrand of Anderne near to Guisnes in Picardie Whether this Will. Harrison be the same with the writer I cannot tell WILLIAM WATKINSON was educated in Ch. Ch. became Prebendary of Milverton in the Church of Wells after he had taken the Degree of Bach. of Arts afterwards he was one of the Proctors and Bach. of Divinity of this University He hath translated into English 1 Of the happiness of this our age and the ingratitude of Men to God for his benefits Lond. 1578. qu. Written by Joh. Rivius 2 Meditations on the 32. Psalm Lond. 1579. oct and other things which I have not yet seen How long he lived beyond Fifteen hundred eighty and seven 29. Elizab. in which year he took the Degree of Bach. of Div. I know not ULPIAN FULWELL a Somersethire Man born and a Gentlemans Son became a Commoner of St. Maries Hall in the Year 1578 aged 32 but whether he took any Degree among us it appears not While he continued in the said House where he was esteemed a Person of ingenuity by his contemporaries he partly wrot The eighth liberal science called Ars adulandi or the Art of flattery Printed 1579. qu. Afterwards having learned the art of Poetry among the Academians he wrot and published A pleasant enterlude intit Like will to like quoth the Devil to the Collier Wherein is declared what punishment follows those that will rather live licentiously that esteem and follow good counsel Lond. 1587. qu. Written in time and printed in an English Character The name of Ulp. Fulwell stands quoted by Jo. Speed in his life of K. Ed. 6. in his Chronicle and therefore I suppose he hath other things printed for I cannot conceive that Joh. Speed should quote him for any thing out of the two former books ROBERT CROWLEY or Croleus as he writes himself a very forward Man for reformation in the time of K. Ed. 6. and Qu. Elizab. was born in Glocestershire became a Student in the University about 1534 and was soon after made Demie of Magd. Coll. ●● 1542 he being then Bach. of Arts was made Probationer-fellow of the said House by the name of Rob. Crule but whether he took the Degree of Master of Arts it appears not for likely it is that he left the University when K. Hen. 8. began to settle a mongrel Religion in the Nation When K. Ed. 6. began to Reign he exercised the profession of Printing in Ely rents in Holbourn near to London sold books and at leisure times exercised the gift of Preaching in the great City and elsewhere But upon the succession of Queen Mary he among several English Protestants lest the Kingdom went to Frankfort in Germany and setled there purposely to enjoy the Religion which had been practised in England in the days of K. Ed. 6. After her decease he returned and had several benefices bestowed on him among which was the Vicaridge of St. Giles by Criplegate in London of which Church he wrot himself Vicar 1566. where continuing his pretended gifts in preaching was followed and respected by the neighbourhood of those parts and by others for his skill in rimes and poetry He hath written The Supper of the Lord after the true meaning of the sixth of John and the XI of the 1 Epist to the Corinthians c. And incidently in the exposition of the Supper is confuted the Letter of Mr. Tho. More against Joh. Frith Printed 5. Apr. 1533 in a small oct Confutation of Nich. Shaxton Bishop of Sarum his recantation of 13 Articles at the burning of Mistris Anne Askew Lond. 1546. oct Explicatio petitoria ad Parliamentum adversus expilatores plebis Printed in the Engl. tongue 1548 in oct Translated into Lat. by John Heron. Confutation of Miles Hoggard's wicked ballad made in defence of transubstantation of the Sacrament Lond. 1548. oct The voice of the last Trumpet blown by the seventh Angell c containing 12 several lessons Lond. 1549. oct Written in meter Pleasure and pain heaven and hell Remember these four and all shall be well Lond. 1550 51. in oct Written in meter Way to wealth wherein is plainly taught a most present remedy for sedition Lond. 1550. oct One and thirty Epigrams wherein are briefly touched so many abuses that may and ought to be put away Lond. 1550. in tw This was printed by the Author Crowley in his house in Ely rents before-mention'd An apologie of those English Preachers and Writers which Cerberus the three-headed dog of hell chargeth with false doctrine under the name of Predestination Lond. 1566. qu. Of which book you may see more in Canterburies doome written by Will. Prynne p. 169. Of the signes and tokens of the latter day Lond. 1567. oct A setting open of the subtile sophistry of Tho. Watson D. D. which he used in his two Sermons preached before Qu. May in Lent 1553 concerning the real presence in the Sacrament Lond. 1569. qu. Sermon in the Chappell at Gilde hall in London 29. Sept. 1574. before the Lord Mayor and the whole state of the Citie on Psalme 139. ver 21. 22. 23. 24. c. Lond. 1575. oct Answer to Tho. Pound his six reasons wherein he sheweth that the Scriptures must be judged by the Church Lond. 1581. qu. Brief discourse concerning those four usual notes whereby Christs Catholick Church is known c. Lond. 1581. qu. Replication to that lewd answer which Frier Joh. Francis of the Minimies order in Nigeon near Paris hath made to a letter that his Mother caused to be sent to him out of England Lond. 1586. qu. Deliberate aunsweare to a Papist proving that Papists are Antichristian Schismaticks
c. in Parliament which were pleaded against by several persons on his behalf and that many years after his death year 1629 which hapned as I conceive about sixteen hundred twenty and nine were Votes passed in the H. of Com. that 5000. pounds should be given to his children because he had suffered in the 3 of Car. 1. Dom. 1627. for opposing the illegalities of that time The said Votes passed in 1646. and no doubt there is but all or at least some of the money was paid WILLIAM THORNE a most noted Linguist and Rabbie of his time and therefore well known to and respected by that noted Belgick Critick John Drusius who dedicates to him his Opuscula Gramaticalia received his first breath at Semeley in Wilts his Grammatical education in Wykchams School and his Academical in New coll of which he became perpetual Fellow in 1587. being then esteemed to be well grounded in humane learning In 1593. he proceeded in Arts and five years after was constituted Hebrew Professor of the University Afterwards being promoted to the Deanary of Chichester in the room as it seems of Dr. Martin Colepeper deceased he proceeded in Divinity at which time he was reputed eminent not only for his incomparable skill in the Oriental Sacred Tongues by men unmatchable in them worthily famoused on this side and beyond the Sea but also for other learning His writings are Tullius sive Rhetor in tria stromata divisus Oxon. 1592. octavo A kenning Glass for a Christian King Serm. on Joh. 1● latter part of the 15. verse Lond. 1623. oct and other things as 't is said but such I have not yet seen He died 13. Feb. in sixteen hundred twenty and nine and was buried two days after in the Cath. Ch. at Chichester In his Deanry of Chichester succeeded Dr. Francis Dee of Cambridge about that time Chancellour of the Chat Sarum and afterwards Bishop of Peterborough LEWIS OWEN a native of Merionithshire became either a Servitor or a Student of Ch. Ch. in Summer time an 1590. aged 18. but left the University without a degree having some petty employment bestow'd on him about that time Afterwards he travelled in the latter end of Q. Elizab. and beginning of K. James into several countries of Europe and in Spain making a longer continuance than elsewhere he entred himself if I mistake not into the Society of Jesus at Valladolid where he continued a curious observer among them for some time At length being fully satisfied of their intregues which tended as he said to worldly policy rather than true religion he left and became a bitter enemy against them as well in his discourses as writings as it may appear in these things following The running Register recording a true relation of the State of the English Colleges Seminaries and Cloysters in all foreign parts together with a brief discourse of the lives practices c. of Engl. Monks Friers Jesuits c. Lond. 1626. qu. The unmasking of all Popish Monks Friers and Jesuits Or a treatise of their genealogy beginnings proceedings and present state c. Lond. 1628. qu. Speculum Jesuiticum Or the Jesuits looking Glass wherein they may behold Ignatius their Patron his progress their own pilgrimage his life their beginning c. Lond. 1629. qu. A true Catalogue of all their Colleges professed houses houses of Approbation Seminaries and houses of residence in all parts of the World And lastly a true number of the Fellows of their Society taken out of their own books and catalogues printed with the Speculum Jesuiticum and both at the end of Europae Speculum 1629. written by Sir Ed. Sandys before mention'd This Lew. Owen who had a rambling head was living in sixteen hundred twenty and nine but what became of him afterwards I cannot find Besides this Lew. Owen was another of both his names born in Anglesie first a Student in S. Edm. Hall 1578. afterwards of Hart hall and a Benefactor to Jesus coll WILLIAM HERBERT Son and Heir of Hen. Earl of Pembroke was born at Wilton in Wilts 8. Apr. 1580. became a Nobleman of New coll in Lent-term 1592. aged 13. continued there about two years succeeded his Father in his honours 1601. made Knight of the Garter 1. Jac. 1. and Governour of Portsmouth six years after In 1626. he was unanimously elected Chancellour of this University being a great Patron of learning and about that time was made Lord Chamberlain of the Kings Household He was not only a great favourer of learned and ingenious men but was himself learned and endowed to admiration with a poetical genie as by those amorous and not inelegant Aires and Poems of his composition doth evidently appear some of which had musical Notes set to them by Hen. Lawes and Nich. Laneare All that he hath extant were published with this title Poems written by William Earl of Pembroke c. many of which are answered by way of repartee by Sir Benj. Rudyard with other Poems written by them occasionally and apart Lond. 1660. oct He died suddenly in his house called Baynards Castle in London on the tenth of Apr. in sixteen hundred and thirty year 1630 according to the calculation of his nativity made several years before by Mr. Tho. Allen of Glouc. hall whereupon his body was buried in the Cath. Ch. at Salisbury near to that of his Father See more of him in the Fasti among the Creations an 1605. He had a younger brother named Philip who was also a Nobleman of New coll at the same time with his brother was afterwards created Earl of Montgomery and upon the death of his brother William succeeded in the title of Pembroke But this Philip was quite different in temper from his brother for he was esteemed by all that knew or had to do with him a very cholerick man a frequent Sweater and so illiterate that if the report be true he could scarce write his name He also turn'd Rebel when the Civil Wars began in 1642. was one of the Council of State by Olivers appointment after K. Ch. 1. was beheaded and a most passionate enemy to learning which notoriously appeared when he deeply engag'd himself in the undoing of this University of which he was Chancellour in 1648. I have seen several rambling and confus'd Speeches that he with great confidence uttered in Parliament and Committees which were afterwards printed under his name and others very witty and Satyrical that were father'd upon him The Reader is to know that besides the former Will. Herbert hath been others of both his names that have been writers as one who was a Knight in the time of Qu. Elizab. an 1586. and another of Pointington in 1646. who dedicates his book called Herberts belief c. to his Son Benjamin and one William Har●ert who published The Prophecy of Cadwallader c. SAMUEL PAGE a Ministers Son and a Bedfordshire man born was admitted Schollar of C. C. coll 10 June 1587. aged 13 or
their zealous profession of the Gospel and also that the Count had been trained up in good Arts as well as in Divinity June 24. Thomas Bilson of New John Rainolds of C. C. Coll. Besides these three were but three more admitted Doct. of Law Jul… John Daye of Magd. Coll. He became Vicar Gen. to the B. of Bathe and Wells an 1587. He was the only person who was admitted Doctor of his Faculty this year ☞ Not one Doct. of Phys was adm this year Doct. of Div. March 27. Ralph Tomson of Brasn Coll. He was now one of the Chaplains to the Queen and dying 18 Aug. 1591 was buried in the Church of Settrington of which he was Rector in Yorkshire Apr… Robert Dorset Canon of Ch. Ch. In the beginning of this year 1579 he became Dean of Chester in the place of Rich. Langworth or Longworth D. D. of Cambridge deceased who before had succeeded Dr. Jo. Piers but the year when I cannot tell This Dr. Dorset who was also Rector of Ewelme in Oxfordshire died 29 May 1580 and was buried in the Church there whereupon one Tho. Madesley or Modesley succeeded him in his Deanery July 3. John Langworth of New Coll. This person who was Son of Lancelot Langworth of Kertlebury in Worcestershire was installed Prebendary of Worcester in the place of Richard Longworth before mention'd an 1579 was afterwards Prebendary of Canterbury and in 1588 Feb. 4. was admitted Archdeacon of Wells but in whose place I cannot tell because from the death of John Rugg Archdeacon of Wells which hapned in 1581 to the year 1587 the Register of that Church is wanting or defective In the said Archdeaconry of Wells succeeded him one Steph. Nelson but when unless in the year 1610 I cannot tell and in his Prebendary of Worcester John Hanmer an 1614. John Woolton who became Bishop of Exeter this year did in the month of May supplicate for the degree of D. of D. but whether admitted or diplomated I find not Incorporations May…Edward Graunt or Grant Bach. of Div. of Cambridge and chief Master of Westminster School June…John Langworth Bach. of Div. of the same University In the month following he was admitted Doct. of his Faculty as before I have told you and proceeded as a Member of New Coll. in the Act that followed July 14. Eubu●e Thelwall Bach. of Arts of Trin. Coll. in the said University He was afterwards Master of Arts of this University Counsellour at Law Master of the Alienation Office one of the Masters of the Chancery a Knight and at length Principal of and an especial Benefactor to Jesus College in Oxon. He died 8 Oct. 1630 aged 68 years and was buried in the Chappel belonging to that Coll. Godfrey Goldsborough Bach. of Div. of Cambridge was incorporated the same day This person who had been Fellow of Trin. Coll. in that University was installed Archdeacon of Worcester in the place of Dr. Thomas Powell resigning 15 July 1579 he being then Prebendary of Caddington in the Cath. Church of S. Paul and on the 12 August 1581 was installed Prebendary of the Church there in the place of John Bullyngham promoted to the See of Glocester At length upon the death to the said Bullyngham he became Bishop of Glocester an 1598 at which time he had license to keep his Preb. of Worcester in commendam and dying 26 May 1604 was buried in a little Chappel on the North side of a fair large Chappel at the East end of the Choire of the Cath. Church at Glocester Over his Grave was soon after a raised or Altar-Monument erected with the proportion of a Bish in his Pontifie 〈◊〉 lying thereon with this Inscription Aureus Fulvo nomen sortitus ab auro Hâc Goldisburgus nunc requiescit humo Scilicet orta solo pretiosa metalla parente In matrem redeunt inveterata suam He left behind him two Sons John and Godfrey and other Children as I conceive besides a Brother named John Richard Wood Bach. of Div. of the same University was incorporated the same day July 14. He was afterwards Doctor of his Faculty and became Can. or Preb. of Westminster in the place of John Read deceased in the month of May 1587. John Keltride M. A. of the same Univ. was also then July 14. incorporated in the same degree Whether he be the same with John Keltridge who wrot Exposition or Readings on the Lords Prayer on Luke 11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. as also A Sermon at the making of Ministers on 1 Tim. 3. 1 2 3. printed at Lond. 1578 as also of a Sermon against the Jesuits on Deut. 6. 4. Lond. 1581. qu. I cannot tell Quaere Creations Feb. 12. Richard Barnes M. of A. of this University and Bach. of Div. of Cambridge now Bishop of Durham was actually created Doctor of Divinity by certain persons appointed by the Members of the University but whether at London or elsewhere it appears not An. Dom. 1580. An. 22 Elizab. An. 23 Elizab. Chanc. the same Vicechanc. Arthur Yeldard D. D. President of Trin. Coll. July 13. Proct. Rob. Crayne of Ball. Coll. Tho. Stone of Ch. Ch. Elected in Congregation 13 Apr. The junior was afterwards Parson of Warkton in Northamptonshire and a great promoter of Presbytery He died there 1617. Bach. of Arts. June 13. Rob. Wright of Trin. Coll. Sabin Chambers of Broadgates Hall Hen. Cuffe of Trin. Coll. The first of these three was afterwards Bishop of Lichfield the other a Jesu● and the last an eminent Grecian Jan. 13. Francis Godwin of Ch. Ch. He was afterwards successively B. of Landaff and Hereford Feb. 3. John Rider of Jesus Coll. He was also afterwards a B. in Ireland 17. Will. Hubbocke lately of Magd. Hall now of C. C. Coll. Admitted 103. Mast of Arts. June 15. Will. Gager of Ch. Ch. March 10. Thomas Gibson of Queens Coll. originally as it seems of that of Mert. One of both his names hath published A fruitful Sermon preached at Okeham in Rutlandshire on 1 Cor. 9. 16. Lond. 1584 in oct Whether the same with him who was Master of Arts I cannot tell Another Tho. Gibson also I find who published The blessing of a good King in eight Sermons c. Lond. 1614 oct whether he was of Oxon I know not Mar. 16. Chacles Turnbull John Spenser of C. C. Coll. Adm. 49. ☞ Not one Bach. of Phys was this year admitted only three supplicated for that degree Five Bach. of Div. were admitted yet not one of them can I mention according to the method that I follow Doct. of Law July 20. Daniel Donne of All 's Coll. now Principal of New Inn. He was afterwards Dean of the Arches Master of the Requests one of the Commissioners appointed by Q. Elizabeth to treat with the Danes at Bremen an 1602 a Knight and one of the two first Burgesses elected by the Univ. of Oxon after the Members thereof were impowr'd to send Burgesses to Parliament an 1603. He died 15
and at the same time 't was ordered that an yearly pension should be by him Williams paid to the famous Pet. du Moulin a French Protestant who a little before had fled into England upon account of Religion About that time he by the favour of George Duke of Buckingham was made a privy Counsellor to his Majesty and upon the promotion of Doct. Rob. Tounson to the See of Salisbury had the Deanery of Westminster confer'd upon him in which he was install'd 10 July 1620 Afterwards the Deanery of Salisbury was confer'd upon Dr. Joh. Bowles of Cambridge as I shall elsewhere tell you In the month of July 1621 he was nominated Bishop of Lincoln on the Translation of Dr. George Mountaigne to the See of London and about the same time was made L. Keeper of the great Seal by Buckingham's Endeavours On the 9 Oct. following he proceeded to Westminster Hall as L. Keeper but without pomp and on the 11 of Nov. was consecrated Bishop of Lincoln in the collegiate Church of S. Peter at Westminster by the Bishops of London Worcester Ely Oxford and Landaff and about that time his Majesty gave him leave to keep Westminster in commendam It was then observed by many that as Sir Nich. Bacon had before received the Great Seal from a Clergyman Nich. Heath Archb. of York so a Bishop again received them from his Son Sir Francis at which the Lawyers did fret to have such a Flower pull'd out of their garden But as for the further addition to the story that Williams was brought in by Buckingham to serve such turns as none of the Laity could be found bad enough to undertake as a libellous Author reports we must leave it to knowing men to be Judges of it After K. Ch. 1. came to the Crown he was continued a privy Counsellour for a time but Buckingham being then in great favour with that Prince caused the Seal to be taken from him in Oct. 1625 as having neglected and been very ungrateful to him and in the beginning of Feb. following when that King was crown'd he was set aside from administring Service at that Ceremony as Dean of Westminster and Dr. Laud Bishop of S. Davids and Preb. of Westm who before had received several schoolings and affronts from Williams while L. Keeper officiated in his place Further also lest he should seek revenge against Buckingham for what he had done unto him he with the Earls of Some●set Middlesex and Bristow all of an inclination tho not all of a plume were interdicted the Parliament House Hereupon Williams grew highly discontented sided with the Puritan and finding the King to decline in the affection of his People he fomented popular discourses tending to his Majesties dishonour so long until at length the incontinence of his Tongue betrayed him into Speeches which trespass'd upon Loyalty for which words they having taken vent he was question'd by a Bill in the Star-Chamber 4 Car. 1. dom 1628. But the information being somewhat lame and taken up with second-hand Reports the Accusation lay dormant till about 1632 when it was revived again And the purgation of B. Williams depending principally upon the testimony of one John Pregian Registrary of Lincoln it hapned that the Febr. after one Elizab. Hodson was delivered of a base Child and laid it to this Pregian The Bishop finding his great Witness charged with such Infamy conceived it would invalidate all his Testimony and that once rendred invalid the Bishop could easily prognosticate his own ruin Therefore he bestirs himself amain and tho by order of the Justices at the publick Session at Lincoln Pregian was charged as the reputed Father the Bishop by his Agents Pawel and Owen procured that Order suppressed and by subornation and menacing of and tampering with Witnesses did at length in May 10 Car. 1. procure the Child to be fathered upon one Bohun and Pregian to be acquitted After this he being accriminated in the Star-Chamber for corrupting of Witnesses and being convicted by full proof on the 11 of July 1637 he received this censure that he was to pay ten thousand pounds fine to the King to be imprison'd in the Tower of London during his Majesties pleasure and to be suspended ab officiis beneficiis In 1640 Nov. 16. he was released from the Tower and became the Idol for a time of both Houses having since his fall closed with the Puritan and who then should be in daily conference with him but Edward Bagshaw a Parliament man for Southwark and afterwards Will. Prynne two zealous and bigotted Puritans whose Counsels were chiefly to pull down Laud Archbishop of Canterbury Wentworth Earl of Strafford Heylyn of Westminster and other Royalists On the 12 Jan. following he preached before the King and pleased the Puritan very much as being zealous for the Sabbath and against the Book for Sports yet towards the conclusion said that the discipline of Geneva and Cornaries Diet were fit for none but Beggars and Tradesmen Afterwards it was observed by many that he declined dayly in the peoples favour who took him then not to be the same man as they did before In 1641 he was by his Maj. favour purposely to please the Puritan then dominant translated from Lincoln to York and soon after was in the head of the Bishops when they made their Protestation against the House of Lords in behalf of themselves for which being imprison'd in the Tower again continued there eighteen weeks At length being with much ado released he retired to the King at Oxon where he provided himself with a Commission and Instructions what to do when he went farther Afterwards he went into his own Country repaired his Castle at Aberconway fortified it and spared not any cost or labour to make it teneable for his Majesties Service But then his Majesty and privy Council suspecting that he would not be faithful to him they put a Commander therein and in a manner thrust the Archb. out Whereupon taking these matters in high disdain he retired to his house at Pentryn or Penryn not far from Aberconway which he fortified and having gained the favour of the Parliament put a Garrison therein and declared for them Afterwards obtaining some Forces from one Mitton a Parliamentarian Colonel in those Parts went forthwith and set upon Aberconway Castle took it and kept it to his dying day in his own possession This was in the latter end of 1645 at which time the Kings Cause did daily decline as the Archbishop did in the minds of the Royalists who for these his Actions spared not to stile him a perfidious Prelate the shame of the Clergy and the Apostate Archbishop of York whereas while he was in his greatness he was characterized to be a person of a generous mind a lover and encourager of learning and learned men he himself being very learned hospitable and a great Benefactor to the publick yet always high and proud and sometimes insolent and
Bonham afterwards drawn into method and form as now they are in the said book by Edward Poeton of Petworth Licentiat in Physick and Chirurgery late and long servant to the aforesaid Dr. B●nham Nov. 11. Franc. Kinaston M. A. of Cambridge lately of Oriel Coll. Mar. 9. Will. Young M. A. of Aberdeen in Scotland now a Student in Lincoln Coll. In the latter end of this year one Matthew Evans a Gentleman of London well skill'd in the Hebrew Greek Lat. and Vulgar tongues sojourned in the University purposely to compleat certain writings lying by him for the benefit of the learned republick c. Thus in the license granted to him by the ven congregation in order to his admission into the pub Library But what writings they were that he was about to finish with the help of the said Lib. I know not nor any thing else of the Man An. Dom. 1612. An. 10. Jac. 1. Chanc. the● same Vicechanc. the same July 28. Proct. Tho. Seller of Trin. Coll. Rich. Corbet of Ch. Ch. Ap. 22 The junior of which was afterwards Bishop of Oxon and Norwich Bach. of Arts. May 5. Richard Steuart of Magd. hall afterwards of All 's Coll. 14. Rob. Weld●n Barten Holyday of Ch. Ch. July 1. Jerem. Stephens Vivian Molineux of Brasn Coll. The last of these two who was Son of Sir Rich. Molineux of Sefton in Lanc. and Visc Molineux of Marybourgh in Ireland travelled afterwards into several forreign Countries was at Rome where tho puritanically educated under the tuition of Sam. Radcliff of Brasn Coll he changed his Religion returned a well bred Man was 〈◊〉 and in the grand Rebellion suffer'd for the royal cause 〈◊〉 translated from Spanish into English A treatise of the difference betwixt the temporal and eternal Lond. 1672. oct written originally by Eusebius Nieremberg S. ● Feb. 8. Will. Thomas of Bras Coll. Of about 198 Bachelaurs of Arts that were admitted this year I only find the aforesaid five Persons Molineux being excepted who were afterwards Writers as in the other volume you shall see at large Bach. of Law Nov. 16. Robert Gentilis of All 's Coll. Son of Aubrey Gentilis Besides him who will be mention'd also in the next vol. were only three more admitted Mast of Arts. May 5. Gilb. Ironside of Trin. Coll. 14. Edw. Boughen Gabriel Clarke of Ch. Ch. The last of these two I take to be the same Gabr. Clarke who was collated to the Archdeaconry of Northumberland by Dr. Neile Bishop of Durham upon the resignation of Dr. John Craddock 7. Aug. 1619. Which G. Clarke who is stiled D. D. in the Registers of the Church of Durham became Archdeacon of Durham by the same hand on the death of Will. Moreton Bach. of Divinity in the beginning of Sept. 1620. Tho. Dugard of Ch. Ch. was adm the same day Quaere 23. Sam. Smith Accepted Frewen of Magd. Coll. June 30. Percivall Burrell of Ch. Ch. This Person who was originally of Hart hall and afterwards Preacher at Suttons Hospital called the Charter-house near London published Suttons Synagogue or the English Centurion Serm. on Luke 7. part of the 5. vers Lond. 1629. qu. and perhaps other things Jul. 2. Edw. Cotton of Ch. Ch. a Compounder He was Son of Will. Cotton Bishop of Exeter and was about this time Archdeacon of Totness in the Dioc. of Exeter He departed this life in 1647 whereupon his Archdeaconry continuing void till the restauration of K. Charles 2. Franc. Fulwood D. D. then succeeded 9. Thom. Hayne of Linc. Tho. Howell of Jesus Will. Greenhill of Magd. Coll. Jan… John Heath Hen. Welstede of New Coll. The last of these two who was now Chaplain as I conceive of New Coll. but lately of Broadgates hall was the same Welstede who wrot and published The cure of a hard heart printed 1624. 5. Mar. 5. Nathaniel Grenfeild of St. Edm. hall He was afterwards Preacher at Whitfield in Oxfordshire and the writer and publisher of The great day or a Sermon setting forth the desperate estate and condition of the wicked at the day of Judgment on Rev. 6. 15 16 17. Lond. 1615. oct and perhaps of other things Quaere 18. Anthony White Chaplain of C. C. Coll. He was afterwards Vicar of Wargrave in Berks. and the writer and publisher of 1 Truth purchased on Prov. 23. ver 23. 2 Errour abandoned on Jam. 1. 16. Both which were preached at St. Maries in Oxford and were printed at Oxon. 1628 and dedicated by the Author to his Patron Sir Hen. Nevill of Billingbere Admitted 110. Bach. of Div. July 9. Will. Bridges Will. Twisse of New Coll. The first of these two who was Son to Dr. John Bridges Bishop of Oxon was by his Fathers endeavours made Archdeacon of that Diocess in June 1614 he being then one of the Fellows of Wykehams Coll. near Winchester which dignity he holding to the time of his death was succeeded by Barten Holyday of Ch. Ch. before the year 1626. July 9. Franc. James H●n Byam of Ch. Ch. Of the first you may see more among the D. of D. an 1614. Admitted 22. Doct. of Law Jun. 30. Nathaniel Harris of New Coll. He died at Blechingley in Surr●y 1625. Basil Wood of All 's Coll. He was about this time Chancellour of St. Asaph and of Rochester July 9. Arthur Ducke Dec. 7. Charles Caesar of All 's Coll. The last who was a younger Son of St. Julius Caesar Master of the Rolls was afterwards a Knight Judge of the Audience and Master of the Faculties ☜ Not one Doctor of Physick was admitted this year Doct. of Div. Jun 30. John Prideaux John Whetcomb of Exet. Coll. July 2. Will. Whyte of Trin. Coll. 16. John Brookes of Vniv. Coll. He was about this time Canon residentiary of York and in Apr. 1615 became chauntor thereof in the place of Hen. Banks D. D. who had been admitted thereunto in Apr. 1613 on the death of John Gibson LL. D. and Knight which hapned 28. Feb. 1612. As for the said Brokes he died 23 March 1616. aged 49 and was buried in the Cath. Ch. at York Janu. 27. John Abbott of Ball. Coll. Incorporations June 30. George Ramsey a Scot was incorporated M. of A. as he had stood elsewhere On the 14. Jul. being the day after the publick Act had been celebrated these Cantabrigians following were incorporated July 14. Henry Burton M. A. This Person who made a great noise and disturbance in his time was born in an obscure town called Birdsall in Yorkshire educated in St. Johns Coll. in the said University afterwards was Tutor or Master to the Sons of Robert Lord Carey of Lepington whose Lady was Governess to Pr. Char. when a Child sole officer which some call Clerk in the Closet of Pr. Henry and after his death to the said Prince Charles removed from his Service when that Prince became Kings for his pragmaticalness and impudence in demonstrating by a letter which he presented to the said King how popishly affected