Publications of the Catholic Record Society
THE Catholic Record Society was founded 10June, 1904 , for printingRegistersand other old Records of the Faith, chiefly personal and genealogical, since the Reformation in England and Wales
THE Catholic Record Society was founded 10June, 1904 , for printingRegistersand other old Records of the Faith, chiefly personal and genealogical, since the Reformation in England and Wales
THIRD, FOURTH AND FIFTH
1598-1654
WITH THE RHEIMS REPORT, 1579-80
FOUNDED
EDITED BY
EDWIN H. BURTON, D.D. , F. R. Hist S. , Vice-President of St. Edmund's College, Old Hall, Herts, AND
THOMAS L. WILLIAMS, M.A., Master of St. Edmund's House, Cambridge
LONDON 1911
PRIVATELY PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY BY J. WHITEHEAD & SON , LEEDS
Due to the difficulty of eliminating MS emendations and additions by unknown hands in the original volume from which this Reprint was made: and also because of their possible historical and factual value: they have been allowed to stand
This
Volume is Issued to the members for 1910-11 being the Second for the year
Reprinted 1969 for Wm. DAWSON & SONSLTD , LONDON with the permission of THE CATHOLIC RECORD SOCIETY
Reprinted by StephenAustin and Sons, Ltd., Hertford, England.
Thispart
Diary
4u Hemerologuem ab an:1641 ad an:1647
Lemerologium CollegyAnglorum
K
Duacem meipicus aPerfidentia admodum DominiD.GeorgyMuschetti que merit in annum Dominies41 .
Prafatio
Mountſiamagituraunusexquolandakſſimes mot
ille indies &fummatimpro noſtral tolligendipenibus inter= rifut eſt , ſubtea morte diDin D.FranksyBartenzf¬ byteri ,ofHuins Collagy rocuratoris fideliſſimi , queHeir operiguariterſincumbebat . Quofamen kam landaleme primordiy's Colleyypeligiofeferè fervata confuctudo , poſtliminioquaßſveſtitutebandem reviviſet , nosillam inques
RDGeorgins MufcottusC.Alihgubernaculesefervitver tenuitateſnoſtracefaccialiipsurdſmandatoſinſinfegenen , (bifuere nongravabimur .
CumEximiusdus ar
pa anno -Weagister noster&Wafthandie lifound5JDorfer , ofCollegyAughrum Duaren Drafes afakisfuæ 80 Sattedofÿ52 Eraßßentialperi mentissimus . Moes&Kallis27(quo munere fummépigilantié , polinifudin ofthanfateper¬ asfaunasiſgs , funclutfinaximarum virkukum pofferit exemplaſvelinquent
auno
Dui ésqedieziJanuary Duanjindieto Collegiediem clansischesextremum , unddiesſnoſterſurkannt OrlakensVa de eine obite verkon farkut , & omni Class AuglicansI Georgium Maſtoftumſirum doctriné , prudentia etpietateſchr¬ poftplurimustprofide Catholicéſinſeiner Auglisaná exant varsirumpersizinliokam¬ label laborit , postdiuturnas diversarum pliusannosmoleſties ſtremné fuperates , workihpverhidePontentiam alatribersustenkakan , fumma omninegratulationsPelegit , ek , ßenzur Erdem dirk Collegyfelicifts, ordinavit;dafitprimum 2ºdieMay 64 EmiffimiCardisBarbar . lifterit(ad Official , vertit , ofd lumnesdirk C . Aegy)consolaborisdemerkeVraßßisdefanet , xe¬ riber ofexhortatorist , ſofprediétum RumDGereginenWenſraften tanquam Prasidibledientiam ofelamanter amplerberentur , rigs Pequiem exhiberent , quarum Conoremfubiungendum ducimus: Tedinalis b istobulan ann 164 in 2dieMay
um
ab an: 1641 ad an: 1647
[Pages 1-14 blank; on page 15 the Title and the first two paragraphsof thePreface, as printed below, are written. Tothetitle Canon Tierney has added a pencillednote: "This part of the Diaryis called by Bish Challoner, 'Mr. Ireland's Diary' (Missionary Priests , ii, 187 , etc.) No doubt, therefore, it is in Ireland's handwriting He was Procurator from this time to 1647 , when the hand changes" On page 20 the Diarybegins , repeatingthe title andfirst two paragraphs already written on page 15 , with the variants that the name Barberini which was abbreviated on page 15 is here written infull, and the date in the titlethere written as a numeral is here given in words ]
[P.21] Hemerologium Collegii Anglorum Duaceni incipiens a Præsidentia Rd admodum Domini
D. Georgii Muscotti, quæ incidit in annum
Domini Millesimum sexcentesimum quadragesimum primum.
PRÆFATIO .
NONUS jam agitur annus ex quo laudatissimus mos ille indies summatim res nostras colligendi penitus intercisus est, utpote a morte Rdi Dni D. ffrancisci Barber, Presbyteri et hujus Collegii
Procuratoris fidelissimi, qui huic operi gnaviter incumbebat. Quo tamen tam laudata, et a primordiis Collegii religiose fere servata consuetudo postliminio quasi restituta tandem reviviscat, nos illam ex quo R. D. Georgius Muscottus Collegii gubernacula suscepit, pro tenuitate nostra ex speciali ipsius mandato in integrum restituere non gravabimur.
Cum eximius Dominus ac Magister noster D. Matthæus Kellisonus S. T. Doctor et Collegii Anglorum Duaceni Præses meritissimus anno ætatis suæ 80, sacerdotii 52, Præsidentia vero 27 (quo munere summa vigilantia, sollicitudine et charitate perfunctus est) maximarum virtutum posteris exempla relinquens , anno Domini 1641 die 21 Januarii Duaci in dicto Collegio, diem clausisset extremum, SSmus Dominus noster Urbanus Papa Octavus de ejus obitu certior factus, ex omni clero Anglicano D. Georgium Muscottum virum doctrina, prudentia et pietate insignem post plurimos pro fide Catholica in vinea Anglicana exantlatos labores, post diuturnas diversorum carcerum per 20 et amplius annos molestias strenue superatas, mortisque pro fide sententiam alacriter sustentatam, summa omnium gratulatione selegit et in Præsidem dicti Collegii feliciter ordinavit ; datis primum [22]
die 2º Maii 1641 , Emissimi Cardinalis Barberini literis ad Officiales , Lectores et Alumnos dicti Collegii consolatoriis de morte Præsidis defuncti, pariter et exhortatoriis ut predictum Ram D. Georgium Muscottum amanter amplecteretur, eique tanquam Præsidi obedientiam et obsequium exhiberent, quarum tenorem subjungendumduximus
Admodum Rdi in Christo
Quem de morte vestri Præsidis Matthæi Kellisoni concepistis, et mihi per literas significastis mærorem nova probatissimi Viri Doctoris Georgii Moschetti electione levandum duxi Is sæcularis sacerdos est, quod vos tam anxie optastis, et multis pro fide Catholica olim exantlatis laboribus , et tempore Londinensis pestilentiæ exhibitis pietatis officiis ita commendatus , ut spem magnam faciat fore ut Collegium istud vestrum sub ejus regimine , doctrina, moribus, zelo fidei in dies magis efflorescat, et pace et concordia , in qua est locus Dei, crescat et augeatur
Hunc igitur propriis meritis et mea pariter erga vos charitate commendatum complectamini , eique quam defuncto præstitistis obedientiam et obsequium exhibete , meque quem vestri et omnium Angliæ Catholicorum amantissimum esse scitis , orationum vestrarum participem facite. Literas patentes pro novo Præside propediem submittam
Datis Romæ die ii Maii 1641 . Vester Studiosus F. Cardinalis Barberinus
Quarto deinde die ejusdem Maii promissæ suæ Emtiae patentes, quibus in Præsidem constituitur, ad præfatum D. Muschottum in carcere pro fide tunc Londini detentum, sunt datæ in hæc verba :
Franciscus St Laurentii in Damaso Cardlis Barberinus S. R. E. Vicecanclis et Regni Angliæ Protector
Dilecto nobis Rdo D. Georgio Muschetto Salutem . Cum sicut accepimus Collegium Anglorum Duacenum nuper ob mortem Matthæi Kellisoni Præside destitutum sit, nostrique officii sit, pro eo quo fungimur munere Protectoris Angliæ apud Sanctam Sedem Apostolicam, de simili Præside ei Collegio providere, te quem probitate prudentia, doctrina, religionis et fidei zelo a Deo insignitum novimus, prædicti CollegiiAnglorum Duaceni Præsidem constituendum duximus; prout præsentium tenore autoritate nostra de mandato etiam SSm D. N. constituimus [23] et deputamus: Volentes te omnibus facultatibus privilegiis, præeminentiis , et emolumentis quibus similes Præsides hactenus usi sunt, frui, potiri et gaudere ; Mandantes proinde et præcipientes Dilectis in Christo Officialibus Lectoribus, Alumnis cæterisque dicti Collegii Ministris et inferioribus famulis quibuscumque ut te tanquam verum et legitimum Collegii Præsidem agnoscant, tibique in omnibus debitum obsequium et obedientiam
exhibeant: Tibi vero ut Ecclesiasticam disciplinam et concordiam ante omnia promovere cures injungimus ; Sic enim villicationis tuæ rationem Christo Domino in die judicii tanquam bonus et fidelis servus, et ejusdem Christi Dni Vicario, sive Nobis, quoties opus fuerit, tanquam prudens Minister præclare reddes. Omnino autem ne quid novi ad Collegii prædicti regimen spectans nobis inconsultis, aut a Sta Sede Apostolica non obtenta licentia introducasprohibemus .
Datum Romæ die 4 Maii 1641. Pontificatus Smt D. N. Urbani Papæ Octavi, Anno Decimo octavo
F. Cards Barberini Protector Locus Sigilli
Antonius Jenagallus , Secretarius
[Hand changes]
Quibus perspectis statuque Collegii sub immenso æris alieni pondere ingemiscentis , et in medio Castrorum ex disidiis potentissimorum Hispaniarum et Galliarum Regum tunc temporis constituti diligenter appenso, præfatus Dns Muschottus Rdmo Dno Calcedonensi Episcopo adhortante, admodum Rdo D. D.
Champnæo Capituli Decano, universoque Clero Anglicano propellente, necessitatibusque insuper dicti Collegii indies magis magisque prementibus vix tandem prædicti Collegii gubernacula renitens invitusque suscepit. Cum ecce literæ ex improviso a quatuor primariis Collegii senioribus , utpote a duobus Theologiæ professoribus, a Procuratore et Præfecto Generali tædio rerum jam fatigatis, difficultatesque Collegii causantibus , acceptæ leguntur, quibus significabantse in animo fixum habere a Collegio discedere, intraque unius mensis spatium se ab omnibus in Collegio officiis et lectionibus exuere [24] Quod cum Rdus Dns Præses novas difficultates in ipso limine pullulantes cerneret se operi diligentius accingens, ut urgentibus Collegii necessitatibus occurreret mille florenos in communes usus Confessario Collegii Dno. Davisio, qui præfatis litteris non subscripserat , protinus assignavit , et aliquos , qui Collegii curam agerent donec ipse in ergastulo detinebatur, præmittendosduxit Habitoque cum admodum R. Dno Champnæo, cæterisque confratribus tunc Londini commorantibus , hac de re consilio ex eorum consensu R. D. Gulielmum Hydæum (qui per quadriennium in eodem Collegio philosophiam prælegerat , et non ita pridem Theologiæ prælegendæ per biennium et amplius ibidem operam egregie navaverat), et Edmundum Irelandum quondam ejusdem Collegii Agentem Londini, et deinceps alibi ; illum quidem in Vicepresidem Collegii cum plenaria sua potestate, donec ipsemet veniret, erectum , hunc vero in Procuratorem et Præfectum Generalem constitutum, ambos ad iter confestim accinctos ad Collegii subsidium celeriter destinavit, qui Londino solventes, tempestate nondum sedata, nono tandem die utpote 12mo Octobris 1641 Duacum securi pervenerunt
et in Collegio, tam a senioribus (nullus enim præter D. Nicolaum Middletonum secundarium Theologiæ Professorem adhuc discesserat) quam a sacerdotibus et cæteris alumnis perhumaniter accepti sunt
Post biduum R. D. Hyde coramomnibus presbyteris, theologis, et dicti Collegii studiosis suam authoritatem promulgavit, et in signum humilis acceptationis rogavit ut omnes se ad Ecclesiam statim conferrent quinquiesPater et Ave recitatur, quod et factum est. Edmundus vero Irelandus ne cuivis offendiculum daret, nec Procuratoris nec Præfecti Generalis muneribusaperte se immiscuit ante 29umprædicti Octobris, quo die tam D. Sanfordus Procurator, quam D. Wake, Præfectus [25] nuper Generalis e Collegio discesserunt in Angliam profecturi
Per id temporistam R. D. VicepræsesquamEdmundusIrelandus summis viribus contenderuntut statum Collegiiperspectum haberent. Inprimis omnia Collegii membra, tam famulos quam studiosos recensuere, repertisque senioribus tribus utpote Confessario uno , et duobus philosophiæ professoribus , (D. enim Gulielmum Hart, qui febri quartana duntaxat detentus , discessum brevi meditabatur, in numerum non redegerunt) Sacerdotibus quatuor, theologis quinque, philosophis novem , rhetoribus sex, syntaxianis duobus, grammatico uno , famulis vero novem , inter quos duobus deprehensis janitoribus, alterum senio pene, et annis inutilem confestim dimiserunt, et integer numerus Collegialium , comprehensis etiam ipsis, consistebat quadragenarius .
Deinde ad libros Collegii ratiocinarios animos applicabant, et cum ex rationibus a D. Sanfordo nuper firmatis (quæ quidem tantum continebant debita in Belgio contracta) debita Collegii viginti quinque millia et trecentos nonaginta duos et duodecim asses excedere non videbantur, re penitius inspecta, et creditoribus aliis sub adventum novorum officialium in lucem prodeuntibus ad summam viginti sex millium nongintorum quinquaginta quatuor florenorum et quatuordecim assium eadem debita excrescere deprehensum est
Porro adjectis debitis in Anglia pro quibus Collegium solvit census annuos ad rationem octo pro centum nec non et computatis fundationibus absumptis in usum Collegii, oneribus nihilominus relictis, totalis debitorum summa ad usque quadraginta quatuor millia [26] quingentos octoginta tres florenos et novemdecim asses pertingere visa est, ut ex catalogo infra ponendo clarius considerantipatebit.
Præterea inter omnes studiosos octo tantum reperti sunt qui pensiones annuatim persolvere tenebantur, reliqui enim vel in alumnorum numerum sunt admissi vel ex contractibus pecunia numerata et jamdudum absumpta initis ab ulteriori solutione liberabantur Qui vero in Collegio convictorummorealebanturultra ducentos florenos annuatim solvere ut plurimum non tenebantur , cum tamen, tam ex rationibus tribus abhinc annis ab eximio Dno Edmundo Stratfordo et D. [blank] Martino Collegii tunc
temporis Procuratore ad calculum redactis , quam ex recentioribus ab Edmundo Irelando (pro notitia quam adhuc habere poterat) jamjam initis satis constet neminem convictorum posse in hoc Collegio, uti moris est nutriri, tam communibus quam privatis expensis in computus plene reductis , infra trecentorum florenorum impensas annuatim exhibendas. Horrea denique omni genere commeatus destituta visebant ; in cellariis viginti majora dolia cerevisiæ repererunt, parum butyri, majorem copiam casei, ad usum vero culinæ paucissima ligna licet hiemps jam instaret, præter tria millia fasciculorum in unum cumulum congestorum , ita ut omnes provisiones quæ per domum ullo modo reperiri poterant vix aut ne vix quidem æstimari poterant pretio sexcentorum florenorum
Ex pensione Apostolica pro decursis mensibus debebantur octoginta duo floreni supra duo millia et decem asses , in parata pecunia numerabantur in manibus Domini Davisii Confessarii centum quatuordecim floreni et sex stuyveri, reliquiæ quidem mille florenorum supradictorum a R. D. Preside illi consignatorum in usus Collegii Quicquid enim commeatus [27] erat in Collegio, vel ab illo mediantibus dictis pecuniis paratum fuerat, vel ex credito ab aliis inferebatur, ac propterea inter debita Collegii merito recensendum . Et hæc præsens rerum facies. secum
Summa igitur cura habita est ut annona in totius anni usum paulatim inferreretur ; quinque enim millia florenorum ex Anglia in hunc finem attulerant, omniaque , juxta mandata quæ a R. D. Præside acceperant , numerata pecunia coemebant , ut si debita Collegii non multum diminuere possent, minime saltem augerent Singulis tamen mensibus veterana debita, si illis suppeteret , nonnihil diminuere studebant, et procedente tempore plurimum diminuebant, ut ex dicendis inferius clare patebit
Adventus R. Dri Præsidis Dum vero hæc aguntur Rdus Dns Præses , intercedente serenissima, et pientissima Regina Angliæ , regia authoritate in exilium missus est, qui vinculis excussis illico se Duacum contulit, ubi summo omnium suorum gaudio decima quarta die Novembris lætanter susceptus est Postridie Dominicæ Adventus D. Gulielmus Hartius olim philosophiæ et Theologiæ in hoc Collegio Professor inde discessit in oppidum, opportunitatem expectans transmeandi in Galliam et inde Romam Et vigesima octava Decembris Duaco decedens cum tubicine Attrebatensi Lutetiam Parisiorum versus iter arripuit , ubi aliquot menses commoratus , cum litteris commendatitiis Rami Da Episcopi Chalcedonensis et aliorum, iter aggrediens Romam se contulit , et ab Eminentissimo Dno D. Francisco Barberino perhumaniter exceptus, ab eodem post aliquot mensium decursum lectione publica philosophiæ in Sapientia donatus est [28] Sequitur catalogus omniumdebitorum quibus hocce Collegium gravabaturdievigesima sexta Octobris anni 1641, cum DD Gulielmus Hyde et Edmundus Irelandus suis officiis fungi cæperunt .
Catalogus debitorum quem D. Sanfordus nuperrimus
Procurator die decima quinta Augusti 1641 absolutum
in manus præfati Edmundi Irelandi moderni Procuratoris tradidit dicta die vigesima sexta Octobris 1641 .
Nicolao Everard Mercatori Dunquerq
Gulielmo Craftes, quondam Collegii Emptori
Romano Ramery, mercat Insulensi
Antonio le Febure , Insulensi
Egidio le Grand, lanioni
Petro et Anthonio Havets, lignorum merc .
Nicolas de Raismes brasii mercat
Hæredibus Joannis Fabri lignarii
Jacobo Welcombe butyri mercatori
Nicolao Mesplant , casei mercatori
Anthonio Foüet, candelarummercat novo
Danieli Goodman , fabro ferrario
Christophero Petri, vitriario
Martino Janviere, butyri recentis mercat.
Petro Caron, Plumbario
Venditori galerorum Jacobo
Roberto Hustin, vini mercatori
Mariæ la Gauch, molendini custodi
Cæmentarii viduæ
D'ouzy pistori
David Laloe, pharmacopolæ .
Francisco Dronie, salsorum pisciummercat.
[29] Amato Lanchry, linei panni mercat.
Claudio Herigner, metaxario
Gulielmo Lodey, fabro operis intestini
Antonio Villanie, veteri candalarum mercat
Joanni Coco, famulo Collegii
Francisco Allan, Emptori Collegii
Juliano, vetri janitori
Thomæ Jorosie, infirmariæ famulo
Petro Bedon, lixa 25- 2- ..
D. Francisco Sanford, Collegii Procurat
Edmundo Busquel olim Collegii Emptori
Judæ Valliaunt, frumenti mercat
Viduæ Marci Wyon, typographæ 98.
Mariæ Pleasaunt , lanionis sorori 345
Joanni Thefruict, lignorum mercat 352-16
Dno Joanni Davisio, Confessario 24
Dno Anthonio Burdet, philos professori . 9
Dno Joanni Talbot, studioso . 8-10
Dno Radulpho Boldes, sacerdoti 7
Dno Roberto Stanlæo, sacerdoti
Dno Joanni Tompsono, sacerdoti 12-2- .. 22.. ::::
Joanni Markenfieldo et fratri, studiosis 15
Magistro Thomæ Layton, theologo
Serrurier bibliopola Collegii
Jacobo Galerorum venditori
Uxori Walrici Remington, Ecclesiæ lotrici
Andreæ braxatori
Agneti lotrici linteaminum Collegii
Petro de Raismes pro hordeo
Dno Michaeli Wake, præfecto generali
Joanni Broode, fabro lignario
Dno Collier, advocato
Georgio Russels, studioso
Dno Georgio Persono ex mutuo
Petro Aquatori [30]
Summa Catalogi D. Sandfordi 25,392 -12-
Debita quibus obnoxium erat Collegium dicta
15ta Augusti in prædicto Catalogo non expressa.
Eximio Dno Valentino Randour virtute assignationis D. Eustachii de Sandas ab eximio D. Kellisono nupero Præside acceptatæ pro Castro escarpensi
Rdo Dno Randour, hebraicæ linguæ professori ex syngrapha D. Kellisoni manu signata
Exactoribus vectigalis trium assium super singulis raseriis brasii a Januario 1640 usque ad mensem Septembris ejusdem anni
Simoni Laden pro rudi panno in affixionibuspoetarumusurpato duobus retro annis
Hospitali sive zenodochio B. Virginis in platea
Cervi censusperpetuus 13 flor 10 sol pro quatuor retro annis
OppidoDuacensi pro domo e regione Collegiicensus pro quinque retro annis
Zenodochio sive Hospitali infantum expositorum censuspro quatuor retro annis cumdimidio
Davidi Laloe, pharmacopolæ superius non contentum
Pro paramentis sacerdotalibus injuncta in testamento D. Richardi Irelandi
623- I2
Debita contracta pro expensis diurnis a dicta 15taAugusti usque ad 26 Octobris 1641 . flor.
Roberto Hustin pro dolio vini 80Judæ Valliaunt, pro frumento 119 9-2
Mariæ la Gauche, viduæ pro brasio 20 Rasir
Eidem pro viginti quatuor raseriisbrasii 84 98-
[31] Eidem pro molendo brasio tribusvicibus
Petro Aquatori pro aqua ducenda ad bis conficiendam cerevisiam
Joanni Baptista Ramery pro literarum expensis a prima Augusti ad quintam Octobris 1641
Summa debitorum contractorum a 15* Aug. ad 26a Octobris
Debita contracta quibusdam artificibus partim ante dictam 15 Augusti, partim post, quibus omnibus gravabatur Collegium prædicta 26 Octobris 1641
Tegularum artifici
Sartori ærario
Plumbario
Operis intestini fabro
Restioni
Fabro ferrario
Pistori
Tonsori sive Chirurgo
Joanni Coco Collegii
Carolo promo
Thomæ Simpson, calceatori
Juliano Janitori
Joanni Hortulano
Francisco Allan, Emptori
Lignorum Mercatoribus pro censu
[32]
Summa debitorum contractorumartificibus et famulis .. 525 14 ..
Debita contracta extinctione quorundam censuum et absumptione pecuniarum quibus census perpetui vel temporales creari debuerant ad sustinenda onera
relicta Collegio.
Census ducentorum florenorum in monte pietatis flor
Duaceno a R. D. Richardo Irelando fundatus in partem sustentationis studiosi in perpetuum oppigneratus pro
Census60 flor fundatussuper mille floren in monte Antverpiensi pro duabus missis singulis hebdomadis pro anima D. Gulielmi Harrisoni, presbyt in perpetuum, extinctus 4,0001,000 -
Censusgo floren. super domo Antverpiensifundatus a R.D.RobertoTempest in partemsustentationis studiosi e sua familia, extinctus, venditionedomus 1,900.
Census 120 florenorumin Anglia a R. D. Colletono fundatus in partem sustentationis studiosi in perpetuum, extinctus absumptione principalis . 1,500 -
Mille floreni donati a R. D. Georgio Harrisono ad fundandas tres missas pro anima ejus per hebdomadam in perpetuum, absumpti
D. Richardus Taylerus olim Collegii confessarius numerabat 600 florenos cum onere sustentandi scholarem ex Cumberlandia in perpetuum in parte pro rata flor 1,000.. 600 -
..
Summa fundationum extinctarum 10,000 -
Nobilis Domina Abigael dederat Collegio mille florenos cum obligatione duarum missarum hebdomadalium pro viginti annos post mortem ipsius quæ adhuc vivit ; absumpti sunt Tenetur Collegium ad tres missas per hebdomadam in honorem SSmae Trinitatis pro mille florenis olim absumptis sub presidentia D. DoctorisWorthingtoni.
Tenetur Collegium ad quatuor missas per annum pro anima Thomæ Hungerford ratione 500 florenorum ab eo donatorum Collegio [33] Debita in Anglia pro pecuniis mutuo acceptis contracta, in prædicto catalogo non expressa pro quibus Collegium solvit ad rationem octo pro centum
Capitulo Cleri Anglicani cui numeratur census annuus 320 florenorum, donec refundantur
D. Georgio Muschot moderno præsidi census annuus 120 florenorum donec refundantur
Eximio Dno Georgio Leyborne census annuus 160 florenorum donec refundantur
D. Richardo Worthingtono flor. 4,000.. 1,5002,0001295.. ..
Summa debitorum in Anglia 7,629 - 5..
Summa totalis omniumdebitorum quibus gravabatur Collegium , præfata die vigesima sexta, anni millesimi sexcentesimi quadragesimi primi . 44,583-19.. exNec mirum cuiquam esse debet quod hæc omnia in Catalogo
D. Sanfordi qui temporis augustiis coarctatus debita tantum in Belgicis provinciis in computus reducere satagebat, non primantur, cum successor ejus, qui omnes nervos in id negotii contendebat , vix toto biennio subsequenti in horum omnium notitiam venire potuerit, tanta fuit rerum nostrarum confusio Ultra hæc certa debita , pro interesse pecuniarum ut aliis censibus solvebat Collegium ad minus annuatim octingentos florenos
[34] Census vero annui Collegii qui tunc de facto percipiebantur tam ad levanda hæc onera, quam ad alendas triginta duas personas (tot enim aderant non numeratis octo convictoribus, qui pensiones non justas solvebant , nec famulo Dnt Vicepræsidis,
qui animo revertendi in Angliam hic tantum subsistere videbatur) non excedebant quinque millia sexcentos nonaginta duos florenos et quatuordecim asses ut ex subjecta tabella patebit
Census annui Collegii Duaceni qui de facto percipiuntur
Pro pensione Apostolica
Pro aliis censibus Romæ in montibus
Ex fundatione D. Roberti Tempest
Ex fundatione D. Richardi Irelandi
Anno Domini 1642
Die quarto Januarii Duacum venit Edoardus Fitz-herbert, alias Fettiplace, sacerdos hujus Collegii qui aliquot annos in vinea Anglicana transegerat, Generalis Præfecti officio functurus, pensionem nihilominus trecentorum florenorum per annum, in Collegii usus ex charitate refundens ac si Convictor esset
Die 28 Januarii è Collegio dimissus est Joannes Danby hic Talbot, philosophiæ operam dans, postquam per quinquennium fere studiis hic vacasset, sæcularem vitam aggressurus, eo quod sumptibus Collegii jam vivens alia se in animo habere ab institutione Collegii aliena omnino declarasset
Martyrium
D. Thomae
Reynolds
Die 21° S. Agneti sacro R. D. Thomas Greene communiter Reynolds natus Oxonii, hujus Collegii alumnus et sacerdos, passus est Londini ætate jam grandævus Et cum esset [35] natura metulosior, et ob senium jam factus infirmior plurimum extulit gloriam Dei, admirabundus quod tam debilem et timidum senem corroborasset ad tam acerbam, et ignominiosam mortem fortiter et alacriter subeundam Anno Dni 1628 capitis damnatus est eam solam ob causam quod sacerdos esset , sed clementissimus Rex Carolus ad instantiam serenissimæ Reginæ vitam illi prorogavit ; ita tamen ut ab illo usque ad præsentem annum, utpote per quatuordecim annos sub custodia manserit Londini Hoc vero anno jussu parliamenti in arenam vocatus absque ulla prioris caussæ disquisitione, aut novi criminis delatione ad lanienam raptus est, et glorioso martyrio vitam finivit, quammultis * longo jam temporein Anglia agens cumulaverat, nam plurimos a via veritatis aberrantes, zelo Dei fervens , ad caulas Ecclesiæ Catholicæ reduxerat, et factus bonus odor Christi a vitiis ad virtutis amorem attraxerat
D. Albanus Roe , martyr Eadem die pariter cum illo passus est R. Pater Albanus Roe, sacerdos et monachus Benedictinus olim in juventute in hoc Collegio studiosus . *
Thus in the original. Possibly in error for 'meritis. '
Note in Tierney's hand :" He was expelled Diary i, 120." The reference should be Diary iii, 120. See pages 106-108 and 354-356 supra.
Die 16º Februarii Mr Franciscus Blaxton Theologus tertii anni et Collegii alumnus a Rdo D. Præside coram omnibus senioribus acriter reprehensus est, quod cum sæpius a morte Præsidis defuncti in oppidum in domos sæcularium sine venia exivisset et tempus inibi inutiliter bibendo et garriendo contrivisset , etiam ab adventu novi Præsidis monitus non destitisset , sed pluribus malum præbuisset exemplum . Et parum abfuit quin fuisset dimissus, sed ad instantiam D. Vicepræsidis , et ex consensu reliquorum seniorum ad ulteriorem probationem duo insuper mensesilli a D. Præside indulti sunt.
Die 13 Martii Joannes Smithson hic Ducket et Thomas Forcer, hic Langley, ille Rhetor, hic vero [36] grammaticus e Collegio discesserunt in Angliam profecturi Ille quidem cum intentione revertendi et Religionem Carmelitarum discalceatorum ingrediendi; hic vero dimissus eo quod ad studia cum non esset multum idoneus, suos visendi studio teneretur, a quibus suæ pensionis solutio nonnihil negligebatur
2º Aprilis duacum venerunt Georgius et Gulielmus Smyth (hic nuncupati Gray) filii Joannis Smyth, generosi et Catholici Dunelmensis Comitatus ad convictum et scholares in Collegio admissi sunt , sed non ad habitum Collegialem
4° Aprilis D. Radulphus Boldes alias Lascels, sacerdos, nondum audito cursu Theologico, in Angliam discessit ad recuperandam valetudinem, quam per varios annos prælegendo lectiones humaniores (quo munere cum laude functus est) multum attriverat et tota hyeme præterita cum febri quartana conflictaverat
D. Joannes Lockwood , martyr
13° Aprilis , D. Joannes Lockwood , annos natus 87 passus est Eboraci eo quod Sacerdos Romanus esset , quod libenter fassus est, et addidit hoc verisimilius esse, eo quod esset Romæ ordinatus. In Anglia ad 44°r annos munera Sacerdotis obierat, et cum jam senio pene confectus cum difficultate scalam ad patibulum anhelans ascenderet subridens coram populo dixit, quis non tantum laboraret, ut cælum peteret . Salutaria monita tanquam alter Eleazarus vir venerabilis populo moribundus dedit, e cujus laniena Carnifex tanto horrore perculsus est ut fugam arriperet, et cum a satellitibus detentus cogeretur perficere quod inchoaverat, fune arrepto conabatur se suspendere priusquam quasi sanguinarius dissecaret membra innocentum, sed scorti cujusdam blandimentis mox delinitus ex mitiori fit lanio immanissimus , et omnia tam hujus Martyris quam commilitonis viscera et pudenda in frusta minutissima dividit, et in populum dispergit tanquam furiosus.
martyr
D. Edmundus Eum eadem hora secutus est D. Edmundus CattherCatthericke, icke, alias Huddleston, Eboracensis, in passione socius, eo quod sacerdos esset , vir mitissimus et hujus Collegii alumnus , annos habens triginta septem, quorum [37] septem in vinea Anglicana operarius strenuus impenderat . 220 Aprilis Duacum venit et in Collegio susceptus est
Gulielmus Eure, hic dictus Georgius Phillipsonus, filius unicus patris sui D. Radulphus Eure de Malton in comitatu Eboracensi et Katharina Arundellii filiæ Illmt D. Thomæ Arundellii, S. Imp R. Comitis et Baronis de Warder omnium nobilissimorum Catholicorum Hic adolescens in Castro de Warder natus, et jam decimum tertium ætatis annum agens huc venit animi excolendi gratia, studia a primis rudimentis inchoaturus. Pecunias secum duxit ad dissolvendam pensionem per triennium numerando trecentos florenos per annum quæ in manibus Procuratoris depositæ sunt, ne quid dispendii ex non soluta pensione propter temporum calamitates Collegium pateretur.
D. Edoardus 260 Aprilis Londini passus est mirabili alacritate
Morgan ,martyr.
D. Edoardus Morgan , natus in Wallia in comitatu Flint, hujus Collegii alumnus , annos habens quinquaginta septem Postridie ejus diei quo sententiam mortis accepit tanto perfusus est gaudio in sacris mysteriis celebrandis , ut maxima cum difficultate potuerit finem Missæ imponere, et hoc non priusquam animum divertisset a cogitando Smum nomen Jesu, clamans cum B. Zaverio, Satis est, Domine.
Maius 1642
2º Maii e Collegio discessit Richardus Shereborne , hic Lee , ad recuperandam pensionem retro jam aliquot annis actam . Rhetor erat, et adolescens bonæ spei, sed propter tumultus in patria nihil potuit recipere.
[38] 12° Maii, habitum Collegialem induti sunt Georgius et Gulielmus Gray, consultis prius parentibus eorum optimis Catholicis , qui omnino cupiebant ut studiis se diligenter accingerent, et institutis Catholicæ religionis plenius imbuerentur . Classi grammatices destinati sunt.
14° Maii in Collegio suscepta est crux argentea a Smo D. N. Urbano octavo huic Collegio a triennio donata ad instantiam admodum Rd D. Georgii Leyborne sacerdotis tunc Romæ agentis, qui negotia hujus Collegii tam domi quam foras insigniter promovebat. Una cum cruce argentea in pixide lignea referta Agnis Dei, pariter receptum est Breve Apostolicum in hæc verba
Urbanus P. P. viii
Dilecti filii salutem et Apostolicam Benedictionem Eximia vestra promerita, ac præsertim singularis pietas et erga nos atque hanc Sanctam Sedem observantia jampridem pontificiam charitatem mirifice quæsiverunt Propterea quæ de vestris virtutibus sæpe commemorari audimus, cum filiorum, quos unice diligimus, laudibus suffragentur, uberem lætitiæ materiam nobis afferunt. Perjucundum sane Nobis est, in isto Collegio iis doctrinæ ac morum institutionibus ingenia decorari , unde non parum in Christianam Rempublicam ornamentum, in Catholicam
William Eure succeeded his grandfather as fifth Lord Eure of Malton His alias is from his maternal grandmother, Anne daughter of Miles Phillipson, and second wife of Thomas, the first Lord Arundell of Wardour .J.S.H .
religionem præsidium proficisci possit . Idcirco paternæ erga vos propensionis documenta , ubicunque dabitur opportunitas, semper libentissime exhibebimus Mittimus interea argenteam crucem, quam veluti benevolentiæ nostræ pignus vobis pergratam fore arbitramur Eisdam Apostolicam benedictionem ex animo impertimur, atque altissimum omnium largitorem demisse oramus , ut vos cælestibus muneribus affatim cumulet Datam Roma apud Sanctam Mariam Majorem sub annulo Piscatoris die xxii Octobris MDcxxxix Pontificatus nostri anno xvii In dorso Dilectis filiis Collegialibus Collegii Anglicani Duacensis. Julius Rospigliosius
[39] In pede ipsius crucis argentea insculpta sunt hæc verba : Urbanus P. P. Octavus Pon. Max a quo multa bona in gentem Anglicanam derivata sunt , hanc crucem suo Anglorum Duaceno Collegio donavit A.D. MDCXxxix.
Eadem vice idem D. Georgius Leyborne simul impetravit a Smo D. N. Altare privilegiatum pro hoc Collegio, cujus Breve diu ante receptum est in hoc Collegio in liac forma
Urbanus P. P. viii
Ad futuram rei memoriam Omnium saluti paterna charitate intenti, sacra interdum loca spiritualibus indulgentiarum muneribus decoramus, ut inde fidelium defunctorum animæ, Domini Nostri Jesu Christi ejusque Sanctorum suffragia meritoruni consequi, et illis adjutæ ex Purgatorii pœnis ad æternam salutem per Dei misericordiam perduci valeant; volentes igitur Ecclesiam Sancti Thomæ Collegii Anglicani Oppidi Duaci Attrebatensis diocesis simili privilegio ad tempus nondum elapsum per Nos apostolica auctoritate decoratam , dummodo 111 ea septem missæ quotidie celebrentur, et in ea sit Altare per ordinarium loci semel tantum designan[dum] hoc speciali dono illustrare ; nec non omnes, et quascunque similes concessiones eidem Ecclesiæ per Nos hactenus quomodolibet factas revocantes , et annullantes; De omnipotentis Dei misericordia, ac Beatorum Petri, et Pauli Apostolorum ejus auctoritate confisi, ut quandocunque Sacerdos aliquis ejusdem Ecclesiæ duntaxat Missam defunctorum in die Commemorationisdefunctorum , et singulis diebus infra illius octavam, ac secunda feria cujuslibet hebdomada [40] pro anima cujuscunque fidelis, quæ Deo in charitate conjuncta ab hac luce inigraverit , ad predictum Altare celebrabit anima ipsa de thesauro Ecclesiæ per modumi suffragii indulgentiam consequatur; Ita ut ejusdem Doinini Nostri Jesu Christi, ac Beatissime Virginis Mariæ, Sanctorumque omnium meritis sibi suffragantibus a purgatorii pœnis liberetur, concedimus et indulgemus, In contrarium facien [tibus]non obstan[tibus] quibuscunque Præsentibus ad decennium tantuni valituris Datum Rom apud Sanctam Mariam Majorem Sub annulo piscatoris Die ix Novembris MDCXxxix, Pontificatus nostri anno decimo septimo
M. A. Maraldus
Ostenso hoc brevi venerabilibus DD Vicariis Generalibus , subscripserunt ut infra
Rai Domini Vicarii Generales Sedis Episcopalis
Attrebatensis Vacantis permiserunt publicari supradictas
Indulgentias in diocesi Atrebatensi Datum in civitate
Atrebatensi xxvito Januarii 1640
De Mandato Rdorum Dominorum, B. Cornaille
Junius 1642 .
13° Junii Robertus Byflet hic Worseley, Joannes Rawlinson hic Metcalfe , et Thomas Malton hic Leyton, utrumque Collegii juramentum præstiterunt in cubiculo Rd Dni Præsidis, et prima tonsura insigniti ad quatuor minores ordines promoti sunt una cum Magistro Blaxtono qui ante juramenta præstiterat a Rmo Dno Christophoro de France , Episcopo Audomarensi* in templo D. Jacobi Duacensi
[41] 14° Junii, Georgius Russels, Joannes Weddington hic Singleton, Thomas Gradil hic Middleton, Gulielmus Walmesley hic Hammerton, Edoardus Barker hic Vernalty, Thurstonus Anderton hic Robertus Thurston, Thomas Duffield hic Thirkill, Joannes Mason hic Gennings, utrumque Collegii juramentum præstiterunt et primam tonsuramcumquatuor minoribus ordinibus ab eodem Episcopo in præfato templo susceperunt Julius 1642
10 Julii ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Richardus Mossocke hic dictus Moore, filius Henrici Mossocke generosi et Joanna Moore filiæ Armigeri amborum Catholicorum Natus erat in Comitatu Lancastriæ in parochia Ormiskirkiæ, annum ætatis jam agens decimum quintum, ab infantia Catholica religione imbutus, et literis parum instructus huc missus est studiorum causa , et ut prosequatur Deo favente finem hujus Collegii Adduxit secum sexcentos florenos ad suam sustentationem per biennium qui in manibus Procuratoris depositi sunt Classi Rudimentariorum destinatur
14° Julii admissus est in Collegium [Gulielmus cancelled] Thomas Blount hic dictus Thomas Anderton, filius D. Gualteri § Blount, Equitis aurati [42] et Elizabethæ Wylde, amborum Catholicorum , natus in Comitatu Wigorniensi in Catholica religione ab incunabulis educatus , huc venit anno ætatis decimo quinto excolendi animi gratia, pro cujus expensis in victu et vestitu solvendi sunt a parentibus trecenti floreni annuatim.
25to Julii discesserunt a Collegio Mattheus Sturton hic Williamson eo quod pensio ejus retro agebatur nec ipse in animum
wife , Christopher de France, Bishop of St. Omer 1635-1656 . Henry Mossock married Jane daughter of John More of Bankhall, by his daughterof Edward Scarisbrick of Scarisbrick (Burke's Commoners , iii, 229).J.S H.
§ SirWalter Blount of Sodington was made a baronet 5 Oct., 1642. His wife was daughter of George Wylde of Droitwich , sergeant -at-law, by Francesdaughter of Sir Edmund Huddleston of Sawston , Cambs (Harl Soc , xxvii, 151).J.S.H.
induxerat aut induci poterat ut juramentum Collegii prestaret cum vita ecclesiastica non placeret, et Joannes Mennell hic
Markenfield studio visendi suos , utriusque cursu philosophico jam fere absoluto . Augustus 1642
IImo die Augusti cursum philosophicum propugnarunt in schola Theologorum , mane Thomas Middleton, a prandio Georgius
Russels, Præside Magistro Joanne Stratfordio mane 12mo Augusti cursum philosophicum propugnarunt
Gulielmus Ireland, a prandio Henricus (Joannes written above] Foster, præsidente D. Antonio Burdet
martyr D. Hugo Greene , 19no Augusti die Veneris R. D. Hugo Greeneus , alias Ferdinandus Browne Londinensis , hujus
Collegii alumnus , illustre Martyrium seu potius inauditam lanienam ob sacerdotium Dorcestriæ fortiter passus est, nam ventre a carnifice circumscisso, et abdomine super pectus collocato, intuitus est, et sinistra tetigit viscera sua, dum dextra se munivit signo redemptionis nostræ, et dum carnifex jecur evellit, et viscera quoquo versum invertens rimatur cor, salutiferum nomen Jesu sæpius distincte pronunciavit Frons sudore maduit, et oculi, et nares sanguine et aqua exundarunt. Et quando ob erumpentes sanguinis rivos lingua non potuit [43] amplius salutare nomen Jesu pronunciare labia movebantur et crebri gemitus quos ex imo corde edebat, indicia erant acerbissimi doloris, et cruciatus quem ad dimidium horæ et amplius invicto animo, oculis in cælum intentis, toleravit Passus est anno ætatus suæ quinquagesimo septimo, Caussa eo quod sacerdos Romanus esset
21mo Augusti admissus est Wolstanus Paston generosus, hic Augustinus Beeston, qui cursum philosophiæ pariter ac theologiæ magna ex parte in hoc Collegio ab aliquot annis audiverat, at sacris ordinibus initiatus non erat , suis expensis semper vivens, et jam ad mensam R D. Presidis inter seniores admissus, trecentos et octoginta florenos pro victu et vestitu numerabat, et ex charitate munus Præfecti Infirmariæ obibat, et Procuratori Collegii, dum ipse catechizandis scholaribus diligentius incumbebat manus auxiliaresferebat
Una cum ipso venit Balduinus de Sto Georgio, hic Thomas Phoenix, filius Thomæ * de Sto Georgio, armigeri et Francisca uxoris ejus comitatus Ca[n]tabrigensis , ipsc vero Londini natus parentibus tunc temporis hæretica labe infectis Post aliquot
The family de St. George (the Diary implies that they continued to use the prefix "de,"generally abandoned by our ancestors about A . 11 1400) was seated from an early period at Hatley-St George , Cambs , the name of Baldwin constantly recurring. The third son of John St. George of Hatley was Thomas , of whom nothing more is said in the long Visitation pedigree of 1619, which was made by John's first cousin , Sir Henry St . George (of the junior branch), then Richmond Herald, who with his sons, Sir Thomas and Sir Henry, successively held the office of Garter King of Arms from 1644 to 1715 , whilst another son, Richard, was Ulster King of Arms Four successive generations were indeed heralds; Francis, the
annos reconciliata matre filius etiam jam septennis in fide instructus in gremium Ecclesiæ piæ matris opera et hortatu receptus est, patre adhuc in schismate vitam traducente, in quo perseveravit usque ad mortem, quando etiam [44] gratiam a Domino impetravit reconciliationis. Post patris mortem Balduinus jam pupillus traditus est tutori hæretico matris consanguineo ubi spatio circiter unius anni in hæresim redire coactus, tunc vero a tutore nescit quo modo liberatus, et matri redditus, denuo catholicus factus, et ad hoc Collegium missus ut literis et religione imbueretur, soluturus quotannis trecentos florenos pro pensione, annum ætatis nunc agens decimum tertium vel circiter.
23º Augusti missus est D. Robertus Singleton in Angliam, completis studiis et juramentis sive promissionibus de more R. D. Præsidis * præstitis a quo facultates ordinarias accepit Hic nuncupatus erat Robertus Stanley, a pensione Lancastrensi per totum suum tempus sustentatus , et secundus sacerdos qui mediante illa pensione initiatus est
30mo Augusti, D. Antonius Burdet secundarius philosophiæ professor absoluto jam cursu, et ad prælegendum alterum non invitatus, e Collegio sub pretextu in Angliam revertendi discessit, sed Societatem Jesu statim ingressus est September 1642
7mo die Septembris Richardus Danby hic Moore Comitatus Eboracensis, rediens e militia cui in exercitu Regis Catholici in Belgio inserviisset , et studia, quæ a paucis annis in hoc Collegio coluerat repetere desiderans, ad audiendum cursum philosophicum admissus est, numerantibus amicis trecentos florenos per annum
170 Septembris , die D. Lamberto sacra, Magr Franciscus Rols hic Blakeston, Mr Joannes [blank] hic Medcalf , Mr Robertus Byflet hic Worseley , Mag Robertus Quintin hic Prannell et Magr Thomas [45] Malton hic Layton in pago de Attre in Hannonia ab illustrissimo Archiepiscopo Cameracensi § promoti sunt ad subdiaconatum
20mo die Sabbato quatuor temporum iidem ibidem ad diaconatum promoti
21moFesto St Matthæi Apostoli iidem ad sacrum presbyteratus ordinem demum ab eodem illmo Domino promoti sunt, et omnes incolumes domum reversi sunt November 1642
16 Novembris Duacum venit et in Collegium admissus est Thomas Clercke Sarisburiensis rudimentis grammatices operam commonancestor , being Norroy King, and his younger son , Sir Richard, also Norroy and later Clarencieux King (Mark Noble's History of the College of Arms , and Harl. Soc , xli, 89-91) In a faulty list of recusants of 4 Dec., 1640 , appears St. George, widow," of St. Martin's in the Fields (Midx. Records , iii, 150). Some of the yeomanry class, spelt Fenix and Phenix[e], of St. Giles'sinthe Fields, appear as recusants in the same volumeJ.S.H.
So written for Præsidi
The missing name should have been Rawlinson § Francis van der Burch, Archbishop of Cambrai 1615-1644
daturus, etiamsi paulo esset ætate provectior et ducentos et quinquaginta florenos pro pensione quotannis_soluturus
28 Novembris discessit in Angliam Joannes [Henricus erased] Fosterus alias Samowayes, qui more Convictoris per aliquot annos solvens ducentos florenos pacifice vixisset, et cursum philosophicum audivisset , vitam vero Ecclesiasticam non affectans, jam tandem ad suos reversus est. December 1642
90 Decembris ad Collegium venerunt Thomas et Henricus Manning hic Detton, ille classi syntaxeos , hic grammatices operam navaturus et trecentos florenos annuatim uterque numeraturus
12mo Decembris huc venit D. Georgius de forti scuto qui aliquantisper promoverat negotia Excellentissimi Ducis Lotharingiæ in curia Romana , quam ob rem transivit pedes per Galliam, ementito [46] habitu clericali, et Attrebato huc venit a nostro Gubernatore in Collegio conclusus donec de mente Principis constaret , interim se studiis addicere cæpit
A 26ª Octobris 1641 (unde initium ducunt rationes nostræ) usque ad finem hujus anni 1642, additis accedentium et subtractis discedentium mensibus, fuerunt per totum in Collegio quadraginta duæ personæ, * quorum octo vel circiter Convictores , cæteri sustentabantur sumptibus Collegii , et tamen debita antiqua Collegii hoc anno (Deo dante) diminuta sunt sex fere millibus florenorum
Anno 1643
Februarius
10mo die Februarii missi sunt in Angliam ad animarum conversionem cum facultatibus ordinariis a Rdo D. Præside concessis D. Franciscus Rols hic Blaxton et D. Joannes Rawlinson hic Metcalf ; pariter cum iis discesserunt D. Georgius e forti scuto, negato sibi a Principe hic diutius subsistendi loco, eo quod per Galliam non obtento ejus salvo conductu quem pasportam vocant in has provincias ingressus esset , et Gulielmus Smyth (hic Gray) ob adversam valetudinem in Angliam reversuri
Martius
3° die Martii dimissus est a Collegio Joannes Mason (hic Gennings) eo quod cum alumnus esset , astrinxisset se voto ingrediendi Religionem Benedictinam , et Angliam versus profectus est ad procurandas pecunias sine quibus hic a Benedictinis nostris recipi non poterat
[47] Aprilis
20mo Aprilis dimissus est e Collegio Thomas Clerke, licet brevi tempore multum in studiis profecisset, eo quod pensio tempestive non solvebatur.
A list of those supported at the expense of the College during 1642 was inscribedamongthe blank pages at the end of the First Diary See First andSecond Diaries , page 39
CC
27mo die Aprilis R. P. Henricus Heath communiter dictus Pater Paulus, primo in hoc Collegio ab Anglia veniens receptus, deinde Franciscanus factus, et tandem Guardianus Is intellecto glorioso Sacerdotum in Anglia triumpho, qui post hujusce Parliamenti inauspicata initia vitam Christi caussa constantissime profuderant, ardentissimo desiderio illorum vestigia sequendi se sentiens inflammatum, venia a Superioribus petita et obtenta in Angliam sub nautæ tenui habitu se contulit Ubi panem ostiatim mendicans, et in platea pernoctans , quia non erat ei locus in diversorio, prima nocte qua Londinum venit, ac si furtum vel quoddam facinus meditaretur, deprehensus est Cum vero scriptum pileo inseruerat , quo sui in Angliam reditus propositum, caussasque exposuerat , addens argumenta quibus hujus propositi jus, fasque defendit, et Catholicæ Religionis veritatem asseruit, dum a satellitibus excutitur, hoc scripto reperto proditur , et in carcerem coniicitur Ubi paucis diebus explevit tempora multa, et omnibus eum adeuntibus magnam ædificationem et exemplum præbuit, et brevi ad mortem condemnatus in Dei omnipotentis manus mira animi serenitate et alacritate sese resignavit constanter asserens se nunquam dubitasse quin ii [48] qui Dei fidei caussa vitam profunderent, singulari animi suavitate et voluptate a Deo perfunderentur: nunquam tamen cogitare potuisse lætitiam illam adeo eximiam fore, ac illa erat qua jam fruebatur, quæ quidem tam vehemens et copiosa fuit, ut ipse ferendo non esset
Consultus quid deceret profiteri de juramento, quod dicitur fidelitatis , illicito, schedulam suam sententiamclarius exprimentem sua manu signavit cum in procinctu ad Martyrium esset et testatus est se tam certo credere juramentum illud a veritate abhorrere , ut paratus esset pro hoc Catholico dogmate , æque ac pro quovis alio catholicæ Religionis articulo vitam ponere, et, inter scribendum, Ego, inquit, libenti animo schedulam hanc meo nomine obsigno millies et millies, si necesse foret, sanguine obsignarem . Ad patibulum doctissime peroravit, et pro conversione Angliæ instantissime oravit, donec subductu curru pépendit manibus in cœlum ad tempus sublatis
Maius 1643
28 Maii Duacum venit Thomas Perse filius Thomæ Perse generosi sed schismaticiet Clara * Benlowes, generosæet Catholicæ , ipse educatus ut plurimum hæretice, annum ætatis jam agens decimum septimum aut circiter, huc missus est ab avia materna ut instrueretur in fide Catholica , et bonis moribus et literis imbueretur, quare primo Confessario, deinde præceptorigrammatices comendatus est Pro pensione avia numeratura est trecentos florenos per annum et semestrem pensionem præ manibus numerabit
Clare Bendlowes is mentioned on p 251 with her three brothers The same Essex visitation calls her husband " Thomas Peirce of Auson (Alveston) upon Avon . " J.S.H.
[49]
Junius 1643
5to die Junii dimissi sunt e Collegio Thomas Manning hic Detton et Henricus Manning hic Detton, eo quod pensionis solutio ab amicis negligeretur, adolescentes aliter bonæ spei, et studiis satis idonei
12mo Junii missi sunt in Angliam cum facultatibus ordinarii a R. D. Præside concessis lucrandarum animarum caussa D. Franciscus Muttleburie hic Beaumond , et D. Robertus Byflet hic Worseley , absoluto studiorum curriculo Una cum illis profectus est Angliam versus Joannes Procer , famulus D. Gulielmi Hyde, qui hic substiterat a duodecimo Octobris anni 1641 quo tempore Dominus ipsius venerat ad Collegium munere Vicepresidis functurus, et Theologiam Ecclesiasticam prælecturus 25to Junii admissi sunt in Collegium Thomas Ravenscroft (hic Rider) anno ætatis decimo quarto, et Georgius Ravenscroft (hic etiam Rider) anno ætatis undecimo , filii Jacobi Ravenscroft, armigeri, in comitatu Huntingdonensi, et Mariæ uxoris ejus, schismaticorum , qui filios in sua Religione pro ætatis ratione educaverant . Quod huc missi ad vitandos tumultus in Anglia, et ut bonis literis imbuerentur, gratia divina operante, Catholici facti sunt, et alter classi Grammatices , alter primis rudimentis designatus est Solvit uterque pro pensione annua trecentos florenos anticipata solutione unius semestris pensionis [50] 27mo Junii e Collegio dimissus est Joannes Kynne (hic Colleton), Poeta, eo quod esset animo a studiis omnino abalienato, et post poenas publicas quas semel detractaverat veniam petiisset a Dno Præside ut militiam ad tempus exerceret , dicens se aliter ad sanam mentem reduci non posse nisi miseriarum perpessione edoctum ; Petitioni ejus, adhibito consilio seniorum , annuit R. D. Præses et, vestibus et pecuniis ad iter paratis, commendatus est Capitaneo Richardo Pavier olim in hoc Collegio studioso , qui vel eo nomine illum perhumaniter excepit et tractavit Vixerat hic super pensione à Ven¹ viro D. Joanne Colletono , Capituli Cleri , Anglicani decano fundata, et dimissus est cum ea conditione, ut si intra annum rediret locus ei servaretur: sin minus alteri ex eadem cognatione concederetur
. Julius 1643
23º Julii, admissi sunt in Collegium , Franciscus Tempest (hic Wilmott) anno ætatis decimo octavo natus in oppido de Wantage in comitatu Bercheriensi , Sarisburiensis dioecesis, filius Thomæ Tempest armigeri et Marthæ uxoris ejus, Catholicorum , qui Thomas pro fide Catholica bonorum sequestrationem nuper est passus et custodiæ traditus, et vita functus sed an in carcere, an extra, filio nondum constat Avus pro
The plural is used as applying also to those mentioned in the next entry
William Willmott of Wantage, by his wife Cecilia daughter of Hugh Hyde of Letcombe-Regis, had a daughter Martha, wife of ThomasTempest ofWhaddon , Cambs. (Harl. Soc ., Ivi, 142) .J.S. H.
eadem sancta fide plurima etiam passus Proavus pro fautore Reginæ Scotiæ Mariæ possessiones perdidit , si non et vitam . Ipse Franciscus ab infantia fide Catholica a parentibus enutritus, et bonarum literarum studiis hactenus educatus , quibus ut promoveatur huc missus est a parentibus, alendus ex pensione quam avunculus Doctor Thomas Tempest [51] fundavit Antverpiæ ad alendum unum studiosum e sua familia in perpetuum. Scholæ syntaxeos deputatus est.
Et cum illo admissi sunt Georgius et Antonius Penny (hic Smyth) prior annum ætatis decimum tertium agens, alter duodecimum, filii Georgii * Penny, armigeri, in comitatu Dorcestrensi et Annæ Perkins uxoris ejus, amborum Catholicorum, juxta quorum institutum et ipsi pariter educati sunt , et ad hoc huc missi , ut in religione Catholica plenius informentur, et bonis artibus et moribus imbuantur Rudimentis Grammatices hoc anno incumbunt. Sexcentos florenos annuatim solvunt, et totidem pro primo anno præ manibus numerantur.
Augustus 1643
20mo die Augusti D. Georgius de fortiscuto, qui mense Februario in Angliam profectus est revertitur et in Collegio recipitur, literis operam navaturus.
22do Augusti admissus est in Collegium Gulielmus Paston hic Beeston, nepos D. Augustini Beeston, et filius patris sui viri Catholici maximus natu Pro pensione solvit trecentos florenos annuatim, quorum medietas in præsenti numerantur.
September 1643
17mo Septembris utrumque Collegii juramentum præstiterunt in manibus R. D. Præsidis Gulielmus Canning hic dictus Harwood, et Henricus [52] Glen, et postridie una cum Magistro [blank] Colletono alias Kynne (qui cum illis Parisiis ubi, studiis operam navabant huc venerat ut sacris initiaretur) missi et a R. D. Præside præsentati sunt, Illmo ac Revmo D. Francisco Vanderburgh, Archiepiscopo Cameracensi, a quo ad subdiaconatus , diaconatus et sacrum etiam presbyteratus ordinem rite promoti sunt, deinde huc divertentes, statim Parisios , unde venerunt reversi sunt.
October 1643
12mo Octobris D. Georgius Personius ætate valde provectus et pene confectus donavit Collegio residuum suæ pensionis Neopolitanæ quæ multis retroactis annis illi debebatur et R. D. Præses coram Magnifico Domino Rectore acceptavit in nomine Collegii
* George Penne (ob 1673) of Toller Welme, Dorset (the son of John Penne of East Coker, Somerset , and Dorothy daughter of SirJohn Poyntz of Iron-Acton, Gloucestershire ), married Jane daughter of Edmund Perkins of Ufton , Berks , and had four sons (1) George, (2) Anthony, (3) Giles, (4) Poyntz, Anne and Elizabeth The eldest , George , the student, d 14 May, 1695, æt 88, having married Anne daughter of ThomasTregonwell of Anderson or Anderstone-Winterbourne, Dorset , and leftfour sons. The eldest , George , had his estate, of £650 per ann , sequestered by the Parliament in 1645. The family was impoverished by its loyalty to the Church, and ruined by its devotion to the Stuarts (John Hutchins' Hist Dorset, ii, 92, 3rd edit.; Payne's Nonjurors, 40).—J.S.H
December 1643
17mo Decembris e Collegio discessit et Angliam repetiit D. Georgius de forti scuto eo quod media ad promovenda studia illi non suppeditarentur.
Hoc anno additis accedentium et subtractis discedentium mensibus, per totum alebantur in Collegio triginta octo persona. * Anno 1644
Aprilis
19mo Aprilis e Collegio discesserunt D. Augustinus Beeston alias Wolstanus Paston, Gulielmus Paston ejus nepos hic Beeston , et Thomas Blount hic Anderton, Bruxellas versus ; ille quidem ad res suas curandas : hi vero duo ad valetudinem recuperandam [53] et confirmandam qua nimis adversa in Collegio usi sunt. Maius 1644
Igna Maii profecti sunt Ipras Magister Georgius Russels , et Magister Gulielmus Walmesley hic Hammerton, præsentati a R. Dno Præside ad sacros ordines suscipiendos
21ma die Maii a Rdmo Dno Judoco Boukaert § Episcopo Iprensi ibidem promoti sunt ad sacrum subdiaconatus ordinem 24 Maii domum reversi sunt incolumes præfati ordinati. Junius 1644
23a Junii ad Collegium accessit Robertus Heneadge hic Browne filius Georgii Henedge equitis aurati, et Elizabethæ Tressham, amborum Catholicorum, in Catholica religionis enutritus Huc missus est a D. Francisco Mannocke, anno ætatis decimo septimo ad excolendum ingenium, et primis rudimentariis annumeratusest 26ta reversus est Bruxellis Thomas Blount hic Anderton , confirmata aliquantulum valetudine, at vero Gulielmus Paston hic Beeston ibi se studiis applicuit , et plene convaluit excepto quod post aliquod temporis spatium suborto tumore in gutture struma sive Regio, quod vocant, morbo laborare credebatur, ideoque in Gallias transmissus , ut contactus regii beneficio frueretur. [54] 27ma die Junii D. Georgius Russels et D. Gulielmus Hammerton Gandavum profecti sunt ad sacros ordines suscipiendos, sed post aliquot dies re infecta reversi sunt, dicente Rmo Dno Episcopo Gandavensi rem quidem fieri posse , ut scilicet extra tempora a jure statuta conferrentur Ordines in vigori Indulti Apostolici se autem nolle facere. Julius 1644
9na Julii Duacum venit Gulielmus Wall hic dictus Marsh , filius Gulielmi Wall et Dorotheæ uxoris ejus Catholicorum et generosorum Curriculum studiorum humaniorum Odomari
For list of names see First and Second Douay Diaries, pp 40, 41 .
From this point Mr. Ireland uses the feminine form of the date instead of the masculine as hitherto Jodocus Bouchaërt, Cong Orat , Bishop of Ypres 1641-1646
Sir GeorgeHeneageof Ilainton, co Lincoln, married Elizabeth, only daughter of FrancisTresham of Rushton, Northants , and was succeeded by his seventh but eldest surviving son George Robert, in the text, is the eighth, and born 17Nov .. 1626. Charles, the ninth son , was born 7 April, 1629 (Harl Soc , li, 480).J.S.H
jam Rhetor pene absolverat , et huc venit ad audiendum cursum philosophicum , patre pensionem pro more solvente.
19na die admissus est in culinam Gulielmus , lixa, Wallo Augustus 1644
19na Augusti cursum philosophiæ defendebat mane Robertus Thurston, a prandio Thomas Thirkill, sub D. Joanne Stratfordo præsidente
20ma die mane defendebat Richardus Moore, a prandio Edoardus Vernaly sub eodem Præside D. Joanne Stratfordo antiquo philosophiæ professore.
22 Augusti e Collegio discessit Gulielmus Wall hic Marsh, eo quod movente Spiritu Sancto ad perfectiorem vitæ cursum aspiraret rerum mundanarum, priusquam experiretur pertæsus, et Sacram Carthusianorum Religionem (patre annuente cujus filius erat natu maximus) ingressurus, ideoque Neoportum se contulit .
[55] 23ª e Collegio discesserunt, absoluto jam studiorum curriculo, D. Robertus Quintin , hic Prannell, et D. Thomas Malton hic Layton, impertitis a Rdo Dno Præside facultatibus ordinariis ; indultum tamen est illis ad tempus subsistere Bruxellis, donec tempora in Anglia sint paulo mitiora, et ipsi paratiores facti meliorem transmeandi occasionem nanciscantur. September 1644
gna die Septembris e Collegio discessit Richardus Danby hic Moore, et in oppido cubiculum conduxit ut medicinæ operam navaret scholas publicas frequentaturus. Eadem die discessit Georgius Smyth, hic Gray, ad parentes Parisiis commorantes et avum, et patruum cujus hæres erat profecturus
Eadem die huc venit D. Richardus Worthingtonus, sacerdos, qui per multos annos negotia Collegii tanquam agens generalis peregerat , jam in Gallias transiturus, et intra paucos dies Parisiis appulit
Martyrium 17ma Septembris , stylo novo, vel saltem initio D. Joannis Octobris, Londini passus est R. D. Joannes Ducket Ducketti Eboracensis Comitatus , hujus Collegii alumnus, annos habens viginti octo, eo quod sacerdos esset, quod et libenter fassus est ne quid grave sociis utpote duobus laicis qui cum illo deprehensi sunt, quibus exilium minitabantur parlamentarii nisi hoc assererent, contingeret [56] Plurimum deditus erat orationi mentali in vita sua, et in ea aliquando pernoctavit, utque plenius instrueretur cum ex Gallia in Anglia transfretabat Neoportum in Flandria divertit, ut cum admodum Rdo Patre Joanne Ducquetto cognato suo tunc temporis Priore dignissimo Carthusiæ Anglicana, de oratione et rebus spiritualibus conferret Hoc de eo admiratione dignum memoratur, quod ab eo tempore quo reus ante judicem sistebatur usque ad finem vitæ, facies ejus immutata fuerit adeo et roseo quodam colore, et insolito sed venusto rubore suffusa (cum alias esset
pallidior) omnium oculis apparuerit: astantes intuebantur vultum ejus tanquam vultum angeli, stantis inter illos
24° Septembris ad sacrum diaconatus ordinem promoti sunt D. Georgius Russels et Dns Gulielmus Hammerton a Rdmo D. Judoco Boukaert, Episcopo Iprensi ibidem
October 1644
20mo Octobris cantatum est summum sacrum in honorem Smae Trinitatis in gratiarum actione pro martyrio R. D. Joannis Ducquetti
November 1644
3º Novembris vesperi inter horas octavam et nonam D. Georgius Personius qui per annum cum medio vel circiter in Collegio prope portam vixerat, jam senio et morbis confectus , ex hac luce migravit, duobus Patribus Carınelitanis discalceatis quorum alter Prior (quem et Testamenti Executorem constituerat) assistentibus , et tota nocte pro ejus anima orantibus.
December 1644
2da die Decembris theses theologicas defendit D. Joannes Singleton sacerdos sub Rdo D. Gulielmo Hydæo, Vicepræside et theologiæ professore, in schola theologica et matutino tempore. 17ma Decembris Armenteriæ * D. Georgius [57] Russells, et D. Gulielmus Hammerton ad sacrum presbyteratus ordinem promoti sunt a Rdmo Dno Christophoro de France Episcopo Audomarensi
25ta Decembris media nocte suas primitias cantavit D. Georgius Russell
Hoc anno additis accedentium et subtractis discedentium mensibus per totum alebantur in Collegio triginta sex personæ superstitibus quatuor fere mensibus, quorum viginti duæ cum dimidio, alebantur sumptibus Collegii. *
Anno 1645 Februarius
5ta Februarii e Collegio discessit Robertus Henedge, hic Browne, ab amicis vocatus Gandavum , nec erat ad studia multum idoneus, omnia nihilominus amici juste persolverunt. Martius 1645
12ª die Martii utrumque Collegii juramentum in manibus Rd D. Præsidis publice præstiterunt coram sumnio altari Magister Gulielmus Mennell hic Ireland, diocesis Eboracensis , Franciscus Wilmot hic Tempest , dioc Sarisburiensis , et Thomas Rowdon hic Feasby, dioc Eboracensis, ille theologus tertii anni hi duo poeta
Aprilis 1645
Ioma Aprilis Magister Joannes Singleton et Magr_Gulielmus Ireland profecti [58] sunt ad inquirendum Rdmum D. Episcopum Audomarensem qui faciliorem reliquis se præbuit in conferendis
Armentiers
For list of names see First and Second Douay Diaries, pp. 41 , 42 .
nostratibus Ordines extra tempora, perpensis difficultatibus itinerum propter milituminfestationem, et Anglorum calamitatibus
15ta die Aprilis ad subdiaconatus ordinem.
17ma ad sacrum diaconatus ordinem
18va ad sacrum etiam presbyteratus ordinem promoti sunt præfati D. Joannes Waddington hic Singleton , et D. Gulielmus
Mennell hic Ireland a Rdmo D. Christophoro de France , Episcopo
Audomarensi in oppido Stegrensi, suæ dioecesis
24ta e Collegio discessit et cubiculum in oppido sibi conduxit D. Joannes Stratfordus sive Litchmorus subdiaconus, qui per plures annos philosophiam in Collegio professus cum laude fuerat Præsenti vero anno cum discipuli nulli adessent vacabat, admonitus ergo a Rdo D. Præside ut se pararet ad reliquos sacros ordines , juxta juramentum in admissione præstitum, suscipiendos, procrastinavit difficultates texens, circa nescio quam indignitatem, a quibus cum dimoveri non posset, R. D. Præses , habito maturo hac de re cum senioribus consilio , non judicavit expedire ut diutius in Collegio moraretur, sed pacifice sine strepitu, et cum honore dimitteretur . Maius 1645
8va die Maii intimata est per literas admodum Rdi D. Gasparis Laureten, Præpositi Ecclesiæ Attrebatensis et Vicarii Generalis nati Sedis Vacantis hodierno mane scriptas, et Rdo D. Præsidi transmissas, visitatio Collegii futura ex Commissione Pronuncii Apostolici (cui hoc a Sacra Congregatione Cardinalium de propaganda fide jussu Smt D. N. Innocentii decimi mandatum erat) eidem Ven¹ viro Gaspari Laureten, et Eximio D. et Magistro nostro D. Francisco [59] Sylvio, S. Theologiæ Doctore et Professore primario, nec non insignis Ecclesiæ S. Amati Decano facta ; quam intimationem R. D. Præses humiliter et gratanter accepit respondens visitationem intra paucos dies posse commode incloari
16ª die Maii auspicata est visitatio prædicta , prius celebrato Sacro ad summum al[tare] a Ven" D. Gaspare Laureten, præposito, etc., et primo quidem quoad locum , omnia enim cubicula tam Superiorum, quam studiosorum , infirmaria, vestiaria, officinas et cætera loca Collegii lustrata ab utrisque visitatoribus et visitata sunt, vasa item argentea et supellex sacra monstrata est; inventaria insuper omnium bonorum Collegii (exceptis solis libris qui adeo scatent per Collegium , ut vel sola nomina in unum collecta in ingens excrescerent volumen) exactissime conficiuntur et in manus DD Visitatorum traduntur Finita visitatione locali, duo visitatores et frater Venlis D. Præpositi, canonicus et ipse Attrebatensis, qui jam munere Secretarii visitationis fungebatur, una cuni R. Ď Præside, et senioribus accedunt ad prandium in triclinio Collegii, et posthac DD Visitatores, nolentes oneri esse, usque ad finem visitationis non comeduntin Collegio 17ma die Maii inchoata est visitatio personarum a Venli Dno Præposito (fratre ejus in scripta redigente relationes unius-
cujusque) eximio D. Sylvio suam præsentiam in hac parte ob nimias occupationes excusante Et primo visitatur R. D. Præses , deinde D. Vicepræses, seniores, sacerdotes, et cæteri, singuli suo ordine, nec omittuntur famuli [60] In Collegio, decrescente per singulos annos numero, ne nimis graveretur sicut in adventu R. D. Præsidis, jam non reperiebantur ultra triginta personas, quorum circiter novem convictores , cæteri alebantur sumptibus Collegii Hora undecima surgit Venlis D. Visitator et una cum fratre suo remeat ad ædes proprias.
A prandio revertitur, et sic deinceps quotidie usque dum totalis visitatio personarum absoluta est. Junius 1645
8va die Junii e Collegio discessit R. Dns Edoardus Fettiplace hic Fitzherbert, Præfectus Generalis, et Neoportum in Flandria se contulit, sanctissimum Carthusianorum ordinem inter Anglos ingressurus, quod et fecit, et perfecit vir vere pius et bonus . In ejus locum surrogatus est a R. D. Præside, habito prius consilio Vens Dni Visitatoris, D. Gulielmus Irelandus, Sacerdos, et theologus tertii anni, vir modestus et prudens non enim visum est illi multiplicandum esse numerum seniorum pendente visitatione, donec resciret quid Eminen DD statuerent de rebus Collegii
26a Junii, peracta visitatione personali , inquirunt RR. DD. Visitatores quantum quisque Collegialium pro alimento et cæteris necessariis consumeret per annum, ut inde dijudicari possit an Collegium complectatur numerum competentem ad exhauriendam pensionem Apostolicam, et libris expositorum omnium a 26ta die Octobris 1641 usque ad finem Maii 1645 una cum numero omnium personarum quæ toto illo tempore in hoc Collegio alebantur diligenter examinatis, satis aperte constabat singula capita annuatim consumpsisse fere trecentos florenos, Deinde distinctione inter [61] Convictores et alumnos singulis annis accuratius facta, compertum est ultra convictores qui pensiones solvebant, fuisse primo anno, hoc est a dicta 26ta Octobris 1641 usque ad finem anni 1642, per totum alitos in Collegio nihil solventes , personas viginti novem : a principio anni 1643 usque ad finem ejusdem per totum viginti quatuor personas cum dimidio, sive sex mensibus superstitibus: ab initio vero anni 1644 usque ad finem ejusdem per totum personas viginti duas cum dimidio : ab initio demum anni 1645 usque ad finem Maii jamjam elapsi personas viginti cum dimidio Ex quibus omnibus in computus districtius redactis manifestum erat per triennium in sustentandis Alumnis fuisse supra pensionem Apostolicam expositos supra quatuor millia quingentos florenos qui suffecissent ad sustentationem quatuor seniorum per illud triennium, casu quo Eminent DD18 non fuisset visum seniores alendos esse ex pensione Apostolica
Porro in dissolvendis antiquis debitis et pro interesse pecuniarum constabat fuisse exposita quindecim millia florenorum,
qui suffecissent ad sustentationem quatuordecim alumnorum per hoc triennium, atque adeo floruisset hoc Collegium hisce licet calamitosis temporibus, si æere alieno imis gravatum non fuisset
Deinde repræsentabatur status in quo repertum est Collegium cum R. D. Muscottus [62] modernus præses suam præsidentiam auspicabatur et exhibitus est RR DD Visitatoribus catalogus debitorum in principio hujus diarii descriptus , una cum catalogo debitorum in præsenti Præterea exhibiti sunt catalogi omnium pensionum reddituum, sive censuum Collegii quos de facto recipit vel de jure recipere debet ; omnium item onerum , et obligationum, quantum licuit e tenebris eruere, quibus obnoxium est Collegium .
Denique quo fructus ex administratione pensionis Apostolicæ percepti clarius in lucem prodirent exhibita sunt nomina omnium sub hujus præsidentia inter alumnos admissorum , ad sacros ordines promotorum, et in messem Anglicanam missorum aut in hoc Collegio detentorum, vel alio destinatorum Et admodum RR DD Visitatoribus in omnibus quæ inquisiverunt ad pleniorem status Collegii cognitionem , satisfactum est, quibus in unum collectis et a RR. DD. Visitatoribus accurate perlectis , confecta est ipsorum Relatio, et clausa Visitatio Julius 1645
20ma die Julii visitatio transmissa est Romam et RR DD Visitatores invitati sunt ad prandium in Collegio
21ma Julii, Thomas Blount hic Anderton in veterem morbum sive languorem relapsus profectus est Angliam versus ut balnea naturalia experiretur
Augustus 1645 cum
2da die Augusti ad nos venit ex Gallia ubi per triennium pauperrime vitam traducens hæserat [63] R. D. Georgius Spencæus alias Fenuicke, alias Warwicke, triginta sex abhinc annis sacro presbyteratus ordine initiatus in Universitate Salmanticensi , et plurimum hujus temporis intervalli in vinea Anglicana operi missionis insudans , tandem vero vi persecutionum una patrono suo, quocum vixerat, expulsus, in Galliam sive Brittannian minorem secessit, et inde cum patrono suo in Catholica regione nunc degenti non multum necessarius erat, ad hoc collegium tanquam communein matrem se contulit , et cum fratribus suis pio ipsius in gremio ultimum tentaret claudere diem fæliciter, et benigne exceptus est a R. D. Præside
September 1645
2da die Septembris venerunt ad Collegium Augustinus et Edoardus Belson hic Clifford filii Augustini Belson armigeri et [blank] Curson, uxoris ejus, Catholicorum, qui et educaverunt filios in religione paterna. Augustinus annos habet decem et fere septem, in Essexia natus , et classi syntaxeos destinatus Edoardusannum agit decimum sextum et grammaticæ destinatur Solvit uterque per annum trecentos et viginti florenos Antverpiæ regiæ nonetæ anticipata pensione semestri .
14 Septembris e Collegio discessit Dos Georgius Spenceus alias Warwicke, et Bruxellas se contulit aliquam vivendi rationem ibi conquisiturus, cum nullus illi vacaret locus in Collegio [64] Eadem die e Collegio discessit D. Joannes Davisius, Collegii Confessarius ordinarius, et ad Cænobium D. Gregorii Benedictinorum Anglorum in hoc oppido Duaceno se contulit , ubi hac vespera habitum St Benedicti indutus est a R. Patre Joanne Mutesio Priore nomine tamen admodum R. P. D. Clementis Abbatis de Lambspring in Westfalia, cujus propterea familiæ ascriptus est et quicum postridie in Germaniam iter carpsit Persoluto nihilominus illi Viatico centum et viginti florenorum in regia pecunia In ejus locum surrogatus est Edmundus Irelandus, Procurator CollegiiOctober 1645
Ima die Octobris aperiuntur de more Schola. [Several lines blank] November 1645
8va die Novembris e Collegio discessit Thomas Perse hic Greene, Convictor, eo quod studiorum pertæsus vitam liberiorem quæsierit, et Bruxellis primo jussu aviæ aliquantisper subsistens, demum ex ejusdem licentia in Angliam remeavit
29na Novembris hinc discessit Thomas a Sto Georgio hic Phoenix vitæ Collegialis etiam pertæsus, et Gandavum se contulit ad D. Augustinum Beeston qui illum ad Collegium adduxerat December 1645
16 die Decembris in cubiculo R. D. Presidis, præsentibus D. Gulielmo Hydæo Vicepræside et Edmundo Irelando Procuratore, utrumque Collegii juramentum præstitit Richardus Mossocke hic Morus et nomen in libro Collegii subscripsit [65] R.D.Preses agonizat * 24ª Decembris , die Dominica R. D. Præses, qui circa festum S. Bartholomei mense sextili febre correptus erat quartana, eaque paulatim exedente consumptus , ut nihil præter'pellem et ossa relinqueretur, ad extremadeveniens, accersito primo ad se circa horam quartam matutinam Confessario (a quo facta prius confessione totius vitæ generali beneficium absolutionis petiit et obtinuit) deinde Collegialibus omnibus (quos pullos suos peramanter nuncupavit) eos agonizans ad pietatem quam per totam vitam ferventer, in hac vero ultima infirmitate maxime spiraverat, adhortabatur, addens duo tantum ab illis observanda esse , utpote mandata Dei, et regulas Collegii quibus via tuta illis strueretur in cælis, impertitaque ex animo benedictione omnia fausta omnibus et singulis precatus est .
Deinde invalescente morbo, et viribus deficientibus, oculis in cælum, quoad potuit, semper intentis, animam in manus
D. Jesu commendavit et inter Collegialium orationes omnium
S. Matris Ecclesiæ sacramentis rite munitus octavam inter et nonam expiravit in ipso profesto Nativitatis Christi Domini,
In the margin
qua die ipse olim, dum carcere tenebatur, prædicans latronibus a Custode deprehensus, detrusus est in fætidissimum lacum inter ipsos latrones inibique per triduum detentus, sed suavissimos inde reportavit fructus, nam ex decem facinorosis qui paulo post mulctabantur morte, novem ad fidem Catholicam conversi sunt.
[66] Vir erat, si corpus spectes ; statura quidem parvus , sed juste in omnibus membris a natura formatus, oculis nigris, et vivacibus, vultu, præsertim in senectute venerabili: si animam; magnus, excelsus, cujus conversatio, spretis terrenis sordibus , in cælis erat: si doctrinam ; singulari Latini sermonis facundia præcellens, in Theologia practica versatissimus , et potens in scripturis si conversationem ; gravis, modestus, affabilis, sobrius, vini et fortioris cerevisiæ abstemius , de pietate libenter ingerens sermonem : si labores ; dum vires suppeterent , indefatigabilis nocte ac die quæ boni pastoris erant diligenter obiens, peste percussis et ab omnibus derelictis, tam corporalia quam spiritualia providens et exhibens , vitam suam pro lucro_animarum præsertim in illa peste Londinensi cujus meminit Eminentiss D. Protector in litteris ad Officiales , Lectores et Alumnos Collegii , cum in Præsidem co-optabatur, sæpissime exponens : si passiones; gloriosus , a falsis fratribus spe lucri traditus, plurima expertus ergastula, viginti et amplius annorum incarceratione maceratus , sententia demum mortis pro sacerdotio damnatus: si charitatis opera ; exemplaris , viscera misericordiæ in pauperes effundens, quibus non tantum impræsentiarum pro cujusque necessitate largiter erogabat , sed redditus et census annuos in sustentationem orphanorum, viduarum et pauperum pro fide Catholica in carcere detentorum ad valorem quadringentorum florenorum in perpetuum fundari curavit, et hujus fundationis
Ramo D. Episcopo Chalcedonensi in morte commendavit: si regimen ; in re familiari administranda providus, parcus alieni, liberalis sui ; in disciplina [67] tuenda sever[us] non accipiens faciem hominis, in reprehensionibus acris, in admonitionibus sedulus, in exhortationibus fervidus, et vultu plane angelico, æque prælucens opere ac sermone : si famam clarus ; tam a clero regulari quam seculari , et laicis omnibus, suffragantibus sibi multis operibus bonis, bene audiens Denique tantus vir erat ut Eminent D. Protector minime hæsitaverit illum pronunciare florem cleri Anglicani curam
Disciplinam reflorescere fecit, et rem familiarem adeo præclare administravit, ut solo quadriennio, quo præsidebat , calamitosis licet temporibus Anglia interim intestinis bellis conflagrante , et Catholicis graviter oppressis, Collegium nihilominus ultra viginti quinque millia florenorum auctum reliquerit
Condens testamentum , ultra mille florenos quos quidem mense Septembris (dum testamentum concinnabat) donaverat Collegio, legavit eidem quingentos florenos sibi inde debitos, utpote partem majoris summa a se mutuo acceptæ sub præsidentia Eximii D. Kellisoni
Usum librorum suorumuna cum linteaminibus legavit Præsidi futuro, et pro tempore existenti in perpetuum, ac vestimenta et lanea quæque ordinavit vendenda ad coemenda paramenta nigra pro celebratione Missæ solemnis defunctorum, cum hac obligatione, ut dies ejus anniversarius solemniter celebraretur in Collegio ad septennium Quibus executor ejus testamentarius addidit trecentos circiter florenos [68] ad perficienda dicta paramenta et pro parili ornamento altaris cum hac ulteriori obligatione, ut elapso præfato septennio , adhuc per aliud septennium omnes et singuli sacerdotes, quos tunc contigerit fore in Collegio sacra faciant saltem privatim in hac die anniversaria pro requie ipsius animæ, quæ Rdo D. Præsidi moderno proposita et ab illo acceptata et concordata fuit. Donavit præterea sex millia florenorum ad fundandum censum annuum perpetuum pro sustentatione unius alumni in hoc Collegio ad colendam vineam Anglicanam, absque ulteriori obligatione quam ut disciplinam observet per omnia sicut cæteri alumni et postquam ad sacerdotium promotus fuerit, singulis septimanis, quamdiu hac pensione fruetur, unum sacrum faciat pro anima fundatoris, pro animabus patris et matris ejus, fratrum ac sororum. Commendavit postremo literas in manus executoris sui presentis non aperiendas ante mortem D. Thomæ Roper, de quarum contentis dicetur 29na die Octobris 1647, post recepta certa nuncia de morte præfati Domini Thomæ Roper. 26ta die Decembris circa meridiem depositum R. D. Georgii Muscotti, nuper Præsidis dignissimi, terræ committitur in templo D. Jacobi in sacello Bmae Virginis, præsentibus Venbilibus et admodum RR DD Visitatoribus aliisque Doctoribus et ingenti concursu populorum, qui ad rumorem sepulturæ Martyris designati et tanta pro fide Catholica passi (qui quidem rumor a R. D. Pastore non rogato in die Nativitatis Domini pro concione sponte promanans per civitatem percrebuerat ) visendi studio densis agminibus confluxerant
Absoluto Officio in Ecclesia Venles DD. Visitatores redierunt ad Collegium et ingressi [69] triclinium , protulerunt et perlegerunt literas perillustris D. Pronuncii, quibus, intellecta gravi infirmitate R. D. Præsidis, illis potestatem fecerat, casu quo mors sequeretur, providendi de bono regimine Collegii quousque aliud a superioribus decerneretur ; in quarum vigore committebant facultatem regendi Collegium DD Gulielmo Hydæo Vicepresidi et Edmundo Irelando Confessario et Procuratori Collegii, donec aliud statueretur
Omnes expensæ funeris ab executoribus persolutæ sunt, a quibus paulo post impositum est et marmor sepulchro Præsidis defuncti cum inscriptione quæ, si cui libeat, ibi perlegi potest
Hoc anno per totum alebantur in Collegio triginta circite personæ,quarum viginti cumdimidio alebantursumptibusCollegii.*
For list of names see First and Second Douay Diaries, pp 42, 43-
Anno 1646
Januarius
27ma Januarii e vivis excessit Franciscus Tempest hic Wilmot, Rhetorum facile princeps , juvenis summæ spei, qui non minus virtute quam eruditione cæteris longe præcelluit
Aprilis 1646
20ma die Aprilis ad collegium venit Andreas Whitall hic Kniveton filius Joannis [70] Whytall et Annæ Pegg, gener[osorum] natus in Yelderley in comitatu Derbiensi , educatus e cunabulis in religione
Catholica (quam etiam colebant parentes ejus) annum ætatis agens decinium septimum, soluturus est pensionem trecentorum florenorum per triennium et postea admittendus in alumnum. Anticipata solutione numeravit sexcentos florenos, restant adhuc trecenti floreni numerandi nisi R. D. Præsidi visum fuerit aliquid relaxare ratione calamitatum et persecutionum quas passi sunt parentes ejus in Anglia
23 Aprilis ad Collegium venit Ven¹sD. Gaspar Laureten, visitator Collegii, secum afferens formam juramenti præstandi ab alumnis Venis Collegii Urbani de propaganda fide in universo terrarum Orbe, una cum literis perillustris D. Antonii Bichi, Pronuncii Apostolici et Abbatis Stae Anastasia datis 17ma die instantis Aprilis, regentibus dictum visitatorem ut diligenter invigilet ne deinceps utantur in hoc Collegio alia formula nisi ista correcta , et ut curet annotari inter memorias Collegii hoc mandatum Suæ Sanctitatis ut inviolabiliter in posterum observetur. * Forma juramenti præstandi ab alumnis Ven118 Collegii Urbani de propaganda fide in universo terrarum orbe
Ego diœcesis plenam habens instituti hujus Collegii notitiam , legibus et constitutionibus ipsius , quas juxta superiorum explicationem amplector, sponte subjicio, easque pro posse observare promitto. filius me
Insuper spondeo et juro quod dum in hoc Collegio permanebo, et postquam ab eo sive completis, sine incompletis studiis exiero , ante elapsum triennium, nullam Religionem , [71] Societatem , aut Congregationem Regularem , sine speciali Sedis Apostolicæ licentia, ingrediar, neque in aliqua earum professionein emittam.
Item spondeo et juro, quod volente sacra Congregatione de propaganda fide, statum Ecclesiasticum amplectar, et ad omnes sacros etiam presbyteratus ordines , cum superioribus visum fuerit, promovebor.
Denique spondeo et juro quod jussu ejusdem Sacræ Congregationis de propaganda Fide sine mora in provinciam meam revertar vel ad aliam provinciam arbitrio ejusdem Sacræ Congregationis proficiscar: ut ibi perpetuo in divinis administrandis laborem meum et operam pro salute animarum impendam, quod etiam prastabo, si cum prædictis Sedis licentia aut post triennium prædictum sine dicta licentia Religionem Societatem aut Congre-
This oath was still further modified by Pope Alexander VII a few years later
gationem Regularem ingressus fuero, et in earum aliqua professionem emisero. Nec e dicta provincia nisi ex aliqua urgenti causa, et cum expressa Sacræ Congregationis prædictæ licentia discedam . Sic me Deus adjuvet, et hæc Sancta Dei Evangelia. Hanc formam juramenti una cum literis perillustris D. Pronuncii intimavit Ven¹s D. Visitator juxta tenorem dictarum literarum DD Gulielmo Hyde, Vicepresidi, et Edmundo Irelando Confessario pro tempore Collegii Rectoribus, qui responderunt se humiliter acceptare hoc juramentum, et diligenter annotaturos inter memorias Collegii , idemque fideliter [72] præsentaturos Præsidi futuro penes quein erat jus admittendi in Collegium , ut de eo faceret quod sibi in Domino faciendum visum foret. Maius 1646
2da die Maii accepimus duo decreta S. Congregationis de propaganda Fide mediatione admodum Rd D. Thomæ Blackloi, S. Theologiæ Baccalaurei anno superiori Romæ Agentis, quæ subjungenda duximus
Decretum S. Congregationis de propaganda Fide habitæ die 12 Septembris 1645 coram Smio
Ref. Eminentmo D. Cardinali Barberino instantiam D. Georgii Muschotti, Collegii Anglorun Duaceni Præsidentis , pro indulgentia in articulo mortis, pro se et sacerdotibus eum in regimine dicti Collegii adjuvantibus, et pro facultate concedendi mille benedictiones extraordinarias pro coronis, crucibus , et medalliis singulis alumnis Anglis ejusdem Collegii, qui finitis studiis ad Missionem Anglicanam se transferunt S. D. N. petitionibus Oratoris annuit. Card. Antonius Barberinus, Prefect. [73] locus sigilli Cards Barberini
Infra
Franciscus Ingolus, secretarius .
Sequitur et aliud decretum eadem die factum.
Decretum Sa. Congregationis de propag[anda] Fide habita die 12 Septembris 1645 , coram Smo
Ref. Eminentmo D. Cardi Barberino instantiam D. Georgii Moschetti, Collegii Duaceni Anglorum Præsidis, pro facultatibus, quæ pro Anglia conceduntur exercendis in Anglos , qui frequenter ob patriæ bella in Belgium se conferunt, et Confessarios non habent, qui linguam calleant Anglicanam in numero sufficientes , cum potestate eas communicandi Confessariis dicti Collegii
Sacra Congregatio , S. D. N. annuente , jussit pro facultatibus petitis per Oratorem adiri Sanctum Officium et potestatem eas communicandi restringi ad unum tantum Confessarium præfati Collegii
Franciscus Ingolus, sec. Inserviet f[o]r[m]a propria pro Anglia
In dorso
A Rev. Sigr Assessor del Sto officio
! Incolta per il Presid del College Inglese di Douay
7ma die Maii receptum est Indultum pro ordinandis D. Vicepræsidi ab Ilmo Domino Pronuncio Bruxellis transmissum quod sic habet
Innocentius PP. X.
Dilecte fili, Sal[u]tem et Ap[osto]licam ben[edictionem ]. De tua singulari fide, prudentia et doctrina plurimum [74] in Domino confidentes , ea tibi benigne concedenda duximus quæ infrascripti Collegii , et alumnorum ejus commodo , et utilitati profutura esse cognoscimus. De ven[erabilium itaque fratrumnostrorumS.R.E. Cardinalium negotiis propagandæ Fidei, præpositorum consilio, ad quindecim annos proximos duntaxat, et interim quandiu Rectoris munere in isto Collegio Anglorum Duaceni fungeris, quo ipsius scholares alumni post longos studiorum labores sacerdotali ministerio pro loci et temporis necessitate fungi ac functionibus sacris assuescere , ac Ecclesiæ dicti Collegii officia divina præstare, seu uti operarii fructuosius mitti valeant, eisdem Alumnis ut de tuo consensu, et examine præcedente, et absque literis dimissoriis suorum Ordinariorum, et non obstan [te] quocunque natalium defectu , super quo cum illis gratiose dispensamus, clericali militiæ ascribi , et aliquibus quatuor etiam ferialis diebus, etcontinuis, vel interpolatis, seu unica diebus [sic]ad quatuor minores, necnon tribus Dominicis vel aliis festivis pariter continuis vel interpolatis diebus, etiam absque ullo beneficii , vel patrimonii titulo ad sacros etiam presbyteratus ordines extra tempora a jure statuta et anni curriculo non expectato , nec servatis interstitiis a Sac Conc Trident designatis, et absque eo quod antequam de uno ad alium ordinem promoveantur, in primo quoque suscepto ministrare, aut alicujus Ecclesiæ servitio ascribi teneantur, promoveri et promoti in illis etiam in Altaris ministerio ministrare libere ac licite valeant
Nec non tibi ut per te vel Confessorem idoneum quem duxeris eligendum singulos alumnos prædictos a quibusvis excommunicationis , suspen[sionis] et interd[ic]ti, aliisque Ecclesiasticis [75] sent[ent]iis, cen [suris] expressis a jure, vel ab ho[min]e quavis occasione vel causa latis, quas ipsi pro tempore quomodolibet incurrerint et a quibusvis prædictis, excessibus et delictis quantumvis gravibus et enormibus etiam in casibus in literis die Cænæ Domini legi solitis contentis (conspirationisin personam, vel statum Romani Pontificis, falsitatis literarum et scripturarum Apostolicarum, delationis armorum et aliorum prohibitorum ad partes infidelium, injectionis manuum violentarum in Prælatos duntaxat exceptis) absolvere ac pro commissis pœnam salutarem , et alia injungenda eis injungere, et cum eis super irregularitate per eos quomodolibet (præterquam occasione homicidii voluntarii , bigamiæ et hæresis) contracta, dispensare libere et licite valeas , authoritate Apostolica ten[ore] præsentium facultatem concedimus, et indulgemus . Pr[ase]ntibus post lapsum dictorum quindecim annorum minime valituris . Non obstant[ibus] Constitutionibus et ordinationibus Apostolicis, ac in Urbibus, Pro-
vincialibus et synodalibus Conciliis editis, generalibus vel specialibus , cæterisque contrariis quibuscunque
Datum Romæ apud S. Petrum sub annulo Piscatoris die xvi Februarii MDCXXxxvi
Pontificatus [blank] Nostri [blank] Anno secundo.
In dorso.
Dilecto filio Moderno et pro tempore ex[iste]nti Rectori Collegii Anglorum Duaceni
[76]
Sigillum in dorso in cera rubra. Junius 1646
M. A. Maraldus
26 Junii Andreas Whytall hic Kniveton in cubiculo D. Vicepræsidis coram eodem et Edmundo Irelando Confessario Collegium [sic] ex commissione perillustris D. Pronuncii regentibus professionem fidei a Pio 4 præscriptam una cum promissione nihil moliendi sponte quod ad pacem Collegii perturbandam conduceret , juramento firmavit et sic ad convictum et habitum Collegialem admissus est Julius 1646
24ta die Julii vesperi ad Collegium venit Henricus Veer, filius Roberti Veer, generosi et Annæ Roberts , Catholicorum, natus Londini inibique literis educatus, et religione Catholica e cunabulis imbutus Huc autem venit in numerum Alumnorum admittendus et logicæ operam daturus
31 Julii Mr Thomas Graddell, Thomas Duffield hic Thirkill, et Thurstonus Anderton hic Robertus Thurston, Theologi, missi sunt Odomarum ad suscipiendos sacros ordines. Augustus 1646
5a die Augusti prædicti Mr Thomas Graddell hic Middleton, Thomas Duffield, et Thurstonus Anderton ad sacrum subdiaconatus ordinem promoti sunt a Rdmo D. Christophoro de France Episcopo Odomarensi in Prioratu Stae Andreæ juxta Ariam,* Ioma vero die iidem ad diaconatus et 12ma ad sacrum etiam presbyteratus ordinem ibidem ab eodem promoti sunt.
7ma die Augusti ad Collegium venit Thomas Churchill hic Dunham, filius Edoardi Churchill armigeri et Catharina Hazelwood, generosæ hæreticorum , natus Londini, ibique ad decimum ætatis annum educatus, quo tempore matre moriente, in Walliam ab avunculo D. Jacobo Hazelwood hujus Collegii Sacerdote missus est, et in Catholica religione hucusque eruditus. Jam annum ætatis agens decimum octavum ad hoc Collegium venit cum intentione suscipiendi suo tempore sacros ordines ut patriam juvat, interim solvit ducentos florenos annuatim, et casu quo post biennium absoluto cursu philosophico non sit paratus ad [77] præstandum Collegii juramentum aucturus est suam pensionem pro biennio elapso usque ad trigentos florenos per annum.
* Aire
James Haslewood (variously spelt ) alias Woode in the Catalogueinserted in the First Diary, is described as of York city or dioceseEboracensisJ.S.H
DD
15ª die in Assumptione B. V. Mariæ in cubiculo D. Vicepresidis professionein fidei de more emiserunt coram præfato D. Vicepræside et Edmundo Irelando, Confessario, Henricus
Veer Londinensis et Thomas Churchill ejusdem dioecesis
2Ima Augusti profecti sunt Lutesiam Parisiorum DD Gulielmus Walmesleyus hic Hammertonus, et Joannes Woodwardus hic Tompsonus opportuniorem expectantes occasionem transmeandi in messem Anglicanam Præfatus D. Gulielmus Hammertonus non recepit viaticum ordinarium utpote octoginta florenorum, sed illud in deposito reliquit in bursa Collegii donec appropinquaret tempus se in Angliam conferendi , vel gravior urgeret necessitas
27ma Augusti ad Collegium venit Dns Thwing, sacerdos Eboracensis secum ducens Gulielmum Langdall hic Creswell , filium Philippi Langdall armigeri et Annæ Thorneton generosa, uxoris ejus, comitatus Eboracensis, annum ætatis jam agentem decimum octavum, in religione Catholica quam profitentur parentes ejus sicut et proavi, educatum. Huc venit animo prosequendi studia, et cum parentibus visum fuerit revertendi in Angliam, trecentos florenos per annum interim soluturus Destinatur classi rudimentariorum.
September 1646
Ioma die Septembris accesserunt ad Collegium [78] Dns Michael Gennings sacerdos in Comitatu Lancastriæ natus ut profiteretur Logicam, et D. Joannes Hamelyn hic Downing filius Bonifacii Hamelyn et Brigittæ Downening generosa, natus in Comitatu Sussexiensi, educatus in studiis a decimo tertio ætatis anno Audomari, unde post septennium in Hispaniam profectus, Hispali in Collegio Anglicano sex annos exegit, philosophiæ et theologiae operam dans, ibidem sacro sacerdotii ordine initiatus fuit 13 Calendas Octobris 1644. Ex Hispaniæ caussa adversæ valetudinis discedens ante tempus penitus exactum quod hisce studiis solet destinari, a Rdmo D. Episcopo Chalcedonensi facultatibus concessis, missus est in Angliam, ubi munere suo fungens ad anni unius spatium huc missus est ad studia interrupta perficienda, tempus enim unius anni defuerat
IIma die Septembris ad Collegium reversus Thomas Su Georgii hic Phoenix, qui 29% die Novembris anni superioris inde discesserat , sed jam animosior factus quantum ad observantiam disciplinæ Collegialis , cursum philosophiae cum audiendi studio tenebatur, ducentos et quinquaginta florenos soluturus per annum , et peracto biennio de seipso alibi dispositurus,
Philip son of William Langdale by his first wife Elizabeth daughter of Sir Philip Constableof Everingham, was of Langthorpe, Swine Thefather married secondly Bridget Metham, whose sister Katharine was wife of George Cresswell of Nunkeeling, they being sisters of Dorothy mentioned below Philip Langdale married Anne daughter of Robert Thornton of East Newton by his first wife , Dorothy daughterof Thomas Metham of Metham, and his wife Katharine daughter of Sir William Bellasis (J. Foster's Yorks Visitations, 129 , 149, 253 , and 296 ; Surtees Soc ., xxxvi, 67).J.S.H .
nisi interea temporis animo amplectendi, statum Ecclesiasticum Deus illum inspiraret ex alto. [blank] die Septembris discessit D. Gulielmus Ireland alias Mennell absoluto jam cursu Theologico , et sacro sacerdotio initiatus . Is per annum et amplius primus omnium Sacerdotumnon-seniorum functus fuerat officio Præfectus Generalis cum laude et modestia . Et jam licet facultatibus ordinariis munitus, se tamen ex consensu Superiorum Lutesiam Parisiorum, ut inter Patres qui dicuntur Missionis plenius instrueretur in Sacramentis administrandis et aliis muneribus obeundis quæ spectant bonum Missionarium, et ab iisdem peramanter exceptus est 178 die Septembris D. Gulielmus Hydæus Vicepræses recepit ab Internuncio Apostolico copiam literarum [79] quibus constitutus est Præses.
18va die convocatis in aulam D. Præsidis scholaribus omnibus R. D. Gulielmus Hydæus legit coram omnibus literas sive prædictam copiam literarum Em D. Protectoris se in Præsidem erigentium in hæcverba:
Aloysius, Cardinalis Capponius dilecto nobis Rdo Gulielmo Hydæo salutem Cum sicut accepimus Collegium Anglorum Duacenum nuper ob mortem Georgii Muschotti præside destitutum sit, nostrique officii sit, pro eo quo fungimur munere Protectionis Angliæ apud Stam Sedem Apostolicam de simili Præside illi Collegio providere, Te, quem probitate, doctrina, prudentia, religionis et fidei zelo a Deo insignitum novimus, prædicti Collegii Anglorum Duaceni Præsidem constituendum duximus, prout præsentium tenore authoritate nostra, de mandato etiam S. D. N. constituimus et deputamus Volentes te omnibus facultatibus, privilegiis, præeminentiis , et emolumentis quibus similes Præsides hactenus usi sunt, frui, potiri, ac gaudere. Mandantes proinde ac præcipientes dilectis in Christo officialibus lectoribus, alumnis, cæterisque dicti Collegii ministris, et inferioribus famulis quibuscunque ut te tanquam verum et legitimum Collegii Præsidem agnoscant, tibique in omnibus debitum obsequium et obedientiam exhibeant: tibi vero ut ecclesiasticam disciplinam et concordiam ante omnia promoveri cures, injungimus ; sic enim villicationis tuæ rationem Christo Domino in die judicii tanquam bonus et fidelis servus, et ejusdem Christi Domini Vicario, sive nobis quoties opus fuerit, tanquam prudens minister præclare reddes Omnino autem ne quid novi ad Collegii prædicti regimen spectans [80] Nobis inconsultis, aut a Sta Sede Apostolica non obtenta licentia introducas, prohibeamus. Datum Romæ die 21ma Julii 1646. Pontificatus Sm D. N. Innocentii X anno secundo. Subsignat A. CardinalisCapponius cum certo paragrapho , et appositum magnum sigillum cum insignibus dicti Cardinalis et infra ad calcem Simon Oliverius, secret
Hæc copia collationata cum suo originali ut supra subsignato et sigillato concordat quod attestor Jac Thibault , Not 1646
Antonius Bichus , Abbas Stae Anast[as]iæ administrator, Apostolicæ jurisdictionis cum facultatibus Nuncii in Belgicis ditionibus, atque Burgundiæ comitatu
Omnibus et quibuscunque literas hasce visuris salutem in Domino sempiternam Notum facimus et attestamur Mrum Jacobum Thibault qui supra scriptam copiam confecit et signavit esse notarium publicum, fidelem et legalem atque scripturis et instrumentis per eum confectis et signatis fidem indubiam semper adhibitam fuisse, et adhiberi de præsenti, in cujus rei fidem subscripsimus , et sigillum nostrum apponi mandavimus . Datum Bruxellis die 27ma Septembris 1646 .
Antonius, Abbas Stae Anastasiæ Locus sigilli
Eadem die ad Collegium venit Franciscus Rider, Catholicis parentibus, sed mediocris fortunæ in Comitatu Staffordiæ , diocesis Liechfieldensis , prognatus , D. Williamsono venerabili sacerdoti, et in eodem comitatu Superiori aliquandiu inservivit, et tandem amicorum mediatione ad hoc Collegium venit inter alumnos annumerandus animo capessendi statum ecclesiasticum et patriam juvandi Annos ætatis habet [blank] [81] 21ma die Septembris Ven¹s D. Præpositus Attrebatensis Vicarius Generalis natus requisitus a R. D. Præside , dedit illi, et Confessariis ab eo designandis , facultatem similem absolvendi qualem ante concesserat R. D. Muschotto decessori suo, secundum hunc tenorem
Vicarii Generales Sedis Episcopalis Attrebatensis vacantis, dilecto in Christo Ven¹¹ viro D. Gulielmo Hydæo , presbytero Collegii Anglorum oppidi Duaceni Præsidi, seu aliis Confessariis ab eo designandis salutem in Domino De vestris prudentia, pietate et discretione plurimum confisi , ut alumnorum et subditorum istius Collegii aliorumque ex Anglia et quibusvis ditionibus Regi Magnæ Brittaniæ subjectis venientium, et in his partibus degentium Confessiones excipere , eosque a casibus etiam Rmo Dno Attrebatensi reservatis absolvere libere et licite possitis , et valeatis licentiam et facultatem ad nostram revocationem duraturam vobis concedimus per præsentes. Datum Duaci sub sigillo R. D. Præpositi Attrebatensis Vicarii, die vigesima prima mensis Septembris 1646 . 24 die Septembris juramentum fidei una cum promissione vivendi pacifice in Collegio de more præstitit Franciscus Rider coram R. D. Præside.
October 1646
Ima die Octobris scholæ pro more aperiuntur R. D. Præses comitatus Præfecto studiorum et professoribus circumit omnes classes et [82] singulis suum Præceptorem designat et commendat Logicæ scilicet D. Michælem Gennings, humanistis vero in unam classem collectis D. Joannem Singletonum qui cursum theologicum hoc anno absolverat D. Thomas Middletonus qui annis superioribus litteras humaniores professus fuerat, ad lec-
tiones theologicas revertitur. R. D. Præses scholares omnes ad pietatis et doctrinæ studium cohortatus est.
Eadem die literas originales constitutivas Præsidis a perillustri D. Internuncio recepit R. Dns Præses , de industria enim retentæ fuerint quousque certior factus esset præfatus D. Internuncius de receptione Copiæ earum, et R. D. Præses designasset tabellarium per quem mitterentur originales , ne ambæ perirent in via.
Una vero cum originalibus accepit R. Das Præses , literas
Emmi D. Protectoris juxta hunc tenorem [In the margin, Literæ Em D. Protectoris Italice ]
Illustris et admodum Rde Dne
Publicas institutionis tuæ in Præsidem Collegii literas mitto, ut perspectum tibi reddent conjunctæ . Notitia quæ mihi facta est de virtute, et egregiis animi tui dotibus sicut eo me induxit ita futurum spero, ut emolumentum quod exinde Collegio accres cet, et augmentum meriti semper præstet tibi, et lætitiam mihi
Gratanter accipio voluntatis tuæ amoris plenæ indicia, et vicissim spondeo, quicquid a me proficisci poterit vel in commodum Collegio, vel ad gustum tibi Romæ 3 Idus Augusti 1646 . Dominationi vestræ
In dorso
Perillustri D. Gulielmo
Hydæo, Collegii Anglorum
Duaceni Præsidi
[
Addictus uti frater A. Cardlis Capponius.
83] 8va die Octobris R. D. Præses coram Ven¹ Dno Præposito
Attrebatensi præstitit juramentum fidei, et eundem Venlem D. Præpositum una cum Eximio Dno Francisco Sylvio, Visitatoribus nostris, et fratre præfati D. Præpositi ad prandendum secum invitavit, et a prandio exhibitum est in schola theologorum_a syntaxianis parvum drama in honorem R. D. Præsidis a D. Thoma Middletono, qui syntaxim anno superiori professus fuerat, compositum
12ma die Octobris aperiuntur scholæ theologorum, et duæ lectiones quotidie præleguntur ex dictatis R. D. Præsidis, qui semel in die per horam præsidet in disputationibus November 1646
13 die Novembris juramentum fidei de more præstitit D. Joannes Hamelyn hic Downing sacerdos, cum promissioneobservandi regulas et pacifice vivendi in Collegio. December 1646
29na die Decembris juramentum fidei una cum promissione observandi regulas Collegii, et pacifice vivendi in Collegio præstitit MrJoannes Jowseus coramRdoD. Præside, præsente Edmundo Irelando Confessario, et ad convictum admissus est
Annus 1647
6ta die Januarii in cubiculo R. D. Præsidis antiquum Collegii juramentum, pariter ac novissimum præstiterunt D. Joannes Hamelyn hic Downing, et Dns [84] Joannes Jowseus, theologus
coram R. D. Præside, præsente Edmundo Irelando Confessario, hac tamen limitatione , ut si quid de novo juramento moderarentur Emm Domini vel idem tollerent totaliter (quod expetierat R. D. Præses ) intelligeretur etiam illis modificatum vel etiam sublatum.
15ª Januarii accepit R. D. Præses literas Em² R. D. Protectoris quibus significavit gratias, quas petierat pro senioribus hujus Collegii et alumnis in articulo mortis a S. D. N. concessas ut sequitur
Illustris et admodum Rde Dne. S. D. N. gratias (quas ipsa ab illo exposcit) spirituales, benigne annuit, tam ad majorem Vestræ Dominationis quam sacerdotum ejusdemque Collegii alumnorum consolationem Ac proinde illi sacerdotibusque prædictis indulgentiam confert plenariam in articulo mortis dictam Eandemque alumnisCollegii ejusdem communicandipotestatem indulget Dominationi Vestræ. Præterea S. Sanctitasfacultatem D[ominationi] Vestræ concedit, uti poscit , mille benedictiones extraordinarias pro rosariis, medalliis, atque crucibus distribuere Alumnis præscripti Collegii, qui peracto studiorum curriculo in messem Anglicanam sunt mittendi
Concedit pariter S. Beatitudo Do[minatio]ni Vestræ ut queat licite ac valide iis, qui isti Collegio a confessionibus sunt, copiam ampliare ас facultatem sacramentales eorum Confessiones exaudiendi, qui ob sævientem in Anglia persecutionem , discordiasque civiles , in Belgium transfretarunt Deus D. V. diu servet incolumem Romæ, [blank] Decembris 1646 Vestræ Dom[ination]is
In dorso.
Illmt et admodum
[85]
Uti frater. A. Cards Capponius.
R. Dno D. Gulielmo Hydæo Februarius 1647
8va die Februarii recepit R. D. Præses literas Em¹ D. Protectoris infra scriptas pro se doctorandi licentia
Illis et admodum Rde Dne
Intelleximus D. V. suasu et impulsu Cleri Anglicani Lauream ambire theologicam atque adeo a Nobis exposcit veniam . Recte facit Etenim lubens annuimus Iniquum utique foret, quem ob prudentiam morum atque pietatem cæterasque virtutes Collegii Duaceni Præsidentia dignum existimaverimus, hunc scholastici cujusvis honoris incapacem vel dubitare quidem Idcirco licentiam quam exoptat se doctorandi in theologia concedimus In cujus rei fidem sint hæ literæ propria manu et chirographo subsignatæ. Deus D. V. diu servet incolumen Do[mination]is Vestræ
In dorso
Illmo ac admodum R. D.
D. Gulielmo Hydæo.
Uti frater. A. Cards Capponius
13a die Februarii ad Collegium venit Edouardus Kinn (hic Colleton) filius Joannis Kinn, hæretici, et Catharina Colleton, catholicæ , natus Lautoniæ in Comitatu Glocestrensi, ubi pater ejus exercuit artem pannariam. E pueritia literis vacavit , sed grandior factus primo Jurisconsulto traditus est instituendus cui per biennium inservivit , deinde chirurgo cujus artem , ut potuit , didicit Et tandem huc venit, suadentibus amicis desiderio [86] amplectendi statum ecclesiasticum ut patriam juvet ; ideoque humiliter orat ut admittatur in Collegium super pensione ab admodum R. D. Joanne Colletono consanguineo suo olim in Anglia Cleri sæcularis superiori fundata, et petitioni annuit R. D. Præses Annum ætatis agit vigesimum secundum, et circiter decimum sextum vel septimum proprio motu Catholica Ecclesiæ reconciliatus est. Martius 1647
13a Martii ad sacros ordines suscipiendos profecti sunt
Maurontis Villain * , Magistri Edoardus Barkerus hic Vernalty, dioecesis Norvicensis et Joannes Jowseus, dioecesis Eboracensis Hic Mag Jowseus filius erat Thomæ Jowsei et Janæ uxoris ejus, humili fortuna Catholicorum, sed multis persecutionibus et meritis auctorum Pater enim ejus vincula et carceris [sic] pro fide Catholica diu perpessus est, mater etiam domi suis ærumnis et jacturis non caruit, quorum exemplo, et piorum sacerdotum cohortatione animatus hic Joannes ad literarum studia (dimissa arte coriarii, quam per aliquot annos exercuerat, sibi quæstuosa) se contulit animo amplectendi statum ecclesiasticum, et patriæ afflictæ succurendi Et ex quo ad hoc Collegium venit, dum humanioribus literis et philosophiæ operam dedit, modo famuli ministerio in Collegio fungens , modo suis expensis in oppido vivens, multa dura passus est ; nihilominus in proposito perseverans jam tertii anni theologus a R. D. Præside ad omnes sacros etiam Presbyteratus ordines præsentatus est [blank] die Martii [rest of page blank]. Aprilis 1647 [87]4ta die Aprilis ad Collegium venit ex Anglia, Georgius Burie , Cestrensis Comitatus, ut coci ministerio fungeretur 10ma die Aprilis in publicis scholis R. D. Præses titulo Licentiati in theologia insignitus est, benedictionem impertiente Eximio Dno Sylvio Vice-cancellario , Eximius enim D. Colvenerius Universitatis Cancellarius senio jam pene confectus præ nimia debilitate scholas non valuit adire Convivium pro Doctoribus Regentibus instructum est in Collegio, expensis R. D. Præsidis. Dominica passionis suas primitias cantavit D. Edouardus
Vernalty Hic filius erat Edoardi Barkeri, et Susannæ, uxoris ejus, jurisconsulti sed hæretici, sicut uxor erat Susanna usque ad obitum viri Filius vero Edoardus in domo patrui nobilis Catholici a decimo quarto anno instructus et imbutus erat in Catholica religione quam semper amaverat, licet vivente patre
Probably Bac-St.-Maur
patruus ejus non stiterat illum sacerdoti , nec principiis Catholicæ religionis plene formaverat Decimum quintum annum agens huc venerat
Dominica Resurrectionis 21ma Aprilis ad Collegium e Gallia venit D. Gulielmus Walmesleyus hic Hammertonus ' munere
Procuratoris functurus
Eadem die hora decima suas primitias cantavit D. Joannes
Jowseus
Maius 1647
Ima die Maii auspicatus est suum munus ProcuratorisCollegii D. Gulielmus Hammertonus, cedente Edmundo Irelando veteri
Procuratore
munere [88] Brevi præfatus Edmundus Irelandus cupiens se procuratoris penitus exuere, et pietati promovendæ duntaxat vacare, libros Collegii ratiocinarios in manus novi Procuratoris consignavit, et non ita multo post R. D. Præsidi suas rationes ultimas præsentem et præteritum Collegii status complectentes et conferentes , præsentavit. Ex quibus constabat habita ratione debitorum jam dissolutorum, provisionum intra Collegium repositarum, et præsentis pecuniæ quæ præ manibus visebatur, spatio quinque annorum cum medio quo functus fuerat Officio Procuratoris dictus Edmundus Irelandus, calamitosis licet temporibus, Collegium hocce (Deo dante) auctum esse triginta fere millibus florenorum, quod consideranti tabellas infra positas , et retrospicienti statum Collegii, cum ad idem officium assumptus est, in principio hujus diarii descriptum, clare patebit.
Schedula Debitorum quibus laborat Collegium Anglo Duacenum hac trigesima die Aprilis 1647 .
Romano Ramery, mercatori panni
Antonio le Februe , Insulensi
ŒEgidio le Grand, lanioni
Rdo Dno Præsidi ex transportatione Haiiets lignorum mercatorum.
Gulielmo Craftes promo ex transportatione Nicolai de Raismes et Antonii Haiiet
Dno Heccart ex transportatione Jacobi Welcombe
Executoribus veteris fabri lignarii
[89] Nicolao Mesplant casei mercatori
Petro Caron , plumbario
Davidi Laloe, pharmacopolæ
Francisci Drome, salsorum piscium mercatoris hæredibus
Veteris Cæmentarii uxori
Amato Lanchry panni linei mercat
Joanni Jackson veteri Coquo flor [ass ] 800 -143 6- 603191,850 .. 2 2,000.- .. 262365 3 I 410 6.. 180 1,095 5 500 59 8912 174-14-
Summa debitorum in Flandria 8,533-5-3
Schedula debitorum antiquitus contractorum in Anglia Capitulo Londinensi ad rationem octo pro cent .
Eximio D. Georgio Leybornio ad rationem octo pro cent.
Executoribus D. Georgii Muschotti olim Præsidis ad rationem octo pro cent. sed non exiguntur ab executoribus ultra quinque
4,000.. 2,000.-..
[90] 1,000 -
Summa debitorum in Anglia 7,000 -..-..
Schedula debitorum ex extinctione fundationum contractorum
In MontePietatis Duaceno censusannuus perpetuus floren ex fundatione R. Dn Richardi Irelandi oppigneratus pro In monte Antverpiensi vel domo civica census sexaginta florenorum perpetuus ex fundatione D. Gulielmi Harrisoni Archipresbyteri pro duabus Missis per hebdomadam in perpetuum venditus pro
Domus Doctoris Thomæ Tempest Antverpia donata in partem sustentationis unius e sua familia in Collegio in perpetuum, quæ valebat nonaginta florenos per annum, vendita pro
Ex fundatione R. D. Joannis Colletoni ad alendum unum studiosum in perpetuum consumpti
Ad fundandum tres missas per hebdomadam in perpetuum pro anima R. D. Georgii Harrisoni presbyteri donati et consumpti
Ex fundatione R. D. Richardi Tayleri ad alendum scholarem ex Northumbria consumpti
fundationum extinctorum 10,000
totalis debitorum Collegii Anglo-duaceni 30ma die Apr. 1647
Insuperdebetur Eleenoræ Waferer cens vitalitius 50 florenorum .
Debentur duo sacra per hebdomadam per 20 an post mortem D. Abigael.
Debentur tria sacra in perpetuum in honorem Smae Trinitatis
Debentur quatuor sacra per annum, pro anima Thomæ Cumberford
[91] Ex quibus schedulis una cum catalogis in quarto, 5to, 6toet 7mo folio hujus diarii collatis facile constabit quanta diminutio debitorum antiquorum, nullis novis contractis, in hoc quinquennio cum medio facta fuerit, utpote novemdecim millium quinquaginta florenorum, et tredecim assium cum uno quadrante. Deinde per lustrata domo, repertæ sunt provisiones intra septa
Collegi tam in ligno, panno , quam frumento, butyro, cæterisque
comestibilibus et necessariis juxta pretium quo emptæ sunt, ad valorem duorum millium ducentorum et quadraginta florenorum ; in parata pecunia hic et Antverpiæ septem millia centum quadraginta tres floreni, cum quatuor assibus ; ; in manibus D. Georgii Gage, Receptoris Londinensis , mille et trecenti floreni Hæ vero summæ cum hic numerandæ sint in regia pecunia assurgent ulterius in pecunia currenti ad summam mille septingentorum sexaginta et unius floren. cum novem assibus
Præterea debentur Collegio e Camera Apostolica hac trigesima die Aprilis pro mensibus hactenus decursis inille septingenti triginta tres floreni cum tribus assibus [In the margin, De aliis debitis non fit mentio quia incerta solutio Traditur nihilominus in manus Procuratoris schedula plurium antiquorum debitorum et aliquorum recentium] Ex quibus sequitur, partim in provisionibus, partiin in pecunia , vel parata hic, Londini et Antverpiæ, vel pro Apostolica pensione (quæ nunquam fallit) debita , Collegium jam habere quasi præ manibus duodecim millia nongentos octoginta et tres florenos cum sexdecim assibus. Ex quibus omnibus licebit inter statum Collegii cum R. D. Georgius Muschottus administrationem suscepit , anno millesimo sexcentesimo quadragesimo primo, et præsentem statum hodiernæ diei hanc collationem subsequentem instituere [92] Status Collegii Anglo-duaceni 26ta die Octobris, anno 1641
Repertæ in Collegio provisiones domesticæ , et debit ex pensione Apostolica pro mensibus decursis
Repertum in parata pecunia flor. ass 2,735 - IO
Gravatur Collegium ære alieno in Flandria
Debentur pro fundationibus hic extinctis 26,954 - 1410,000
Debentur pro pecuniis mutuo acceptis in Anglia 07,629 - 5Summa debitorum 44,583-19Status Collegii Anglo-duaceni 30ma die
Relictæ in domo provisiones
In parata pecunia hic et Antverpiæ
Debentur hac 30ma Aprilis ex pensione Apostolica pro mensibus decursis
Deposit in manibus D. G. Gage Londini
Pro auginento pecuniarummodo hic et Antverpia receptarum Aprilis 1647 flor. ass . 2,2407,43 4 .. I,733 1,3003 1,761 - 9 Summa 14,177 flor 16 ..
[93] Deduc pro pensionibus scholariumanticipatis 01,194..
Atque ita.
Reman[ent] Collegio 30ma Aprilis
Gravatur Collegium ære alieno in Belgio
Debentur pro fundationibus hic extinctis
flor. ass
465 . 12,98316..
08,533 5 3
10,000 00 - 0
Debentur pro pecuniis mutuo acceptis in Anglia 7,000 00 - 0
Summa debitorum 25,533-05-3
Atque ita.
Diminuuntur debita antiqua
Et reman[ent] in provisionibus et pecunia
Sum dim et rem .
Sum. omnium inventorum 26ta Octobris 1641
Atque ita
19,050 13- I . 12,983 16 ..
32,034 09 I 02,735 10..
Auctum est Collegium a die 26ta Octobris 1641 usque ad diem 30mam Aprilis 1647viginti novem millibus ducentisnonagintaocto florenis, novemdecim assibus, et uno quadrante [94] Sed tantæ molis erat verum hujusce Collegii tot debitorum involucris implicati statum explicare, ut aliquid post tot annorum spatium acciderit ad istas etiam rationes interturbandas.
29,298-19- I
Dictum est in initio hujus diarii fol 4 nos quinque florenorum millia, ad paranda Collegio necessaria nobiscum ex Anglia attulisse, et omnino creditum est hæc omnia integre ad Collegium pertinuisse, sed quadriennio fere elapso, et non ante , conclusa jam visitatione, et rationibus in ea initis Romam transmissis , significavit nobis R. D. Georgius Gage (e cujus manibus recepta fuerunt prædicta quinque florenorum millia) septingentos et octoginta florenos eorundem non Collegium sed alio spectare, non tamen integram summam unica solutione repetiit , sed per partes prout Collegium solvendo erat, utpote trecentos florenos annuatim, et quia viro spectatæ probitatis omnino fides adhibenda erat, de ordine R. D. Georgii Muschotti Præsidis, præfati trecenti floreni confestim illi numerati sunt Labente vero anno D. Petrus Curtesius, visis chartis et rationibus (quæ diu propter persecutionem ingruentem et sævientem abscondita latuerant) hoc negotium spectantibus , omnino affirmavit quingentos ad minimum florenos pretactæ summæ ad Collegium pertinere. Atque de hoc non semel, sed iterum et tertio summa confidentia tanquam de re certissima Procuratorem suis literis certiorem fecit In qua fide formatæ atque perfecta sunt rationes suprapositæ . Postea vero cum Edmundus Irelandus Procuratoris munus abdicasset, convenientibus præfatis DD. Gage et Curtesio [95] et rem accuratius examinantibus, præfatus Dns Curtesius agnovit errorem suum, fatendo se nescisse dictos septingentos et octoginta florenos mutuo fuisse acceptos ad perficiendam summam quinque millium florenorum in sublevamen hujus Collegii in illa extremitate destinatorum, atque literis in
hunc tenorem Procuratori scriptis retractavit quæ antea dixerat; unde liquet adhuc deberi præfato D. Georgio Gage ex prædicta summa quadringentos et octoginta florenos. Sed ad aliqualiter librandas et firmandas rationes jam positas in computus reducendi sunt octingenti floreni (nescio qua incuria in prædictis rationibus omissi sed certe ad hunc finem non inutili) quos admodum Rdus Dominus Petrus Fittonus Capituli nostri Londinensis decanus (sed tunc causas cleri in Curia Romana promovens recepit dudum Romæ a D. Joanne Zuffo, Agente hujus Collegii, virtute assignationis R. D. Georgii Muschotti Collegii Præsidis datæ decima octava Februarii 1642 ut patet ex acquittantia præfati D. Fittoni in manibus Procuratoris hujus Collegii data nona Aprilis ejusdem anni 1642 , qui quidem octingenti floreni nondum sunt numerati Collegio, unde si ex illis subtrahantur quadringenti octoginta floreni ad satisfaciendum D. Gage, adhuc restabunt trecenti et viginti floreni addendi bursæ Collegii, atque ita integra summa augmenti in substantia Collegii, per hoc spatium facti assurget ad viginti novem millia sexcentos octodecim florenos, novemdecimasses et unum assem et sic ut sequitur emendari poterit computus.
29,298 19 [96] Auctum est Collegium in substantia a die flor. 26ta Octobris 1641 , usque ad diem 30mam Aprilis 1647 ut patet ex rationibus ante positis
Adde pro totidem receptis Romæ a R. D. Petro Fittonoex pensione apostolica et nondum refusis 00,800 -
Deduc huncpro reliquoseptingentorumetoctoginta florenorum D. G. Gage debit Et inde liquet
Collegium auctum esse a die 26th Octobris 1641 usque ad diem 30mam Aprilis 1647 00,480 29,61819 I
De industria vero omissi sunt centum quadraginta floreni cum decem_assibus expositi quidem pro sacris celebratis pro anima D. Roberti Holt nobilis Angli, sed refundendi bursæ Collegii in fine anni ex redditu fundationis quam fecerat idem Robertus. Legaverat enim Collegio quatuor millia florenorum ad creandum censum perpetuum cum obligatione celebrandi quatuor millia sacrorum pro anima ipsius, et alendi unum studiosum in perpetuum in ordine ad Missionem Anglicanam Hæc summa (uti dixi) ex consilio omissa est ad satisfaciendum fæminis quæ subministrant Collegio, recens butyrum per singulas hebdomadas, quibus tantundem vel circiter plus minus debebatur, sed cum iis mos non fert inire computus nisi post certos mensis nondum elapsos. [97] Denique visum est has potius rationes huic diario inserere, quam vel illas quæ tribus mensibus ante mortem R. D. Muschotti olim Præsidis concinnata fuerant ; vel illas , quæ cum R. D.
Hydæus modernus Præses præsidentiam suam auspicatus est formatæ sunt, eo quod in his Procurator utpote officium abdicaturus, magis insudaverit, et longiori experientia doctus , hic tanquam postremis ultimam manum adhibuerit Et cum annus elapsus sit dum hæc scribo, ex quo hæ rationes compilatæ fuerint, novo Procuratore diligenter interim munus obeunte, et difficultates pro re nata de die in diem movente, nihil aliud præterquam quod supra expositum est (quod fuit in favorem Collegii) emendandum occurrit.
7ma die Maii jacta sunt fundamenta parietis lateritii e sacristia ad braxatorium usque portendentis, primum lapidem ponente
R. D. Præside
Eadem die dimissus est Joannes Jackson cocus, in cujus locum suffectus est Georgius Burie ab Anglia in hunc finem evocatus, Joannes vero Bruxellas se contulitcum literis commendatitiis R. D. Præsidis, bene enim se gesserat, et servitium Collegio utile semper præstiterat.
Junius 1647
2da die Junii remissus est D. Joannes Jowsæus e Collegio ad hospitium quærendum in oppido
12ma die Junii significatum est R. D. Præsidi duo decreta emanasse a S. Congregatione de propa[98]ganda fide ad moderandum vel tollendum novum juramentum nobis intimatum 23 die Aprilis anni superioris ut supra dictum est, quorum alterum factum est absente, alterum præsente S. D. N. Innocentio X, et paulo post allata sunt ad Collegium , quorum propterea copias hic subjungimus.
Decretum S. Congregationis de propaganda fide habitæ 12 Martii 1647 . Ref Emmo D. Cardinali Capponio monitum Præsidis Collegii Duaceni asserentis non posse ab alumnis Anglis præfati Collegii observarijuramentum juxta ultimam formulam ad eam [sic] transmissam in duobus punctis, quorum alterum obligationem continet abeundi quocunque illos destinare voluerit S. Congregatio , cum eorum patria operariorum ecclesiasticorum penuria adeo laboret, ut exteros missionarios qui curam habeant Catholicorum Anglorum accersere necesse sit Alterum vero est obligationis non discedendi a missione sine licentia ejusdem S. Congregationis , cum prædicti alumni in Anglia pro prædicta licentia discedendi a missione vix sine periculo vitæ scribere possint ad Urbem et interdum iis derepente fugere, ac alio ad evitandum periculum mortis vel amissionis bonorum, aut gravis mulctæ, se transferre necessarium sit Emmi Patres censuerunt alumnos præfatos a duabus prædictis obligationibus esse liberandos , ita tamen ut in cæteris juramentum vim suam obtineat.
Decretum S. Congregationis de propaganda fide habitæ die 26ta Aprilis 1647 coram Smo
Ref Emmo D. Cardinali Capponio decretum editum die 12ma Martii proxime præteriti circa moderationem novæ formulæ
juramenti alumnis Collegiorum Pontificiorum præscripti pro Collegio Duaceno Anglorum, Sanctitas Sua illud probavit et dixit sufficere, ut alumni dicti Collegii [99] jurent juxta veterem formulam liactenus in dicto Collegio observatam
Concordat cum Registro ejusdem S. Congregationis Franciscus Ingola, secret . Locus sigilli
Una cum hoc ultimo decreto pariter venerunt literæ Emmi D. Protectoris ad R. D. Præsidem Italice scriptæ in hunc sensum
Multum Rde Dne . Per decretum adjunctum quod vobis missum est cognoscere possitis cum intentionem S. Congregationis tum studium meum satisfaciendi alumnis dicti Collegii , ut ad laborandum cum fervore majori in vinea Domini pro salute animarum fiant idonei Possitis itaque secundum tenorem hujus, illud alumnis proponere suscipiendum juramentum quod antehac in praxi erat juxta antiquam formulam anno 1624. Quod reliquum est, precor vobis omnem , quæ est a Deo, fœlicitatem. Romæ 26 Aprilis 1647
Qui vobis cupio inservire, A. Cards Capponius . Franciscus Ingolus, secret
Julius 1647
18 die Julii ad Collegium venit Richardus Braithwait, hic Tolson, filius Richardi Braithwait , armigeri sed schismatici , et Annæ Lawson , Catholicæ, natus et educatus in Stricklandia in Comitatu Westmerlandiæ , annos septemdecim natus. [100] Bonis literis ab infantia educatus, sed per quinque vel sex annos proxime elapsos in militia educatus , partim legendo, partim cum Catholicis conversando ad fidem Catholicam perductus est Trecentos florenos annuatim ab amicis expectat, et statum Ecclesiasticum ut patriam juvet, desiderat 25 Julii discessit e Collegio D. Joannes Downing, sacerdos, completis studiis a R. D. Præside commendatus , ut in Collegio Presbyterorum Francorum juxta Lutesiam Poesim profiteretur. Augustus 1647
8va die Augusti ad Collegium venit Das Thwenge ex comitatu Eboracensi , per Hollandiam cum tribus adolescentulis studiosis quorum primus Franciscus * Chomlæus hic Thorneton, filius Marmaduci Chomlæi, armigeri et Ursula Thorneton, Catholicorum, natus et educatus in parochia Brandsby in comitatu Eboracensi , in fide Catholica , et bonis literis instructus, ad quas perficiendas huc a parentibus missus est, a quibus expectat ducentos et quinquaginta florenos per annum, talem postea vitæ rationem capturus, qualem Dna Deus cum ad perfectiorem ætatem per-
Francis Cholmeley was the second son , his mother being Ursula, eldest daughter of Robert Thornton of East Newton, by his first wife, Dorothy daughter of Thomas Metham of Metham (Surtees Soc , xxxvi, 67 and 220).J.S.H
venerit, inspirabit ; jam quatuordecim annorum tantum ætatem habet
Secundus Radulphus Crathorne , filius Radulphi * Crathorne , armigeri et Margarita Thorneton, Catholicorum, natus et educatus apud Nesse, in parocia Hovingi in Eboracensi comitatu in fide Catholica, et bonis literis ab ineunte ætate eruditus, quas ut ad perfectionem perduceret huc a parentibus missus est, et statum ecclesiasticum desiderat ut patriam juvet, annos quatuordecim jam tantum natus. Ducentos vel ducentos et quinquaginta florenos per annum a parentibusexpectat [101] Tertius Gregorius Hooge hic Wharton, filius Gulielmi Hooge generosi, et Annæ Gelderd, Catholicorum, natus et educatus Haregate in parecia in Knaesborough in comitatu Eboracensi in fide Catholica, et bonis literis instructus, quas ut excoleret Duacum venit animo capessendi statum ecclesiasticum ut patriam juvet Aliquam pecuniarum summam ab amicis expectat, prout conventum fuerit cum R. D. Præside Annos sexdecim jam habet.
[Pages 102-112 blank]
The visitation of 5 Sept., 1665 , gives the children of Ralph Crathorne of Crathorne , by his second wife , Margaret daughter of Robert Thornton of East Newton (elder ones being bythe first wife)(2) Ralph, æt 31 , (3) Francis, æet 26 , (4) John, æt 23 , and (2) Dorothy wife of Henry son and heir of Sir Solomon Swale of South Stainley, bart (Surtees Soc ., xxxvi, 67 and 145) East Ness in the parish of Hovingham Stonegrave parish, in which are East Newton and West Ness, is close by.-J.S.H.
High Harrogate was in the parish of Knaresborough; whilst Low Harrogate was in the parish of PannalJ.S.H
It is now nine years since the praiseworthy custom of daily recordingour history in brief has been altogether omitted, that is, since the death of the Reverend Francis Barber, priest, and most trusty procurator of this College, who diligently fulfilled this task. The custom was praiseworthy, and from the very foundation of the College has for the most part been dutifully observed Now that after an interval it has been, as it were, restored , thatit mayat length flourish again, we * shall not be reluctant to resume it from the date when the Reverend George Muscott undertook the government of the College. This we will do according to our ability and in obedience to his express command
Mr. Matthew Kellison, Doctor of Divinity and most meritorious President of the English College at Douay, ended his life at Douay in the said College on 21 January, in the year of Our Lord, 1641, in the 80th year of his age , the 52nd of his priesthood , and the 27th of his presidency (which office he had filled with the utmost watchfulness , care, and charity), leaving to posterity an example of the highest virtues Our Holy Father, Pope Urban VIII, learning of his death, chose Mr. George Muscott from out of the wholeEnglish Clergy, and to the great joy of all appointed him as President of the said College He was a man remarkablefor learning, wisdom, and holiness, who had undergone many labours for the Catholic Faith in the English vineyard, who had strenuously overcome daily sufferings in various prisons for twenty years and more, and who had gladly received sentence of death for the Faith The most eminent Cardinal Barberini sent letters dated 2 May, 1641 , to the officials, professors, and alumni of the said College, expressing his condolence on the death of the deceased President , and also exhorting them to receive the aforesaid Mr. George Muscott kindly, and to show him as President obedience and respect The tenor of these, we thought, ought to be here appended Very Reverend in Christ,
I know that the grief which you have felt at the death of your President , Matthew Kellison, andwhich you signified to me by your letters, will be assuaged by the new election of that most excellent man, Doctor George Muscott He is a secular priest, as you so anxiously desired, and he is so much commended by the many labours forinerly undergone for the CatholicFaith , and by the offices of kindness shown by him at the time of the pestilence in London,
The writer is the Reverend Edmund Ireland, procurator See Introduction
that he causesgreat hopes to spring up that your College under his guidance will daily flourish more and more in learning, virtue , and zeal for the Faith, and will grow and increase in that peace and harmony in which God's place is found
Receive, therefore , him who is commended equally by his own merits and by my regard for you, and show towards him the same obedience and dutywhichyou paid to the deceased President And let me havea share in your prayers , for you know my affectionfor you, and all the Catholics of England I will shortly despatch the letters patent for the new President . Givenat Rome the second day of May, 1641
Your devoted , F. Cardinal Barberini
On the fourth day of the same month of May, His Eminence's promised letters patent, by which the aforesaid Mr. Muscott was appointedas President , were addressedto him in the followingwords -he being at that time detained a prisoner for the Faith in London
Francis Cardinal Barberini, of St. Laurence in Damaso, ViceChancellor of the Holy Roman Church and Protector of the Realm of England, to our beloved Mr. George Muscott health
As we have heard that the English College at Douay has lately been deprived of its President by the death of Matthew Kellison, and as it is ourdutyby reason ofthe office whichwe hold as Protector of England at the Holy Apostolic See, to provide another President for the College, we have considered that you, whom we know to be marked out by God by uprightness , wisdom , and zeal for religion and the Faith, should be appointed President of the said English College at Douay. Accordingly by the tenor of these presents weby our authority, on the command of His Holiness, do so constitute and appoint you, willing that you shall use, possess, and enjoy all the faculties, privileges , precedence, and emoluments which former Presidents have hitherto possessed Moreover , we command and enjoin on our beloved in Christ, the officials , lecturers, alumni, and other ministers and lower servants of every kind, in the said College to recognise you as the true and lawful President of the College, and to show you due respect and obedience in all things. But on you we enjoin that you should take heed before everything to promote ecclesiastical disciplineand concord. For this you will, like a good and faithful servant, successfully render an account of your stewardship to Christ Our Lord on the Judgment-day andto His Vicar, or to us as often as need may require, like a prudent minister. But above all, we forbid you to introduce any novelty into the government of the said College, without consulting us or obtaining the permission ofthe Apostolic See.
Given at Rome, the fourth day of May, 1641, in the eighteenth year of the pontificate of His Holiness Pope Urban VIII
F. Cardinal Barberini
Antonius Jenegallus, Secretary.
Under these circumstances , and having carefully considered the state of the College groaning under an immense load of debt, and lying between the hostile camps of the powerful kings of Spain and France, the aforesaid Mr. Muscott, on the advice of the Bishop of Chalcedon and at the urgent instance of Dr. Champney , the dean of the Chapter, and of all the English Clergy , at length reluctantly and unwillinglyundertook the governinentof the aforesaid College, the necessities of which were dailybecoming more andmoreburdensome When, behold ! letters were received all unexpectedly from the four seniors of the College, that is, the two professors of Theology, the Procurator, and the General Prefect, who were worn out by the irksomeness of their situation, and who pleaded as their excuse thedifficulties oftheCollege. By theseletters they intimated that they were determined to leave the College, and at the end of one month would resign all offices and lectures therein
The President, seeing new difficulties springing up at the very outset , applying himself thoroughly to the task, that hemightmeet the pressing needs of the College, forthwith despatched to Mr. Davis, the College confessor, who had not signed the said letters, a thousand florins for ordinary expenses He also provided some to send in advance , who might take charge of the College as long as he himself was detained in prison Having taken counsel with Dr. Champney and others of the brethren, who were then in London , about the state of things, he promptly appointed for the service of the College the Reverend William Hyde (who for four years had lecturedonphilosophyat theCollege, and not long before had successfully devoted himself to lecturing in theology there for two years and more) and Edmund Ireland, formerly agent of the College in London, and subsequently elsewhere The former he appointed as Vice-President of the College, with full powers until he himself should arrive ; the latter he made procurator and general prefect. Both immediately entered upon their journey, and, leaving London while a storm was still raging, at length on the ninth day, that is October 12, 1641 , arrived safely at Douay ; and at the College they were very kindly received both by the seniors (for no one had yet left exceptMr. Nicholas Middleton, the junior professor oftheology) and by the priestsand otheralumni
Two days afterwards, Mr. Hyde published his authority before all the priests, theological students , and boys of the said College, and he requested , as a mark of their humble acceptance, that all should go at once to the Church, and there recite the Paterand Ave ive times; which was done But Edmund Ireland, lest he should give the least offence to anybody, did not openly take upon himself theofficesofprocurator and general prefect , until the29thofOctober, on which day Mr. Sanford , the procurator, and Mr. Wake, the late general prefect, left the College to return to England
Throughout that period both the Vice-President and Edmund Ireland exerted themselves to the utmost to realise the condition of the College. First they made a census ofall the members of the
College, both servants and students, and they found that there were three seniors, namely, one confessor and two professors of philosophy (for they did not include Mr. William Hart, who, though he was detained by quartan ague, yet intended to depart shortly), four priests, five students in theology, nine in philosophy, six in rhetoric,two in syntax, one in grammar, and nine servants Finding two door-keepers among these, they immediately dismissed one who was almost useless through old age, and then the whole number of inmates of the College, including themselves , was forty
Then they turned their attention to the College account books, and though from the accounts recently posted by Mr. Sanford (which, indeed, only included debts contracted in Belgium ), the debts of the College did not appear to exceed 25,392 florins and 12 stivers,yet when affairswere more thoroughly investigated, andfresh creditorscame tolighton the arrival of new officials , it was discovered that the same debts amounted to the sum of 26,954 florins and 14 stivers. Moreover, when the debts in England were added, for which the College paid annual interest at the rate of eight percent , and when the foundationswhich had been consumed in the service of the College, though the obligations remained , had been taken into account, the total sum of indebtedness appeared to amount to 44,583 florins and 19 stivers This will be more clearly seen by anyone considering the list given below .
Besides, among all the students , only eight were found who were bound to pay the annual pension ; for the rest either had been admitted as Alumni, or had been exempted from further payment bycontractsentered into for money paiddown and alreadyspent.
Moreover, those who were being educated in the College as Convictors were not bound to pay more than two hundred florins a year at the utmost, although it is sufficiently clear, both from calculationsmade threeyears ago by Mr. Edmund Stratford and Mr. Martin,then procuratorofthe College, and from recent computations by Edmund Ireland (according to the information which he had at that time been able to obtain), that no Convictor can be educated in this College according to our wont, when his expenses both public and private are taken into reckoning, at a lower annual cost than three hundred florins
Finally, they inspected the store-rooms, destitute of all kinds of provisions; but they found in the cellars twenty great casks of beer, a little butter , a largersupply of cheese, and for the use of the kitchen a very few logs, though winter was at hand, besides three thousand bundles of firewood piled together in one heap Thus all the provisions which could be found anywhere could hardly be valued at the priceof six hundredflorins.
From theApostolic pension for the months which had elapsed, 2,082 florins 10 stivers were due. In ready money there remained in the hands of Mr. Davis, the confessor, 114 florins 6 stivers, the remainderofthe thousand florinsaforesaid , forwardedto him for the use of the College by the President For what provisions were in
the College had been purchased by him either out of the said sum of money, or had been obtained by others on credit, and therefore ought to be included among the debts of the College And this is the present state of affairs
The greatest care, therefore , was taken that the supplies for the use of the whole year should gradually be increased, for they had brought with them from England five thousand florins for this purpose, and they made their purchases from ready money, according to the commands which they had received from the President, so that if they could not much diminish the debts of the College, at least they should not increase them But every month they tried to diminish the old debts if they had the means, and as time wenton they did diminish them largely, as will clearly appear from what is written hereafter
But while these things were happening , the President , at the intercession of the most sereneand most pious Queen of England * , was sent into exile by royal authority And he, being freed from his chains, immediately betook himself to Douay, where to the utmost joy of all he was gladly received on the fourteenth day of November
On the day following the [first] Sunday of Advent, Mr. William Hart, formerly professor of philosophyand theologyin this College, departedfrom it into the town, waiting for an opportunity ofpassing into France and thence to Rome And on the twenty-eighth of December, leaving Douay, with the trumpeter of Arras, he directed his journey towards Paris. Having dwelt there some months, he began his journey and went to Rome, where he was most kindly received by the most eminent Cardinal Francesco Barberini, and after some months was appointed public lecturer in philosophyat the Sapienza .
The writer of the Diary proceeds to set out the lengthyschedules of debts to which he had previously referred For the most part, they consisted of tradesmen's accounts, but some are of greater interest as disclosing the names of benefactors of the College Thus we find that " the noble lady Abigael " had given to the College a thousand florins, with the obligation of two weekly masses for twenty years after her death. The lady was still living, but the money had already been spent. The College was also bound to furnish three masses a week in honour of the Blessed Trinityin return for a thousand florins, which had been spent during the presidency of Dr. Worthington Four masses were to be said each year for the soul of Thomas Hungerford , who had left five hundred florinsto the College .
Thatthefinancesofthe College werein a veryconfusedanddisordered state is shown by the note added by Mr. Ireland to the list of debts, wherein he says that Mr. Sanford is not to be blamed for having failed to compile a complete list of liabilities, since "his successor , who expended every effort in that task, could scarcely arrive at a complete knowledge of them " after two years' investigation
Mr. Ireland'sconclusion was that the College owed nearlyforty-five
Henrietta Maria.
thousand florins, against which he could only set an annual income of about 5,700 florins
After this lengthy and very valuable statement of the condition of the English College in the autumn of 1641 , Mr. Ireland resumes the Diary, in its accustomedform, with the new year, 1642.
1642 .
On January 4th, Edward Fitzherbert, alias Fettiplace, a priest of this College who had spent some years in the English vineyard, came to Douay to undertakethe office of General Prefect, paying, nevertheless, out of his charity a pension of three hundred florins for the uses of the College as if he were a Convictor
Towards the end of the month the College received news of the martyrdom of one of its students, the first for fourteen years. The resumption ofexecutionsfor religion marks thefailingpowerofCharlesI and the growing activity of the Parliament In this very month, the King had left London, never to return till he came as a prisoner to meet his death : -
January 21st . On the feast of St. Agnes, the reverend Thomas Greene, commonly called Reynolds , a native of Oxford, alumnus and priest of this College, suffered at London, being well advanced in years. And being by nature somewhat timid and nowweakened by old age, he showed forth in an astonishingmannerthe glory of God, whohad strengthened so weak and timidan old man to undergo bravely and cheerfully such a bitter and ignominious death In the year 1628 , he had been condemned to death for the sole cause that he was a priest ; but the most merciful King Charles, at the instanceof the Queen, spared his life, yet so that from then to the present timethat is, for fourteenyearshe hasremained in durance at London But thisyear, by orderof the Parliament, he was called into court, and without any investigation of his former cause , or the allegationof a fresh indictment, he was carried to the shambles, and ended by a gloriousmartydom that life which he had enriched with merits, having laboured in England for a long time For burning withzeal for God, he had led backto the fold ofthe Catholic Churchmanywhowere wanderingfromthe way ofTruth,andbecoming a good odourin Christ, he had drawn them from viceto the love of virtue.
On the same day there suffered with him the reverend Father Alban Roe, priest and Benedictine monk, formerly in his youth a student of this College
Three months later came the news of yet another martyrdom, that ofthe aged John Lockwood, who suffered at York :-
On April 13, Mr. John Lockwood , who was eighty-seven years old, suffered at York because he was a Roman priest This he freely confessed, adding that it was the more true, as he had been ordained at Rome During forty-four years he had exercised the office of a priest in England, and since it was only with difficulty and loss of breath that he, being now almost worn out with age,
could climbthe ladder to the scaffold , he smiled at the people and said: " Who would not labour a little to reach heaven ? Like another Eleazar, this venerable man gave on the point of death salutary adviceto the people, and the executioner was smitten with such horror at butcheringhim that he took to flight Whenhewas stoppedby the guards and compelled to finish what he had begun, seizing the rope he tried to hang himself, rather than bloodthirstily to dismember the limbs of the innocent But presently being won over by the persuasions of a certain harlot, from a humane manhe became a most inhumanbutcher, and dividing all the entrails of this martyr and his fellow-sufferer into minute fragments , like a maniache hurled them among the people
In the same hour there followed him Mr. Edmund Catherick, alias Huddlestone, a Yorkshireman, who shared his sufferings because he was a priest He was a very gentle man, and a student of this College, aged thirty-seven years, seven of which he had spent as a strenuous labourer on the English Mission
These martyrs were shortly followed by another, the Ven Edward Morgan :
-
On April 26th, at London, Mr. Edward Morgan suffered with wonderful readiness He was born in Wales, in Flintshire, was an alumnusof this College, and was fifty-seven years of age On the day after he received sentence of death, he was seized with such joy in celebrating the holy mysteries that he could only finish Mass with the utmost difficulty, and then only by turning his mind from thinking on the Holy Name of Jesus , exclaiming, with Blessed Xavier," It is enough , O Lord."
During May the College received a valued token of the Sovereign Pontiff's affection and regard : -
On May 14th, we received at the College the silver cross given to this College three years ago by His Holiness Urban VIII, at the instance of the Reverend George Leyborne , priest, then dwelling at Rome, who signally promoted the interests of this house both at home and abroad
Together with the silver cross which was in a wooden casefilled with Agnus Dei, an Apostolic Brief in these words was received .
VIII, Pope
Beloved Sons, Health and Apostolic Benediction
Your distinguishedmerits and especially your singular devotion and observance both towards Us and this Holy See have long ago wonderfully appealed to our pontifical love Whereforethe things we often hear recalled about your virtues, since they confirm the praises of sons whom We specially love, afford frequent matter of joy to Us Clearly it is most pleasing to Us that in your College your characters are being adorned with that training in learning and virtue, from whichno smalladvantage to the Christian commonwealth, no slight assistance to the Catholic Faith may result And therefore We will always most willingly display proofs of Our
paternal affection towards you, whenever the opportunity is furnished Meanwhile , We send a silver cross which, We think, will be welcome to you, as a pledge of Our good-will From Our heart we impart to you the Apostolic Benediction, and We humbly pray the Most High Giver of all things to load you abundantly with heavenly gifts. Given at Rome from St. Mary Major's under the Ring of the Fisherman, on the 22nd day of October , 1639 , in the 17th year of our pontificate
On the back is written : -
To our beloved sons the members of the English College at Douay.
Julius Rospigliosi
On the foot of the silver cross these words are engraved : - Pope Urban VIII, Supreme Pontiff, from whom many benefits on the English race have been derived, gave this cross to his English College at Douay A.D. 1639
At the same time the said Mr. George Leyborne also obtained from His Holiness a privileged altar for this College
The terms of the brief, which are given in full, will be found in the text of the Diary It was confined to All Souls' Day and the seven succeedingdays, and to Monday in each week ; and the durationofthe grant was limited to ten years.
In August came the news of another inartyrdom in London: -
On Friday,August 19, the Reverend Hugh Green, alias Ferdinand Browne , of London, an aluınnus of this College, bravely suffered at Dorchester an illustrious martyrdom, or, rather, an unheard-of butchery on accountof his priesthood For when his belly was cut open by the executionerand his abdomen placed on his breast, he gazed at it, and with his left hand touched his bowels, while withhis right hand he fortified himself with the sign of our redemption. And while the executionerwas tearing out his liver, and disturbing his entrails, was searching for his heart, he distinctly pronounced several times the saving name of Jesus His forehead was bathed with sweat , and blood and water flowed from his eyes and nose And when on account of the gushing streams of blood his tongue could no longerpronounce the saving name of Jesus, his lips moved, and the frequentgroans which he uttered from his inmost heart were proof of the most bitter painand torture which, with his eyes lifted to heaven, he bore with an unconquered soul for half an hour and He suffered in the fifty-seventhyear of his age , the cause of hisdeath being that he was a Roman priest more
At thistimethenotices ofnewstudents are fuller than in the previous Diary, and frequentlygive biographical details. The amount of money which they brought for their pension is noted, and some cases are given of students whose pensions were in arrear being sent back to England
The departure of one of the professors at the end of Augustis thus chronicled-
August 30th. Mr. Anthony Burdet, junior professor of philoso phy, having completed his course of lectures, and not being invited to give another, left the College under pretext of going to England, but he immediately entered the Societyof Jesus
At Ember-tide five students, whose names are given below, received all the majororders
Atthe end of the year the writer gives a brief review of the stateof affairs-
From Oct. 26, 1641 (when our accounts began), until the end of this year, 1642, taking into account arrivals and departures, there were in the College forty-two persons, of whom eight orthereabouts were convictors, and the rest were supported at the expense of the College. And yet the former debts of the College were this year decreased (through God's help) by nearly six thousand florins
The following priests were ordained : Sept. 21. Robert Byflet
Thomas Malton .
Robert Quintin.
John Rawlinson
Francis Rolls
No deaths are recorded duringtheyear. 1643
On Feb. I, two of the newly-ordained priests, Mr. Rolls and Mr. Rawlinson, were sent on the Mission.
In April, another former student won the crown of martyrdom: -
On the 27th of April, Father Paul suffered at London The Reverend Father Henry Heath, commonly called Father Paul, when he first came out of England was received into this College, then he became a Franciscan and finally Guardian He having learnt of the glorious triumph of the priests in England, who after the inauspicious opening of this Parliament, had with the utmost constancylaid down their lives for the cause of Christ, and feeling himself on fire with the desire of following in their footsteps , having asked and obtainedleave from his superiors , betook himself to England in the rough dress of a sailor There he begged his bread from doortodoor, and on the night of his arrival in London, sleeping in a public place because there was no room for him in the inn , he was arrested as though he were devising some theft or other crime
Butashe had preserved in his hat a writing in whichhe had expressed his intention of returning to England and his reasons therefor, with additional arguments in whichhe defended thejustice and lawfulness of such intention , and asserted the truth of the Catholic religion he was betrayed by the discoveryof this paper when he was being searched by the officers ; and he was committed to prison. There, in a few days, he fulfilled a long time, and he afforded greatedification and example to all who visited him, and being shortly condemned to death, he resigned himself into the hands of Almighty God with wonderful tranquility and readiness Heconstantly asserted that he had never doubted that those who gave up their lives for the sake of
God's Faithwould be filled by God with a singularsweetnessof soul and delight, but that he never could have believed that the joy would be so exceeding great as that was which he then experienced, which, indeed, was so vehement and abundant that he himself was notequalto bearing it
Being asked what it was fitting to hold with regard to the unlawful oath, which is called the Oath of Allegiance , he signed with his own hand, when he was on the point of martyrdom, a schedule expressing more clearly his own opinion And he testified that he so certainly believed that that oath was repugnant to the truth, that he would be ready to lay down his life for this Catholic dogma as much as for any other article of the Catholic religion While writingit, he said : " I sign this schedule with my name willingly If need were , I would sign it a thousand and a thousand times inmy blood . " At the scaffold he made an eloquent speech, and prayed most earnestly for the conversion of England, until the cart was drawn away, and he was left hanging with his hands lifted up for a time towardsheaven
In the autumn , the College received a welcome benefaction :October 12th Mr. George Persons, very advanced in age and almost worn out, gave to the College the residue of his Neapolitan pension, which for many years past was owing to him, and the President , in presence of the Rector Magnificus [of the university], accepted it in the name of the College.
At theend of theyear we find thenote : -
This year, taking into account arrivals and departures , thirty- eight persons were being supported in the College
Three priests were ordained : Sept. Colleton Henry Glen William Canning
No deaths occurred duringtheyear 1644
Nothing of interest happened during this year, and the entries are confined to the coming and going of students. Incidentally, there is a referenceto the King of France touching for King's Evil, but the result is not described The boy who was afflicted was William Paston, who " was believed to labourunder what they call ' King's Evil, ' and so was sent into France that he might gain the benefit of the royal touch. "
In August, defensions in philosophy wereheld, the first to be recorded since 1641. Possibly they had fallen into desuetude, and were now resumed
No directreference is made in the Diary to the civil war then raging in England, though distant allusions to the disturbed state of things are occasionally found Thus two boys are sent by their parents to be out of the way of the troubles , and two priests who had finished their studies in August, received their faculties for the Mission, but were given leave to stay in Brussels " until times are a little better in England "
In October, tidings of a fresh martyrdom came to hand : -
On September 17th, new style, or at least in the beginning of October, Mr. John Duckett suffered at London He was a Yorkshireman, an alumnus of this College, and was twenty-eight years old Hesuffered becausehe wasa priest, whichhewillinglyadmitted lest any harm should happen to his two lay companions who were arrested with him, and whom the Parliamentariansthreatenedwith death unless they asserted this He was very muchgiven to mental prayer during his life, and he sometimes spent the night in it And that he might be more fully instructed therein, when he journeyed from France into England he stopped at Niewport, in Flanders, to confer about prayer and spiritual matters with his relative, the Reverend Father John Duckett, at that time the worthy prior of the English Charterhouse
One fact about him worthy of admiration is remembered , namely, that from the time when he was pronounced guilty before the judge until the end of his life, his face was so changed that it appeared to the eyes of all suffused with a certain rosy colour and an unusual but lovely flush (though he was usually rather pale). The bystanders gazed upon his face as upon the face of an angel standing amongst them
On October 20, High Mass was sung in honour of the Blessed Trinity as a thanksgiving for the martyrdom of Mr. JohnDuckett
In November, the old man, George Persons , ended his days: -
On November 3rd, in the evening between the hours of eight andnine,Mr. George Persons, who for a yearand a halfor thereabouts had lived in the College near the doors, being now worn out with old age and disease, departed this life Two Discalced Carmelite Fathers assisted him, one of whom was the Prior (whom he had appointed executor of his will) , and they prayed for his soul all night
Mr. Ireland concludesthe year with his annual summary : -
This year, adding the months of the arrivals and subtracting those of the departures, there were supported in the College thirtysix persons (four months remaining over), of whom twenty-two and a half were supported at the expense of the College. *
Two priests were ordained this year : - Dec. 17. George Russels
William Walmesley
The only death was that of George Persons, 3 Nov. 1645 . This proved to be another quiet year The first item of interest relates to the refusal of John Stratford to be ordained priest because of his scruples, and to his consequent departure from the College: -
Though this result of 22 persons seems curious at first sight, it willbe seen on examination to follow from "Mr. Ireland's method of calculation by months If a person stayed six months at the College, he would be reckonedas half a person for the year . The same result would follow if two people stayed for three months each
April 24. Mr. John Stratford, or Litchmore, sub-deacon,left the College, and hired a room for himself in the town For several years he had taught philosophy in the College with success But in the present year, as he had no pupils, he was at liberty. Being advised, therefore , by the President to prepare himself to receive the remaining holy orders according to the oath he had taken on admission , he procrastinated, inventing difficulties as to his unworthiness , from which he could not be moved The President, having carefully deliberated with the seniors about this state of things, did not judge it expedient for him to tarry longer in the College, but decided that he should be dismissed in peace, without disturbanceand with honour
In May, it becameknown that a new visitation was to be held :-
On May 8th, by letters from the Very Rev. Gaspar Laureten, Provost of the Cathedral of Arras, and Vicar-General during the vacancyofthat See, written this morning and sent to the President , it was intimated that a visitation of the College would be held by commission ofthe Pro-NuncioApostolic, to whomthis was entrusted by the Sacred Congregation of Propaganda at the command of His Holiness Innocent X. The commission was addressed to the said venerable man, Gaspar Laureten, and to the distinguishedmaster [in this university], M. Francis Sylvius, Doctor of Theology and senior professor , also dean of the Church of St. Amatus. This intimation the President humbly and joyfully received, saying that the visitation couldconvenientlybe begun in a fewdays
On May 16th, the said visitation was commenced, after Mass had been celebrated at the High Altar by Mr. Gaspar Laureten And first as to place, all the rooms both of the Superiors and of the students, the infirmary, the wardrobe, the offices, and other parts ofthe College were inspected by both visitors. The silver plate was exhibited, and the sacred furniture was shown to them . Inventories ofall theCollege goods (except only the books which are so dispersed throughout the house that even the names, if collected together, would fill a huge volume) were very carefully made and delivered intothe President's hands
When the local visitation was completed , the two visitors and the Provost'sbrother, who was also a Canon of Arras, and whoacted as Secretaryfor the Visitation , accompanied the President and the seniors to dinner in the College refectory ; but after that the Visitors, not wishing to be a burden to the College, did not take any repast in the College till the close of the visitation
OnMay 17th,the Visitation of Personswas begun by the Provost, his brother reducing to writing the depositions of each one M. Sylvius excused himselffrom this part by reason of stress of business. The President was visited first, then the Vice-President , the Seniors, the priests, and the rest each one in his turn, nor were the servants omitted As the number in the College was decreasing every year, lest it should be over-burdened as when the President arrived,
now there were not found to be more than thirty persons, of whom about nine were convictors, the rest being supported at the expense of the College. At eleven o'clock the Visitor rose and departed with his brother to his own house After dinner he returned, and thus he proceeded every day till the whole visitation of persons was finished.
On June 26th, the personal visitation was complete , and the Visitors enquired how much each inmate of the College cost annually to supportfor food and other necessaries, so that it might be decided whether the College included a sufficient number to satisfy the Apostolicpension. The books of all the disbursements from Oct.26, 1641, to the end of May, 1645, togetherwith the numberof all the persons who during all that time were supported in the College, were examined carefully, and it was sufficiently clear that three hundred florins were annually spent per head Then when the distinction between alumni and convictors in each year was more thoroughly made, it was foundthat apart from theconvictorswho paid pensions, in the first year, that is from Oct. 26, 1641, to the end of the year 1642, twenty-nine persons in all who paid nothing were supported in theCollege ; fromthe beginning of the year 1643 till the end thereof, twenty-four personsand a half that is, six months outstanding*; from the beginning of the year1644 to the end of the same, twentytwo persons and a half ; finally, from the beginning of the year 1645 to the end of Mayjust past , twenty persons and a half When all this was more closely brought to a reckoning , it was clear that during three years four thousand five hundred florins in excess of the Apostolic pension had been spent on the support of the alumni ; and this amount would have sufficed for the support of the four seniors for the three years, in case it should not seem good to the Cardinalsthat the seniors should be supported out of the Apostolic pension.
Moreover, in the discharge of former debts and payment of interest, it was certain that fifteen thousand florins had been spent, which would suffice for the support of fourteen alumni during the three years, and thus the College would have flourished , even in these calamitous times , if it had not been overburdened with debt
Then explanation was given of the state in which the College was found when the present President , Mr. Muscott , began his presidency , and the schedule of debts copied in the beginning ofthis book was shown to the Visitors, together with a schedule of the debts at the present time Furthermore, schedules were produced of all pensions, rents, or funds of the College which it actually receives or oughtbyrights to receive Also of all burdens and obligations to which the College was liable, so far as it was possible to bring them to light
Finally, that the fruits derived from the administration of the Apostolic pension might be moreclearly shown, therewere produced the names of all admitted as alumni during this presidency,
* See note, p. 480
of those admitted to holy orders, and sent on the English Mission , or kept in this College, or otherwisedisposed of. And satisfaction was given to the Very Reverend Visitors in all their enquiries necessary for the fuller knowledge of the state of the College, and these results being collected together and carefully read through by the Visitors, their Report was written and the Visitation closed .
On July 20 , the Visitation was sent to Rome, and the Visitors were invited to dinner at the College
In September, Mr. Davis , the College Confessor, who had been so useful on the first appointment of the President , left the College to join the Benedictine Order He was succeeded as confessor by Edmund Ireland, the writer of the Diary
Before the close of the year the College lost its President, who had been ailing since the summer : -
On Sunday, December 24th, the President ; who about the feast of St. Bartholomew, in August, had been seized by quartan ague, which gradually exhausted him, being now worn away so that nothing but skin and bone was left, drew nigh his end First, suminoninghisconfessor about four o'clockin the morning, he asked andsought from him the benefit ofabsolution, having made a general confession of his whole life Then he called all the students (whom lovinglyhe used to call his nestlings *) and, while dying, exhorted them to the piety which he had breathed forth during the whole of his life, but especially in this his final weakness He added that there were only two things to be observed by them, namely, the commandmentsof God and the rules of the College, by which a safe way to heaven was prepared for them And having from his heart given them his blessing, he prayed for every happiness on each and all
Then, as the illness increased and his powers failed, fixing his eyes on heaven as long as he could, he commended his soulinto the hands ofthe Lord Jesus; and among the prayers ofallthe students, and fortified by the sacraments of Holy Mother Church, he expired between eight and nine o'clock on the eve of the Nativity of Christ
Our Lord. On that same day he himself, long ago when he wasin prison, was seized by the gaoler while preaching to the thieves, andwas thrust into a most foul dungeon with the thieves themselves, being kept there three days But he bore away most sweet fruits, for out of ten criminals who shortly after paid the death penalty, nine were converted to the Catholic Faith
With regard to his body, he was a man short in stature, butwell proportioned in all his limbs ; his eyes were black and sparkling ; his countenance, especially in old age, venerable As to his soul, he was a great and noble man whose conversation , scorningearthly baseness,was ever in heaven. In learninghe excelled in a remarkable fluencyinthe Latintongue ; hewas veryskilledin practicalTheology and mightyin the Scriptures In intercourse he was grave, modest, * " pullos. "
affable , temperate, abstemious from wine and strong beer, willingly turning his discourse to piety. As to his labours, as long as his strengthendured , he was tireless night and day, in diligently fulfilling the duties of a good shepherd, providing and ministering both corporally and spirituallyto the plague-stricken and those whowere abandoned by all. Often did he risk his own life to gain souls, especially in that plague of London, which the Cardinal Protector recalled in his letters to the superiors , lecturers, and students of the College onhis election as President Ifyou regardhis sufferings, he was gloriousbeing betrayed by false brethren for the sake of gain, he had experience ofmanyprisons ; was emaciated bycaptivity for twenty years and more, and finallywas condemned to deathfor his priesthood . As to his works of charity, he was exemplary, pouring out the bowels of his mercy on the poor, for whom he not only at the moment generously provided every necessity, but he took care to get annual rents and revenues to the amount of four hundredflorins established in perpetuity for the supportof orphans, widowsand poor people kept in prison for the Catholic Faith; and at his death he commended the care of this fund to the Bishop of Chalcedon Regarding his administration, he was farsighted in the management of his resources, sparing of the goods of others, lavish of his own He was strict in preserving discipline, not regardingthe face of man ; keen in reproof, faithfulin admonition, earnest in exhortation, he shone alike in work and word, as with the very lookof an angel. In respect to his reputation, he was noteworthy,withgood report among the clergy, as well regularas secular, and all the laity, winning them by his many good deeds. In truth, he was sucha man that the Eminent Cardinal Protector did not hesitate to declare him the flower of the English clergy
He caused discipline to flourish anew, and he administered domesticaffairs so brilliantly, that in the period of onlyfour years during which hewas President , although the times were calamitous , and England was blazing with civil war, and the Catholics were oppressed, yet he left the College richer by twenty-five thousand florins
When making his will, besides the thousand florins which in September, when he was drafting the will, he had givento theCollege, he bequeathed to it five hundredflorins, which it owed him, as part of a largersum lent by him in the presidency of Dr. Kellison.
He left in perpetuity the use of his books, together with his household linen, to the future President for the time being; and he ordered his clothes and some woollen things to be sold, and the proceeds applied to the purchase of black vestments for the celebration of solemn Mass for the dead, with this obligation, that his anniversary should be solemnly observed in the College for seven years To these proceeds the executorof his will added aboutthree hundredflorins to complete the said vestments , and to providealtarhangings to match, with this further obligation, thatwhenthe aforesaid period of seven years should have expired, the priests who
should then happen to be at the College should each and all for a further period of seven years offer mass at least privately on his anniversary for the repose of his soul And this was proposed to the new President , and by him accepted and agreed
He also bequeathed six thousandflorins to establisha burse for the support of one student in this College, destined for the English Mission, without any other obligation than that of observing the disciplinein all points as the other students , and after his ordination to the priesthood , of offering each week as long as he enjoys the burse, one mass for the soul of the founder, his father and mother, brothers and sisters.
Finally, he entrusted to the hands of his executor letters notto be opened till the deathof Mr. Thomas Roper An account oftheir contents will be given under date Oct. 29, 1647, when news was received of the death of the said Mr. Thomas Roper
Funeral of the President . On December 26th, about mid-day, the remains of the Reverend George Muscott, our late most worthy President , were committed to earth in the chapel of the Blessed Virgin in St. James' Church There were present the venerable and very reverend Visitors and the other doctors , as well as an immense concourse of people who flocked together in great crowds through theirdesire of witnessingthe funeral of a martyr-designate , and ofone whohad suffered so muchfor the CatholicFaith For the story hadquicklyspread, being noised through the city owingtothe unprompted address of the parish priest on the feastofChristmas.
Whentheriteshad beenaccomplished in the church, the venerable Visitors returned to the College and, having entered the refectory, they produced and read letters from the illustrious_Pro-Nuncio, by which, having learnt of the serious illness of the President, he had given them power in the event of his death to provide for the goodgovernment of the College, until other arrangements had been made by our superiors . And by virtue of these they entrustedthe powerof ruling the College to the Reverend Doctor William Hyde, Vice-President , and to Edmund Ireland, Confessor and Procurator ofthe College, until it should be otherwise decreed
All the expenses of the funeral were defrayed by the executors, whoalso shortlyafterwardsplaced a marbleslab uponthePresident's tomb, with an inscription which, if anyone shouldwish, may be read thereon
In this year there were about thirty persons supported in the College, of whom twenty and a half were supported at the expense ofthe College .
Twopriests had beenordained duringthe year: - April 18. William Mennell John Weddington 1646
Theyear opened withthe deathof a student, Francis Tempest alias Wilmot, much the best of the Rhetoricians , a youth of the greatest promise, far exceeding the rest both in virtue and learning "
In April the superiors received the form of the revised oath to be taken by alumni on admission :-
April 23rd. The venerable M. Gaspar Laureten, Visitor of the College, came to the College, bringing with him the form of oath to be taken by alumni of the Venerable Roman College of the Propaganda of the Faith all over the world He also brought letters of the illustrious Anthony Bichi, Apostolic Pro-Nuncio and Abbot of St. Anastasia , dated the 17th day of April, orderingthe saidVisitor to take diligent care that hereafter no other formula should be used in this College, but this correct one , and that he should cause this mandate of His Holiness to be entered among the records of the College that in future it may be faithfully observed
The formula of the new oath, which was shortly afterwards withdrawn, is then given (see Latin text) The Vice-President and Procurator undertook that it should be received and entered in the records of the College , and that they would faithfully present it to the future President
Shortly afterwards , they received two decrees of the Congregation of Propaganda, the first, dated 12 September, 1645, grantingan indulgence in thehour of death to the President and all the priests whoassisted him in the government of the College , and giving him power to grant faculties to all priests leaving the College for the English Mission for blessing rosaries, crosses, and medals, to the number of one thousand each
The second decree , of even date, empowered the President to grant faculties , such as were granted in England, to one of the College Confessors for the English people who, owing to the civil war, had taken refuge in Belgium, and could not find there English-speaking confessors sufficient for their numbers
Shortly afterwards an Indult was received, dated 16 Feb., 1646, empowering the President for the next ensuing fifteen years to present the students of his College for ordination. This was a renewal of the customary powers of the President, and the document is chiefly of interest as showing the precise terms of the privilege .
In September came the appointment of the new President : -
On September 17 , Mr. William Hyde, the Vice-President , received from the Apostolic Internuncio a copy of the letters by which he was appointed President
Onthe 18th, havingsummoned all the studentsto the President's reception -room , the Reverend William Hyde read before all the letters, or the copy of the said letters, of the Eminent Cardinal Protector appointing him President
The letters exactly reproduce the terms of those addressed to Mr. Muscott on the death of Dr. Kellison [see Latin text and translation at the beginning of the Fourth Diary]
They conclude:" Given at Rome the 21st day of July, 1646 , in the second year of the pontificate of His Holiness Innocent X."
The copy was attested by the Pro-Nuncio in a certificate dated 27 September, 1646.
In thesamemonth , the new President received all necessarydiocesan faculties from the Vicars-General of the diocese of Arras
On October 1st, the schools werereopenedas usual, and the President,
accompanied by the Prefect of Studies, visited each class, appointing professors and exhortingthe students to zeal for learning and piety
Onthesame daythe President receivedthe originalletters ofappointment, of which he had previously only had the attested copy With them was a short letter written by the Cardinal Protector , in Italian, expressing his interestin the College and its new head
On October 8th, the President made his profession of faith before the Venerable Provost of Arras, and subsequently invited the Provost together with M. Francis Sylvius , the Visitors, and the Provost's brother, to dine with him. After dinner the Syntaxians , in honour ofthe President, performed a short playwritten by Mr. Thomas Middleton, who had been teaching syntax in the previous year
During the year three priests had been ordained : - Aug. 12. Thurstan Anderton . Thomas Duffield
Thomas Gradell 1647
On January 15, the President received from the Cardinal Protector a letter informinghim that the Pope had allowed him the same special privileges which had been granted by the Congregation of Propaganda to his predecessorin 1645. And in the following month he was given the power "se doctorandi " of taking his degree in divinity During the next few months he passed through the necessary preliminaries , including the Licentiate
On April 10th, the Presidentreceived the Licentiate in Theology in the public schools, being blessed by the Vice-Chancellor , M. Sylvius, because Dr. Colvener , the Chancellor , was now so old that on account of his weakness lie could not come to the schools A banquet for the doctors and regents was prepared in the College at the expense of the President
On the first of May, a change of Procurator was made Edmund Ireland, who had held the office since 1641, resigned, and wassucceeded by William Walmesley or Hammerton , who had beenordained in 1644 . The change afforded Mr. Ireland the opportunity of inserting in the Diary a review of the financial work he had been enabled to do during his five and a halfyears' tenure of office: -
In a short time, the said Edmund Ireland, desiringto resign the office of Procurator, and to have leisure to devote himself to the encouragement of piety, transferred the College account-books to the hands of the new Procurator, and not long afterwards he presented tothe President his final accounts embracing and including the past and present condition of the College From these it was shown that taking into account the debts already discharged , the stores of provisionsthen in the College and the sums of money in hand, in the five years and a half during which the said Edmund Ireland had discharged the office of Procurator, the College (through the helpof God) was richer by nearly thirty thousand florins . This will clearlyappear to anyone who considers the appended summaries , and compares them with the state of the College as described in the beginning of the Diary, when he first took office.
Then follow schedules of debts amounting altogether to 25.533 florins. Contrastingthis with the figures of 1641, he showsthat while he had contracted no new liabilities, he had discharged the old debts FF
to the extent of 19,050 florins Stores in the College were valued at 2,250 florins , and therewere 7,143 florins in readymoney Mr. George Gage, the agent in London, held a further sum of 1,300 florins These amounts, when computed in the current coinage, would bring in an extra sum of 1,761 florins Moreover, 1,733 florins were owing to the College from the Apostolic pension, besides other debts, the payment of which was doubtful Several calculations follow, with the final result:
-
And thus, from the 26th of October, 1641, to the 30th ofApril, 1647, the College gained 29,298 florins 19 stivers.
But it was a work of such magnitude to unravel the truestate of this College, involved and swathedin so many debts, thatsomething may happen even after such an interval of years to disturb these accounts
He then enters into lengthy explanation concerning two items on the accounts whichsubsequent events causedto be questioned, and another amount whichhe omitted on purpose The final upshot was , however,infavourof the College , and Mr.Ireland concludesthis subject with some general reflections :
-
" Finally, it seemed good to insert in the Diary these accounts rather than those which had been drawn up three months before the deathof the former President, Mr. Muscott, or those which were made out when Dr. Hyde, the present President , assumed office. Because in these the Procurator, as being about to resign his office, took more pains, that, having been taught by a lengthy experience, he might put the finishing touch to these as being the latest. And thoughwhile Iamwritingthis, a yearhas passedsince these accounts were drawn up, nothing else (except the matters which have been explained above, and which were in favour of the College) has been met with which needs alteration, though the new Procurator has meanwhilediligentlydischarged his duty, andfromdaytodayraised questionsas they arose
The remaining entries in the Diary are of no great interest, relating, as they do, chiefly to the admission of new students, and mattersof domestic concern:
-
On May 7th, the foundations were laid of a new brick wall, extending from the sacristy to the brew-house, the first stone of which was laid by the President
On the 12th day of July it was intimated to the President that two decrees had been publishedby the CongregationofPropaganda to modify or abolish the new oath which had been sent to us on April 23rd in the previous year. One of these was made in the absence of His Holiness Innocence X, the other in his presence. Shortly afterwardsboth were brought to the College.
The first of these two decrees, which related only to the English College at Douay, was dated 12 March, 1647, and modified the oath on two points The second decree, dated 27 April, 1647, altogether relieved the students from the obligationof taking the new oath.
With the entry of three new boys on August 8th, 1647, the Fourth Diary comes to a close .
Hinſeling ſſydoskenisſtaredjeansenBuyaert)patusetreLondini
27. Marty and die1997 . liers
117
Lugduni Balaurd 1497 pertres annos dedit:poster exindè vener rensfus , Oxoniam + Collegio
incomme eritibus , pit quatios rumos shedio cofitronachiarum incubuit; tandem lectionelibrond
Catheliore defalfitateprotestantis relioginius convictes , precipié autem ex hoc motino , quod plané nachfarind offer indicabut aliqua certam et inhallibelius habere fideiregulam; quam nullibi excepta ac tni reconciliates a Catholicàinvenire pofuit . postá ecclasice komand
37.far . 6.of College Angleren Anaceaeadmichfen , ibig hustinoMarco
Drury presidence logica ſhchophiddefencebit . So tertio and theologia no philosophiae doccnde asmonituserat . Juos philofophia milagros cutches solusprælegit , postcurfur2007 2 finited 1634 ans . The1631.Fungz . facultatibus ordinatis's munitus inprcffiones Anglicans à Collegio Tihechfit . per manned vixitcom no ConsiliaStingSin kallyhönn PrestondeMannes , quam ex huperioreen Londoni reliquit; alus mitem andArm
Ano . D.de Montis aquilà tranfegit ac illektriſchmis .
DeuocatusexAnglia abeximioDuo cellijonopræfidepertresancos theoloque docuit . postic pastein Allegiograffance staren in Anglind revestitus dannda a Ano . Chalcedonenhi ¿quite aurato horbite triemind com .
no Gualtero Blink factus est archiciabung Nigoraid itsalopid Comitatum poolen Cright Cum Dur shumphrède poules . a preside LineGeorgie munchcotto , ViceprafesCollegiy , miffung factusest . 41. sept . 20 Collegio cum potestate profidis curante abfentia dictidie Machlotti . munus . ſticeprocs: par quing Justinuit , quo tempore dwas jumperlectives theblogisprovidit , rozt . and quotamiss feuil , chring factam dictains , inträgepræfidebat . C
64pt . 27.perofatesGul:ſcſydem recepit at den e Card:Capoinprotective Anglia , quod constitutesofferpresescollagi 18.v semibus abemusatstudiosisconvolatis pradictstrue thi leitä jutut , postea breuihabita orationelocusproff schaapit . 1646. .1. Aperiuntur jchola (postforum abandprof: decantate)etpro more exhortationefritä , gingerlyMashibes vominent vongistre . ad suss respectic onfeſſoriesandasit hasstudiest buysome magister theologie Ang prafes..maguter Logices Ding Machnal Gennings , magistarpropos at grammatica , bang foammes singleton , profectusgratisdug . Russelsacadas! tankini , nonseriet . Catechista dictus 4.Genings .
8 . Scholar ang preses recepitportaules was adietoprotectora , quibus inpublic . lactis fcholares fuacalminagratulatovi profectarent , ofpost . pet proudrid Tromina exhibuerunt .
[Page 113]
[114 blank]
ab an 1647
Notes for a diary ad annum 1654
[115] See October 20, 1650 , wt is due by Mr. Hyde's will to the Colledge from the university's cave . [116 blank]
[117] Gulielmus Hyde (cujus verum nomen Bayaert) natus erat Londini 27 Martii anno Domini 1597. Per tres annos Lugduni Batavorum humanioribus literis operam dedit : exinde reversus Oxoniam missus * , et in Collegio qui vulgo dicitur Christ Church commensalis ac postea factus magister in artibus, per quatuor annos studio controversiarum incubuit ; tandem lectione librorum catholicorum de falsitate protestanticæ religionis convictus; præcipue autem ex hoc motivo, quod plene necessarium esse judicabat aliquam certam et infallibilem habere fidei regulam ; quam nullibi excepta ecclesia Catholica invenire potuit Postea ecclesiæRomanæ reconciliatus.
Anno Domini 1623. Jan. 6. In Collegium Anglorum Duacenum admissus , ibique sub Domino Marco Drury præsidente totam logicam ac philosophiamdefendebat In tertio anno theologiæ ad philosophiamdocendum admonitus erat . Duos philosophiæ integros cursus solus prælegit Post cursum 2um finitum , anno Domini 1631 , Junii 3 facultatibus ordinariis munitus in missionem Anglicanam è Collegio discessit Per unum annum vixit cum Dno Preston * de Manner, quem ex consilio eximii D Kellisoni ac Superiorum Londoni reliquit; alium autem annum cum illustrissimo Dro D. de Montis Aquila § transegit.
A.D 1633. Revocatus ex Anglia ab eximio Dno Kellisono Præside per tres annos theologiam docuit, postea peste in Collegio grassante iterum in Angliam revertitur, perque triennium cum Dno Gualtero Blunt ¶ , equite aurato habitavit , deinde a Rdmo Dno Chalcedonensi factus est Archidiaconus Wigorniæ et Salopiæ Comitatuum. Postea vixit cum Dno Humphredo Weld
A.D 1641. Sept. I. Factus est a Dno Georgio Muscotto præside, vicepræses Collegii, missusque ad Collegium cum potestate præsidis durante absentia dicti Dni Muscotti Munus Vicepræsidis per quinque annos sustinuit, quo tempore duas semper lectiones
" Beyaert , William, subscribed 21 Oct. 1614; B.A. from Christ Church 17 Dec. 1614 , M.A. 15 May 1617 . "Foster, Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 , p 120
Mr. Preston , of Furness Abbey § Lord Morley and Monteagle
Sir Walter Blount, of Sodington
theologis providit, videlicet unam quotannis fecit, aliamquefactam dictavit, ac in utraque præsidebat
1646. Sept. 27. Præfatus Gulielmus Hydeus recepit notitiam ab Emtssmo Cardinali Caponi, ProtectoreAngliæ, quod constitutus esset Præses Collegii.
28. Omnibus alumnis et studiosis convocatis , prædictæ literæ lectæ sunt, postea, brevi habitaoratione, locumsuum præses suscepit.
1646
Octobris 1. Aperiuntur scholæ (post sacrum a Dno. Præside decantatum) et pro more exhortatione facta, singulis in classibus magistri ad suos respectivescholares venerunt Magistertheologiæ Dns Præses Confessarius ordinarius et præfectus studiorum, Dns Edmundus Irelandus. Magister logices Dns Michael Genings. Magister poesios et grammaticæ Dns Joannes Singleton Præfectus Generalis Dns Russel, sacerdos tantum, non senior ; catechista dictus D. Genings
8. Das Præsesrecepit patentes suas a dicto Protectore, quibus in pubiico lectis, scholares sua carmina gratulatoria præsentarunt , et post prandium dramma exhibuerunt. [118] 12. Dns Præses classem theologorum adivit, incæpitque duas dictare lectiones
13. Dns Edmundus Irelandus munus catechisandi reliquit.
14. Ad id munus subeundum rogatus Dns Michael Genings, proximo die dominico catechisare incæpit 21 Octobris.
30. Dn8 Laureten, Præpositus Atrabati, Vicarius Generalis capituli sede vacante, extendebat facultates Dno. Præsidi concessas ad absolvendum omnes sibi confitentes in festis Sti. Caroli Boromæi , Sti. Thomæ Cantuar: Sti Gregorii et Sti Augustini * , et insuper prædicto Dno. Præsidi potestatem corrigendi libros ad legendum in Collegio idoneos concessit.
Dec. 14. D. Præses scripsit Dno Fitton et Dno. Harrington significans quod non potuit admittere Drum Starky, sacerdotem Lisbonæ (quem in Collegium admitti rogabant) propter defectum unius tibiæ quam in bello Anglicano amiserat; quia regulæ Collegii præscribunt admittendum in alumnum esse satis honesta corporis specie; erat etiam opinio Dni Præpositi Atrebatensis prædictum D. Starkynon esse admittendum sine dispensatione a Roma
17. Thomas Crumpe admissus erat servus.
29. Post utrumque Collegii juramentum præstitum, Magister Joannes Jousy admittitur alumnus.
30. Omnes cæperunt frequentare ec[c]lesiam ad meditandum tempore illo a regulis pro meditationibus præstituto 1647
Jan. 6. D. Joannes Dowinge, sacerdos Cicestrensis, et Joannes Jowsey juramentum Collegii præstiterunt.
Thesewerethe Patron Saintsof the College Theirfestivals are still specially observed at Old Hall and Ushaw, the colleges descended from Douay, byHigh Mass at the former and Benediction at the latter
Jan. 15. Dn8 Præses recepit literas ab Emtssmo D. C. Caponi Protectore; per quas significabat suam sanctitatem concessisse dicto D. Præsidi omnibusque Collegii sacerdotibus plenariam Indulgentiam in articulo mortis, cum potestate D. Præsidi data eandem impendendi omnibus alumnis Collegii, facultatem dandi potestateinsingulis missionariis ad benedicendum 1,000 numismata indulgentiis extraordinariis, facultatem ad dandum confessariis Collegii potestatem absolvendi onines Anglos , qui ratione persecutionis aliarumve molestiis ex Anglia huc appellerent
Feb. 8. Dns Præses recepit literas protectoris pro doctoratu suscipiendo
Feb. 10 Dns Præses missam St Gulielmi cantavit : omnibus in refectoriodedit placentas et vinum senioribus ferculumextraordinarium idemque sacerdotibus prædictis placentis, vino, etc., a Collegio habitis, solvebat decem flor cum undecim assibus
Feb. 13. Ad Collegium venit ex Anglia per Parisios Edwardus Collington alias Kin.
Martii 5. Dns Præses immatriculari se fecit
Martii13 Adsacrosordines suscipiendos profectisuntMaurontis villam Edwardus Barker hic Vernalty, et Joannes Joucy, theologi 3 anni.
Martii 15. Respondebat 1° Dns Præses pro Bachalaureatu et postridie factus est bachalaureus biblicus, sub eximio D. Sylvio Vicecancelario
[119] Martii 22. Secunda vice pro bachalaureatu respondebat D. Præses sub præfato D. Sylvio ; deinde examinatus et juratus factus est bachalaureus formatus per dictum D. Franciscum Sylvium vicecancelarium .
Martii 26. Ia vice sub Doctore Coverden respondebat D. Præses pro licentiatu in theologia
29. 2ª vice sub dicto D. Sylvio respondebat D. Præses pro licentiatu
Aprilis 2. Reversi sunt præfati EdwardusVernalty et Joannes Joucy, sacro presbyteratu insigniti.
Aprilis 3. 3ª vice sub dicto D. Sylvio respondebat D. Præses pro licentiatu.
4. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Georgius Berry cocus, Cestrensis
Apr. 5. 4ª vice respondebat D. Præses sub D. DoctoreCoverden, hucusque pro juribus in toto soluti sunt ducenti septem floreni et 15 asses .
II
Faciebat suas disputationes D. Præses ad Collationem solvebatque pro Chyrothecis 49 florenos, et titulo Licentiatiali insignitur
12. Domínica Passionis primitias suas cantavit D. Edwardus Vernalty.
14. Factum est convivium pro licentiatu in Collegio, quod 114 flor ac 27 ass constabat
Probably Bac-St Maur.
15. Novum horologium datum a' D. Edwardo Fettiplace a fabro perficitur et in turri juxta ecclesiam collocatum.
Aprilis 21. Dominica Resurrectionis mane ad Collegium venit D. Gulielmus Hamerton, Parisiis ad munus fungendum Procuratoris.
Eodem die hora 10ª primitias suas cantavit D. Joannes Joucy.
MaiiI. Officium Procuratoris suscepit D. Gulielmus Hamerton
8. Fundamenta parietis lateritii e sacristia ad braxatorium protensi posita sunt
23. Soluti sunt 50 flor. Amato Lanchre in diminutione debiti sui.
Eodem die dimissus erat Joannes Jackson cocus .
26. Affictiones habuit Dns Joannes Singleton.
Junii 2. Dimissusest D. Joannes Joucy ut suis expensis vivat in oppidoDuac
12. Significatum est per literas Roma duo decreta emanasse aS. Congregatione de novo juramento in Collegio proponendo .
Junii 21. Dns Præses acceptavit mille flor de pecuniis Comitissa Rutlandiæ in manibus Dni Georgii Gage, pro quibus D. Præses assignavit similem summam in manibus Dnt Wake, Antwerpiæ, unde recipienduset redditus de 5 pro censu, 24 die Junii et 24 Decembris, recepto autem isto redditu missæ (pro rata) dicendæ sunt pro dicta illust ma Dna Comitissa Rutlandiæ
22. Soluti sunt 512 flor .10 asses, qui debebuntur Dromè. [120] Julii 18. Ad Collegium venit Richardus Brathwait , Carleolensis, hic Tolson , ad Collegium
20 Solutum est Amato Lanchre quod restabat de suo debito videlicet 39 flor .12 asses
25. e Collegio discessit Parisios D. Joannes Downingssacerdos .
Aug. 5. Sub Dno Præside defendebant tractatum de deo uno et trino, Dns Georgius Russel et Dns Edwardus Vernalty.
7. Finitaest constructiodomus in area lignorum, ubireponuntur ligna.
8. Venerunt ad Collegium RadulphusCraythorne hic* Yaxley, FranciscusChomley hic Thorneton, et Gregorius Hog hic Wharton Eboracenses, quos Dns Thomas Thwenge sacerdos huc adduxit.
15. Discessit Dns Thwenge.
15. 1am disputationem pro doctoratu fecit D. Præses de prædestinatione
17. 2am vero, de verboDei scripto et non scripto fecit.
19. Tertiam disputationem de ordine.
20 1,000 flor soluti sunt D. Gulielmo Hamertono ratione 973 flor persolutorum a D. Georgio Gage et Dno Petro Petersono in satisfactione omnium summarum pecuniæ receptarum a Dno Gage durante procuratione Dn Irelandi
* The alias "Yaxley" is omitted in the Fourth Diary, p 469. His greatgrandfather, Ralph Crathorne, married Bridget daughterof Richard YaxleyofYaxley, Suffolk (Foster's Yorks Visitations , 209). Richard seems to be elder brother of WilliamYaxley of Boston, co Lincoln, father of the priest-martyr Richard Yaxley (Hart . Soc ., lii, 1124).J.S.H
30. Solutæ sunt ducentæ libræ sterlingorum capitulo cleri Angl Londini
Sept. 16. Soluti sunt 30 flor. uxori lapicidæ in diminutione veterisdebiti
23. Soluti sunt 100 flor Jacobo Welcome in diminutione veteris debiti
Septem 27. Missus est a Parisiis in Angliam lucrandarum animarum gratia D. Joannes Tomson sacerdos (post exactos in theologia 4 annos) facultatibus ordinariis munitus
30. Soluti sunt 60 flor viduæ Anthonii le Febure in diminutione debiti veteris
30. Reliquit Præfecti generalis officium Dns Russel, suo loco subditur Dns Thomas Thirkil, sacerdos
Octobris 1° die post missain a DnoPræside cantatam aperiuntur scholæ, et post habita a D. Præside in singulis classibus exhortatione ad virtutum doctrinæque studium incumbendum, magistri designati suas provincias respective acceptarunt, ipsique a D. Præside discipulis suis commendantur Magistri theologiæ D. Præses, et Das HomphredusWhitaker hic Franciscus Clayton. Magister Philosophiæ Dos Michael Genings, Magisterrhetoriceset poesios Dns Singleton, syntaxeos et grammatices , Das Robertus Thurston Confessarius ordinarius D. Ireland Generalis Præfectus Dns Thomas Thirkil, sacerdos tantum, Catechista præfatus D. Genings [122] Octob 1. eodem die venit ad Collegium Bruxellis Henricus Gage hic Daniel
6. Licentia concessa est D. Præs absolvendi hæreticos
7. Theses logicæ publice defenduntur Præside D. Michaele Genings, defendebant Thomas Rider, Franciscus Rider, Thomas Dunham, Henry Vere, Georgius Philipson, Thomas Feaseby.
12. Concessæ suntfacultatesDno GulielmoCanninge hicHarwood (qui tunc temporis morabatur Parisiis) et in messem Anglicanam mittitur.
12. Hoc eodem die Vesperas suas pro doctoratu faciebat D. Præses , terminorum interpreseximius D. Dr Vermeil Octob. 25. laureadoctorali insignitur D. Præses , una cum Dno Randour, Regente Collegiiregii, et Dno Gertman , præside Seminarii Regii convivium doctorale eodem die in nostro refectorioopipare instructum est .
24. Omnia jura soluta expensæque factæ pro doctoratu D. Præs perveniebantad summam 973 florenorum, II assium.
29. Apertæ sunt literæ quas clausas R. D. Muscottus moribundus tradidit in manus Domini Irelandi executoris sui cum obligatione ut non aperientur ante mortem D. Thomæ Roper, qui ab aliquot mensibus jam in Anglia defunctuserat
30. Solvitursumma 480 florenorumD. Gage et D. Petro Petersono quæ suinma nuper (in quibusdamchartulis dicti D. Petersoni ) reperiebatipsis deberi a Collegio.
There is no page 121
So written If it is not an error for 23, the entry is misplaced
Novembris 16. venit ad Collegiumex Anglia D. Humphredus Whitaker Lancastrensis , hic Franciscus Clayton, magistertheologiæ, de quo sit mentio 1° die Octobris , et cum eo EdwardusBarret, hic Gower .
eodem die cum ipsis venit ex Anglia ad Collegium , Thomas Berry, filius Georgii Berry, coci Collegii, 12 annum agens ad Rudimenta eleemosynis Collegiialendus
[124 (sic)] Nov. 25. Professionem fidei coram D. Præside et D. Edmundo Irelando emiserunt HenricusGage hic Daniel, Richardus Brathwait hic Tolson , et Edwardus Barret, hic Gower.
27. Suam lectionem theologicam pomeridianam fæliciter auspicatus est R. D. HumfredusWhitaker, hic Franciscus Clayton.
27. De veteri debito soluti sunt 200 floreni D. Davidi Laloe pharmacapolæ Collegii.
Decembris 1° . Professionem fidei de more coram D. Præside et D. Edmundo Irelando fecerunt, Baldwinus de Sto Georgio Cantabrigensis ,Georgius PennyDorcastrensis , AugustinusBelson , Sussexiensis, Franciscus Chomeley, Eboracensis, Anthonius Penny, Dorcestrensis , Rodulphus Claythorne, Eboracensis, Gregorius Hogge, Eboracensis , EdwardusBelson, Sussexiensis, et GulielmusLangdale, Eboracensis
21 die. de Parisiis discedens D. Gulielmus Irelandusin Angliam missus a R.D. Præside et facultatibus ordinariis munitus ; concessa ipsi insuperfacultate benedicendi mille numismata
28. Solutæ sunt ducentæ libræ sterlingorum (reliquum veteris debiti) capitulo cleri Anglicani.
30. A 1º die Septembris , 1646, ad hunc diem solutasunt debita vetera (sicut librum expositorum inspicienti patebit) quæ simul sumpta perveneruntad summamsexies mille nongentorumet trium florenorum cum duobus assibus
1648
Jan. 11 die admissus est in Collegium Michael Constable Lincolnensis
27. Discessit e Collegio Thomas Ravenscroft hic Rider philosophus, versus Bruxellas ad avunculum suum iter carpens. Febr 2. Utrumque Collegiijuramentum præstiterunt Franciscus Rider et Henricus Vere.
Feb. 10. D. Præses missam St Gulielmi cantavit, placentaset vinum in prandioomnibus in refectoriodedit ; insuperunumferculum extraordinarium senioribus , aliudque sacerdotibus addidit, pro habitis a Collegio solvebat novem florenos procuratori
6die Martii ad Collegiuma Lutetia Parisiorum venit D. Thomas Read Hamptoniensis , juris Doctor, et in Curiis Cantuariensibus
There is no page 123
Although described of Lincolnshire he was probablya Constableof Everingham , Yorks , the family having property in both counties . Sir Philip Constable , the first baronet, and perhaps mentioned 9 June below, had a brother Michael, b .s.p. See this one's death 3 Oct. followingJ.S.H
advocatus *; post 28 annos in studiis exactos in Oxonia ad fidem Catholicam nuper conversus, qui prius principalis erat Aulæ Stae Magdelenæ.
[125] Martii, die 10. D. Præses iter auspicatus est versus Antwerpiam ad tractandum Collegii negotium cum D. Lyonello Wake de assecuratione præstanda pro solutione istarum pæcuniarum quas præfatusD. Wake Collegio debet
Martii die 27, reversus est D. Præses
Maii 13 die Collegiali habitu indutus D. Thomas Read.
14. Juramentum professionis fidei præstitit præfatus D. Read
20. Abiit in Angliam a Rhetorica Andreas Whytehall hic Kniveton ob defectu valetudinis
Aprilis 3. D. Præses concessit facultates ordinarias (una cum potestate benedicendi mille numismata ad communicandas indulgentias extraordinarias) D. Joanni Collingtono, alias Kinne IIensis Venit adCollegium GulielmusWinchcombehic Pen, Berceri-
27. e Collegio discessit D. Thomas Read versus Neoportum iter suum dirigens.
Maii 2 die ad Collegium venit ex Anglia Robertus Brathwait liic Tolson Carleolensis, cum intentione studendi sacrosque ordines cum tempore suscipiendi .
Eodem diereversus est præfatus D. Read et in Collegium denovo receptus est
2. Eodem aie etiam discessit a Collegio Andreas Kniveton alias Whytehall, Rhetor, in Angliam ob defectu valetudinis
8. DnB Præses admonuit D. Edwardum Barker hic Vernalty ut sequenti anno doceret poesim et syntaxim. eodem die D. Præses admonuit D. Joannem Singleton ut se prepararet ad logicam docendam anno sequenti proxime.
14. Juramentum professionis fidei præstitit D. Thomas Read, Doctor civilis juris
20. Abiit in Angliam Andreas Kniveton alias Whytehall, ob adversam valetudinem.
23. Hinc abierunt D. Edmundus Irelandus olim procurator et GulielmusEure, hic Georgius Philipson, versus Bruxellas
25. Confessarius ordinarius, et præfectus studiorum a D. Præside substituitur , loco præfati Dn Irelandi, Das Franciscus Clayton indeque unus ex assistentibus
"Thomas Reade gent New Coll , matric 11 Oct. 1631, B.C.L. same day, fellow , D.C.L. 8 May 1638 ; born at Linkinholt , Hants.; advocate of Doctors' Commons 1661; a most noted royalist, trailed a pike for his majesty in the University of Oxford ; nominated by Charles I principal of Magdalen Hall 1643-6 , changed his religion for that of Rome, and lived beyond sea; after the restoration became a surrogate for Sir William Merick, judge of the prerogative court; died in 1669 " (Foster, Alumni Oxonienses 1241). For his ordination to the priesthood see below under date 2 April 1649
These three entries are out of chronological order
This and the following entry repeat the information given out-of-date above .
Junii 3. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Robertus Brathwait hic Tolson, Carleolensis, Edwardus Kinne hic Collington, Glocestrensis, Gulielmus Winchcombe Berceriensis, Michael Constable, Lincolniensis
9. Ad Collegium venit Philippus Constable, Lincolniensis
ΙΟ Ad Collegium venit Ferdinandus Thwenge, Eboracensis.
18. Ad Collegium venit Josephus Langdale, hic Creswell, Eboracensis .
[126] Junii 21. D. Præses , in gratiam cujuslibet benefactoris ordinavit quod in posterum pro singulis decem florenis sine omni onere et obligatione Collegio (a quocumque ) datis, unum fieret
sacrum .
Eodem die, D. Præses ordinavit sacrum ordinarium die lunæ per singulas septimanas ad altare privilegiatum fieri pro animabus omnium benefactorum hujus Collegii defunctorum; nisi occurrat specialis ratio celebrandi missam pro aliquo benefactore particulari .
22. D. Georgius Russel suscepit provinciam docendi Rhetores usque ad finem anni
D. Joannes Singleton incoepit studio philosophiæ vacare, ut posset dictata aliqua præparare in mensem Octobris proxime sequentis
23. D. Præsesin beneficiumhujus Collegiistudiosorumscholam linguæ Gallicæ instituit, et ad omnes instruendos diebus et horis statutis D. Walricum Remington providit
30. Ad Collegium ex Anglia D. FrancisGascoigne, hic Johnson, Eboracensis
Eodem vero die huc accessit Nicholaus Tempest , hic Wilmot, Sarisburiensis .
Julii die 3. D. Præses quæsivit a R. D. Laureten Vicario Generali Atrebatensi, si necesse putaret nostros qui in hæresi educati fuerant habere dispensationem pro irregularitate ex hæresi contracta Respondit, non, quia talis facultas non concessa erat D. Præsidi neque prædecessoribus suis ; et multi tales præsentati fuerant nulla hujusmodi dispensatione obtenta, nedum quæsita, ut præfatus D. Vicarius affirmabat se posse testari pro 10 annis temporeD. Mathæi Kellisoni
5 die. D. Carolus Laureten Archidiaconuset Vicarius Generalis Atrebatensis, sede vacante , per literas suas patentes ad D. Præsidem missas, ipsum censorem librorum constituit
13. D. Franciscus Gascoigne ad mensam D. Præsidis admissus est, hac conditione, videlicet ut jentaculum commune habeat , in prandio sicut cæteri seniores, vesperi autem Collationem tantum, et solvat 25 libras sterlingorumper annum
22. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Philippus Constable, Lincolniensis, Josephus Langdale hic Creswell, Eboracensis, Ferdinandus Thwenge , Eboracensis , Nicholaus Tempest, hic Wilmot, Sarisburiensis
[127] Julii 26. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venerunt Richardus Fletcher, hic Barton, Lancastrensis , ex pensione D. Muscotti alendus ;
Gulielmus Waynman, Wiltoniensis, hic Meneral De Bruxellis huc venerunt Edwardus Goldinge , Notingamensis , Georgius Roper, hic Browne, Staffordiensis , et Petrus Vavasour hic Whyte, Eboracensis, ex Lutetia Parisiorum, Gulielmus Timperley, hic Haire, Suffolciensis
27. D. Franciscus Gascoigne, constitutus est a D. Præside , Præfectus Generalis
30. D. Joannes Jowsey scripto propria manu signato testatus est, quod admissus erat in Collegium hac conditione, nimirum, ut post susceptum presbiteratum extra Collegium in civitatesepropriis aleretexpensis
Eodem die examinabantur pro missione Anglicana D. Thomas Duffield, hic Thirkill, et D. Joannes Jowsey . Aug. 3. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Georgius Roper, hic Browne, Staffordiensis , Edwardus Goldinge , Notingamiensis, Petrus Vavasour, hicWhyte, Eboracensis , Richardus Fletcher, hic Barton, Lancastrensis
18. Missa Sti Caroli solemniter decantata est in gratiarum actione pro preservatione Collegii a peste. Eodem die in messemAnglicanammissi suntD. Thomas Duffield, hic Thirkil, post 4 annos in studio theologiæ exactos et DnsJoannes Jowsey facultatibus ordinariismuniti , qui per Hollandiamin Angliam carpserunt iter, cum potestate cuilibet eorum benedicendi mille numismata ad commu[ni]candas indulgentias extraordinarias ab Urbano 8 indultas
26. Ad Collegium venerunt Cecillus Trafford hic Howel, Cestrensis , et EdwardusWilliscot hic Fitzherbert, Berceriensis.
28. Facultates ordinarias concessit D. Præses D. Joanni Downinge a Parisiis in Angliam misso, cum potestate benedicendi mille numismata, ad communicandas indulgentias extraordinarias.
29. Factus est D. Franciscus Johnson , Confessarius extraordinarius, et præfecturamreliquit.
Eodem die constitutus est Præfectus Generalis , D. Georgius Russel, sacerdos tantum.
30. D. Thomas Read factus est præfectus valetudinarii . Sept. 10. e Collegio discessit Baldwinus de Sto Georgio hic Thomas Phoenix, carpens iter versus Bruxellas.
22. A Collegio amovetur Edwardus Goldinge , quia nec regulas observaretnec penitentias subiret
Eodem die juramentum professionis fidei præstitit Cecillus Trafford
28. Loco Dn Reade in præfecturainfirmorum suffectus est D. Robertus Thurstan [128] 1° die Octobris post sacrum pro felici virtutis et doctrinæ successu a D. Præside decantatum reserantur scholæ, et studiosi omnes, prout designabatur ipsis, suam petierunt Classem ; ubi post habita exhortatione a D. Præside ad virtutem et in studiis diligentiam scholaribus respectivecommendanturmagistri Theologis magister primarius D. Franciscus Clayton, secundarius D.
Michael Genings, logicis, D. Joannes Singleton , magister solus poetis et syntaxianis, D. EdwardusVernalty,grammaticiset figuristis magister Thomas Feasby Confessarius ordinarius et præfectus studiorum prædictus D. Clayton Præfectus Generalis D. Georgius Russel sacerdos tantum, Confessarii extraordinarii , dictusD. Genings et D. Franciscus Johnson Catechista prædictus D. Genings
3. Variolis laborans mortuus est Michael Constable. Eodem die theses philosophiæ universalis propugnavit Magister Thomas Feasbysub D. Michaele Genings præsidente
29. Ad Collegium a Parisiis venerunt Magister Andreas * SkinnerWarwicensiset Joannes Rootes hic Flud, Sussexiensis
Novemb 8. Abivit a Collegio Petrus Vavasour hic Wyke* versus Lovanium
IO Iam tonsuram et quatuor minores ordines susceperunt (a manibusRami D.Odomarensis §) MagisterFranciscus Rider, Magister Thomas Feasby, Magister Henricus Vere et Richardus More, alias Mossocke.
Eodem die juramentum professionis fidei præstitit Magister Andreas Skinner hic Benley, diocoesisCicestrensis
15. Juramentum Collegii emisit Magister Andreas Bentley et alumnusCollegii factus.
17. D. Præses solvebat Jacobo le Symon pro famulatu suo anni unius elapsi , 50 florenos mercedem suam
Nov. 27. Ex Anglia huc accessit Gulielmus Messenger, hic Smithson, Eboracensis.
Dec. 6. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit MagisterJoannes Copland, hic Street, prope Lancastriam natus, subdiaconus , ad diaconatum et presbyteratum suscipiendum , statimque postea in Angliam reversurus .
20. Juramentum professionis fidei præstitit Gulielmus Messenger, hic Smithson.
[129] Dec. 16. Magister Joannes Street et Andreas Bentley missi sunt , (pridie de more facta examinatione) Tornacum, hic ad subdiaconatum diaconatum et presbyteratum, ille ad diaconatum et presbyteratum suscipiendum .
26. In Collegiumadmissus est Joannes Watts, hic Richardson, comitatu Warwicensis diocesis Vigorniensis , bachelaureus in artibus academiæ Oxoniensis , more protestantico diaconus et Minister seu concionator factus, a duobus annis ad fidem Catholicam conversus
27. Inter manus D. Præsidis publice in Ecclesia nostra juramentum Collegii alumnorum et professionis fidei præstitit Joannes Watts hic Richardson .
At the visitations of Warwickshire 1619 and Sussex 1633 Anthony Skinner of Shelfield , Aston-Cantlow, and his first wife, Elizabeth daughter of Edward Gage of Bentley, Sussex, appear They had ,( 1) William, æt 20 in 1619 , (2) Edward , (3) Anthony, (4) James , (5) Andrew; Mary and Eleanor (Harl Soc , xii, 295 ; liii , 9).J.S.H
In the entry for August 3rd the alias is given as Whyte § Christopher de France, Bishop of St. Omer 1635-1656
Eodem tempore modoque prædicto juramentum alumnorum præstiterunt Richardus Fletcher hic Barton, et Edwardus Kinne hic Collington. Idem præstitit Nicholaus Tempest hic Wilmot hac conditioneut siabamicis suis sua pensio compleaturet complete solvatur quotannis: hoc juramento non obligetur plusquam sibi (Wilmot) visumfuerit, et præterea sub promissione D. Præsidis quod præfatus NicholausWilmot nullo modo per hoc juramentum lædat aut in posterum impediat amicorum suorum jus prætendendi hic admissionem et victum ex sumptibus Collegii, ex intuitu pensionis in illum finem a Dno. Tempest Collegio donatæ, juxta modum et rationem in suo testamentopræfixam
29. Tornaco reversi sunt Dns Joannes Copland , hic Street et Das Andreas Skinner, hic Bentley, sacro presbyteratus ordine insigniti
30. A 1° die Jan. proxime elapso ad hunc diem, soluti sunt de ære alieno veteri (sicut librum expositorum inspicienti patebit) quater mille quingenti nonaginta quatuor floreni, duodecim asses , cum duobus quadratitibus.
1649
[130] Jan. 1. Ex Anglia per Lutetiam Parisiorum huc advenit , HenricusHolden, diocesis Cestrensis studiis operam dandi gratia
2. Præstitit juramentum professionis fidei.
6. In die Epiphaniæ Domini primitias suas celebrarunt D. Joannes Street et D. Andreas Bentley.
8. Missæ sunt a D. Præside rationes de statu Collegii Emissimo D. Cardinali Protectori Barbarino
14. E Collegio versus Bruxellas a Rhetorica discessit Henricus Gage, hicDaniel, obadversam valetudinem.
15. Discessit a Collegio iter carpens versus Parisios D.Andreas Skinner, hic Bentley, qui quondamper duos annos studio philosophiæ hic operamdederat, theologiæ vero per sex menses .
20 Thomas Crumpe factus est promus.
27. Rationes de statu Collegii missæ sunt Romæ Cardinali Protectori
28. Pro missione examinatur D. Joannes Street
29. In messem Anglicanam facultatibus ordinariis instructus ob defectum valetudinis missus est D. Humfredus Whitaker hic Franciscus Clayton hiclector rarius theologiæ, confessarius ordinarius et præfectus studiorum, cumpotestatebenedicendi mille numismata ad communicandas indulgentiasextraordinarias. Eodem die in vineamAnglicanamlucrandarumanimarum gratia mittitur Dns Joannes Copland hic Street, facultatibus ordinariis munitus, cum potestate benedicendi mille numismata ad communicandasindulgentias extraordinarias.
Febr. 10. D. Præses , post missam St Gulielmi decantatam , in prandio omnibus in refectorio placentas et vinum, senioribus ferculum idemque sacerdotibus , cum vino Hispanico quæ omnia constiterunt tredecim flor
Martii 11. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Philippus Brathwait hic Tolson, Carleolensis, ut se promeret in studiis
[On small leaf pasted between pp 130 and 131.]
First, I desire that you will declare yt it is yor will and pleasure to have the quire kept up and continued, and to shew the straights wee are in, and more like to be, unless there be a present and speedy course taken to preventit.
2d That you desire Mr Middl : and Mr Thurston to excersice andshewe themwhere to finde the office ofye Church in ye plainsong bookes, and yt they may have the practise thereof whiles they remaine heere ; and for the performance of this office, I judge Collington, R. Tolson, and Willmott (by reason they are alumnes) to be most fitt, and Aug. and Ed : Clifford, if they shall prove to be in the same condition
3d That the time allotted for musicke , as is sett downe in the rules, may be observ'd, and yt there masters may not detainethem in schooles beyound there time, or imploye them otherwise , wthout you judge it convenientor nessesarie.
4. That those wch are to be of ye quire, come before the last pulse to accommodate there bookes, and finde out ye office wch is to be sunge at yt time, and that they omitt (at that time) thereother perticulareandprivate bookes ofdevotion, and joyne wth the congregation in singing ye psalmes, and answering at Mass and Evensong as in all other places they doe [131] Martii 29. Juramentum alumnorum præstitit D. Thomas Read, Wintoniensis.
eodem die examinatur pro sacris ordinibus
30. Mittitur Tornacum D. Thomas Read ad 1am tonsuram, sacrosque ordines suscipiendum .
Aprilis 2. Feria sexta in parasceve ram tonsuram et quatuor minores ordines, Sabato sancto subdiaconatum , die lunæ paschatis diaconatum, et die Martis presbyteratum Tornaci suscepit D. Thomas Read ; quandiu ibi moratusest, hospitabatur in monasterii [sic] St Martini
8. Ad Collegium reversus D. Thomas Read sacro presbyteratus ordineinsignitus.
18. Dominica2ª post Pascha primitias suascelebravitD. Thomas Read
24. Hinc in Angliam discessit Franciscus Thorneton, alias Cholmeley , ad valetudinem suam recuperandam
May 11. D. Thomas Read, Civilis Doctor, advocatus in Curiis Cantuariensibus , et principalis Aulæ Magdelenæ in Oxonia, pro missione examinatur
12. ACollegio discessit præfatus D. Read in messemAnglicanam facultatibus ordinariis instructus, cum potestate benedicendi mille numismata ad communicandas indulgentias extraordinarias, in Angliam per Hollandiam transiens In Collegio studuit theologiæ Petri a Sto . Joseph
Eodem die e syntaxi a Collegio abivit Ferdinandus Thwenge, quia nulla spes recipiendisuam pensionem effulgebat
13. 1am tonsuram et quatuor minores ordines Duaci a Rdmo , D. Episcopo AudomarensiinCollegio St Amandi, susceperunt Edwardus Kynne, hic Collington, Joannes Watts, hic Richardson, Nicholaus Wilmot, alias Tempest , et Barton alias Fletcher
30. Habentur affictiones a D. Vernaltey magistro poesios, poetæ fuerunt NicholausWilmot, Philippus Constable, Edwardus Gower, Gulielmus Smithson, RichardusTolson, Edwardus Clifford, folia 223. [132] Maii 31. Ex Anglia ad Collegiumvenit Edmundus Penny, hic Smith, Dorcestriensis , cum intentione studiis incumbendi.
Junii die 2. D. Præses a provisoribus dotis electus est Regius professor lectionis historicæ quod precipue summo conatui et diligentiæ Dni Shantrineacceptumrefert D. Præses
4. Literæ mittebantur Bruxellas ad confirmationem prædictæ electionis obtinendam.
6. Abiit e Collegio in Angliam GulielmusLangdalehic Creswel , syntaxianus.
8. Designatus est D. Thomas Midleton professor rhetorices , ad levandum onus D. Vernaltey, qui existimabat se non posse sufficienter docere Rhetoricam et poesim
14. D. Thomas Midleton adductus est in classem Rhetorices, ibiquebrevi præmissa a D.Præside exhortatione, magisterdeclaratur.
17. D. Præses post lectum S. Scripturæ caput in prandio et cænainstituitFirinicommentarium (super capita prælecta) legendum theologosque examinandos esse a professoribus theologiæ, circa difficultates ibidem explicatas.
21. A Lutetia Parisiorum huc accessit Georgius Tattersall Hamptoniensis16annum agens, desiderans se in studiis perficerein Angliam redire
24. Ex Anglia ad Collegiumvenit Joannes * Stitch hicSaunders , Londinensis
Eodem die ex Anglia venit Richardus Gildon, hic Worsley, de comitatu Dorcestriæ , et diocesi Bristoliensis, qui post cursum philosophiæ auditum rediturus est.
Eodem die venerunt Robertus et Joannes Gildon, hic Worsley (fratres natu minores supradicti Rich : Gildon) prætendentes divino numine favente sacros suscipere ordines [133] Junii 27. D. Thomas Thwenge hic adduxit Thomam hic Vavasour, Eboracensis 16 annum agentem qui in votis habet, Deo annuente , sacerdotem fieri
Julii 1. Præfatus Thomas Vavasour admissus est inter commensales Collegii.
4. D. Thomas Thwenge abiit per Hollandiam iter faciens in Angliam.
10. Ex Anglia venit ad Collegium Richardus Langdale hic Creswel , 16 annum agens, Eboracensis
In the London visitation 1634 there is an eight generation pedigree of a Stych family, deducing from Stych[e] in Shropshire A third son John, whose eldest brother was then aged 21 , may be the one in the Diary, wherethe description is too scanty (Harl. Soc , xvii, 271).J.S.H . Surname omitted It should be Young
Eodem die de Bruxellis huc advenerunt Jacobus et Joannes Ravenscrofthic Rider, Huntingtonienses
12. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Mathæus * Lockwood, hic Atkinson, Eboracensis
Eodem die ad Collegium venit Marmadux Beckewith hic Thomas Nateby, Eboracensis , hos duos huc adduxit D. Joannes Jowsey
15. In Angliam revertitur D. Joannes Jowsey
16. Ex Anglia ad Collegium accessit Joannes Leckonby, hic Hawley, 29 annum agens , Dunelmensis , qui aliquamdiu studiis operam dedit Oxoniæ, jam nuper ad fidem Catholicain conversus.
24. Theses logicas propugnabanttemporematutino Augustinus Belson vide paginam sequentem.
25. Hoc die ex institutione D. Præsidis incæpit observatio pulsandi campanulam ecclesiæ nostræ ad Angelus Domini.
27. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venerunt Edwardus Tildsley hic LeydeMerston in comitatu Lancastriæ , RobertusCrosse , hic Joannes Wolful, ejusdem Comitatus, et Edwardus Hunt de Whittington in comitatu Salopiæ
Hos tres huc adduxit D. Joannes Wilson, sacerdos, qui vocabatur alias Tatlocke prope Lathom natus, in comitatu Lancastriæ .
1649
[134] Prædictus D. Wilson apud Jesuitas Madritæ in Hispania studuit, et post auditam philosophiam et sacrum presbyteratus ordinem susceptum sine theologia in Angliam dimissus
Julii 24 die [In margin " Ponatur hoc pagina priori 24 die " And the next two paragraphs are marked down to Eboracensis "] theses logicas propugnabant tempore matutino Augustinus Belson hicClifford et Cecillus Trafford, hic Howell, tempore veropomeridiano Georgius Penny hic Smith, et Georgius Ravenscroft hic Rider, sub D. Joanne Singletono , præsidente.
Julii 24. Eodem die juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Joannes Leckonby hic Hawley, Dunelmensis , Mathæus Lockwood, Eboracensis et Thomas Yonge , hic Vavasour, Eboracensis .
Aug. I. De Bruxellis in Angliam missus est D. Robertus Quintain hic Prannell, facultatibus ordinariis instructus, cum potestate benedicendi 1,000 numismata ad communicandas indulgentias .
Aug. 6. A Parisiisper Atrebatum veneruntad Collegium Joannes et Carolus Towneleyhic Ashton de Towneleyin comitatu Lancastriæ , et diocesi Cestrensi, annos nati 18 et 19
Richard son of Christopher Lockwood of Sowerby, adjoining Thirsk, and brother of John Lockwood , priest-martyr. By his second wife, Dorothy daughter of Anthony Atkinson of Wensley, he had ,(1) Matthew, æt 35 , 23 Aug. 1665 , who married Barbara daughterand coheir of Thomas Beckwith of Aketon, Featherstone; John and Dorothy, wife of John Ilamerton of Purston-Jackling, Featherstone (Foster's Yorks . Visitations, 549 ; Surtees Soc , xxxvi, 107).J.S H.
Charles, third son and heir of Richard Towneley of Towneley by his wife , Jane daughter of Ralph Asheton of Lever, by his first wife, Mary daughter of Sir Francis Bernard of Harrogate, Yorks., had,-Richard , his heir ; John, buried at Burnley 1678 ; Charles ; and Francis. Their father was slain at Marston Moor in 1644 (Commoners, ii, 265) .J.S.II
18. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Joannes et Carolus Towneleyhic Ashton, Lancastrenses.
24. E Collegio in Angliam discessit D. Joannes Tatlocke hic Wilson, sacerdos, quia D. Præses ipsum studiis haud idoneum esse judicavit
29. E Collegio Rhetor discessit Gulielmus Winchcombe hic Pen
29. Eodem die discessit a Collegio Robertus Brathwait, hic Tolson, post negotia sua ibi expedienda reversurus .
Sept. 8. A D. Præside loco D. Georgii Russel constituitur Præfectus Generalis D. Robertus Thurston Sacerdos, et præfatus D. Russel monitus est ad Rhetoricam sequenti anno docendam . [135] 1° die Octobris 1649 post sacrum (pro fælici virtutis et doctrinæstudiorum progressu) a D. Præside solemniterdecantatum aperiuntur scholæ; studiosisinguli suas , prout unicuiquedesignabatur, classes adibant ; postea singulis in classibus præmissa a D. Præsidead virtutem bonosque mores exhortationemagistri declarantur; theologiæ (primarius D. Doctor Daniel post 3 mensesexpectatus) secundarius D. Michael Genings, philosophiæ D. Joannes Singleton, Rhetorices D. Georgius Russell ; posios D. Edwardus Vernalty; syntaxeos magister Joannes Hawley, grammatices et rudimentorum MagisterThomas Feasby Confessarii extraordinarii , dictus D. Genings et D. Franciscus Johnson Præfectus studiorum præfatus D. Singleton; præfectus generalis D. Robertus Thurstan ad mensam sacerdotum sedens Catechista prædictus D. Genings Nov. 1. D. Thomas Gradel , hic Midleton examinatur pro missione.
2. e Collegio discessit D. Thomas Gradel, hic Midleton , Lancastrensis, facultatibus ordinariis munitus, cum potestate benedicendi 1,000 numismata ad indulgentias communicandas ; ipse docuerat grammaticam et syntaxim et poesim, et rhetoricam per 3 menses . Per tres annos et amplius studio theologiæ scholasticæ operam dederat
9. Ex Anglia ad Collegium venerunt studendi gratia, Joannes * Trafford, 18 annum agens (hic Howell) de Trafford, in comitatu Lancastriæ , et Henricus Trafford (frater prædicti Joannis), hic Howell, 17 annum agens.
19. Ex Anglia huc accessit studendi gratia Franciscus Lawson 18 annum agens (hic Langley), de Brough in parochiaCaterickeet comitatu Eboracensi
Eodem die venit ex Anglia Carolus Salvin hic Heberon , 17
John Trafford would, by these statements of age, be fourth, not sixth son , as often stated, of Sir Cecil Trafford of Trafford He married Anne daughter and coheir of Richard Ashton of Croston, so becomingof Croston The Trafford estates reverted to his descendants , the senior representativebeing now Sir Humphrey de Trafford, baronetJ.S.II
Gerard son of Gerard Salvin of Croxdale by Anne daughter of Humphrey Blakiston and his wife Margaret Hebborne By two wives he had seventeen children By the second , Mary daughter of Bryan Belasyse of Morton, he had a fifth son , Charles Salvin of Tudhor, who died 1685 unmarried (Commoners , i, 536).J.S.H . GG
annum agens, de Croxdale in parochia St Oswini, comitatu et diocesi Dunelmensi
[136] Dec. 3. ExAnglia venit studendigratia Stephanus Wharton, hic Rud, 20 annum agens de parochia Kirkby Thewer in comitatu Westmorlandiæ , in diocesi Carleolensi
12. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Joannes Trafford hic Howell, et Henricus Howell frater ejus Cestrensis diocesis, Stephanus Wharton, hic Rud, Carleolensis, Franciscus Lawson, hic Langley, Eboracensis , et Carolus Salvin, hic Heberon , Dunelmensis
Dec. 17 die solus propugnavit theses theologicas de jure et justitia magister Henricus Vere, sub D. Michaele Genings, præside
27. Literas Regias a consilio privato Bruxellensi in confirmationem electionis suæ ad historicam lectionem publice profitendam recepitD. Præses
29. Juramentum alumnorum præstiterunt Magister Joannes Leckonby, hic Hawley, Dunelmensis , Henricus Holden , Cestrensis, RobertusGildon, hic WorsleleyBristoliensis
Vetera debita soluta per hunc annum (sicut librum expositorum inspicienti patebit) bis mille nongenti et quatuor floreni cum sexdecim assibus
1650
[137] Jan. 4
Admissus est D. Præses in facultatem artium
Jan. 6 die de Parisiis per Atrebatum huc advenit Jacobus Morgan 24 annum agens (hic Robertus Robinson ) Londinensis .
7 die juramentum facultatis artium præstitit D. Præses
10 die in schola publica medicorum auspicatus est D. Præses lectionem historicam in apparatu Baronii
II die admissus est D. Præses ad Consilium Universitatis
30. Juramentum alumnorum præstitit Magister Thomas Churchhil hic Dunham.
Febr. 10. Missam St Gulielmi cantavit D. Præses ; in prandio dedit placentas cum vino omnibus in refectorio, ferculum extraordinarium senioribus , aliud sacerdotibus , quæ omnia constiterunt 9 flor.
18. Instructum est convivium ex sumptibus D. Præsidis pro Consilio Universitatis, quod constabat 272 flor. 8 pat
23. Hinc proficiscebatur in Angliam Cecillus Trafford, hic Howell, Lancastrensis ob adversam valetudinemphilosophus
Eodem die Collegio discessit Richardus Langdalehic Creswell (grammaticus) ad valetudinem recuperandam , Eboracensis
[138] Febr 25 die ex Holandia ad Collegium venit D. Thomas Blacklowe
Martii 2 die constituitur D. Blacklowe Vicepræses hujus Collegii.
28. loco supra ecclesiam in hunc finem adaptato frequentatio ibidem orationis mentalis incipitur
Eodem die Nieoporto venit ad Collegium D. Gulielinus Wall hic Marsh, sacerdos, Lancastrensis , qui, literis humanioribus sub
Jesuitis Audomari, postea sub Jesuitis Anglis Romæ cursum philosophiæ magno cum applausu sub viridi panno defendit ; aliquam partem theologiæ ibidem prælectam audivit.
Eodem die Neoporto ad Collegium venit Richardus Savage de Rocksavage in comitatu Cestrensi
Martii 20 die e Gallia Duacum venit Carolus 2us, Angliæ Rex; hospitabatur in refugio Aquacinctino ; coram Sua Majestate orationem gratulatoriam habuit D. Præses Rex jussit D. Præsidem suo nomine gratias agere Rectori magnifico et universitati pro observantiissibi ab ipsis exhibitis.
21. D. Præses in nomine Collegii suæ majestati præsentavit carminaLatina et Anglica
Eodem die majestas sua Duaco discessit Insulas * petens, exinde in Hollandiam
31. E Collegio discessit Thomas Joucy sutor, versus Romam . [139] April26. Dimitt[it]ur Georgius Berry Anglusquondam cocus prætendens post paucas septimanas ire in Angliam.
Eodem die suo loco suffectus Richardus D'Urcy, Duacenus.
Eodem die admittitur lixa Quintinus Angraffe, Wallo. Maii 26 die publice exhibentur carmina parietibus affixa , a D. Georgio Russel magistro rhetorices, et D. Edwardo Vernaltey [poeseos] magistro, folia 226.
27. D. Præses dixit, quod hoc 27 die Maii 1650 D. Gulielmus Russel, equesAuratus, ipsi debebat reddituspro septem annisultimo elapsis
29. Juramentum alumnorum præstitit Robert Brathwait hic Tolson, Carleolensis
30. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Dns Gulielmus Wall hic Marsh, et Richardus Savage, Cestrenses.
31 die præfatus D. Gulielmus Marsh juramentum alumnorum præstitit
Junii die 19. Neoporto ad Collegium venit D. Edwardus Daniel, s theologiæ doctor, præses per 6 annos quondam Lisbonensis Collegii Anglorum.
22. Factus est prædictus D. Daniel professor primarius theologiæ, et confessarius ordinarius
24. Ex Anglia ad Collegium venit Thomas Gage, 14 annum agens, hic Markham, de Bentley in Comitatu Sussexiæ .
Julii 10. Mortuus est Georgius Berry, Anglus, quondam cocus .
Julii 22. Admissus est Symon Tottell, Duacenus , sutor Collegii. [140] Julii 23. Ex Anglia venit ad Collegium Joannes Dracot hic Parker, de Paynesley in parochiaDracot in comitatu Staffordiensi.
24. In Refectoriodeclaratur a D. Præside, D. Doctorem Daniel esse Confessarium ordinarium
27. Juramentum professionis fidei præstitit Joannes Draycot, hic Parker, Staffordiensis
Aug. 2. Collegii sartor. Michael Lanchry, Duacenus, admissus est servus
* Lille
Augusti 2 die mane philosophiam universalemdefendit Joannes Watts hic Richardson; post prandium defendit Georgius Ravenscroft hic Rider ; die vero sequenti defendit Georgius Penny hic Smith, sub D. Joanne Singletono
16 die a Collegio discessit D. Thomas Blacklowe, Vicepreses, in Hollandiam.
23 die ad Collegiumex Anglia venit Franciscus Wyvel 19 annum agens, hic Gascoigne, de Constable Burton in parochia Fingall in comitatu Eboracensi
Eodem die venit huc ex Anglia Franciscus Smith, hic Blaxton, 17 annum agens, de Broxtowe prope Notinghamiam in comitatu Notinghamiensis
Eodem die una venerunt Edwardus et Thomas Smith, fratres, hic Gray, 13 et 14 annum agentes, de Ash * , prope Dunelmum in comitatu Dunelmensi
Eodem die venit Henry Aske, 16 annum agens, hic Dalton, de Bentley, prope Hull in comitatu Eboracensi
Eodem die una venit Joannes Lockwood 13 annum agens, hic Atkinson, de Sowerby in parochia Sowerby , in comitatu Eboracensi
Hos 6 simul ex Anglia conduxit D. Thomas Thwenge [141] Augustii 28 die pro missione Anglicana examinantur D. Georgius Russell et D. Robertus Thurstan.
30. In messem Anglicanam mittitur D. Georgius Russell , Eboracensis , facultatibus ordinariis instructus cum potestate benedicendi 1,000 numismata ad communicandas indulgentias Per 2 annos studuerat philosophiæ , per 4, theologiæ . semel docuerat grammaticam et syntaxim, semel poesim ; bis Rhetoricam, et bis fuit Præfectus generalis .
Eodem die una discessit D. Thurstanus Anderson, hic Robertus Thurstan, de Clayton in comitatu Lancastriæ , facultatibus ordinariis instructus, cum potestatebenedicendi mille numismataad communicandas indulgentias Hic semel docuerat grammaticamet syntaxim et semel fuit Præfectus generalis
Eodem vero die D. EdwardusVernalty (alias Barker) constitutus est Præfectus generalis , sacerdos tantum , in loco præfati D. Roberti Thurstan. Sept. 9 die ad Collegium venit Gulielmus More, 17 annum agens, hic Brooke, de Chilston in parochia Madley in comitatu et diocesi Herefordiensi, et Chrysacarus More, 14 annum agens, hic Thomas Brooke, frater prædicti Gulielmi More 13. E Collegio abiit Georgius Pennyhic Smith versus Bruxellas, et exinde Romam, qui a grammatica usque ad finem philosophiæ semper in Classe primus
I More generally known as Eshe It is in the parish of LanchesterJ S.H. ThomasMore of More Place , Herts , and Barnborough, Yorks , married Mary daughterof Sir Basil Brookeof Madeley Court and parish , Shropshire, in the diocese of Hereford. His sons were ,(1) William , ob v.p. s.p.; (2) Basil, the heir; (3) Cressacre ; (4) Thoinas, oh cal.; John (Commoners , iii, 451) Query the meaningof " Chilston " -J.S.H.
[142] Octob 1° die 1650 reserantur scholæ, exhortatione singulis in classibus pro more habita a D. Præside, qui scholaribus in qualibet classe magistrossuos designabat ; theologis primarium professorem D. Doctorem Daniel, 2rlum D. MichaelemGenings, logicis D. Joannem Singleton, rhetoribus D. Gulielmum Marsh , poetis magistrum Joannem Hawley, syntaxianis magistrum Thomam Feasby, grammaticis et rudimentariis magistrum Edwardum Collington : confessarium ordinarium D. Daniel : extraordinarios D. Genings, et D. Franciscum Johnson, præfectum generalem et præfectum studiorum D. Edw Vernalty factus senior . Catechista prædictus D. Genings
Octob 19. A Collegio discessit Franciscus Allen janitor ad habitum Benedictinorum Anglorum suscipiendum Duaci
Eodem die in officium janitoris admittitur GulielmusCraftes
Octob. 20mo die, D. Præses admissus est in SocietatemCaveæ Universitatis hac conditione ut a 1° die Januarii 1651 , quotam suam de fructibus exinde provenientibus perciperet: quo facto Dns Præses deposuitin manibus Joannis Pleasant Vinitoris prædictæ Caveæ 25 florenos, quam summam universitas reddere tenebitur Collegio post mortem D. Præsidis, insuperautem partem suam pro fructibus dictæcaveæ aliorum trium mensiumjuxta condictum eo tempore factum.
26. Parisiis ad Collegiumvenit D. RichardusNichols, diaconus ut sacrum presbyteratus ordinem hic susciperet ; hic educatusin Collegio Su Petri in Academia Cantabrigiensi , ubi lectione s[anc] torumpatrum ct controvertistarum ad fidem convertitur, ibidemque incarceratur, postea liberatus Londinum petiit ubi a parliamento ter vel quater in carcerem missus, tandem ope illustrmi Comitis Egmundi liberatus, Galliam petiit, et coram Apostolico Nuntio Parisiis hæresim abjuravit [143] Octob. 28. D. Præses in convivio excepit Dnum Shantrine cum uxore sua et sorore ejus, Dominam Velue et consobrinam ejus ; D. Carolum Laureten, Archidiaconum, Doctorem Denis , Doctorem Briet et Dam Bonhoseau ; quod constitit 74 flor cum 15 assibus
Nov. 7 die theses theologicas de fide, spe, et charitate publice propugnabantMagisterHenricusVere et MagisterThomas Churchhill hic Downham, sub D. Michaele Genings. 22. ExAnglia ad Collegium venit Gulielmus Gildon hicWorsley, Bristoliensis
Dec.4. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Dns Richardus Nichols Cantuariensis , Georgius Rider Lincolniensis, Edwardus Ley, Cestrensis, Edwardus Hunt, Salopiensis, Georgius Tattersall, Sarisburiensis , Henricus Dalton, Eboracensis , Gulielmus et Thomas Brooke, Herefordienses , Gulielmuset Joannes Worsley, Bristolienses , EdwardusGray,Dunelmensis , Joannes Wolfall, Cestrensis, Franciscus Gascoigne, Eboracensis , Franciscus Blaxton, Lincolniensis, Joannes Flud, Cicestrensis , Edmundus Smith, Dorcestrensis , Robertus Robinson , Londinensis , Carolus Tasborough , Norvicensis, Gulielmus
Menerell, Sarisburiensis , Gulielmus Haire, Norvicensis , Philippus Tolson, Carleolensis
Eodem die juramentum alumnorum præstitit Das Richardus Nicols
[144] Dec. 7. TornacummittunturD. RichardusNicols ad presbyteratum, magister Robertus Tolson alias Brathwait, ad minores et majores ordines, magister Franciscus Rider ad subdiaconatum , diaconatumet presbyteratum suscipiendum .
19. A Collegio ad BenedictinosAnglos Duaci discessit D. Rich Savage
21. Publicein ecclesiacoram D. Præsidejuramentumalumnorum præstiterunt Gregorius Hog, hic Wharton, Eboracensis, Joannes
Gildon, hic Worsley, Bristoliensis, Robertus Crosse , hic Joannes
Wolful , Cestrensis, Thomas Vavasour , Eboracensis
24. Tornaco reversus est D. Richardus Nicolls sacro presby- teratus ordine insignitus.
30. Tornacoreversi sunt D. Robertus Brathwait et D. Francis'cus Rider, sacro presbyteratu initiati.
Per hunc annum Annum * soluta sunt debita 580 flor 12 pat
[145 ] Jan. 1. In festo Circumcisionis Domini, primitias suas celebravit D. Richardus Nicholls
Eodem die primitias suas cantavit D. Franciscus Rider
6. Rationes a D. Præside missæ de statu Collegii ad Sacræ Congregationis de propaganda fide
8. Dominica 1ª post Epiphaniam primitias suas cantavit D. Robertus Tolson , alias Brathwait
IO e Collegio discessit D. Richardus Nichols versus Parisios iter carpens .
23. D. Præses vendidit Georgio Trent bibliopolæAnglo in usum Dni Carre Parisiis350 libros Dni Mathæi Kellisoni in ram partem, una cum aliis libris superfluis et nulli usui Collegio, pro quibus omnibus recipiendi sunt mille et quinquaginta floreni
Febr 10. Celebravit festum St Gulielmi Ducis Aquitaniæ: placenta, vinum Gallicum, Hispanicum etc. constiterunt 18 flor.― 16 pat
13. e Collegio abiit Symon Tottal , Duacenus, ad habitum Dominicanorum suscipiendum Duaci.
Martii 1 die, Regiæ literæ de privato Consilio Bruxellensi ad D. Præsidem delatæ hac superscriptione . A Nre Cher et bien aymè le President et Superieur du Seminaire des Anglois en nre ville de Douay Intus hoc modo
Par le Roy.
Cher et Bien aymè, nous vous depeschons ceste a fin que vous rendiez incontinent en ceste ville, et icy estant avisé vous vous addresserez a Nre Sccretaire de Guerre, qui vous declarera
Thus in the original.
ce que luy avons donnè en charge de vous dire a nre part Atant cher et bien aymè nre bon dieu vous ayt en sa guard. de nre ville de Bruxell quasi hic erat Nomen Secretarii le 28 Febvrier, 1651 , cito. Consilii Privati [146] Martii 4. Equis conductis D. Præses et D. Dr Daniel cum famulo Jacobo le Symonhinc profecti sunt versus Bruxellas
9. A Collegio discessit versus Bruxellas Augustinus Belson hic Clifford, post studium philosophiæ cursus exactum.
IO Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Mauritius Thril, * hic Web, de Leusom in comitatu Sussexiæ et diocesi Cantuariensi
23. Bruxellis revertitur D. Præses cum D. Daniel postquam Secretarius Consilii Privati in mandatis dedisset D. Præsidi ut ageret cum Rdmo D. Episcopo Chalcedonensi de retrahendo D. Georgium Gage a partibus Regis Portugalliæ, et quod D. Præses in posterumnullum per literas cum D. Gage retineret commercium .
April 8. Jacobus le Symon, famulatum D. Præsidis reliquit et admittitur servus Collegii ad inserviendumægrotis.
Eodem die admitt [it]ur Gerardus Fennell, Hybernus, in famulum Dni. Præsidis
April 30. A Parisiis ad Collegium venit D. Carre quondam hic procurator, et cum eo , MonsieurLeonardBibliopola Parisiensi [s].
6 die hinc abiit versus Antwerpiam
9. Ex sumptibus D. Carre facta est recreatio in refectorio, dantur artocreæ cum vino, senioribus et sacerdotibus insupercapones assati
Maii 3 die a Collegio discessit Bruxellas Georgius Ravenscroft , hic Rider, post studium in philosophia finitum et partem hujus anni in theologia
15. A Collegio discessit in Angliam Anthonius Penny hic Smith, philosophus [147] Maii 20. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Thomas Jones , hic Johnson , Wallus, de Kingstoneet in parochia ejusdem nominis in comitatu Monumeti et diocesi Landaphiensi .
22 die abiit hinc in Angliam Stephanus Wharton hic Rud , Westmorlandiensis, ob defectum pensionis
Eodem die etiam abiit in Angliam Franciscus Smith,hic Blaxton , ob defectumpensionis suæ .
23 die continua febri laborans mortuus est Thomas Yonge hic Vavasour .
Eodem die D. Præses recepit literas ab Emtssmo D. Cardinali Caponi, per quas significatur D. Præsidi , quod rationes suæ de
In the Sussex visitations [1633 ?] (Harl Soc , liii, 75) is a confused and unsigned pedigree , showing that Thomas Threele of Lewsham [? Lewisham, Kent], byhis first wife, Margaret daughter of ...., Gifford of London, doctor, had these sons , (1) John ; (2) William; (3) Thomas; (4) Charles; (5) Andrew ; (6) Lawrence; (7) Henry ; (8) Morrice Lewis-ham or Lewisom would be in Canterbury diocese as above . Maurice or Morrice Threele mayfrom residence have so describedhimself; but, as a Sussex man, of the diocese of Chichester , as in the First Diary. Mistakes are prevalent however, as Boxill and Boxley in Sussex, probably Bexhill in Sussex and Boxley in Kent.-J.S.H.
statu Collegii in plena Congregatione perlegebantur , et quod D. Præses jure merito exemplum ab aliis imitandum esse præbuisset.
26 die publice exhibita sunt carmina parietibus affixa per D. Gulielmum Marsh, magistrum rhetorices , et Magistrum Joannem Hawley, poesios professorem, folia latinorum 260, græcorum vero carminum 31 .
Eodem die ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Gulielmus* Canninge hic Fowler, de Foscut in parochiaFemingtonin comitatuWarwicensi
Eodem die etiam ex Anglia venit Evannus Messenger, hic Joannes Smithson de parochia Rippon in comitatu Eboraci [148] Junii 2° die, theses logicas publice defendebant tempore matutino Nicholaus Tempest hic Wilmot et Gulielmus Messenger, hic Smithson, post prandium Joannes et Carolus Towneley hic Ashton
3 die Richardus Gildon, hic Worsley, et Philippus Constable , Dno JoanneSingletono, præside
II. A Collegio nostroLisbonensiper Angliam huc venitCarolus
Genings hic Newport, filius Anthonii & Genings de Dunmuwincomitatu Essexiæ, logicæ operamdaturus, alendus ex sumptibusCollegii
Eodem die de Lisbona una per Angliam venit huc Gulielmus
Gascoigne, hicMeynel , filius Guliel Gascoigne de Hiltonin comitatu Eboracensi ex sumptibus Collegii alendus operamque daturus logicæ
Eodem die ex Anglia venit EdwardusLucy filius Henrici Lucy capitanei in comitatu Staffordiensi, natus Gandavi, per sex annos Parisiis apud Benedictinos Anglos , postea in Collegio Anglo Lisbonæ per tres vixit, studio philosophiæ incumbereprætendens
Julii 10. A Dno Præside consulitur Doctor Briet utrum Collegium teneatur solvere pensiones suas Benedictinis Recollectis et Carthusianis (ex illo redditu a D. Richardo Irelando fundato quem ex Monte Pietatis Duaceno recipimus) juxta valorem pæcuniarum regium sicut recipimus vel juxta currentem pro tempore. Respondit Collegium teneri solvere juxta valorem regium quemadmodum recipitur , quia capitale fundationis erat monetæ Regiæ et redditus solutus in monetaregia nobis
Eodem die de eadem materia consulitur D. Fouquier, juris Licentiatus Respondit, praxim valere in contrarium, videlicet solvendi redditus in monetacurrenti
Richard Canningof Foxcotein the parishof Ilmington , co Warwick, æt 8 in 1619 , married Grace daughter of Edward Fowler of St. Thomas' Priory, Stafford , byhis second wife, Dorothy daughterof Thomas Eyre of Hassop , co Derby They had , (1) William, in the text; (2) Nicholas; (3) Richard, heir to his father; (4) John, O.P.; (5) and Thomas (Harl Soc , xii, 225 ; Commoners , iii, 263 ; J.Gillow's St. Thomas Priory).J.S.H
The Messengers were of Fountains Hall in the parish of Ripon.J.S.H
§ Anthony son of RichardJennynsof Dunmow and his wife Elizabeth daughter of Thomas Wiseman of Northend, Saffron-Walden, married Elizabeth daughter of Robert Brooke of Barkway, Royston, Herts , and had ,(1) Richard, æt 21, 1634 ; (2) Anthony; (3)John; (4) Robert; (5) Jerome; (6) George ; (7) Charles; and four daughters (Harl. Soc ., xiii, 428-9).J.S.H.
Julii 13. Abiit a Collegio prædictus Edwardus Lucy, Bruxellas petens, lassus hic studendo . [149] Julii 26. A Collegio discessit Mathæus Lockwood, hic Atkinson, e syntaxi, Bruxellas cum intentione pro aliquo tempore illic commorandi.
Eodem die ob defectum valetudinis e Collegio discessit Joannes Draycot, hicParker, syntaxianus,versus Bruxellasexindein Angliam
Eodem die profectus est versus Bruxellas et inde in Angliam Joannes Lockwood, hic Atkinson, grammaticus, ob defectum valetudinis.
Julii 22. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt Guliel Gascoigne, hic Meynel, Eboracensis, Carolus Genings, hic Newport dioecesis Londinensis, Evannus Messenger hic Joannes Smithson, Eboracensis , Mauritius Thrill hic Webb, Cicestrensis, Gulielmus Canninge,Wigorniensis, et Thomas Jones hic Johnson , Landaffensis in Wallia
22. Eodem dieexAnglia ad Collegiumvenit Joannes * Dancastle , 16annumagens, hicGriffin , filius unicus JoannisDancastle armigeri, de parochiaBinfield in comitatu Berceriæ
23 die ad Collegium de Lutetia Parisiorum venerunt Thomas Summerset hic Johnson , et Carolus, frater ejus, 2us et 3us filius illustrmi D. Dni Joannis Summerset (et Dnæ MariæArundel) de Pantley in comitatu- [blank].
30 die ex Gallia per Atrebatum huc venit D. Joannes Davis , quondam in Collegioconfessarius ordinarius.
50] Aug. 7 die examinatur pro missione D. Edwardus Barker, hic Vernalty, per D. Præsidem, assistentibus D. Doctore Daniel, et D. Michaele Genings
9 die hinc in Angliam discessit D. Edwardus Vernalty senior et præfectus generalis , facultatibus ordinariis munitus, cum potestate benedicendi 1,000 numismata ad communicandas indulgentias, obedientia promissa Ramo D. Episcopo Chalcedonensi et Vicariis ejus in Anglia
Cum ipso abiit hinc in Angliam D. Joannes Davis ad functionem ibi exercendam , cui D. Præses dono dedit viginta quinque florenos ad supplendam necessitatem suam in itinere suo.
Cum iis eodem die discessit a Collegio, Edwardus Barret, hic Gower, logicus, quia ulterius in animo non habuit studere.
Eodem die ad supplendumlocum Præfecti Generalis , dum alius habeatur exeratur D. Franciscus Johnson . II die conclusiones theologicas publice defendebant Magister Henricus Vere mane ; post prandium Magister Thomas Dunham , aliasChurchhill,tractu de sacramentis : præside D. Michaele Genings
John Dancastle of Wellhouse[? Well House in Hampstead -Norris] had , -(1) John, of Welhouse; (2) Griffin, of the Grange in the parish of Shaw . J. Orlebar Payne shows that thefamily owned the manorof Binfield in 1717 (Harl. Soc , Ivi, 190 , 194 ; Nonjurors, 7).J.S.H
In Cath. Rec Soc., ix, 127 , I was unableto showwhere Sir John Somerset was seated. By this it seems that Pauntley, Gloucestershire , fills the hiatus .J.S.H.
21. Hinc abiit in Angliam Carolus Salvin hic Hebron, Dunelmensis, poeta , ob adversam valetudinem
25 die hinc abiit versus Parisios Edwardus et Thomas Smith, hic Gray, Eboracenses . *
Sept. 2.D. Præses cæpit collicapassione et postea calculolaborare ab hoc tempore sensim invalescebat sua infirmitas stomachi usque ad mortein
[151] Sept. 7. A Collegio discesserunt versus Parisios, Georgius Browne, qui huc venit 26 Julii 1648; Gulielmuset Thomas Brooke, qui huc venerunt 7 Sept. 1650, syntaxiani
14 die ex Anglia venit huc Edwardus Paston * , Ioum annuni agens, hic Evrard, filius 2us Gulielmi Paston , armigeri de Apleton in comitatu Norfolciæ.
27 die ad Collegiuinex Anglia venit D. Joannes Morgan annum 23um agens, filius Thomæ Morgan generosi defuncti et Joanna Smith, de platea Holborniensi in Londino, operam daturus docendi logicam Literas humaniores , philosophiamet theologiam in Collegio Anglorum Lisbonæ addiscebat , ibique juramentorum alumnorum præstabat , et minoribus ordinibus insigniebatur sacris
Eodem die venit ad Collegium ex Anglia Mathæus Chamber , de militia Anglicana, operam daturus logicæ, filius Rich Chamber ministri Protestantici, et Susannæ de Spofforth in comitatu Eboracensi, Londini natus , Cantabrigiæ per aliquot annos educatus [Rest of page blank ] [152] 1° die Octobris 1651 aperiuntur scholæ, post sacrum a D. Præside decantatumpro fælici studiorum successu , et exhortationem moreconsueto a D. Præside singulisin classibus factam ; professores suam cujusque provinciam docendi susceperunt D. Doctor Daniel professor primarius theologiæ, D. MichaelGenings, 2rlus , D. Joannes Singleton solus philosophiæ , D. Joannes Morgan solus logices, Magister Joannes Hawley, rhetorica et poesios, MagisterEdwardus Collington, syntaxios, Magister Joannes Richardson , grammatices et rudimentorum Confessarius ordinarius præfatus D. Daniel Extraordinarii , D. Genings et D. Franciscus Johnson, supplens locum Præfecti generalis , dictus D. Johnson, præfectus studiorum dictus D. Joannes Singleton, Catechista , dictus D. Genings
Octob 7. Abiit a Collegio Gerardus Fennellfamulus D. Præsidis ad Collegium Hybernorum Duacenum
Eodem die suo loco iterum admittitur Jacobus le Symon , Duacenus , famulus D. Præsidis
Eodem die ex Anglia ad Collegium venit Robertus Chamber, frater Mathæi, qui venit Sept. 27 proxime elapso, ad logicam studendam
Eodem die ex Anglia venit Audlæus Butler hic Thomas Audley,
Elsewherethe Smiths alias Gray are described as of co. Durham. They are evidently ofthe family of Smythe of Eshe, co Durham; Acton-Burnell, Salop; and Wooton-Wawen, co Warwick, who have been baronets since 1661 , now represented by Sir Walter Smythe .J.S.H. He subsequentlybecame President of the College , 1688-1714
Hybernus, ad syntaxim, filius Theobaldi Butler generosi Hyberni de Callaniain comitatu Kilkeniæ. 12 die vocati sunt tres doctores medicinæ, videlicet Doctor Remy, Doctor le Surq, et Doctor le Count, ad simul consultandum de morbo D. Præsidis [153] Octobris 13. Abiit a Collegio logicus Edwardus Belson , hic Clifford, petens Bruxellas.
19. Ex Anglia venit ad Collegium Rhetor Joannes Evans , Wallus, 22um annum agens, filius Hugonis Evans et Gueathanæ , media sortis, de parochia Sti Joannis Evangelistæ in comitatu Brechiniæ, ex contractu admittitur Alumnus pro quingentisflorenis
29. Juramentum professionis fidei præstiterunt D. Joannes Morgan, Londinensis , Mathæus Chamber, Londinensis , Robertus Chamber , Londinensis , Joannes Evans,Wallus Menevensis, Audlæus Butler, hic Tho : Audeley, HybernusKilkennensis
29. De Parisiis ad Collegium venerunt Gulielmus Bloomer hic Greene , 18 annum agens,filius 2us Dni. Joannis * BloomerArmigeri defuncti et Franciscæ Browne, filiæ illustrmi D. Dni de Monte acuto de Hardropein comitatu et diocesi Glocestriæ, ad rhetoricam ; et Anthonius Bloomerhic Greene, frater ejus, ad poesim
Nov. II die ex Anglia revertiturAndreas Kniveton alias Whitehall qui abiit Maii 20, 1648, propter defectum valetudinis, logicus.
Dec. 9. Ad Collegium ex Anglia per Hollandiam venit Richardus Russel philosophus (filius Richardi Russel de BucklandiainComitatu Berceriæ generosi) vixerat in Collegio Anglo Vlisiponensiper9 annos
ΙΟ Venit ad Collegium D. Joannes Jowsey, sacerdos, ad conducendumMarmaducemBeckwith hic ThomamNateby in Angliam. [154] Dec. 13. A Collegio e syntaxi iter tendens in Angliam discessit Marmadux Beckwith hic Thomas Nateby, sub conductu D. Joannis Jowsey.
Eodem die cum ipsis discessit Nicholaus Tempest, hic Wilmot, philosophuset Collegii alumnus, iter carpens in Angliam ad suam valetudinem recuperandam .
18 die D. Præsestestamentumsuum condidit, statuitque Collegium hæredem omnium bonorum suorum, post funerales expensas et legata (prout in dicto testamento exprimuntur) soluta, reliquit Collegio (deductis ut supra) in pecuniis hic et in Anglia (ut videre est, Jan. 1 , 1653, in rationibus Eximio D. D. Georgio Leyborne tunc præsidi redditis) novies mille octingentos quadraginta duos florenos, cum octodecim assibus Executorem testamenti constituit Gulielmum Hamerton, cum licentia tradendi totum quod restabatoneris, præsidi venturo Dns Hydeus reliquitbibliothecam suam ad usum præsidis venturi, etc. [155] Dec. 22. Longo stomachali morbo laborans moritur D. GulielmusHyde, præses
Eodem die venerunt ex parte Magnifici Rectoris D. Licentiatus
* There is a pedigree of Blomer of Hatherop in the visitation of 1623 (Harl Soc , xxi, 21) No such connection with the family of the Viscounts Montagu is shown; but would probably be of a later date. It is not, however, given in Burke's Extinct Peerage.J.S.H
Wariner, fiscallus Universitatis, D. Georgius Honoré , secretarius universitatis et France Bedellus , ad omnes Abacos Cistulas, et riscos D. Hydei nuper Præsidis obsignandos et sigillo universitatis muniendos , jus pretendentes ad hoc faciendum, quia defunctus fuit Doctor Universitatis Duacenæ, sic prædicta obsignarunt cera' et prædictumimposuerunt.
24 die circa meridiem depositum D. Hydei nuper Præsidis dignissimi terræ committitur in templo Sti Jacobi in sacello Beatæ Mariæ Virginis, præsentibus Rectore MagnificoD. Remyet omnibus Doctoribus et officialibus Universitatis cum ingenti concursu civium ; concio funebris per Capucinum facta est, chorus totus in circuitu pro more obducitur pannis nigris Post sepulturam efferuntur panes cum vino omnibus invitatis juxta consuetudinem universitatis Omnes expensæ funeris solutæ sunt ab executore, et marmor sepulchro Præsidis defuncti, impositum est 2 die Dec., 1653, cum inscriptione, sicut ibidem appareat legenti
26. Comparuit per citationem Guliel : Hamerton executor testamenti dicti D. Hydei defuncti, coram Rectore Magnifico, Doctore Remy, et suo assessore Doctore Briet , et suscepit executionem dicti testamenti
27. Hora prima post prandium ad Collegium reversi sunt prædicti officiales universitatis, videlicet fiscallus , secretarius, et Bedellus ad auferandum sigillum cistis, etc., impositum, et conficiendum inventarium omnium bonorum D. Hydei, defuncti ; et insumpserunt hoc efficiendo circiter 4 horas, postea bis vel ter redierunt sed nihil fecerunt; pro suis autem vacationibus exegerunt 153 florenos monetæ Regiæquæ summain monetacurrenti tunc temporis perveniebatad plus quam 200 florenos sicut videre est in taxatione Febr. 28 sequenti
[1652]
Jan. 1. Jacobus le Symon factus est servus valetudinarii qui fuit famulus Præsidis defuncti
Jan. 14. Redierunt officiales prædicti et hac vice ostenderunt parvam chartulam 8 vel 10 linearum ,in qua scriptam est prædictam summam sibi deberi , sine subsignatione , sine aliqua authoritate et forma taxationis, sineque omni mentione facta de particularibus ex quibus talis summa accresceret Unde executor humaniter ab ipsis petebat ut omnia particularia ad longum in scriptis traderent et abipsis subsignata , dicens hoc sibinecessarium esse, quia rationem de his cæterisque aliis præsidi venturo redditurus esset ; quod promittentes abierunt
[156] Jan. 15. Theses publice defendebantde octo libris physicorum, Henricus Holden , Lancastrensis , et Richardus Brathwait, hic Tolson, Carleolensis , D. Joanne Singletono præside. 23. D. Doctor Daniel admisit Thomam Berry, qui ad Collegium venit Nov. 16, 1647, inter commensales Collegii, hac conditione ut in musica et quocumquein posterum idoneus evadat, Collegio inserviret, quamdiuexigatur ab ipso
Feb. 8 die ad Collegiumdelatæ sunt literæ a superioribusCleri Anglicani missæ ad seniores, hac inscriptione : Dilectis fratribus nostris, senioribus Collegii Duaceni, per quas significabant quod cupiebant D. Daniel supplere locum Præsidis usque dum alius a Stmo Dno Papa constitueretur, et quod prædicto D. Daniel interim solveretur pensio ordinaria Præsidis, videlicet 200 flor per annum. Præfatæ literæ datæ erant
Londini, Jan. 23, 1652
Henricus Mettham Franciscus Hoard
Hoc modo signatæ:
13. A Collegio in Angliam discessit Haire, logicus Georgius Fisher. Gulil Harrison. Petrus Peterson Georgius Warham. Gulielmus Timperley hic
16. Ad Collegium redierunt prædicti officiales Universitatis , afferentes omnia particularia taxationis, pro suis vacationibus in conficiendo prædicto inventario, scripta in duobus foliis sed ratione cartætam vilis tamque obliteratescriptionis, non legenda ; deinde non subscripserant nominasua, quemadmodumab ipsis desideratum fuit. His visis prædictus executor summopere rogavit, ut omnia traderent in bona charta nitide conscripta, suisque nominibus in calce suppositis ; undeconquestisunt de dilatione solutionis suorum salariorum, nihilominus promittentes hoc effectum dare iterum abierunt
17. Ad Collegium venit Anthonius Knowles quem huc misit D. Comes de Andover Bruxellis
Feb. 26venitad CollegiumPhilippus Giles, Duacenus, ad munus janitoris subeundum , loco Gulielmi Craftes, qui ægrotabat . [157] Feb. 28 iterum ad Collegium venerunt prædicti officiales universitatis, vdzt fiscallus, secretarius et Bedellus adferentes omnia particularia taxationis prædictæ in bona charta nitide conscripta cum suis nominibus in calce appositis, in manus præfati executoristradiderunt, urgentes præsentem solutionem , quam ipse nec recusabat , nec promittebat, sed humiliter rogabat quatenus ipsi dignarent habere patientiam per aliquot dies, usque dum ipse acquisisset pæcunias talis speciei, quæ minus cederet in damnum Collegii (quia tunc temporis multum interesset interunam et aliam pæcuniæ speciem solvendam juxta valorem regium, propter majorem valorem arbitrarie sine regis consensu a populo introductum) hoc ægre ferentes abierunt ; et vesperi ad Collegium promotorem universitatis cum duobus satellitibus habentem chyrographum Rectoris sigillo munitum, ad prædictas pecunias vi extorquendas , miserunt, et in mandatis dederunt a Collegio sine pæcuniis predictis non discedere : tamen Rector post 3 horas ipsos revocabataffirmanssæpissime D. Doctori Daniel et D. Singletono, his verbis, me plane nescientetotum hoc fecerunt, nec taxationem approbavi , nec vidi , sed Fiscallus vel secretarius aliud prætendens abstulitsigillum hac de re me plane inconsulto
Postridie executor cum consensu et approbatione Doctoris Daniel aliorumque seniorum per Notarium Apostolicum factam interjecit appellationem ad illustmum D. Bichum internuntium Apostolicum Bruxellis
Martii I venit ad Collegium ex Anglia D. Thomas Thirkil ad munus Præfecti Generalis obeundum
Martii 3. Mittitur Quintinus Angraffe lixa ad deferendam appellationemprædictam Bruxellas.
5 die officiales universitatis executorem quæsitabant ipsum incarcerare minitantes.
6 die præfatus executor a Collegio discessit per Insulas versus Bruxellas ad obtinendam a Consilio privato protectionem Regiam pro semetipso et Collegio, ne universitas aliquod violentius intentaret, dum causa in curia PrivatiConsiliiageretur
6 juxta ordinem D. Doctoris Daniel reliquorumque seniorum Collegii eodem die discessit a Collegio iter tendens Neoportum Magister Rich : More, ad consultandum D. Edmundum Irelandum avunculum suum , de sua sufficentiaad sacros ordines suscipiendos ; quia minus idoneus hic a senioribus judicabatur [158] Martii 6 die etiam Gulielmus Craftes condidit testamentum suum , etex duobusmillibus florenorum, quos illi Collegium debebat legavit Anglis Monialibus Lovanii 400 flor Anglis MonialibusBrugis 500, Jesuitis Anglis Sti. Audomari 100 flor reliquum Collegio sicut testamentum inspicienti patebit ; executorem Doctorem Daniel constituit
8 die Guliel Craftes gangræna laborans pes abscinditur
10 die cœpit D. Thirkill exercere munus Præfecti Generalis senior , loco D. Francisci Johnson illud relinquentis. II die Gulielmus Craftes excessit e vivis ; quia servus Collegii non esset D. Daniel ad magistratus misit , ut ipsum ab universitate defenderet; scabini miserunt officialem suum , qui pro more cistas defuncti obsignavit et sigillo magistratuum munivit Postea venerunt officiales universitatis prætendentes jus obsignandi et sigillandi prædicta , Collegio minitantes mulctasquianonadmitterentur exercere suam prætensam authoritatem.
Eodem die Bruxellis revertitur Quintinus Angraffe lixa cum prohibitione, jubente ne quid contra D. Hamerton vel Collegium intentet universitas lite pendente, sub poena 100 ducatorum et excommunicationis .
12 die inter nonam et decimamhoram mane sepelitur Gulielmus Craftes , in ecclesia Sti Jacobi
Eodem hinc discesserunt in Angliam ob adversam valetudinem , Gulielmus Smithson , philosophus , qui huc venit Nov. 27 , 1648, et Joannes , frater ipsius syntaxianusqui luc venit May 26, 1651
Martii 24. Per Antwerpiam ex Anglia venit Rich Allibond, 16umannum agens, hic Petrus Ford, filius 2u8 Jobi Allibond, generosi, et Margareta Chamber protestantium ; natus est in parochia Spawforth in comitatu Eboraci
April 2 die RectorMagnificus et consiliumUniversitatiscomparere
citaverunt D. Daniel et reliquos seniores et adducere infra 3 dies omnes studiosios immatriculationem subire coram Rectore, sub poena 8 flor per capita singula. April 3 hinc in Angliam abiit Josephus Creswell , qui huc venit Junii 28 , 1648.
[159] April 6. E Collegio discessit Richardus Tolson in Angliam iter carpens per Antwerpiam ; ipse ad Collegiumvenit Julii 19, 1648
7 die dimittitur Jacobus le Symon ad sibi providendum in civitate Duacena cum permissione redeundi ad prandium pro 15 diebus vel 3 septimanisdum servitium quærat alibi
16 die D. Hamerton mane hora 8 exhibuit petitionem Collegii (ad protectionem regiam implorandam) illustmo D. D. Wacktendoncke, Vicepræsidi Consilii Privati, et antehoramIIammatutinam , decretumest a Consilioemanare statim prohibitionem universi[ta]ti, et in registris relatum Postridie literæ regiæ clausæ mittuntur universitati in hunc modum Gallicescriptæ.
Par le Roy
Venerable chers et bien aymez nous vous envoyons avec ceste , la requeste a nous presenteè de la part des Superieurs et estudiants entretenus au College des Anglois en Nre Ville et Université de Douay, affin de la veoir avec les pieces y attachees , et advertir ceux de nre counseil privè ce qu'est de plaints y contenu , endedans le mois de la reception de ceste pendant lequel seront tenues en surceance toutes les executions et poursuites mentionneès par la mesme requeste Atant Venerable Chers et bien aymez Notre Signeur Dieu vous ayt en sa guard.
De Bruxelles le 16 d'Avril 1652 .
Signè
Il. Comte.
La superscription-
A Venble nos chers et bien aymes le Recteur et Counseil de Notre Université de Douay.
Hoc tam cito obtentum et expeditum fuit mediantibus literis
Rdi D. Patris Rudisendi ex parte Collegii ad illustrmum D. Archiepiscopum Mechliniensem datas
22. Hæ litteræ clausæ traditæ sunt in manus RectorisMagnifici per Joannem de Gouy Lictorem regium Duacenum , unde procella adversariorum in plenam malatiam* transformatur [160] April 26 ex Anglia venit ad Collegium magister Edwardus Whalle hic Robinson , filius Thomæ Whalle, nobilis et Philippæ*
So written for" malitiam "
Edward Brampton of Brampton, and his wife Joan daughter of Christopher DaubeneyofSharrington, both died in 1622. He was succeeded successively by the last remaining of his six sons ,-Charles and Edward, who both dying without issue , their two sisters became coheiresses The younger, Alice, married Bray The elder, Philippa, married ThomasWhall of Catton near Norwich, and Middeton near Lynn as above These had, Augustine Whall, who married Margaret daughter of Philip Paris (or Parris) of Pudding-Norton near Fakenham , by his wife Magdalen daughterofCharles Waldegraveof Stanninghall, Suffolk AugustineWhallhad sons , Augustine and Charles , Benedictinesat Lamspring (Weldon only gives Dom. George
Brampton Catholicorum, de Midletonia in comitatu Norfolciensi; præfatus Edwardus a 12 et amplius annis a Collegio in Angliam, theologus tertii anni ad valetudinemsuam recuperandam [discessit] Eodem tempore et die venerunt nepotes predicti Edwardi* Whalle, Gulielmus Whalle, hic Thomas Robinson , et Carolus Whalle hic Robinson , fratres parentibus Catholicis orti, et in fide Catholica a primis annis instructi : patris eorum nomen Augustinus Whalle, de Midletonia in comitatu Norfolciæ generosus, matris vero Margareta Paris
Maii 1 die e Collegio in Angliam discessit Philippus Constable (qui huc venit Junii 9, 1648) philosophus : avocatus erat occasione mortis suifratrismajoris natu
Eodem die in Angliam hinc abiit Edwardus Hunt, poeta, qui huc accessit Julii 27, 1649
May 5. Constituitur magister Edwardus Robinson præceptor syntaxios loco magistri Edwardi Collington, qui exinde cœpit frequentare classem theologicam
18. Ex Anglia ad Collegium venit ad syntaxim Edwardus* Elrington , hic Lutton, 14 annumagens,filius natu maximusRodulphi Elrington, aquarum distillatarum mercatoris , et Franciscæ Tomson , Catholicorum Londini in Longe Acre habitantium, ubi Edwardus natus et ab infantia in fide Catholica educatus [161 ] May 27. Affiguntur Carmina parietibus loco ordinario publice legenda magistro Rhetorices et poesios magistro. Joanne Hawley, folia latine 172. Græce scripta 30
Maii 29. Hinc discessit Edwardus Tildsley hic Ley, rhetor, qui venit ad Collegium 27 Julii, 1649 , cum animo revertendi ad logicampost negotia sua transacta.
Junii 8. Ex Anglia ad [Collegium ] accessit Albanus Draycot hic Parker, 18umannum agens, filius 7us Edwardi § Draycot, generosi e vivis excessi, et Elinoræ, Catholicæ , habitantis in parochia Bangor in comitatu Denbiensi Præfatus Albanus natus est in comitatu Salopiæ, et in fide Catholicaab ineunteætate instructus.
Whall in 1666), and Philippa The Brampton estates having been alienated , Alice Bray, then a widow, and her nephewAugustine Whall, desired the ownerto use the family arms as a mementoof the family settledthere since the time of William Rufus (Bloomfield's History of Norfolk, i, 435, 6; vii, 116; Harl Soc , xxxii, 49-51, 214) -J.S.H.
See the previous note
As Ralph Eldrington of St. Giles's in the Fields, distiller, he and his wife Frances appear as recusants 4 Dec. 1640 (Midx Records, iii, 149).J.S H.
John Draycote of Paynsley , Staffs , married Elizabeth daughterof Edward ap Llewellyn alias Hosyer of Preston -Gobalds or Gubbals, Salop, and had,-Philip, his heir, ob.v.p.; George ; Richard; and Albion (sic). Philip Draycote married firstly Catharinedaughterof Edward Basset of Fledborough, Notts His second wife was Anne daughterof Edward Norris of Speke , Lancs , and widow of Sir ThomasButier of Beausy or Bewsy, near Warrington She bore him,-Edward , who seems to be the one in the text, having the son Alban named after an uncle; Margaret, and Anne Mr. John W. Clay, F.S.A., editor of the Familia Minorum Gentium , identifiestheir son with the Edward Draycot, a recusant , of Shrewsbury, assessed on 20 shillings lands, 19 June 1641 (Wm Salt Soc Visit Staffs ., 111; Harl Soc , xxviii , 261 ; xl, 1254).J.S.H
Junii 14. E Collegio discessit Mauritius Webbe alias Thrill recte in Angliam proficiscens ob ingravescentem quotidie calculi morbum; ipse ad Collegiumvenit10Martii 1651 .
Junii 25. Theseslogicas propugnabantpublice HenricusHowell , Gregorius Wharton, Mathæus Chamber, Wm Meynell, Charles Newport, Robert Worsley ; sub D. JoanneMorgano
Julii 2. Abiit in Angliam Carolus Johnson (oculorum morbo laborans) sub conductu magistri Thomæ Dunham, theologi 4 anni.
3 die hinc profectus est magister Henricus Vere, Gandavum versus, cum parentibus aliquamdiu commorari, quia ipse finiisset 4 annos in theologia et non erat potestas in Collegio præsentandi ad sacros ordines
Julii 6 die totam philosophiam solus defendebat Richardus Gildon hic Worsley sub D. Joanne Singleton.
Julii 10 die hinc discessit Richardus Gildon, hic Worsley, in Angliam post universamphilosophiamab ipso cum magno applausu publice propugnatam.
10 die abiit in missionem Angliæ D. Marsh, postquamdocuit hic rhetoricam et per unum annum cum dimidio theologiæ operam dedit. Ipsehuc venit Maii 18 , 1649 .
Eodem die abiit in missionem D. Franciscus Rider post4 annos in studio theologiæ exactos
Julii11. ExAnglia ad Collegium venit 2a vice Joannes Lockwood hic Atkinson qui infirmitatepectoris laborans abiit hinc inAngliam Julii 16, 1651
12 totam philosophiam defendebat mane Henricus Holden , post prandium Joannes Ashton.
13 die mane defendebat Carolus Ashton sub D. Joanne Singleton.
13 die ex Anglia venerunt ad Collegium Jacobus Thwaits, hic Smith, 15 annum agens, filius natu maximus Joannis Thwaits armigeri et Lucia Smith, de Longe Marston in comitatu Eboraci, et Carolus et Franciscus Thwaits, fratres Jacobi prædicti. [162] Julii 13. Eodem dievenit ad CollegiumJohannes Brathwayt hic Tolson , filius 4us Richardi Brathwayt , armigeri, schismatici de parochia Strickland in comitatu Westmorlandiæ et diocesi Carleolensi ,23umannumagensadrudimenta, relicta militia Anglicana in qua pro rege multapassus est in carceribus , etc.
19. ExAnglia venit ad CollegiumJoannes Gascoigne grammaticus, 16 annum agens (filius 4us D. Thomæ Gascoigne, Baronetti, et Annæ Simons, Catholicorum de Barnebowe in parochia Baricke et comitatu Eboraci) ab infantia in disciplina Catholicaeducatus
Julii 20 die eximius D. Das Georgius Leyborne recepit patentes suas de Emtssmo D. Cardinali Barberino Protectore, perquas constitutus est Præses CollegiiAnglorum Duaceni.
31 die hinc abiit in Angliam Joannes Stitch hic Saunders, non proficiens
This entry is written at the bottom of the page, its place in the text being indicated by the words, " 10 die abiitin missionem Anglieetc. utinfra . "
Eodem die ex Anglia reversus magister Thomas Dunham, qui adconducendum Carolum Johnson abiit Julii 2, 1652 .
Eodem die secunda vice ex Anglia venit Nicholaus Tempest hic Wilmot, qui infirmus discessit Dec. 13, 1651
Eodem vero die ex Anglia venit huc Joannes Yeatman, hic Cantrill, ad rudimenta (filius unicus Joannis Yeatman generosi et Annæ Cantril Catholicorum, de parochia Abingdon in comitatu Berceriæ) 17um annum agens ,hucusque in fidei Catholicæ rudimentis non instructus
Aug. 16. Ad Collegium venit ex Anglia Gulielmus Coldham hic Barnes, 18um annum agens, grammaticus, filius unicus Gulielmi Coldham , generosi, et Mariæ Gage Catholicorum, habitantium in parochia Stedham in comitatu Sussexiæ, ubi præfatus Gulielmus Barnes natus, et ab infantia sua in fide Catholicainstructus erat. [163] Aug. 16. Eodem die ex Anglia ad Collegium accessit Thomas Henslowe (hic Wm Tomson ) 17um annum agens ad grammaticam, filius unicus Thomæ Henslowe generosi Catholici, et Annæ Windall defunctæ de parochia Burhant in comitatu Hamptoniæ, ubi natus erat, in fide Catholica hactenus non instructus.
18 die hinc recta in Angliam abiit Audleus Butler hic Thomas Audley, syntaxianus, qui venit Oct. 7, 1651, propter defectum valetudinis
Sept. 7. e Collegio discessit Philippus Giles, Duacenus, janitor non bene patiens disciplinam Collegii de jejunio feriæ 6ªe et ejusmodi
Sept. 24. E Collegio discessit Thomas Jones, Wallus, hic Johnson, e syntaxi, qui ad Collegium venit Maii 20, 1651
Octobris 1° die post missam a D. Daniel pro more decantatam pro felici studiorum successu , omnes studiosi præsentibus senioribus in classem theologiæ convenerunt; quos D. Daniel alloquutus brevi sermone ostendit, durante absentia Præsidis omnia non posse de scholis, quæ oportuit statui ; sed sperare magistros hic nominatos, interim alacriter munus suum subituros Professor Tarlus theologiæ D. Daniel de sacramentis poenitentiæ , ordinis, extremæ unctionis et matrimonii , 2rtus D. MichaelGenings intractatu de fide, spe et charitate. Dictata philosophiæ Dni Morgan prælegit D. Joannes Singleton, dum aliquid hac de re, etc., a D. Præside in Anglia decernatur, magister logicæ D. Joannes Morgan , magister poesios magister Edwardus Robinson, magister syntaxios magister Joannes Richardson, grammaticæ magister Thomas Dunham, professor linguæ græcæ magister Joannes Howley, qui etiam frequentaturus est classem logicorum Confessarius ordinarius D. Daniel, extraordinarii D. Genings et D. Franciscus Johnson Præfectus Generalis , D. Thomas Thirkill ; præfectus studiorum prædictus D. Singleton Catechista ordinarius præfatus D. Genings.
William Coldham, the father, is described at the Sussex Visitation 1634 as 26 years of age, his wife being Mary daughter of John Gage of Croydon (i.e. Haling Manor), whose second wife was the widow Barnes Anne (see Appendix C; and Harl Soc , liii, 189).J.S H.
6. E Parisiisper Atrebatum huc venerunt Robertuset Valentinus Knightly, hic Parker filius Ius et 2us Roberti* Knightley armigeri, de Offchurch in comitatu Warwicensi, ab infantia sua in fide Catholica instructi et educati sunt.
29. Ad Collegium rediit magister Vere, qui abiit Julii 3 , 1652. Nov. 12 hinc discessit D. Joannes Singleton, in Angliam [163] Nov. 19 die cum venia Dnt Præsidis præfecturamet Collegium reliquit D. Thomas Thirkill in Angliam tendens, cujus loco Præfectus generalis suffectus est per literas Dni Præsidis, D. Franciscus Johnson
Nov. 22 dieexAnglia venit EdmundusPerkins hic More, 16annum agens, §ad poesim, filius natus maximus Edmundi Perkins, et Jana Kennion, Catholicorum, de villa quæ vulgo vocatur Brookein Comitatu Southaptoniæ , ab ineunte ætate principiis fidei Catholicæ imbutus est
Eodem die venit huc D. Carolus Williams, Wallus, sacerdos , filius Thomæ Williams, schismatici de Monmothia ; hic Carolus ad fidem Catholicamconversus et in literis in Monmothia educatus , studendi gratia missus est Lisbonam, ubi in Collegio Anglorum literas humaniores una cum logica addiscebat , tunc factus sacerdos in Angliam in missione Lisbona discessit ob inopiam Collegii, huc accedens ad philosophiam et theologiam audire, et iterum postquam idoneus est factus in Angliam redire, sub pensione 250 flor. per annum
23. Ad Collegium venit Joannes Basset hic Stansby 12um annum agens, (ex Anglia solvens captus est ab Hollandis sic per Midleburganet Flishingam hucvenit spoliatus ) filius unicus Anthonii Basset pharmocopola Londinensis et Mariæ Cobs de platea Strand in parochiaSti. Martini, ubi præfatus Joannes natus et ab infantia in fide Catholica instructus est ab utroque parente Catholico.
Dec. 30 die ex Anglia hora sexta vesperi ad Collegium venit eximius D. Georgius Leyborne, Collegii præses, cui in Aulam intrato pro more leguntur et exhibentur carmina congratulatoria magnum omnium exprimentia gaudium His peractis, a D. Præside brevi habita oratione, dimittunturscholastici
Eodem tempore cum D. Præside rediit Dns Joannes Singleton ad incoeptum munus prælegendi dictata logica D. Morgani continuandum, quod reliquitNov. 12, proxime discedens in Angliam. [164] Dec. 30. Eodem die ex Anglia etiam cum D. Præside
Robert Knightley of Offchurch-Bury, who married Anne daughterof Sir John PettonsofNorwich, at the visitation of 1619 only names his son John, ret 8 ; Edward ob . inf.; and Bridget His arms, consisting of twenty-three grand-quarterings, is given (Harl. Soc , xii, 401) .J.S H.
This is the second page so numbered
The figure has been altered Possiblyit shouldread 18
Anthony Bassett of St. Martin's in the Fields, apothecary , and [?Frances] his wife appear as recusants 4 Dec. 1640. He was convicted as such 5 May 1641 (Midx Records, iii, 151 , 156) Perhaps he is the same , as yeoman , 15 March 1674 (Ibid. , iv. 52).1.5.11
rediit, ut munus Præfecti Generalis, quod Nov. 19 reliquit, iterum subeat
Eodem die cum predictis rediit ad logicain Edwardus Ley, qui e Collegio discessit Maii 29, ultimo
Eodem die venit cum prædictis Jobus Allibond hic Joannes Ford, 14 annum agens, filius tertius Jobi Allibond, generosi et Margareta Chamber, protestantium, de parochiaSpaworth in comitatu Eboraci, grammaticus, nuper in fide Catholicainstructus
Eodem die venit cum D. Præside, famulus suus, qui vocatur
Anthonius Harris, ad logicam
Jan. 1. Per rationesI die Jan. datas 1653, et in manus Domini Præsidis traditas, constat, quod a 17 die Sept. 1646, quo tempore D. Gulielmus Hydæus factus est Præses , status Collegii (habita ratione debitorum solutorum, provisionum intra Collegium repositarum, et pæcuniæ presentis , quæ præ manibus videbatur) spatio sex annorum auctus sit per quadraginta duo mille ducentos septingentos septuaginta novem florenos sicut prædictas rationes inspicienti in particulari comparebit Ut hic debentinseri ad longum.
Jan. 7. a D. Præside suffectus est (ad docendam grammaticam) magisterHenricusVere, loco magistri Thomæ Dunham
Jan. 10. Ad Collegium venit Bedellus universitatis missus a Rectore et consilio, jubere quod 13 Jan. professores omnes Collegii compareant coram præfato Rectore , et juramentum præstent nil docendi contra fidem aut bonos mores ; hoc recusatur et querela Bruxellis missa est 21 die Jan. sequente 13 die mane in schedulis summa diligentia et arte depictis, et carmina Anglice Wallice, Latine, et Græce conscripta affiguntur super pannum viridem, in circuitum Collegii Ambulacri ; ubi omnes pro viribus exprimebant sua gaudia de adventu D. Præsidis. Post prandium a magistroEdwardo Robinson exhibetur Dramma in adventu D. Præsidis, qua potuit arte præparatum: in fine Drammatis prodeunt tripudiatores depictos characteres in manibus portantes, qui post aliquos in tripudio motus ob oculos spectatorum ostendunt characteres conficientes anagramma nominis D. Præsidis, et sic pro diversis vicibus durante tripudio , pro vario characterum situ, varia ostenderunt anagrammata, magna cuni dexteritate et artificio peracta [165] Jan. 14. Coram oinnibus studiosis , etc., in aulam convocatis leguntur patentes D. Præsidis
Eodem die iterum munus præfecti generalis subiit D. Thomas Thirkill loco D. Francisci Johnson
15 die a Collegio discessit Joannes Lockwood hic Atkinson syntaxianusob debilitatem pectoris: qui huc venit Julii 11, proxime elapso.
Nameomitted, but a previousentry shows that it refers to ThomasThirkill This is probably an uncancelledmistake
Febr 19. Theses publice defendebant de 8 libris physicorum Nicolaus Tempest , hic Wilmot, et Henricus Trafford, hic Howell, præside D. JoanneMorgan
Feb. 20. Abiit hinc in Angliam Gulielmus Waynman hic Menerell, syntaxianus, qui huc venit 26 Julii, 1648
Martii 5. Juramentum alumnorum præstiterunt magister Edward Whalle, Norwicensis , hic Robinson , Mathæus et Robertus Chamber , Eboracenses
Martii 5 die examinantur pro ordinibus suscipiendis magister Edwardus Whall, hic theologus 4th anni, magister Thomas Roudon, hic Feasby, 2 anni, magisterThomas Churchhil hic Dunham, theologus 4 anni completi, Edwardus Kynne hic Collington, theologus I anni, magister Henricus Vere, theologus 4 anni completi, Mathæus et RobertusChamber , philosophi
6 die præfati mittuntur Cameracum presentatione ad sacros ordines muniti
7dieMagisterRobinson,Dunham, Vere * et Mathæus etRobertus Chamber , minores ordines susceperunt Cameraci
8 die Sabbato omnes subdiaconatum susceperunt .
9 die Dominica diaconatum susceperunt .
12 in festo Su Gregorii omnes sacro presbyteratu insigniuntur
13. Reversi sunt omnes supradicti septem, sacerdotes [166] Martii 14. Ex Anglia ad logicam revertitur Mauritius Webbe , qui infirmus abiit Junii 14, proxime elapso.
16 die Dominica 3a quadragesimæ primitias suas cantavit D. Thomas Rouden hic Feasby, hora 10a .
23. Dominica 4a quadragesimæ tempore communis sacri , primitias suas celebravit D. Edwardus Kinne hic Collington ; hora 10a eodem mane primitias suas cantavit, D. Thomas Churchhill hic Dunham
25 die in Festo Annuntiationis B. MariæVirginis temporecommunis sacri primitias suas D. Henricus Vere, hora 10a eodem mane primitias suas cantavit D. Edwardus Whalle, hic Robinson.
30. Dominica 5 quadragesimæ de Passione Domini tempore communis sacri, suas primitias celebravit D. Robertus Chamber , codem manehora 10a primitias suas cantavit D. Mathæus Chamber
Eodem die vesperi ad Collegium ex Anglia venerunt adsyntaxim fratres, Henricus Carne, 16 annum agens, et Carolus, 15 annum agens, filius 4us et 5us Gulielmi Carne defuncti, armigeri, et Janæ Thomas , Catholicæ, de parochia Nach in comitatu Glamorganiæ , ab anno tantum in fide Catholicainstructisunt [167] Aprilis 10. Ad Collegium 2° rediit ex Anglia Thomas Smith, hic Gray, qui r ° venit hucAug. 23 , 1650.
Eodem die venit ad Collegium ex Anglia Ludovicus Slyne, 20um annum agens, admissus sartor Collegii.
13 die Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Robertus Lambert, pater ejus Nicolaus Lambert, Catholicus defunctus generosus ; mater
* This is probablyan error, asVere had receivedthe MinorOrders to Nov. 1649 .
vero hæretica, natus Bedfordiæ , educatus in comitatu Eboracensi , operam dedit militiæ in Anglia, incarceratus pro fide Catholica per sex decen menses, 24 annum agens,huc venit ad poesiin.
Maii 1 die mittitur in messein AnglicanamD. Thomas Churchill, hicDunham post studium 4 annorumin theologia scholastica absolutum, facultatibus ordinariis munitus ; docuerat grammaticam per tres menses
Eodem die hinc discessit in Angliam D. Edwardus Kynne hic Collington sacerdos, post annum cum dimidio in studio theologia scholastica absolutum (docuerat rudimenta et grammaticam per annum ; syntaxim vero per sex menses) facultatibus ordinariis munitis *
Eodem die mittuntur in Anglicanam messem D. D. Mathæus et Robertus Chamber sacerdotes (qui ad logicam huc venerunt Sept.27 et Oct.7, 1651) facultatibus ordinariismuniti, etobdefectum salutis et necessitatem Collegii nondum philosophiæ cursu absoluto, nullaque studii theologiæ opera dedita, in missionem destinantur. [168] Maii 1 die eodem hinc proficiscitur in Angliam Magister Joannes Towneleyhic Ashton, theologus I anni qui huc venit Aug. 6, 1649 .
Eodem die in Angliam discessit Edmundus Perkins, hic More , poeta(ob defectumvaletudinis) qui huc venit Nov. 22, 1652.
3. Hinc proficiscitur versus Bruxellas, D. Præses , D. Hamerton et famulus D. Præsidis, ad negotiandum processum contra universitatem .
23. Reversus est D. Hamerton
26die in festo St Augustini pro consuetudine affiguntur carmina parietibus Collegii publice legenda, magistro poesios D. Edwardo Robinson folia 150 latine, 18 græce conscriptahabentur
28 die ex Anglia venit Anthonius Thorold hic Benson (filius tertius D. Roberti Thorold equitis aurati in comitatu Lincolniensi) literas humaniores apud Jesuitas Anglos Audomari didicerat, postea Roman proficiscens logicæ per sex menses studuit : ab infantia fide Catholica instructus est
Junii 4. Juramentum professionis fidei præstitit Magister
Russell , Sarisburiensis , et etiam juramentum alumnorum eodem tempore
Eodem die juramentuin alumnorum præstiterunt Carolus
Genings, hicNewport, Londinensis , AndreasWhythall , hic Kniveton
Coventriensis , Henricus Trafford, hic Howell, Cestrensis, Gulielmus
Gascoigne hic Meynel , Eboracensis.
Junii 5. Mittuntur Caineracum ad minores ordines Magister
Henricus Holden, Gregorius Wharton, Carolus Newport, Robertus Worsley, Andreas Kniveton, Henricus Howell, Wm Meynel munitis"; thus in the original for" munitus" Sir Robert Thorold of Hough on the Hill, knighted 1 June 1641 , and raisedto a baronetcy three years later He married Catharine daughter of Henry Roper, second Lord Teynham, and had ,-Sir Robert, second baronet ; Anthony ; John; and Edward (Walter C. Metcalfe'sKnights, 196 ; Harl Soc . , lii, 981).J.s.11 .
Junii 5. Præmisso examine mittuntur Cameracum Magister Joannes Wats hic Richardson et Magister Richardus Russell , ad sacros ordines suscipiendos.
6, feria 6 quatuor temporum, MagisterRussell Cameraci minores ordines suscepit
7. Sabbatouterquesubdiaconatum , et dieDominicodiaconatum susceperunt
7. Eodem die reversi sunt Cameraco minoribus ordinibus insigniti, Magistri Henricus Holden, Gregorius Wharton , Carolus Newport, Robertus Worsley, Andreas Kniveton, Henricus Howell, GulielmusMeynell.
Junii 8 die ex Anglia ad Collegium venerunt ad rudimenta , GulielmusCobs, hic Bedingfieldet fraterejus, HenricusIIumet 13um annum agentes, (filius secundus et tertius Gulielmi Cobs armigeri et Elizabethæ Bedingfield, Catholicorumde Sandringhamin comitatu Norfolciensi et diocesi Norvicensi) : in fide Catholica ab infantia instructisunt
12. Reversus est D. Præses , Bruxellis, per Valencenas cum famulo suo .
Eodem die cum prædictis venit ad rudimenta Thomas Short , hic Peregrine, 10 annumagens (filius unicus PeregriniShort,Doctoris Medicina, et Janæ uxoris ejus, Catholicorum, de Castle Acre in comitatu Norfolciensi et diocesi Norvicensi) in fide Catholica ab ineunte ætate instructus
12 die, in Festo Corporis Christi, Magister Joannes Richardson solus presbyteratum suscepit
13. Cameraco reversi sunt presbyter D Richardson, diaconus Magister Russel
15 die abiit hinc ad Anglo Benedictinos Duacenos (quia ad Remigialia hic non incipitur logica) Anthonius Benson , qui huc venit Maii 28 die proxime elapso
21. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venerunt Richardus et Henricus Conquest,hic Houghton, ad rudimenta, 18 et 13 annumagentes,filius 2us et 3us Richardi Conquest armigeri et Elizabethæ * Thimbleby, Catholicorum, de Houghton-Conquest in comitatu Bedfordiensi . [169] Junii 22. Die Dominica primitias suas cantavit D. Joannes Wats hic Richardson
22. Eodem die 2do ex Anglia huc venit Franciscus Lawson hic Langley, qui 1° venit ad CollegiumNov. 19, 1649
23 die ex Anglia venit Thomas Simpson , natus 55 annos, sutor, qui fuit Collegii servus a 12 annis præteritis, iterum sub probatione admissus Collegii servus
26. Abiit in Angliam Thomas Gage, hic Markam, grammaticus, qui huc venit Junii 24, 1650, avocatus in Angliam ex occasione mortis sui patris.
* Elizabeth daughterof Richard Thimbleby of Irnham, co. Lincoln, andhis wife Mary daughterof Elward Brooksbyof Shoby, co Leicester Elizabeth was a lady ofthe privy chamber to Queen Ilenrietta Maria Their only children in the 1634 visitation were , John Thimbleby Conquest ; Richard; and Elizabeth (Harl Soc , xix, 97; lii, 959). -J.S.11
Julii 4 die e Collegio discessit D. Edwardus Daniel (qui huc venit Junii 19, 1650) iter suum dirigensÆriam ad visitandam suam sororem ibidem religiosam , exinde per Audomarum, Dunkirkam Neoportum et Brugas versus Bruxellas
Julii 12 Exiit e Collegio in civitatem ibi vivere suis sumptibus et studere [blank]
Julii 14 die mane theses logicas (ex dictatis D. Joannis Morgan) publice defenderunt Joannes Evans , Wallus, et Henricus Aske hic Dalton Post prandium Georgius Tattersall, Gulielmus Bloomer, hic Greene .
15 die mane Joannes Worsley et Joannes Flud
16 die mane Radulphus Yaxley et Edwardus Tildsley hic Ley. Præside D. Joanne Singleton
24. E Collegio discessit in Angliam Gulielmus Gascoigne hic Meynel, philosophus (qui huc venit Junii 11 , 1651), ob defectum valetudinis
30. Ad Collegium ex Anglia venit Robertus Dalton 15 annum agens, hic Holland, ad syntaxiin, ex utroque parente Catholico prognatus, filius unicus , et ab infantia in fide Catholicainstructus ; pater ejus defunctusThomas Dalton, armiger, et Elizabetha Midleton, de Thurnam in comitatu Lancastriæ . [170] Julii 30. Eodem die ex Anglia ad Collegium venitGeorgius Knype hic Hildsley, 15um annum agens ad syntaxim, filius natu maximusGulielmi Knype generosi,et ElinoræHildsley, Catholicorum, qui habitant in parochia Semley, in comitatu Wiltoniæ præfatus Georgius ab infantia in fide Catholica instructus est
31 die calculo laborans mortuus est Antonius Bloomer hic Greene, poeta, qui huc venit Oct. 29, 1651
Aug. 5 die D. Thomas Thirkil exuit se munere præfecti generalis , cujus loco suffectus est a D. Præside D. Robertus Tolson , ex tunc factus senior, sacerdos et theologus tertii anni
Augusti 6 die ad Collegium ex Anglia venit ad syntaxim Joannes Salvin, hic Heberon, 15unt annum agens filius 7um Gerardi Salvin, protestantis, armigeri, et Mariæ Bellasis Catholicæ de Croxtall in parochia St Oswini in suburbanis Dunelmi. Præfatus Joannes a tribus mensibus in fide Catholicainstructus et reconciliatus.
7. In missionem Anglicanamhinc discessit D. Thomas Duffield, hic Thirkill, qui absoluto cursu theologiæ , 1° mittitur in Angliam 18 Aug. 1648, semel functus est munere præfecti generalis , dum sacerdos tantum ; et bis, postquamfactus est senior
Eodem die simul in messein Anglicanam, mittitur D. Thomas Rouden hic Feasby, sacerdos et theologus 21 anni, facultatibus ordinariis munitus ; anno 1649 docuit grammaticam et rudimenta, anno 1650 docuit syntaxim.
14 die thesesuniversæ philosophiæ mane defendebat publice Henricus Howell, post prandium RobertusWorsley
15 die mane Carolus Newport, post prandium NicholausWilmot, præside D. JoanneMorgan [171] August 21 die abiit hinc in missionem Angliæ D. Joannes
Singleton, facultatibus ordinariis munitus, sacerdos et senior Collegii, ipse docuerat grammaticam et posim anno 1647. Rhetoricam vero anno 1648. Duos completos philosophiæ cursus de propriis dictatis docuit, logicam hoc anno de dictatis D. Joannis Morgan prælegit
Eodem die in Angliam discessit D. Joannes Morgan (qui huc venit Sept. 27, 1651 ) cum animo revertendi statim post quædam sua negotia ibidem transacta, quæ sine sua presentia expedire non possent. Sept. I die mittiturin Angliam D. Joannes WattshicRichardson , sacerdos, facultatibus ordinariis munitus (qui in Collegiumadmissus est Dec. 26, 1648) ; anno 1652 docuit grammaticam et rudimenta, hoc præsenti anno syntaxim, incubuit studio philosophiæ per duos annos, per unum tantumtheologiæ
Eodem die in Angliam per Bruxellas et Antwerpiam discessit Magister Carolus Towneley, hic Ashton (qui huc venit Aug. 6, 1649) post cursum integrum philosophiæ absolutum, et unum annum in theologia
Eodem die discessit hinc Thomas Smith hic Gray, poeta, qui 1° venit ad CollegiumAug. 23, 1650. [172] Sept. 18 die ex Anglia ad Collegium accessit Edwardus Howard hic Talbot, ad grammaticam, 16 annum agens, (filius 4us illustmi D Henrici Howard defuncti, Comitis Arundeliæ, et Dnæ Elizabetha Stewart, Catholicorum, in comitatu Sussexia ) ab infantia in fide Catholica instructus Cum præfato Edwardo venerunt Franciscus et BernardusHoward, fratres ejus, filius 5 et 6us, 14um et IIum annum agentes, hic ad rudimenta, ille ad grammaticam , ab ineunte ætate principiis fidei Catholicæ imbuti sunt.
Eodem die mittitur Valencenas Magister Richardus Russell diaconus ad presbyteratum suscipiendum .
20. Sabbato quatuor temporum sacerdotio initiatus est
22. Revertitur sacerdos.
27 die ad Collegium ex Anglia venit ad rhetoricam Carolus Whytehall hicShirley (frater Andreæ dequomentiofactaest 11 Nov., 1651) 18um annum agens, filius 4us Joannis Whytehall, defuncti generosi, et Annæ* Pegge, Catholicæ habitantis in Yeldersley in parochia Ashborne in comitatu Derbiæ, ab infantia in disciplina Catholica eruditus: ex contractu debet solvere 250 flor per annum pro tribus annis et postea sumptibus Collegii alendus, usque dum omnes suos cursus philosophiæet theologiæ absolverit, et statum ecclesiasticum (Deo ordinante) susceperit
Eodem die venit simul ad CollegiumGulielmusPeg hic Hastings, 16annumagens, ad syntaxim,filius 3us Thomæ Peg defuncti gener-
* Christopher Pegge of Yeldersley, by his wife Jane daughterof Rowland Eyre ofHassop, had a daughter Anne, wife of John Whitewall of Yeldersley(Harl. Soc , xxxvii , 305).J.S.11
Thomaswas son of Christopher Pegge mentioned in the last note His wife was Catharinedaughterof Sir Gilbert Kniveton of Myrcaston, baronet Hunterdoes not mention their son William, whose sister Catharine disgraced the family by becoming a concubineof Charles II, and mother of Charles FitzCharles , Earl of Plymouth (Harl. Soc ., xxxvii, 305).J.S.H.
osi et Katharinæ Kniveton, Catholicae , habitantis in Yeldersieyin parochia Ashborne, in comitatu Derbiensi, in disciplina Catholica a primis annis eruditus, pro cujus pensione solvendi sunt a matre sua 250 flor. per annum
28 die Dominica primitias suas cantavit Dominus Richardus Russell. [173] 1° die Octobris post sacrum hora 7ª solemniter a D. Præside decantatum, pro fælici successu studiorum, aperiuntur scholæ , et singulisin classibus pro more habita a D. Præside orationeincitante ad virtutem, aoctrinamque summis viribus prosequendam , inagistri designantur; primarius professor theologiae in tractatu de gratia materia gratiæ ipsemet D. Præses 2rlus D. Michael Genings in tractatu de incarnatione Christi, professor philosophia solus D. Joannes Morgan , magister rhetorica D. Edwardus Whalle lic Robinson , magister poesios, magister Gregorius Hog hic Wharton, magister syntaxios D Henricus Vere. Magister grammatices et rudimentorum magister RichardusBarton Magisterproficientium in græca lingua, magister Joannes Hawley Magister incipientium ingræcis D. Robertus Tolson , qui et præfectus generalis est Præfectus studiorum prædictus D. Genings, Confessarii, præfatus D. Genings, D. Franciscus Johnson, prædictus D.Tolson et D. Edwardus Robinson supra memoratus . Catechistaprefatus D. Genings
Octob. 7 die hinc abiit dimissus Ludovicus Slyn, sartor (qui venit Apr. 10 ultimo præterito) profecturus recta Londinum, qui propter nimiam apud studiosos familiaritatem , parum utilisCollegio censetur
8 die hinc abiit dimissus Thomas Simpson sutor, Londinum petens, qui propter defectum oculorum suorum et senectutem non idoneus Collegii servitio haberetur, a 23 die Junii usque in hunc diem probationis causa admittebatur.
22 die mittitur in Angliam D. Richardus Russell, sacerdos, unius anni theologus , animarum lucrandarum gratia ; munitus facultatibus ordinariis, qui huc venit Decembris 9, 1651 [174] Oct. 28. Roma per Galliam huc advenit Henricus Thrill, lic Webbe , 20 annum agens, ad syntaxi , filius 4tus Thomæ Thrill armigeri, et Margaretæ Gifford, Catholicorum, de Leucom in comitatu Sussexiæ et diocesi Canturiensi, ab infantia in disciplina Catholicaeruditusest Romæ per duos annos apud Jesuitas Anglos studuit; et exinderecta huc se contulit
Nov. 6. Exhibetur Dramma per Magistrum Rhetorices D. Edwardun Robinson, carmine ianibico.
24 die ex Anglia reversus est D. Joannes Morgan (qui abiit hinc Aug. 21 , proxime elapso) ad provinciam suam docendi philosoplios, quos in ejus absentia exercitavit D. MichaelGenings.
Dec. 2. Discipuli D. Joannis Morgan ad ejus reditum congratulandum dranuna Anglice conpositum exhibuerunt
Eodem die marmor cum inscriptione impositum est sepulchro R. D. Gulielmi Hyde nuper Collegii Præsidis, in sacello B. Marie in ecclesia St Jacobi, pro quo solvuntur lapicidæ28 floreni, octoque
floreni edilibus ecclesiæ pro admissione imponendi prædictum marmor
Dec. 30. D. Henricus Vere exhibuit dramma Anglicanum, quod ipsemet confecerat .
[175]
Feb. 4. A Collegio discessit recta proficiscens in Angliam Henricus Threel hic Web, ob defectum valetudinis, idem quivenit huc Octob 28 die proxime elapso.
Feb. II. Das Edwardus Robinson rhetorices professor, drama exhibuit latinum, cui nomen Homo cadens et resurgens, privatim hac vice agebatur.
12. Postridie Domino Hecart, Benedictinis Anglis aliisque invitatis, idem drama 2do exhibebatur
16 idem drama 3 exhibebatur invitatis Dno Waltenshewecum uxore, filiis filiabusque suis, aliisquepræsentibus.
23 Dominus Joannes Morgan philosophiæ professor etMagister Carolus Genings hic Newport, missi sunt Cameracum ad majores ordines suscipiendos.
Eodem die ibant Cameracum Edwardus Tildsley hic Ley, et Radulphus Craythorne hic Yaxley, ad sacramentumconfirmationis suscipiendum .
24. Prædictus DD Morgan et MagisterNewport subdiaconatum susceperunt
27. Reversi sunt Edwardus Ley et Rodulphus Yaxley confirmati
28. Sabbatho quatuor temporum D. Joannes Morgan et Magister Carolus Newport diaconatum susceperunt
Martii 1. Die Dominico Dominus Joannes Morgan et Magister Carolus Newport, sacro presbyteratusordine insigniti sunt. [176] Martii 2. Feria 2. Dictus Dns Joannes Morgan et Dns Carolus Newport ad Collegium sacerdotes revertuntur
12 , die St Gregorii, primitias suas cantavit Dns Joannes Morgan. 15 , die Dominico, primitias suas cantavit Dns Carolus Newport.
27. Ex Anglia ad Collegium venit Anthonius Ducket hic Curwen , 18um annum agens, filius natu maximus Jacobi Ducket armigeri, schismatici, et Magdelenæ Curwen, mortuæ , de Grayrigge in parochia de Kerkby Kendal, et in comitatu Westmerlandiæ , in studiis hucusque prædictus Anthonius versatus est , et hic syntaxi operam darecæpit
Aprilis 13. Dns Joannes Morganus constitutus est præfectus studiorum, et Dns MichaelGenings reliquitprædictampræfecturam .
25. Dns Robertus Tolson reliquit officium præfecti generalis, loco autem ipsius substitutus est Das Carolus Newport, et factus est senior.
Eodem tempore prædictus Dns Tolson constituitur procurator Collegii in loco Gulielmi Hamerton.
(This ends the Fifth Diary. The following list of martyrs is on a smaller sheet of paper affixed to page 178.)
Anno 1577 .
Cuthbertus Maynus
Joannes Nelsonus
Thomas Sherwoodus
Everardus Hansius
5
10
15
Edmundus Campianus
Radulphus Shervinus
Alexander Briantus.
Joannes Paynus
Thomas Fordus .
Joannes Shertus.
Robertus Jonsonus
Guilielmus Filbæus
Lucas Kirbæus.
Laurentius Jonson seu Richardson
Thomas Cottamus
Richardus Kirkmannus
Jacobus Tomsonus
Gulielmus Hartus
Richardus Thirkellus.
20 20
Joannes Sladus
Georgius Haddocus .
Joannes Mundenus
Jacobus Fennus
Joannes Nutterus
25 Thomas Alfildus
Hugo Taylerus.
Edwardus Stranshannus
Nicolaus Woodfenus
Richardus Sergentus
30
Gulielmus Tomsonus
Robertus Andertonus .
Guilielmus Marsdenus.
Franciscus Inglebæus
Joa Sandes
35 Joa
40 Adamus.
Joa Finglæus
Robertus Debdallus
Tho Pilchardus
Rob Suttonus .
Edmu Sikes.
Joa Hamblæus .
Alex : Crous
Steph Rowshamus
Guil Deanus
45 Guil Gunterus.
Robertus Mortonus
Hugo Morus
Tho Holfordus
Jacobus Claxtonus
50 Tho Feltonus .
Rob Wilcox
Edvar Campianus
Guil Wayus
Radulphus Crokettus
55 Christoph : Buxtonus
Joa Robinsonus.
Joa Hewittus
Guil Hartlæus
Edwardus Burdenus
60 Rich Simsonus
Rob Ludlanus
Nic Calikus.
Joa Amias
Rob Dalbæus.
65 Georgius Nicolles
Richardus Yaxlæus
Guil Spencerus.
Christo Bales
Milo Gerardus.
70 Franc: Diconsonus
Edvard Jones
Anton Middletonus . Rich Hillus.
Joa : Hoggus.
75 Rich Holliday
Rob Thorpus
Montfordus Scotus.
Georg Bislæus
Rogerus Diconsonus
80 Edmu Genningus
Guil Patensonus
Anton Pageus
Jos Lamptonus
Guil : Davies
85 Edva : Waterson .
Guil Harrington
Joa : Bostus
Edva Osbaldestonus
Alexr. Rolingus
90 Guil Freemannus .
Guil Anlabæus
Petrus Snowus
Christoph Robinsonus
Rich Hornerus
95 Matthi Harisonus
Christo Whartonus
Thom Sprattus
Rob : Nutterus
Edva Thwingus
100 Joa: Pybus.
b* Jacobus Harrisonus alias Hayes
Franc Pagus.
Rob Watkinsonus
Joa Sugerus.
105 Mathæus Flattherus
* Rogerus Cadwallador . Georgius Napperus.
Tho : Wilsonusseu Sommers
N. Atkinsonus
IIO Joa Thulis
Tho : Maxfildæus 1° Julii, 1616.
Tho Tunstallus
Guil Sowthrne
Edmu : Arrowsmith
[Hand changes.]
Tho Greene, hic Reynolds
Edmundus Catherick
Edwardus Morgan
Hugo Greene
Joan Ducket
120 [blank] Southwell . *
[Hand changes]
Nicol Postgate.
Tho Thweing
[Notes, at end of MS, to above list-]
* - Lockwood
b* Thurstanus Hunt Lancastriæ
** 1601 Georgius Gervasius hic sacrdos, postea receptus in ordinem gti Benedicti , passus Londini 1608 . Sic evadunt 124 Anno 1694 .
[Hand changes.] Rigby , a Priest, nartyd
* So written for Southworth (Ven John), 1654, whose relics were preservedat theCollege .
This list was copied in or after 1630 , when the work of Raissius , Catalogus Christi Sacerdotum qui ex nobili Anglicano Duacena civitatis Collegio proseminati præclarumfidei Catholice testimonium in Britannia præbuerunt, was published at Douay Later additions in other hands were subsequently made Down to and including Edmund Arrowsmith (1628) it is in one writing. The Parliament martyrs from Greene to Southworth (here written Southwell), who died between 1642 and 1654 , aswellas the date"An 1577" prefixed to the name of Cuthbert Mayne, are supplied bya much later hand . The three names , Postgate , Thwing and Lockwood , have been added by a still later writer in or after 1680. Notes a and b and the summary are in another writing ; and the entry about Rigby seems to be in Dr. Witham's hand (He became President in 1716)
[151] Catologus Spectabiliorum Sacerdotum qui in præsentiarum reperiunturin
Clero Seculari Angliæ *
Pro majori hujusmodi Catologi illustratione operæ prætium erit observare
1° Clerum Angliæ secularem in duas classes , seu ordines distinctum esse , quorum alter consistit ex sacerdotibus capitularibus administrantibus res ad universum clerum secularem pertinentes; alter vero complectitur sacerdotes non capitulares , hoc est, omnes cos et singulos ex clero seculari sacerdotes, qui in numerum Capitularium non sunt relati
2do Capitulares sacerdotes (qui solunt esse numero viginti sex vel circiter uni capiti subordinati, qui Decanus nuncupatur) partim constare ex Vicariis Generalibus , partim ex Archidiaconis, partim ex officialibus, et partim ex simplicibus sacerdotibus , nullo in administratione rerum ad clerum spectantium munere fungentibus
3° Reverendissimum Dominum Georgium Berkettum secundum Angliæ Archipresbiterum a Clemente 8° B. M. P. Max constitutum (cui et assignavit idem Clemens 12 Assistentes) concilio suorum assistentium universum Angliæ Regnum in 12 provinciasdivisisse , singulisque assistentibus singulas Angliæ provincias in curam ac titulum commisisse, quo et confusio in ecclesiastica administratione vitari possit, et nulla esset Regni Provincia cui Pastoralis curæ diligentia non adhiberetur Hanc disciplinæ formulam secuti sunt duo Angliæ Episcopi nempe Gulielmus et Richardus Chalcedonensis, qui comme[mo]rato Berketto in regimine cleri secularis respective successerunt : assignarunt enim (extincto tamen nomine Assistentium) singulas Angliæ provincias vicariis et archidiaconis, idque nunc temporis practicat et a morte defuncti Richardi Chalcedonensis continuo practicavit Capitularium Sacerdotum Decanus, qui et omnes facultates extraordinarias, quas dictus Episcopus a Sua Sanctitate supplicationis in effectum exhibitione obtinuerat, inconsulta imo forsan non opinante eadem Sua Sanctitate exercet. Ecclesia Dei non habet talem consuetudinem Nota Primus AngliæArchipresbiter fuit quidam ex clero seculari sacerdos, cognomento Blackwellus, qui ex eo quod juramenti fidelitatis (quod multas continet propositiones fidei Catholica noxias, et Sedis Apostolicæ auctoritati adversantes ) se defensoren gereret, a Clemente 8° depositus fuit, et ejusdem pontificis optimi auctoritate in ipsius locum substitutus fuit Berkettus
This document, written by Dr. George Leyborne, President of Douay (16521670), formed no part of the original Diary, but was inserted (subsequently to-the binding ofthe Fourth and Fifth Diaries in one volume) between folios 179 and 180 It bears separate pagination (151-156), and thus originally formed part of some other collection On internal evidence it was written between July 1667 and July 1668. (See Introduction )
New page beginsunnumbered In the margin of the original
4° Decanum in præsenti una cum suis capitularibus in præsenti , paucis exceptis juramentum novum quod quidam Recollecta Hybernus (cujus cognomen Welch) in perniciem Catholicorum excogitaverat,suis calculis comprobasse, sigillumquecapitularesuæapprobationi apposuisse. His præmissis de spectabilioribus utriusque classis seu ordinis commemorati Personis sigillatim agere requirit Catologinostri ratio, et quoad spectabiliores prioris classissacerdotes
I Recensetur Dominus Humfredus Warine alias mentito cognomine Elliceus , utpote Sacerdotum Capitularium Decanum se gerens. Hunc apprime novit Præses Collegii Pontificis Duaci ex quo ex ephebis egressus est Fuit in eodem Collegio nutritus et educatus, spatio circiter quinque annorum, sed completis philosophie studiis ad Collegium Anglo-Ulysipponense recens erectum simul cum aliis scholaribus ejusdem Pontificii Collegii tanquam ad novam coloniam traductus fuit, ubi in Præceptorem Theologiæ habuit Albium, alias mentito cognomine Blackloum, peregrinarum et perniciosarum doctrinarum auctorem; expleto vero Theologiæ cursu commemoratusHumfredus Warine, Philosophiam in eodem Collegio docuit, posteaque Theologiam: tandem decem abhinc annis scilicet, ab Albio Albii Partiariis in capitularium sacerdotum Decanum electus fuit, tum ex eo quod esset erga istam factionem bene affectus, cum quod esset cereæ et teneræ naturæ , quæ in quamlibet quasi partem flecti possit Hunc cum Præses Collegii Duaci (missus in Angliam ab Illustrissimo de Vechiis Internuncio Bruxellensi) sciscitaretur, cur facultates defuncti Episcopi extraordinarias exercere aliisque concedere auderet , non obtenta prius licentia a Sua Sanctitate: * respondet bonus Decanus id sufficere quod eadem Sua Sanctitas taceat juxta illud qui tacet consentire videtur ; item cum idem Præses sciscitabatur eum (fuerat Præsidi valde charus) curnon vellet morem gerere Suæ Sanctitatis decretis . pro quibus tuendis quadraginta super centum martyres (omnes Collegii Pontificii alumni in quoet ipse Pontificius Alumnus factus fuit) sui sanguinis effusione gloriosam mortem subierunt . Ad quod replicuit bonus Decanus se aliosque Capitulares statutum habere vivere deinceps more Ecclesiæ Gallicanæ Commemoratus Decanus Londini degit, annos habens 58 vel circiter, ortus honestis parentibus ex minori nobilitate
2do DominusGulielmusClifford ex antiquis BaronibusCliffordiæ ortus, sacerdos sane vitæ exemplaris, nunc vero senio fractus vix e lectosurgit, semper fuit affectus erga Albium ejusque Capitulares amicos, quamvis peregrinas ejusdem Albii doctrinas nunquam amplexatus fuerit nunquam induci potuit ut publicis Cleri rebus se immisceret. Vir sane bonus et cordatus sed in literis humanioribus et sublimioribus doctrinis parum versatus ; Parisiis degit.
3° Thomas Albius alias mentito cognomineBlacklous hic satis superque Pontifici notus totique Curiæ Romanæ inter capitulares sacerdotes post Decanum , principem locum obtinet, et ad instar oraculi ab illis habetur, qui nunc temporis neque judicio neque memoria pollet Londini degit malus senex.
New page begins unnumbered ,
4
° Dominus Thomas Carr, hic multorum annorum spatio a confessionibus fuit monialibus Anglis Ordinis St Augustini Parisiis habitantibus, 60 duos annos vel circiter habet, hacque tempestate paralysi et aliis corporis infirmitatibus laborat Hic simul cum Henrico Holdeno sacerdoti capitulari, et doctore Parisiensi, et jam defuncto peregrinas et perniciosas [152] Albii doctrinas mordicus semper defendit, et Jansenismum pro modulo suo promovit, adeo ut proprium nepotem quem Præses Collegii Pontificii Duaci ad sacrum presbiteratusordinemevexerat, inopia rei familiaris laborantem adjuvare recusaret ex eo quod Jansenii opiniones abhorreret, uti narravit eidem Præsidi ipsemet nepos Commemoratus Dominus Carr honestis non nobilibus parentibus ortus, parum doctus et multum in sæcularibus negotiisversatus , nunquam missioni Anglicanæ incubuit
5°DominusHenricusTurbervill Archidiaconusest, et communiter Londini habitat in domo MarchionisWintoniensis, ab aliquot annis pœne cæcusfuit oculorum organo valde læso, et hactenus imbecillitate videndi laborat Est vitæ exemplaris, et multum versatus in Theologia Polemica ; Apud decanum aliosque capitulares sacerdotes tantæ est autoritatis , ut sese ipsius judicio in omnibus fere consultationibus subinittere soleant Hunc Præses Collegii Duaci in eodem Collegio educatum et novit et valde amavit, juvenem scilicet bonæ indolis et magnæ spei : sed dolendum quod in toto clero seculari nullus ipso magis periculosis Albii doctrinis infectus est præterea juramenti (quod vulgo dicitur juramentum fidelitatis) ubi multa tum fidei Catholicæ , tum auctoritati Romanæ Ecclesiæ inimica continentur) defensorem se gerit Hic et Albius mirum in modum Clero Anglicano a morte Episcopi Richardi Chalcedonensis moverunt Annoshabetcirciter 60, nunquam docuit vel Philosophiam et Theologiam , est autem acri ingenio, honestis parentibus oriundus
6° Dominus Joannes Lassells alias Bolds, hunc probe novit Præses Collegii Duaceni, ubi humaniores literas docuit ; annos habet 58 vel circiter, et valde nobili familia licet pauperima [153] oriundus, pie et exemplariter semper se gessit, et quamvis Albii discipulus fuerit nunquam tamen exterius apparuit profanis ipsius favere novitatibus et quoad factiones in clero occasione Albii exortas, quasi neutraliter se tenuit neque calidus fuit neque frigidus : factus tamen fuit a Decano Capitularium Sacerdotum Archidiaconus Norfolciæ et alterius comitatus quamvis sciverit vel scire debuerit dignitates ecclesiasticas absque Sedes Apostolicæ auctoritate, secundum Canones non esse conferendas. Utcunque autem hocsit Præses Collegii Pontificii audet pro ipso spondere quod si constituatur SuperiorCleri Anglicani, vel Præses ejusdem Collegii semper morem geret Suæ Sanctitatis voluntati Parum vel nihil ex quo in Sacerdotem consecratus est in Missione Anglicana laboravit, semper curam gerens juvenum nobilium et natu maximorum, qui educationisgratia in externas regiones profecti sunt, et proinde ejus conversatiomaxima fuit in Gallia, et aliqualiter in Italia, ubi
ejus notitiam habuit Eminentissimus Franciscus Cardinalis Barbarinus, Angliæ Protector : nunc vero Parisiis degit curam habens nobilissimi Domini Baronis de Lumley.
7°DominusJoannes Leyburnusex antiquis LeyburnorumBaronibus ortus, est nepos Præsidis Pontificii Collegii Duaci; hujus conversatio et commoratio fere semper fuit in Gallia, ejus enim curæ commiserat Illustrissimus Vice-comes Montis Acuti filium suum natu maximum, qui durantibus turbis contra Regem a Parliamento excitatis, nunc in una, nunc in alia Galliæ provincia commoratus est, tandem Romam profectus quasi totam Italiam peragravit : habet annos 44, magnis a natura dotibus instructus, Anglice, Latine et Gallice eleganter scribit, optimæindolis et vitæ valdeexemplaris.
*Judicio tamen patrui sui qui nunc temporis præsidet Collegio Duaceno factus est Neopoliticus Gallus, proprio magis quam communi bono invigilans, tam secretus ut nulli prorsus cordis secreta communicet; utcumqueautem hoc sit, Præses patruus ipsius quemadmodum pro commemorato Domino Lassells ita pro ipso audet spondere quod animo erit semper paratus Suæ Sanctitatis voluntati obedire tum verbis tum effectibus Londini degit communiter in domopræfati Vicecomitis Montis Acuti. 8° Dominus Joannes Gageus Sacræ theologiæ Doctor. Hic agens fuit Cleri Anglicani Romæ aliquot abhinc annis, proindeque sufficienter notus est Eminentissimo Angliæ Protectori, ceterisque Ecclesiæ Romanæ cardinalibus, hic parum laboravit in vinea Anglicana ex quo sacerdos initiatus est Educatio ejus fuit in Collegio Pontificio Duaci, cujus alumnus est Hunc probe novit ejusdem Collegii Præses, et vitamsemper exemplaremduxit ; nunc temporis commoratur in Collegio Navarico Parisiis, habens suæ curæ commissos duos nobiles et natu maximos Ex nobili familia oriundus, sufficienti doctrina imbutus et quoad dissensiones quas peperit Albii doctrina in Anglia valde politice se gerit; nullum habens patrimonium, cujus carentia reddit multos plures ex Clero Secularisacerdotes non audentes palam condemnare novitates quas animo odio habent, ne elemosinis careant quæ capitularibus sacerdotibus distribuendædatæ sunt ; annos habet quadraginta.
9° Dominus Georgius Warrham, Archidiaconus Sussexiæ et Suffolciæ pauperibus parentibus natus, parum doctus, multum in secularibus rebus versatus , magnæ auctoritatis apud Decanum § Pro eo quo præditus est zelo erga factionem adversus Præsidem Duacenum existentem Hunc bene novit idem Præses; fuit enim educatus in prædicto Collegio, nullius spei juvenis, ne quidem idoneus ad docenda Grammaticæ rudimenta Degit in comitatu Norfolciæ, annos habens circiter60
IomoDominus Richardus Stevenson vel Stevens, ita nominabatur dum Duacistuderet, est VicariusGeneralis , cujuscuræ committuntur pluresAngliæ comitatus est septegenarius et paralyticus, honestis non nobilibus parentibus natus , ipsius residentia est apud nobilem
New page beginsunnumbered " Francis" written above. II § New pageunnumbered .
Dominum Fitchherbert, qui est nepos Rd Patris Fitchherberti qui olim fuit Anglo-Romani Collegii Rector, piam et exemplarem vitam degisse observatus est Ejus Magister in theologia fuit Albius
II° Dominus Joannes Medcalfus Archidiaconus Northumbria et Cumbria, magnus zelotes pro causa Capituli, quamvis nihil habet doctrinæ ad eam defendendam Hic palam dixit quod si ipse esset RexAngliæproscriberetomnes sacerdotes quijuramentum fidelitatis præstare recusarent Annos habet circiter 38 in equis nutriendis et instruendis valde versatus , natus vero honestis parentibus sed non nobilibus Degit in comitatu Dunelmensi
12° Dominus Joannes Singletonus questor ærarius sacerdotum sacerdotum* Capitularium, pauperimisortus parentibus Alumnus fuit Collegii Duaceni, ubi literas humanioreset unum philosophiæ cursum docuit. Ab Albio in numerum Capitularium relatus eidemque Albio ejusque doctrinis mirabiliter adhæret, ita ut semper apud se teneat libro[s] ejusdem Albii novis missionariis (hoc est recens Londinum appulsis) commendandos ; turbulentissimo est ingenio, cum in Collegio [154] Duacensi commoraretur , factionem adversus Præsidem suum concitavit, et causa extitit præcipua factionis adversus Præsentem Præsidem a Dno Shephardo et Dno Luttono, duobus Collegii confessariis promotæ Habet anno[s] circiter 38, et est bonus socius, advocatum magis quam concionatorem se exhibens , habitat Londini
13° Dominus Joannes Hollandus alias Serjeant, mentitis cognomentis hic spatio multorum annorum Capitularium sacerdotum secretarius fuit, ad illud officiumabAlbioevectus, cujusnuncscripta, ejus nomine in lucem veniunt plena profanis novitatibus, nunc temporis autem quia male audit apud multos Catholicos , ejus opera non utuntur Capitulares Sacerdotes Natus est ex parentibus hæreticis , educatus Cantabrigiæ , unde commendatus fuit loco amanuensis Pseudo-Episcopo Dunelmensi , qui Catholicos miris modis insectabatur Mortuo vero Pseudo-Episcopo sub initio turbarum Anglicarum nihil habuit quo se sustentaret, habens autem familiaritatem cum quodam Catholicose Ecclesiæ Catholicæ aggregavit, et commendatus Superiori Cleri Angliæ Londini residenti, missus fuit ad Collegium Vlisypponense , ubi factus sacerdos in Angliam rediit et Albii amanuensem se gessit, quousque in Capitularium Sacerdotumsecretariumelectus fuit Annos habet circiter 38, est bonus socius et habitat Londini 14° Dominus Mathæus Sherborne , comitatus Lancastriensis , Vicarius Generalis , hic simul cum Præside Collegii Duaceni qui nunc est, cursum philosophiæ et theologiæ in eodem Collegio absolvit, estque ejusdem Præsidis cognatus Ex quo ad missionem Anglicanam destinatusest in eadem missione perseveranterlaboravit Sacerdos sane bonus, pius et doctus sed adeo senex et pinguis nec non corpore infirmus [155] ut vix ambulare vel equitare possit. 68 annos habet, ortus nobili familia, et cum ejusdem familiæ hærede "Sacerdotum"-thus repeated in text
suo nepote habitat prope Lancastriam, præcipuam comitatus Lancastriensis civitatem .
15° Dominus Robertus Charnack alias Manleus, Archidiaconus commemorati comitatus Lancastriensis Hunc bene novit Præses Collegii Pontificii Duaci, nempe quemjuvenem et amicisdestitutum Ulysipponemmisit, effecitque ut in Collegium Anglo Ulisypponense gratis admitteretur , ubi in theologia magistrum habuit Dominum Humfredum Warine, Capitularium Sacerdotum Decanum . Hic bonus Archidiaconusactuosus et activus est quoadnegocia forensia, et aliis sacerdotibus capitularibus in subtilitate longe excellit sicut in zelo erga Albium , quamvisminus sufficiens est ad ejusdem Albii opiniones comprehendendas, vir scilicet parum doctus , vitæ tamen exemplaris; habitat in domo nobilis Domini et equitis aurati cognomento Thomæ Tylslei viduæ . Natus est ex nobili familia sed valde pauperi, mortuo vero fratre contigit illi ab aliquot annis aliqualis hæreditas, qui antea nullum habuit patrimonium Annos habuit circiter 42.
16° Dominus Hodgsonus, comitatus Eboracensis , Archidiaconus hic ab anno et medio substitutus fuit in locum insignis et sancti viri Domini Georgii Hudlestoni, quem Richardus Episcopus Chalcedonensis ejusdem comitatus Archidiaconum creaverat. Præses Collegii Pontificii Duaci hunc non novit, audivit tamen a sacerdotibusin præfato comitatu commorantibuseum esse juvenem nulla nobilitate fulgentem et nobilibus, piis, doctis et antiquioribus sacerdotibus ideo solum præpositum , quod amicus esset supradicti Singletoni, Questoris Capituli Annos habet 36 et in eodem Comitatu degit
*17° Dominus Georgius Leyburnus Sacræ Theologiæ Doctor et Pontificii Collegii Duacensis Præses , annum suæ presidentiæ16m agens, antequamhujusmodi regimen suscepit, fuit spatio 4 annorum Vicarius Generalis defuncti Episcopi Chalcedonensis ultimi et totius Cleri Anglicani Superior. Hic nunc temporisest quasi alter Joseph inter fratres puta Capitularis
Sufficiet hæc dixisse de principalioribus rae classis sacerdotibus , et sane quoad reliquos parvi momentisunt. Postulat nunc catologi nostri ratio ut de sacerdotibus 2dae classis hoc est de sacerdotibus non capitularibus spectabilioribusagatur, ubi sese offert.
1° Illustrissimus DominusWalterus Montagu Abbascommendatarius in Gallia, et Reginæ Regis Angliæ matris nec non Ducissæ Aurelianensismagnus elemosinarius : hunc bene novit PræsesPontificii CollegiiDuaci ab exordio suæ conversionis ad fidemCatholicam . Hæreticis enim parentibus ortus est. Pater ipsius primum fuit advocatus postea factus comes Mancestriensis Et frater ipsius natu maximuscreatus est a Rege Angliæ, qui nuncest, regiædomus Præfectus vulgo my Lord Chamberlaine Est autem præfatus Abbas Montagu Præsul omni laude major, scilicet omni genere virtutum præditus. Dolendum quod sit adeo senex , annos enim habet 6 ad minimum supra 60, habitat in domo prædictæ Reginæ New pageunnumbered
Parisiis, et magnæ est apud eam auctoritatis, et optandum esset pro bono cleri ut tanta polleret auctoritate apud ipsummet Regem Angliæ
2° DominusEdoardusThymblebeus , EcclesiæCollegiateCameraci præpositus , magna præstantia vir, cujus familia valde nobilis est et a Rege Angliæ estimata Valde gratus est omnibus Regularibus præsertim Patribus Societatis et Benedictinis Anglis, diu Romæ degit, præstans obsequium cuidam Cardinali, ideoque in Curia Romana abunde notus . Pollet viribus et prudentia, nunquam tamen missioni Anglicanæ se ingessit
3° DominusGulielmusMennellex antiquo MennellorumBaronum stirpe prognatus , bonus, pius, sufficienterdoctus et rerum agendarum prudentia instructus Hunc Præses CollegiiAnglo-Duaceniin suum Vice Præsidem alias elegerat , ejusmodi autem muneri parentum et amicorum importunitate (qui induci non potuerunt ut extra Angliam vivere permitterent) renunciavit Habet annos circiter 50, amoribusSacerdotum Capitularium quoad exercitium facultatum extraordinarium absque Suæ Sanctitatis licentia nec non quoad profanas Albii novitates semper dissensit Habitat in comitatu Eboracensiapud Nobilem Dominum Witham
4° Dominus Michael Jenisonus, Collegii Pontificii Duaci Vice præses, nobilibus ortus parentibus, pietate insignis, et sufficienti doctrina imbutus, nec non peregrinis doctrinis inimicus, obedientissimus ecclesiæ Romanæ filius Annos habet 43 et Regi Angliæ valde notus et gratus.
5° Dominus Robertus Pugh , Doctor utriusque juris , pius et bonus ex nobili licet pauperi familia oriundus Hic plures libellos contra Albium in lucem edidit, quod eum præcipuis Capitularibus odiosum reddidit Annos habet 66 vel circiter, sed corpore robustus: alias ingressus est religionem Jesuitarum, et licet Societatem illam deserueritmanet tamen erga illos valde affectus Londini habitat [156] 6° Dominus Robertus Brathwet, vir pietate et prudentia insignis, et inimicus peregrinis doctrinis, hunc bene novit Præses Pontificii Collegii Duaci utpote cognatum suum . Docuit philosophiam in eodem Collegio et plures annos procuratorem se gessit Ortus est ex nobilibus parentibus Annoshabet circiter 44, habitat in Comitatu Lancastriensi, in domo sororissuæ .
7° Dominus Jacobus Heaselwood , theologiæ licentiatus contemporaneus est et condiscipulus Præsidis CollegiiAnglo Duaceni , peregrinas Albii doctrinas abhorret et cane pejus execratur. Est oriundus ex nobili familia et spatio multorum annorum habitavit apud Illustrissimum Dominum Vicecomitem Staffordiæ ejusque uxori semper a confessionibus fuit, vir doctus et vitæ exemplaris; Annos habet 68 et viribus pollet
8° Dominus Laurentius Jones, vir bonæ conversationis et doctus, peregrinis doctrinis valde inimicus, nobilibus sed pauperibusortus parentibus. Habet annos circiter 50, et Londini degit.
9° Dominus Joannes Younge, sacerdos pius , bonus et prudens, qui semper perniciosis Albii doctrinis adversatus est, et amoribus
Capitularium dissensit. Honestis natus parentibus, annos habet circiter 60, corporetamen infirmus HabitatBrantoniæin comitatu
Eboracensi
Plures hujus classis sacerdotes, pios bonos, et sufficienti doctrina præditos hic commemorarem , nisi quod studeo brevitati, et commemoratio eorum majorem desiderat sermonem quam ut paucis explicari queat.
Finis
[180]
Anno 1725 Maii 8vo
Ego R. Witham, præses hujus Collegii, testorme nondumreperire posse ullum diurnale, vel narrationem rerum quæ spectant ad hoc Collegium ab anno 1654, ad annum 1676 sive per illos annos viginti duos , quibus præsidebant Collegio Ex D. Georg[ius] Leyburnus usque ad annum 1670 et deinde successor ejus, R. D. Joannes Leyburn, nepos prioris Præsidis Cumvero in conclaviProcuratoris nuper invenerim literas, et quandoque Catalogum Magistrorum et aliorum in Collegio, nullum tamen hactenus catalogum sacerdotum qui in Angliam missi sunt sub utroque Præside, neque alumnorum qui juramentum præstiterunt sub eximio Dno GeorgioLeyburn
Visum est nihilominus quædam quæ potuimus invenire hic annotare ab anno 1654 quo desinit hemerologium sub præfato Præside
Anno 1654, vel saltem an. 1655 (entrybreaks off).
A LIST OF PROFESSORSOF DIVINITY AND PHILOSOPHY SINCE THE YEAR 1655.*
Professors of Divinity
Professors of Phylo[sophy]. 1655 Dr. LeyburneandMr. Tho 1655 Mr. Ed : Robinson. 1656 Mr. Rob: Worsleyand Mr. 1656 Progers idem
1657 Mr. Ed Robinson and 1657 Nic Wilmot
Mr. Jo : Warner Progers 1658 Mr. Robinson , Mr. Warner 1658 1659 1660 1661 Iidem . Iidem Iidem . 1659
Mr. Rob: Worsley and Mr. Jo Evans.
Mr. Jo: Worsley solus. 1660 Mr. Rob: Tolson 1661
1662 Mr. Harris and Warner 1662
1663. Mr. W. Layburne and 1663
Mr. Shepheard 1664 Mr. Shepheard , Mr. Paston 1664
Mr. Anthony Harris .
Mr. Ed: Paston and Mr. William Gower
Mr. Petr : Bodwell [?]
Mr. Edv: Paston and Mr. William Gower again.
This list must be used with the utmost caution, as the writing is so illegible that many of the readings are very doubtful Those most open to question arc indicated by [?]
1665 the same . 1666 the same . 1667 the same . 1668 nobody. 1669 nobody
1670 Mr. Paston , Mr. Coniers. 1671 the same .
1672 Mr. Paston , Dr. Giffard
1673 the same . 1674 Mr. Paston, Mr. And: Levison
1675 Mr. Paston , Andrew Levison
1676 the same . 1677 the same 1678 Dr. Smith , same . 1679 the same 1680 the same 1681
1665 Mr. James Dirdo [?]. 1666
Mr. Jo : Coniers. 1667 Mr. Roger Croft 1668
Mr. Jo : Cother [?] 1669 Mr. Tho : White. 1670
Mr. Jo : Cother [?] 1671
1672 1673
Mr. And : Levison
Mr. James Smith
Mr. Andrew Levison 1674
Mr. James Smith
1675 Mr. Lovell
1676 Mr. Rob: Jones 1677
Mr. Tho: Yaxley 1678
Mr. Rob : Jones
Mr. Yaxley 1679 1680 Mr. Metcalf thesame, Dr.Smith. 1681 1682 1682 Dr.Smith, Dr. Jones
1683 Dr.Smith, Dr. Jones
1684 Dr. Smith, Dr. Jones. 1685 Dr. Jones, Mr. Paston 1686 Dr. Paston, Dr. Jones 1687 Dr. Jones ,Mr. Yaxley. 1688 Dr. Geo : Witham and Mr. Yaxley. the same .
Mr. Tho : Yaxley. Mr. Metcalf 1683
Mr. Geo : Witham 1684 Mr. Metcalf 1685 Mr. Tho : Yaxley 1686 Mr. Birtwisle 1687 Mr. W. Coniers 1688 Mr. Tho : Hall
1689 Mr. Birtwisle the same . 1690 the same . 1691
Mr. Jo: Morgan Mr. Phil White. the same, Birtwisle 1692 Mr. Rob: Witham. Mr. Ralph Carthorne Mr. Birtwisle , Mr. Inglebie, 1693 I 1. each 55 Mr. Tatershall
Mr. Vere. 57 Mr. Vere . 58 Mr. Petr Fen
Mr. Berry
Mr. Berry 61 Mr. Jo: Flood. 62 Mr. Hastings
63 Mr. Jo : Fen 64 Mr. Milburne. 1694 Maistres of phylosophy, 3° . Maistres of Retoricke 65 Mr. Leban [? Leyburne] 66 Mr. Roger Croft 67 Mr. 68 Mr. William Croft 69 Mr. Andrew Levison
Mr. Paul Harrison [?] 71 Mr. Postgate 72 Mr. Thomas Yaxley. 73 Mr. Tho : Manering. 74 Mr. Geo Wytham 75 Mr. William Martin .
Mr. Tho : Beckwith [?] 77 Geo Massey.
Mr. Nicolson 79 Mr. Tho : Brocholes 80 Mr. William Daniel 81 Mr. Colebeck
This Diary, which is more truly described by the words set against the title " Notes for a Diary, " begins with a biographical account of Dr. William Hyde, vere Bayaert , who becamePresident in 1646. This is followed by notes of events whichhave already been recorded in the Fourth Diary The result is that the two overlap until August, 1647 , when the Fourth Diary stops
The biographical notice of the President runs as follows:-
William Hyde, whose true name is Bayaert, was born at London on March 27th, in the year of Our Lord 1597. For three years he studied humanities at Leyden, and then returning, he was sent to Oxford, where, becoming commoner in the College called Christ Church, and afterwards a Master of Arts, he devoted himself to the study of controversy for four years At length, by reading Catholic books , he was convinced of the falsity of the Protestant religion, chieflyfrom the motive that he thought it plainlynecessary to have some certain and infallible rule of faith, and this he could not findanywheresave in the CatholicChurch Afterwards he was reconciled to the Roman Church
In the year of our Lord 1623, he was admitted on Jan. 6th to the English College at Douay, and there under the supervision of Mr. Mark Drury, he defended all logic and philosophy In the third year of his theology he was called upon to teach philosophy, and he taught two whole courses of philosophy by himself. When the second course was finished, he left the College for the EnglishMission on June 3 in the year of Our Lord 1631 , being accreditedwith the ordinary faculties For one year he lived with Mr. Preston , of " The Manor," whom he left on the advice of Dr. Kellison and his superiors at London; he then passed another year with Lord Monteagle .
Beingrecalledfrom England in the year 1633 by Dr. Kellison, the President , he taught theology for three years, but when the plague attacked the College he returned to England, where for another three years he resided with Sir Walter Blount Then he was appointed Archdeacon of the counties of Worcesterand Salop by the Bishopof Chalcedon Latterly he lived with Mr. Humphrey Weld
On Sept. 1, 1641, he was appointed Vice-President ofthe College byMr. George Muscott, the President, and he was sent to the College with presidentialpowers during the absence ofthe said Mr. Muscott. He discharged the office of Vice-President for five years, during which time he furnishedalways two coursesoflecturesto thestudents in theology; that is, he gave one every year, and the other he dictated, and in both he presided
On Sept. 27, 1646, the aforesaid William Hyde received notice from the most eminent Cardinal Capponi , Protector of England, that he had been appointed President of the College. On the 28th, the said letters were reaa to the assembled alumni and, students, and after a short address, the President assumed office
There is little recorded during the first year of his presidency, especially as the Fourth Diary and this overlap for this period in the manner alreadyexplained He received permission from the Cardinal Protectorin February, 1647, to take the degree of Doctor of Divinity, and passed through the ordinary course, matriculation, baccalaureate, licentiate, performinghis disputations for the doctorate, whichdegree he received on October 25th. The Rev. William Hamertonarrived attheCollegeon April 21st, 1647, to take over theduties ofprocurator; and by the end of this year it is recorded that 6,903 florins and 2 stivers of the old debton the Collegehad beenpaid off.
The ordinationof the following priests is recorded in 1647March Edward Barker, alias Vernalty, at Bac-St Maur John Jousy, 1648 . "
A distinguished convert , Thomas Read, arrived from Paris on March 6th, seeking admission to the College. He was a Doctor of Civil Law, an advocate in the Archiepiscopal Courts, and had spent twenty-eight years in Oxford, where he had been President of Magdalen Hall. Permanent arrangements were made by the President in June with regard to Masses being offered for benefactors One Mass was to be offered for every ten florins given unconditionallyto the College, and Mass was to be said at a privilegedaltar every Monday for the souls of deceased benefactors
The institution of a French class with Walric Remington as the first master is recorded on June 23rd
Duringtheyearthe ordinationofthe followingpriests is recorded : - December. John Copland, alias Street. Andrew Skinner , alias Bentley. The death of Michael Constable from smallpox is recorded on October 3rd . 1649
The entry for June 2nd records the election of the President to be Regius Professor of History in the University, though he only received royal lettersfrom Brusselsconfirming his election on December 27th. Amongst matters in the Collegeitself, we may note on July 25ththe beginning of the custom of ringingthe Angelus bell The " affictiones" mentioned in the entry for May 30th and elsewhereseem to have been a scholastic exercise for the class of poetry Latin and Greek poems were composedand written out by the scholars, usuallyon thefeastof St. Augustine , and were then ' affixed ' to the walls of the school for public inspection
Payments continue to be made towards the reductionof the College debt, 4,594 florins and 12 stivers having been paid off during 1648, and 2,904 florins 16 stivers for thisyear
The ordination of Thomas Read to the priesthood at Tournay is recorded as having taken place on April 6th "
1650.
The President began his public lectures as Professor of History, taking as his subject the works of Baronius He was admittedto the Council oftheUniversityin January; andwhen onMarch 20th,CharlesII, the fugitive King of England, paid a visit to Douay, he ordered the President to give thanks in the King's name to the Rector Magnificus and theUniversityforthedisplayand entertainment given in his honour . Latin and English addresses were also presented to the King by the President in the name oftheCollege
The arrival of Dr. Edward Daniel at the College , on June 19th, is worthy of note. He had been President of the English College at Lisbon for six years, and nowcame to Douay as professor oftheology and ordinary confessor
Among the arrivals was a new student, who had already suffered imprisonment for the Faith :-
Richard Nichols, then a deacon, came from Paris to the College on October 26th, in order to be ordained priest. Educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge , he had been convertedthrough his study of the writings of the Fathers and of controversialists, and had been imprisoned at Cambridge When set free, he had gone to London, where he had been three or four times imprisoned by order of Parliament, and finally being set at liberty through the influenceof the Count Egmont, he had gone to France , and abjured his heresy before the Apostolic Nuncio at Paris
Duringtheyearthe ordinationof the followingpriests is recorded : - December Richard Nicols, at Tournay Robert Tolson, alias Brathwait, Francis Rider
The deathofGeorge Berry,an Englishman, formerlycook, is recorded on July 10th
1651 . He
On March 1st,the President received a letterfromthe Privy Council, commanding him to go to Brussels, and there consult the Secretary for War, who would give him directions as to what he was to do. returnedfrom Brussels on the 24th, having been told by the Secretary to consult with the Bishop of Chalcedon on the matter of withdrawing the Rev. George Gage from the cause of the King of Portugal, and for the future to have no communication by letter withhim. "
OnSeptember2nd occursthefirstnotice ofthePresident's illness. He begins to suffer from colic and afterwards from stone, and from this time his disease increased gradually till his death . "
Three doctors were summoned on October 12th, and held a consultation
On Dec. 18th , " he made his will, and left the College heir to all his possessions, after the payment of funeral expenses and legacies as expressed in the will. He left to the College, in monies here and in England, 9,842 florins 18 stivers"
William Hamerton , the Procurator and writer of the Diary, was made executor , with instructions to hand everythingover to the new
President Dr. Hyde left his libraryfor the use ofthe coming President. He died on December 22nd, and was buried at the church of St. James, in the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin, on December the 24th. Difficultiesat once arose with the Universityauthorities in connection with the late President's property On the day of his death, three Universityofficials came to scal up all his boxes, chests , and possessions ; Mr. Hamertonundertook to carry out the provisions of the will on the 26th and on the 27th, the officials returned to make an inventory ofall theproperty, deinanding a payment of 153 florins fortheir labours
No ordinationto the priesthood is recorded this year. 1652
The University officials returned on January 14th, bringing a sinal paper, without signature or any authority, demanding payment of the sum due to them The executor asked for further particulars, as he himselfwould have to furnish them to the incoming President
On Feb. 8th, a letter was received from the superiors of the English Clergy, asking Dr. Daniel to take theplace ofPresident untilan appointmentwasmade by the Pope. Furthertroubles occurwiththeUniversity officials in February and March They bring a detailed list of their charges written so badlyon cheappaper as to be illegible, and withno namesundersigned Afew days later theyreturn withthe list written out neatly and fully in proper order, and the executor asks for a few days' grace to procure the necessary money. But this they resented . so much that men were sent the same evening to extort the money by force, with orders not to leave the house before securing the money However, the Rector of the University recalled them, declaring to Dr. Danielthatthewhole procedure had taken placewithout his knowledge.
The executor then drew up an appeal to the Apostolic Nuncio at Brussels, and the officials answered, on March 5th, by threatening to throw him into prison. This led him to set off for Brusselsto ask for royal protectionfor himself and the College against any violent action on the part of the University Hewas quite successful , and the entry for April 16th gives a French letter from the Privy Council, instructing tlic University to send a full account of the case to Brussels, and to take no action at all till the matter be decided During the absence of Mr. Hamerton , a prohibition had arrived from Brussels forbidding the University to take any action against Hamerton or the College, ' pendente lite, ' under penalty of 100 ducats and of excommunication And the ingenious move in answer to this was a summonsto theCollege on April 2nd, to have all their students matriculatedwithin three days underpenaltyof 8 florinsfor cach student
The new President, the Rev. George Leyborne , received notice of his appointmentfrom Cardinal Barberini , Protector of England, on July 20th, and came to the Collegeon December 30th.
No one could be presented for ordination during this year owing tothe vacancy in the presidentship .
The death ofWilliam Craftes, door-keeper, is recorded on March 11th 1653 . When theaccountswere made up and rendered to thenew President, it was clear that duringthe six years' presidency ofDr. Hyde , theestate of the College had been increased by forty-two thousand two hundred and seventy-nine florins
Another quarrel arose with the University authoriticsthrough the professorsofthe College refusing to appear before the Rector, and take
an oath not to teach anything contrary to faith. The matter was referred to Brussels, but though the President made a journeythither in May, we are not told how it was settled The year was a quiet but busy one , arrears in ordinations being made up, and many priests leaving the College for England.
Duringtheyearthe ordinationofthe followingpriests is recorded - March 12. Edward Whall, alias Robinson, at Cambrai Thomas Rowdon, alias Feasby, Thomas Churchhil, alias Dunham , Edward Kynne, alias Collington , Henry Vere, Matthew Chamber, Robert Chamber , June 12 . John Richardson, alias Wats, at Valenciennes . Sept. 20
The death is Richard Russell , recorded of Anthony Bloomer, alias Greene , of the School of Poetry, on July 31st. 1654 .
The Diary ends on April 25th with the appointmentof the Rev. Robert Tolson as procuratorin place of the Rev. William Hamerton, thewriter ofthis Diary.
The followingpriests were ordained duringthesemonths:- March 1. John Morgan, Charles Newport, alias Genings, at Cambrai "
There follows a list of martyrs transcribed from the well-known catalogue of Raissius Next comesthe document which has already been described in the note appended to the Latin text As there stated, it originally formed no part ofthe Diary, but its intrinsic interestis so considerable thatit is here translated in full
A LIST OF THE MORE NOTEWORTHY PRIESTS WHO ARE TO BE FOUND AT PRESENT AMONG THE ENGLISH SECULAR CLERGY .
For the better understandingofthis list, itwill be well to observe :
1° That the Secular Clergy of England is divided into two classes or orders, of which the first consists of capitular priests who administer affairs belonging to the whole secular clergy ; and the second embraces the non-capitular priests, i.e. all those priests ofthe secular clergywhoare not among the numberofthe capitulars
2° The capitular priests (who are usually twenty-six or thereabouts in number, under one head, who is called the Dean) consist of Vicars-General , Archdeacons , and officials, and also of simple priests who take no part in the administration of the affairs of the clergy
*3° That the Very Reverend George Berkett was appointed second Archpriest of England by Pope Clement VIII of happy
* Opposite this third observation , in the margin, is placed the following note: " The first Archpriest of England was a priest of the secular clergy, named Blackwell, who was deposed by Clement VIII because he constituted himself defender of the oath of allegiance , which contains many propositions contrary to Catholic faith and the authority of the Apostolic See ; and by the authority of the same Pontiff, Berkett was put in his place
memory, and that the same Pope assigned to him twelve assistants. He with his council of twelve assistants divided the whole kingdom ofEnglandintotwelve provinces , and committed toeachoftheassistants the care of a province and the title thereof, so that confusion in ecclesiastical administration might be avoided, and no province of the kingdom might be deprived of pastoral care This disciplinaryarrangementwasfollowedbythetwo bishops ofEngland,William and Richard of Chalcedon, who succeeded Berkett in turn as rulers of the secular clergy For they assigned the separate provinces of England (though the name of assistants was discontinued) to Vicars and Archdeacons ; and the practice obtains now , and ever since the death of Richard [Bishop] of Chalcedon, the dean of the Capitular priestshas continuedit, andexercises all the extraordinary faculties which the said bishop obtained from His Holiness by a petition to that effect , though he does it without consulting His Holiness, and perhaps againsthis wish; for the Churchof God has no such custom.
4° The present Dean and his Capitulars, with a few exceptions, have approved by their votes of a new oath devised by an Irish Recollect (whose name is Welch), to the great harm of Catholics , and have affixed the Capitular seal to their approval With this introduction, the purpose of our list now . demands that the more noteworthy men of each class should be considered separately
And among the more noteworthy priests of the first class is reckoned Mr. HumphreyWarine, known also by the assumed name of Ellice, who is the Dean of the Capitular priests The President of the Pontifical College of Douay has known him well from his youth. He was brought up and educated in the same College for about five years, but after completing his philosophical studies, was sent with other scholars of the same College to the recentlyerected English College at Lisbon as to a new foundation. There, ashisprofessor ofTheology, he had White, knownalso bytheassumed name of Blacklow, the author of strange and harmful teachings At the end of his Theological course, Humphrey Warine taught philosophy at Lisbon, and afterwards Theology At length, ten years ago, he was chosen by Whiteand his partisansas Deanofthe Capitular priests , both because he was well-disposed towards this party, and because his was a pliable, easy nature which could be bent in any direction.
When the President of the College of Douay (sent to England by the Illustrious Internuncio at Brussels, de Vechiis ) asked him why he dared to exercise and to grant to others the extraordinary faculties of the deceased bishop, without first obtaining leavefrom His Holiness , the good Dean answered, that it was quite sufficient that His Holiness was silent, according to the principle that silence means consent. And again the same President asked him (he had been a close friend of the President ) why he was unwilling to comply with the decrees of His Holiness , for the keeping of which decrees * Dodd calls him Waring.
one hundred and forty martyrs (all studentsof the same College as himself) had shed theirblood , and undergone a glorious death And the good Dean answered to this that he and the other Capitulars had made up their minds to live for the future according to the customs of the Gallican Church The said Dean lives in London, is about fifty-eight years of age, born of respectable parentsofgood position. *
2° Mr. William Clifford sprung from the ancientBaronsClifford. He is a priest of undoubtedly exemplary life, who is now broken down by age, and scarcely rises from his bed He has always been well-disposed towardsWhite and his Capitular friends, although he has never accepted the strange doctrines of the said White He has never been persuaded to mix in the public affairs of the Clergy A man of virtue and prudence , but not well versed in humanities or higher learning. He livesat Paris .
3° Thomas White, who goes by the assumed name of Blacklow, known sufficiently and more than that to the Pope and the whole RomanCourt, holds the principal place among the Capitular priests after the Dean, and is looked on by them as an oracle, though now he is gifted neither with judgment nor memory The wicked old man lives in London.
4° Mr. Thomas Carr, for manyyears was confessor tothe English Augustinian nuns at Paris He is about sixty-two years of age , and suffers from paralysis and other bodily ailments He, with Henry Holden, a Capitular priest and Doctor of Paris, now dead , always strongly upheld the strange and harmful doctrinesofWhite, and to the best of his powerpromoted Jansenism So muchso that he refused to help his own nephew, whom the President of Douay had presented for the priesthood, andwho was in want, becausethe nephew hated the doctrines of Jansenius , as the President has heard from the nephew himself. The said Mr. Carr, born ofrespectable parents, oflittlelearning, and muchoccupied insecular business , has neverworked on the English Mission .
5° Mr. Henry Turbervill is Archdeacon , and usually lives in Londonin the house of theMarquess ofWinchester. For some years he was nearly blind, his eye being badly injured, and even now he suffers from dimness of sight His life is exemplary, and he is well versed in controversial theology With the Dean and the other Capitular priests, he has such weight that they submit to hisopinion in nearly all consultations. He was known to and much liked by the Presidentof Douay, both being educated in the same College, he being then a well-disposed youthof great promise But it is to be regretted that no one of all the secular clergy is more infected with the dangerous teachings of White ; and he constituteshimself defender of the oath, commonly known as the oath of allegiance, in which are contained many things contrary to Catholic Faith and the authorityof the Roman Church He andWhitehave had Honestis parentibus ex minori nobilitate. Nobilis is used not only of the nobility , but of the county families and landed gentry
wonderful influence with the English clergy since the death of Bishop Richard of Chalcedon. He is about sixty, has never taught Philosophy or Theology, though he is an able man, the son of respectable parents
6° Mr. John Lassells, alias Bolds The President of Douay knew him well at the College, where he taught humanities He is about fifty-eight years old, well-born, though his familyarevery poor, has always lived a pious and exemplary life, and though a follower of White, he has never yet seemed openly to favour his profane novelties With respect to the factions which have arisen amongthe clergy concerning White, he has kept a neutral position, beingneither awarm supporternor opponent . Yet hewas madeby the Dean of the Capitular priestsArchdeacon ofNorfolkand another county, though he knew or should have known that according to the canons, ecclesiastical dignities ought not to be conferred without permission of the Apostolic See. However this may be , the President of the College is readyto answer for him that if he should be appointed Superior of the English Clergy or President of the same College, he would always comply with the will of His Holiness . He has done little or no work on the English Mission since his ordination to the priesthood, always having chargeofthe eldest sons ofnoble familieswhoforthe sake of educationhavegone abroad. Hence his life has mostly been spent in France, and sometimes in Italy, where His Eminence Francis Cardinal Barberini, Protector of England, has had acquaintance with him Now , however , he lives in Paris, having charge of the most noble Baron Lumley.
7° Mr. John Leyburn, of the ancient Barons Leyburn, is the nephew of the President of Douay His life has been nearly all spent in France, for the Illustrious Viscount Montague entrusted to him the care of his eldest son, and during the troubles between King and Parliament he stayed in various provinces of France , and finally setting out for Rome, travelled through most of Italy He is forty-four years old, has great natural gifts, is a good English, Latin, and French scholar, of excellentdisposition, and very exemplary life. In the opinion, however, of his uncle, now President of Douay, he has become a " Neopoliticus Gallus, " looking afterhis ownrather than the public good, so reserved that he confides secrets to no man. Still the President , his uncle, as he answered for Mr. Lassells, can answer for him, that by word and deed he will always be prepared to obey the will of His Holiness . He usually lives at London in the house of the said Viscount Montague .
8° Mr. John (Francis) Gage, Doctor of Theology, was Agent for the English Clergy at Rome some years ago, and hence is sufficiently well known to His Eminence the Protector of England, and the other Cardinals ofthe RomanChurch He has workedvery little in England since his ordination He was educated in the Pontifical College of Douay, is well known to the President , and has alwaysled an exemplarylife. Henowlivesin theCollege ofNavarre at Paris, in charge of two eldest sons of noble families He is of
good birth, and sufficiently learned , and he acts diplomatically with regard to the dissensions in England caused by White's teaching ; for he has no patrimony, and the want of this makes many more secular priests afraid to condemn openly noveltieswhich they hate at heart, lest they should be deprived of the alms which are given to the Capitular priests for distribution He is forty years of age
9
.
Mr. George Warrham, Archdeacon of Sussex and Suffolk , bornof poor parents, is unlearned , muchoccupied insecular business , and has great influence with the Dean because he is full of zealfor the party which opposes the present President of Douay. The President knows him well, for he was educated in the said College ; he was a youth of no promise, not even capable of teaching the elements of grammar. He lives in the county of Norfolk, and is about sixty years of age.
10
°
Mr. RichardStevenson, orStevens, forso he was named when studying at Douay, is a Vicar-General, to whose care are entrusted many counties of England He is seventy, is paralysed, ofrespectable though not noble birth He lives with a gentleman, Mr. Fitchherbert, nephew ofthe Reverend Father Fitchherbert, whoused to be Rector of the English College at Rome. He seems to have led a piousand exemplarylife His professor oftheologywas White II
°
Mr. John Medcalf, Archdeacon of Northumberland and Cumberland, is a keen supporter of the Chapter's cause, though he has no learning to defend it. He has said openly that if he were king of England, he would proscribe all priests who refused totake the oath of allegiance He is about thirty-eight, experienced in breeding and training horses , born of respectable though not noble parentage. He lives in the county of Durham.
12
° Mr. John Singleton is Treasurer of the Capitular priests He was born of very poor parents, was a student at Douay, where hetaught humanitiesand one course of philosophy Hewas brought into the Capitulars by White, and is so strong a supporter of his teachingsthat he always keeps White's books by him to be recommended to the new missionaries , i.e. the latest arrivals in London. He is of a quarrelsome disposition, and when he was in theCollege at Douay he organised a party against his President; and he was the principal cause of the faction against the present President, supported by Mr. Shephard and Mr. Lutton, two confessors of the College. He is about thirty-eight, is a good companion, showing himself rather an advocate than a preacher ; he lives in London.
°
13
Mr. John Holland, alias Serjeant , under assumed names has been for many years Secretary of the Capitular priests, being raised to that office by White. His writings now publishedin his name are full of profane novelties But since at present he is in bad odour amongst many Catholics, the Capitular priests do not makeuseofhis help Hewas bornofhereticalparents , andeducated atCambridge , and was thenrecommended as Secretaryto thepseudobishop of Durham, who used to persecute Catholics in wonderful ways. On the death of the pseudo-bishopat the beginning of the .
Englishtroubles, he had no means of sustenance Butbeingfriendly with a Catholic he joined the Church, and being recommended to the Superior of the English Clergy living in London , was sent to the College at Lisbon After being ordained there, he returned to England, and acted as private secretary to White, until he was elected Secretary of the Capitular priests He is about thirty- eight years old, is a good companion , lives in London.
14° Mr. Matthew Sherborne, Vicar-General of the county of Lancaster, was at Douay together with the present President , completedhis course ofphilosophyand theologyin thesame College, and is a relative of the present President He has worked perseveringly on the English Mission from the time that he was sent there A priest certainly good, pious, and learned, but so old, fat, and weak of body that he can scarcely walkor ride. He is sixtyeight yearsofage, ofgood birth, andlives with his nephew , the heir of the family estates, near Lancaster , the principal town of the county.
15°
Mr. Robert Charnack , alias Manley, Archdeacon ofthe said county of Lancaster The present President of Douay knows him well, and sent him as a friendless youth to Lisbon, securing free admission for him to the English College there, where his professor of theology was Mr. Humphrey Warine, dean of the Capitular priests. Thisgood Archdeaconis a busyandactiveman withregard to legal business, and excels the other Capitular priests both in subtlety and in zeal forWhite, though he is incapable ofunderstanding White's opinions owing to his want of learning. He is a man of exemplary life, and lives at the house of the widow of the noble knight, Sir Thomas Tylsley. His familywas very poor, but ofgood position, and, after some few years, at the death of his brother, he succeeded to some property, whereas previously he had nothing. He is about forty-two
16°
Mr. Hodgson , Archdeacon of the county of York, was put in that position a year and a half ago in place of thedistinguished and holy man, Mr. George Hudleston, whom Richard, Bishop of Chalcedon, had made Archdeaconof the same county The President of Douay does not know him, but he has heard from priests living in the said county that he is a young man of no distinction, and onlyplaced over distinguished , pious, learned , andolder priests becausehe is a friend ofthe said Singleton , Treasurerof the Chapter. He is thirty-six years of age, andlives in the same county.
17° Mr. George Leyburn, Doctor of Theology and Presidentof the Pontifical College of Douay, is at present in the sixteenth year of his presidentship . Before he undertook this office, he was for fouryears Vicar-General ofthelate BishopofChalcedon andSuperior of all the English Clergy At the present time he is like another Joseph among his brethren oftheChapter. These remarks will be sufficient with regard to the chief priests ofthefirstclass, and certainly astothe rest they areoflittleaccount. The purpose of this list now demands some notice, where possible,
FIFTH DOUAY
of the priests of the second class, that is, the more noteworthy priests who are not Capitulars ..
Ist. The most illustrious Walter Montague , Abbot Commendatory in Franceand Chief Almoner to the Queen-MotheroftheKing of England, and of the Duchess of Orleans. The Presidentofthe Pontifical College of Douay has known him well since the beginning ofhis conversion to the CatholicFaith For he was born ofheretical parentsandhis father, who was originally a barrister, was afterwards created Earl of Manchester . His eldest brother was also appointed by the reigning King of England to be prefect of the palacein English, "My Lord Chamberlain . " Now the aforesaid Abbot Montagu is a Prelate beyondall praise, that is, endowed with every kind of virtue, and it is to be regretted that he is so old, for he is at least sixty-six He dwells in the house of the said Queen at Paris, and he has great influence with her, and it would be to the advantageofthe Clergy if he possessed such influence with theKing of Englandhimself
2nd. Mr. Edward Thimbleby, provost of the CollegiateChurch of Cambray, a man of great eminence, is of very noble family, and one which is highly regarded by the King of England He is very acceptable to all the regulars , especiallyto the Fathers ofthe Society and the English Benedictines . For a long time heresided at Rome in the service of a certain Cardinal, and so he is very wellknown at the RomanCourt. His abilities and prudence are great, but he has never been upon the English Mission
3rd Mr. William Mennell , descended from the ancient race ofthe Barons Mennell, is good, devout, sufficientlylearned,andgifted with prudence in conducting affairs. The Presidentofthe English College at Douay would have chosen him as his Vice-President , but he refused that office, through the influence of his relatives and friends, whocouldnot be inducedto allow him to liveout ofEngland Heis aboutfiftyyears old,and has always dissented from thefavourite objects of the Capitular priests, both as to the exercise of extraordinary faculties without the leave of His Holiness, and as to the profane noveltiesofWhite Helives in the county of York withMr. Witham, a man ofhigh birth.
4th. Mr. Michael Jenison, * Vice-President of the Pontifical College ofDouay, born of parentsofgood standing, is distinguished by piety, and possesses sufficient learning. He is, moreover , an enemy to strange doctrine, and a very obedient son of the Roman Church. He is forty-three years old, and is well-known to the King of England, andin favour withhim.
5th. Mr. Robert Pugh, doctor in both laws, devout and good, is sprung from a distinguished but impoverished family He has published several pamphlets against White, which have made him unpopular with the chiefCapitulars He is sixty-six orthereabouts, but strong in body Formerly he joined the Jesuits, and although he left their Society, he remains verydevotedto them. Helives in London
In the Fifth Diary he is always called Genings
6th
Mr. Robert Brathwet, a man distinguished by piety and prudence, and an enemy of strange doctrine The President ofthePontifical College ofDouay knows him well, as he is his relative He taught philosophy in the same College, and for several years acted as Procurator. He was born of parents of good standing, and is about forty-four years old He lives in Lancashire in the house of his sister
7th. Mr. James Heaselwood, licentiate of theology, is a contemporary and fellow-student ofthe Presidentof the English College at Douay. He detests the strange doctrinesofWhite, and execrates them worse than a dog. He is descended from a family of good standing, and for the space of many years lived with the illustrious ViscountStafford, to whose wife he was confessor He is a learned manofexemplarylife Heis sixty-eightyears old, andstillvigorous
8th Mr. LawrenceJones,a manof good dispositionandlearned, very hostile to strange doctrines He was born of well-born but poorparents He is about fifty years old andlives in London .
Mr. John Younge, is a devout, good, and prudent priest, who was always averse to the pernicious doctrines of White, and disapproved of the favourite objects of the Capitulars He was born of parentsof good position He is about sixty years old, but feeble in body. He lives at Branton, in the county of York.
Many priestsofthis sort, devout, good, and possessed of sufficient learning, I might here enumerate ; but I am aiming at brevity, andtheirenumerationwould lead to a longerexplanationthan could be set out in brief.
On the last page of the Diarythere is a note, written seventy years later, which runs as follows : -
In the year 1725 , May 8th.
I, Robert Witham, Presidentof this College, certify thatIcannot yetfind any journal or history of events relating to this College from the year 1654 to the year 1676that is, for the twenty-twoyears during which there presided over this College Mr. George Layburne (till the year 1670), and then his successor , Mr. John Leyburne, nephew of the previous President But though I latelydiscovered in the Procurator's room some letters and at some time a catalogue of masters and others in the College, hitherto I have not found any list of the priests who were sent into England by both these Presidents, or ofthe alumni who took theoath underMr. George Leyburn Nevertheless , it has seemed well to note down here some things which we have been able to discover from the year 1654, in whichthe Diary, under the aforesaid President, ceases .
Inthe year 1654, or at least in 1655 . .....
And there the entry ceases, no particulars being given, except a hastily-scrawled list of professors of theology, philosophy, and rhetoric .. This is scribbled rather than written on a sheet of paper affixed tothe Diary by a wafer
. 1579-1580
Contributed from the " Old Brotherhood" archives by the Rev. Raymund Stanfield
Seminarii Pontificii Anglorum apud Remenses gesta a festo
Sanctissimi Trinitatis anno 1579 usque ad festum
S. Mariæ Magdalenæ 1580 Julii 22
In superiori narratione nostra illud erat postremum quod Duaceni Magistratus, Catholicissimiviri, suis nos literis vehementer revocarunt et quod coepimus jam tum cogitare de reditu Nunc autem sequentis relationis hujus hoc erit initium, Deo Opto Maxo et post illum Sanctissimo Domino nostro vero patri ac parenti nostro gratias agere, quod non redierimus Cum enim nihil absque illo tentandum statueremus , dignata est sanctitas sua significare nobis non prius esse migrandum quam major esset securitas Ubi et incredibilem curam suam in nobis conservandis , et singularem prudentiam in futuris prospiciendis , facile declaravit Ecce enim annus jam est et amplius, cum nihil interim ibi tutum , propter excursantium hostium vicina quædam et munitissima præsidia: tum vero hoc temporeita sublata est omnis securitatis exspectatio ut, hostibus quotidie invalescentibus , plurimi etiam cives Duaceni (nescio quibus insidiis) in eorum potestatem armati devenerint. Magnumergo est immo maximum beneficiumhabuisse nos semper et nunc habere civitatem hanc Remensem studiorum nostrorum domicilium in qua tanquam in portu quodam tranquillissimo sic conquiescimus ut hactenus nemo sit qui terreat. Et sane quamvis ante aliquoties, nunquam tamen satis laudare possumus et magistratum ipsum et præcipuos quosdam ex clero, admirabiles viros , et vicinos Episcopos ordinatores presbyterorum nostrorum et nobiles quosdam magna pietate viros, pro eo quem spirant erga nos religioso affectu , miserti causæet conditionis nostræ. Dum in hac pace consistimus, quasi alibi non esset pax, undique ad nos confluunt Duaco Lovanio, reliquo Belgio, ex nostris nonsolumTheologi venerabiles sed multi nobilissimi viri, partim in transitu, salutantes Collegium, partim etiam apud nos seu propenos commorantes Taceoeos qui ex Hispania, qui e Romaad nos hoc anno venerunt, qui omnes quocumque pergerunt, hic prius subsistendum , atque hoc Gregorii 13 Seminarium sibi invisendum existimabant, idque vel honoris causa erga fundatorem vel mutui solatii, quo nosmet invicem in Domino exhortantes consolati sumus. Horum princeps quidem et pater gentis nostræ fuit Rmus D. Episcopus Asaphensis quem in nostra etiam mensa (sic enim dignatus est) quotidie grandævum et venerabilem multorum annorum confessorem lætissimis animis
intuemur. Ex Anglia autem quam numerose advolaverint, vel ex eo apparet quod præter eos qui Romam , interimvelin Angliam discesserunt (de quibus postea) jam nunc hodierno die sumus , non dico in urbe, sed in Seminario 112, præter Duacenos nostros qui plurimi sunt humanioris litteraturæ et philosophiæ in Collegio patrumstudiosiquodhujusCollegiiquasi pedagogium philosophicum constituimus Certe Remenses nostros magnum refectorium non capit, quantumvis in his augustiisloci dilatentur spatia charitatis, quod eo est mirabilius postquam D. Alanus præses , metuens ne sumptus quoque tantæ multitudinis non suffecerint non solum exquisitum examen et delectumfacit advenientium, sed de venturis quoque mandat et monet quantum potest ut quam maxime idonei accedant ; Nam reliquam turbam Catholicorum scholariumferendo plane non esset; quamvis hoc anno Sanctmus D. N. pro sua incredibili largitate priori munificentiæ, menstruæ centum Coronatorum adjecerit50 insingulos menses Non solumautemsic abillocautum est necessario, sed et legatus Angliæ Parissiis consistens, videns et audiens nobiles adolescentes plurimos huc transfretare et alios fieri presbyteros , alios religiosos , omnes ad seminaria tendere , fertur dixisse se dominam suam et consiliarios ejus admoniturum ut huic rei mature prospiciant idque per parentum incarcerationem nisi filios suos non modo domi detineant sed etiam domumrevocent Veniunt tamen quotidie et veniunt tales ut jam sint apud nos nobilium virorumhæredeset filii natu maximi quos parentes cupiunt esse sacerdotes et unus in primis xx plus minus annorum bellus juvenis et Duaci olim educatus , nuperime in Anglia disposito opulentissimo patrimonio, et contempto sæculo, cum esset totus sui juris, anhelat ad vitam ecclesiasticam ; et omnino illud in his adolescentibus nostris est mirabile et gentis nostræ peculiareatque singularebeneficium tam multosesse qui sua sponte, etiamnolentibus parentibus et interdum vetantibus, nullo præmio proposito sed carceribus et cæteris afflictionibus, studiosissime tamen appetunt sacerdotium non sine aliquo magno (ut speramus) præsagio futuræ divinæ clementiæ erga gentem nostram Cum alias rarissimi esse soleant ex nobilibus presbyterii appetentes , atque illi ipsi non nisi opulentum prius consecuti beneficium Sunt et alii præterea inCollegio juvenes nobiles qui tum primum nati cum hæresisjam dominari cæpisset, usque ad hunc diem sic a Catholicis parentibus instituti fuerunt ut, nulla hæresisaut schismatis societate contaminati,semper in ecclesiæ gremio fuerint ab ipsa infantia Quod ideo refero quasi rem valde notandam quia cum præclarum sit cæteros reconciliationis beneficium a nostris presbyteris postulare, hoc est ut ecclesiæ unde exierant reconsilientur, isti reconsiliatione ista non indigeant Atque ut de aliis quoque dicam non vulgaribus, sunt duo in mensa nostra nobiles, provectæ ætatis atque maturæ prudentiæ domi non ita pridem juris mancipalis primum studiosi, deinde in jure etiam dicendo apud populum spectabiles viri: nunc sacræ Theologiæ dediti et de presbyterio cogitantes. Qualis etiam tertius hoc anno factus est diaconus Et illud adhuc majus est
quod venerint quatuor (quos vocant ministri Calvanistici) et duo ex illis jam facti, alteri duo, futuri presbyteri Quem concursum majoremquam antea unde putemusfieri, nisi partim propter presbyterosnostros qui plures hoc anno missi quamprius, plurium quotidie corda tetigerunt, partim autem et maxime propter Romanumillud Collegium , quod hoc anno cæpitsub patribus societatis valde florere, suæ Stis incredibili beneficio et summo favore Illmi et benignissimi protectoris nostri Cardinalis Moroni Cujus Romani Collegii desiderio sic inflamantur omnes fere nostri ut D. Præsidi nihil sit molestius quam ista insatiabilis et incessabilis suorum ambitio ut in hanc Romanam disciplinam et institutionem mittantur Sed quia moderate et cum delectu hac in re agendum fuit, missi sunt hoc temporis spatio ad Collegium illud in disciplinam patrum scholares 18 præter hosceocto * qui nunc mittuntur, et præter quosdam nobiles qui in eadem domo et disciplina vivunt de suo. In Angliam auteminterea temporis, hoc est post superiorem relationem anni præteriti profecti sunt ad illam messem dominicam, presbyteri ex hoc seminario 35, quorum unus quinquegenariuset valdenobilis frater illustris cujusdamregni Consiliarii, quibus accesserunt Roma presbyteri 16. Atque hic est ille annus in quo non solum illud Collegium nostrum, sed illa florentissimasocietas Jesu primum nobis nostræque Angliæ emisit presbyteros operarios quos omnes illustrissimuset piissimus Boromæus Cardinalismira charitate amplexus est, et ad se invitans hospitium præbuit, et factus est nobis alter talis patronus Mediolanensis qualem ante habuimus illusmum et omniprædicationedignissimum,CardinalemBononiensem Quorum patrum adventus tam exoptatus antea, nunc autem postquam incolumes appulerunt, bonis omnibus in Anglia gratissimus, quos non pollicetur (Deo bene juvante) fructus ex illa messe Anglicana? Qui profecto ita exuberat ut D. Writus , S. Theologiæ licentiatus (de quo in superioribus annalibus) hoc jam biennio et amplius vinctus Christi scribat nihil deesse præteroperarios Messem enim in illis septentrionalibus esse incredibilem et certe in una regni provincia non maxima, missas et conciones audiunt centeni et ducenteni non in ecclesiis, quas ad hanc rem nullas habent, sed in secretis et spatiosis locis et ibideminveniuntur circiter 5,000 hominum nominatorum quas reconciliatos vocant, hoc est ecclesiæ gremio ab omni contagione et societate schismatica restitutos, et quos sub hoc nominesummi consiliarii in numerato habentet in eos inquirendum statuerunt et quid factum sit nondum plene scimus, nisi quod populus hanc vexationem sua morte vellet redimere Jam vero in ipsis vinculis gignuntur plurimi , et in carcere demonis est ecclesia Christi, et in mediis catenis verbum Dei non est alligatum, et opulentæ matronæ Londinenses a maritis, mariti ab uxoribus , liberi a parentibuset e contra, si non habitatione, tamenfideseparantur Una autem marito Catholicoet magno juris consultomortuo , vidua transfretavit ad suscipiendum habitum religiosum Quid
The First Diarydoes not enable us to identify the eight students referred to It gives a list of eleven sent to Rome on August 4 (page 168).
quod plebei homines plurimi (genus hominum apud nos honestissima conditione) more latronum præ tribunali manum levare et de missa audienda respondere, et confessi, vel convicti mulctamsolvere coacti sunt et demissi statim ad eundem Dei cultum redierunt, non mulctam metuentes sed manibus laborantesut habeant unde solvant Quoties (Deus bone) Londini et alibi viri nobiles cum uxoribus, imo uxores absque viris (quo sunt magis religiosa) in jus vocantur, non religionis studio sed cupiditate, mulctæ quæ sæpius repetita quibusdam aulicis tales pænalitates ambientibus magnum adfert lucrum Et omnino non tam religione aliqua quam suis commodis metiuntur omnia a minimo hæreticorumusque ad maximum Tamen Nortona (alias de mariti nomine Jonson) Nortoni senis pia filia, illustris illa fæmina quæ ante 2 annos patrem Romam usque inquirebat, illa inquam ad maritum revertens tenetur in carcere et nondum potest emere libertatem Videntes autem Catholicos crescere quotidie magis et magis et veritatem illam quæ magna est et prævalet in domos, in civitates, in provincias, in ipsam aulam quasi in Cæsaris domum , tacite subintrahereet scientes esse in medio sui sacerdotes plurimos, audientes quoque esse etiam patres societatiset nescientes distinguere nec valentes impedire, quia digitus Dei hic est. perantes quodammodotiment semper nescio quid suis temporalibus, Judaizantes ne forte veniant Romani et ideo omnem classem omnem bellicum apparatum Catholicorum Principum contra se armari suspicantur, fitque in illis quod est apud poetam :-major est bello timor ipse belli Augeant et hunc timorem ille terræ motus qui hoc anno etsiin transmarinisquoque viciniis tamen ibi fuitmaximus: et certissimæ atque manifestissimæ visiones , in ære quasi duorum exercitium compugnantium * unde fit ut præter cætera molimina bellica, ter etiam in hebdomida (res mira apud hæreticos)præcipiatur jejunium et quod ecclesia jubente religiose facere contempserunt , hoc hæretice et sæculariter faciunt sua amittendi metu . Atque utinam non frustra metuerent et certe quando voluntas fuerit in cælo, non illis proderit hoc ipsorum jejunium quod non elegit dominus. Interim exspectantes expectamus dominum et sola Des-
* For another account of these " very authentic and manifest visions " see the Life of Ven Edmund Geningsby his brother John "And on a time in these his tenderyears, goingforth at night accordingto his custom , a strange spectacle appeared to him in the air He saw , as it were, men armed with weapons killing and murthering others that were disarmed , and great store of blood running everywhereabout them This strangesight put him into a great fear, which caused him to run hastily to tell his mother, and she presentlywent forth with three or four of her neighbours , and theywereall eyewitnesses ofthe same spectacle This happened at the beginning ofour chiefest persecution , not long before the glorious deathof Father Campionand the rest , aboutthe year 1581." The popular tradition was described in the passage in Thomson'sSeasonsdescriptiveof the appearance ofmeteors (Autumn 1112-1119 ) From look to look, contagious thro' the crowd, The panic runs, and into wondrous shapes Th' appearance throws: armies in meet array, Throng'd with aërial spears, and steeds of fire ; Till the long lines of full extended war , In bleeding fight commixt, the sanguine flood Rolls a broad slaughtero'er the plainsof heaven .
patientia possidebimus per Dei gratiam animas nostras . Non nos dico tantum qui seminario sumus quorum beatissimus status vix habet patientiæ locum sed eis multo magis quibus patientia necessaria est, qui in Anglia tot jam annos vivunt in carceribus , latent in cryptis, circumveniunt in melotisquocumque vocatlucrum animarum: eosque extra Angliam de suis sedibus atque adeo de suis monasteriisdeturbati, et veluti de exilio suo iterum exules facti, pro magno beneficio putant expelli non necari et alio quocunque salvos commigrareposse: ex his sunt moniales nostræ Mechlinienses quarum nonnullæ ante annum in Anglia a Catholicis modo clam enutritæ; ceterænuperurbeabhæreticis captaabierunt Rotomagum Carthusiani nostri Brugensis qui varie huc illucque agitati Lovanii tandem misere et periculose consistunt, hoc est in illa civitate unde propter metum circumstantium periculorum, et summam omnium rerum caritatem, cæteri nostri fere omnes diffugierunt Namurrum, Remos alioquocunque Jamque (væ peccatis nostris) et a Parisiis iminet tribulatio, ut qui inde ad nos ex Anglia commigrare velint ut antea quotidie, nunc propter pestem suppullulantem non possint ne et nobis et huic urbi rediretur periculum Quos omnes peropertune hoc ipso anno R. D. Hydus egregius olim regnante Maria concionator, deinceps exul in Belgio prolixa quadam epistola , hoc est libello suo ad omnes Catholicos Anglos scripta, mirifice consolatur: inter cæteros nos quoque patrio sermone compellans his verbis" et vos de celeberrimiset nominatissimis Gregorii Papæ Seminariis Romæ et Rhemis consistentibus , succrescens spes atque subsidium ruentis patriæ" Sic ille dixit et nos in honorem Dei et suæ Stis ipsa verba posuimus . Fit hoc verbum verum in ore ejus et quod Deus cæpit in nobis ipse perficiat ad suam gloriam Certe vivitur ut ante, studetur ut ante,non metu legis quæ nulla est, sed amore et reverentia superioris quæ non est vulgarisfit oratio, confessio, communicatio, prædicatio ut in superioribus annalibus dictum est. Catechizantur rudiores , initiandi et modo initiati ad recitandum Breviarium, instituuntur publice ut et facilius et certius et uniformius dicatur. Ad majora exercitia accessit hoc anno Magister Sententiarumdocente primum D. Bernardo doctore Theologo , deinde postquam reversus Roma est ipso D. Alano Nam in Summam D. Thomæ nunquam defuit nec cessavit lectio ex optimis quibusque dictatis Societatis Jesu nuperime autem in brevissimamformam redactis in questionibus controversiarum propter majorem expeditionem et breviorem instructionemsacerdotumnostrorumin Angliam præparantium Post reditum D. Bristoi a professione Duacena (nam ibi docebat Magistrum Sententiarum pro D. Alano absente) resumpta est lectio in novum Testamentum, brevissime sed plane explicans textumet adversus hæreticos ubique demonstrans Christum et Ecclesiam . Data est jam olim presbyterisnostris in scriptis formacatechizandi veletiam lucrandi animas, accessit ad hanc alia forma perD. Alanum quæ docet quomodo pro qualitate, conditione, moribus personarum cum singulis agi debeat ad corum Conversionem . Edita est typis
tabula quædam partitionum in SummamD. Thomæ, et jam nunc sub prælo est, mox proditurus, ejusdem authoris D. Bristoi liber patrio sermone prolixe refellens librum hæretici cujusdem Fulci, qui solus fere nunc in Anglia audet contra nostros scripto garrire Editus porro et in Anglia disseminatus est libellus (authoreD. Greg: Martino, Sanctæ Theologiæ Licentiato) propter reconciliandos , de abstinendo prorsus ab hæreticorum ecclesiis et concionibus , qua una in re valde hærent , multi alioqui Catholici ; et putant rem esse parvi momenti, quæque facile illis concedi et condonari posset. Finita quoque est sed nondum edenda vernaculatranslatio Catholicissima bibliorum : quam selectissimis annotationibus ex commentariis præcipuorumpatrum sic exornamuscontra hæreses hujus temporis ad instructionem nostrorum popularium qui propter importunos hæreticos qui nihil nisi scripturas ostentant, avidissime hoc a nobis flagitant et expectant, ut verissime existimemus , idque in singulis quotidie capitulis experiamurnullum librum æquevalere posse ad nostrorum confirmationem seu etiam conversionem et adversariorumconfusionem Sunt et alii nonnulli libri tam latine quam anglicescripti jamque ad prælum parati, sed non est opportunitas excudendi Hoc anno Rmus Epus Rossensis propter seminarium suorum Scotorum Parissiis inchoatum postulavit a nobis instituta et omnem formam Collegii nostri sicut anno præterito fecerat vir amplissimus Vindivillius, Catholicæ Majestati in Belgio consiliarius. Quid plura ! nisi quod illud quoque ad gloriam Dei multum interest unum adolescentem xx duorum annorum Londinensem in hæresisemper enutritum * , omnibus errorumlibris legendis assuetum, solo affectu nescio quo et desiderio videndi cognatum quemdam suum , quem nec ipse satis noverat, sedesse tamen audierat, contra suorum voluntatem, ignota via, incerto itinere omnino, transfretare voluisse et Remos usque inquirere, venit, audivit quæ nunquam prius denique post mensem sic divina gratia mutatus est ut confessuset communicatus etiam minima Catholicæ religionis sacra signa devotissime amplexeretur Postremo quamvis necessitate impulsusnolebatdiscedere, sic tamen flens et paulopostreversurusdiscessitut suo tempore sacerdos fieret Denique ut absolvam et certis quibusdam numeris concludam omnia: ordinati sunt presbyteri hoc anno 20, diaconi sex, subdiaconi tres *; missisunt Romamad Seminarium26 et missi in Angliam presbyteri Remenses et Romani 51. Quibus junxit se eruditissimus quidam medicus § prius doctor Remis creatus, egrotantibusCatholicis operam omnem præstiturus, omnes in præsenti Seminario sumus 112. Ecce autem dum hæc scribimus, modo supervenerunt literæ, patres societatis
John Jeames. See Douay Diaries I and II (London 1878), page 161.
The Douay Diaries give the names of the twenty priestsbut there is a discrepancy as to the other figures , for during the period covered by this report the numbers of deacons and subdeacons respectivelyare given as nineteen and twelve instead of six and three Possibly the Report does not include those deacons and subdeacous who had since becomepriests
Dr. Matthew Fox See Douay Diaries I and II, page 167 .
salvos in Angliam appulisse et clam concursum ad res* fieri salutandi et discendicausa 4ºr autem , nempe tres presbyteros et unum nobilem, sub illud tempus huic quoque appellentes , captos esse et adhuc teneri constrictos. Addebat is qui scripsit incredibile esse et nisi oculis cerneretur non facile persuaderi posse quanta sit seges in una civitate Londino, nobilium maximeet aliorum adolescentulorum qui se totos Catholicae religioni dedunt : de senioribusautem multo minorem spem esse propter eum qui jam penitusin ipsorum animis insedit, atque inveteravit, sæculi amorem Ecce venerunt aliæ quoque recentiores literæpresbytericujusdem nostri, quiper aliquot jamannos incarceratus scribit e vinculis his verbis " Ingens gaudium hic apud nos exsalvoadventueorumqui postremia vobisappulerunt (intelligit patres societatis et comites eorum) Est inarcta custodia proximus meus qui faciet primitias apud me (hic ordinatuspresbyter statim certis de causis migravit in Anglia) Hartus sub obligatione pecuniaria dimissus est (iste eodem tempore appellans , captus quoque est). Nos de istiusmodi periculis nihil curamus , messis succedit (laus Deo) sive per vincula sive per libertatem , gaudium nostrum est fides eorum Nos per Dei gratiam omnem timorem profligavimus, omnia possumus in eo qui nos confortat Videmus plane quod nos aut posteri nostri conculcabimus hanc hæresim et omnem altitutidinem extollentem se adversus scientiam Dei." Sic ille
Events at the Pontifical English College at Rheims from the feast ofthe HolyTrinity in the year 1579 till the feast of St. Mary Magdalen 1580 , July 22.
In our former narrative the last thing recorded was that the magistratesof Douay, who were good Catholics , earnestly invited us backbytheir letters, and that we had alreadybegun tothinkabout returning. Now let us begin the following relation by giving thanks to Almighty God, and after Him, to our most holy Lord and Father the Pope, that we did not return For as we had decided that nothing was to be undertaken without him, His Holiness deigned to intimate to us that we mustnot return till therewas more security. And by this he readily showed both his wonderful care in protecting us, and his singular prudence in foreseeing future developments . For now it is a year and more since anything has been safe there on account of the close vicinity of the invading enemy and their strongly fortified garrisons And, indeed, at this time all hope of security is so far withdrawn that the enemy daily grows stronger, and many citizens of Douay who were in arms have (by what stratagems I know not) fallen into their power It is, therefore, a greatnay, an exceedinglygreatbenefitthat wehave
* The MS. reads " res , " but probably this is a copyist's error for"cos "
always had and now have this city of Rheims as a home for our studies , and as a most secure harbour in which we rest , so that hithertothereis noone to alarm us. And certainly, thoughwehave often spoken before, we can neversufficiently praise both the magistracyitselfand some admirable men of the leading clergy, also the neighbouringbishops who have ordainedour priests, andsome ofthe nobility, men of great piety, for the religiousgood-feelingthey have shown us, being moved to compassion for ourcauseand ourcondition. While we dwell in this peace there pour in on us from all sides, as though there were no peace elsewherefrom Douay, from Louvain , and from the rest of Belgium, not only venerable theologians belonging to our country, but many men of good standing, some of whom visit the College as they travel, others dwell with us or near us . I do not mention those out of Spain who came this year to us from Rome ; all of whom, whithersoever they were bound, felt that they must tarry here and visit this Seminary of Gregory XIII, either out of devotion towards our founder or for the sakeof the mutual encouragement by which we console ourselves, exhorting one another in Our Lord The chief of these and the father of our race was the right reverend Lord Bishop of St. Asaph's , that aged and venerable confessor of many years, whom with joyful souls we beheld daily at our tablesuch was his condescension . In what numbers they have fled hither from England appears even from the fact that besides those who have departed in the meantime for Rome or for England (about whom we will speak hereafter), now at the present moment we are 112 in number , I do not say in the town, but in the seminary, besides our Douay students, whoare forthe mostpartstudying Humanitiesand Philosophy at the College of the [Jesuit] Fathers , whom we have chosen to teach philosophy for this College. Certainly the large refectory does not hold our Rhemish students, although in the narrowness ofthe place the breadthofcharity is enlarged And this is the more wonderful since Mr. Allan, our President , fearing that the expenses of such a great multitude would be too great, has not only made a thorough and particular examination of all new-comers, but has ordered and advised with regard to those about to come that sofar as may be they should come as fit as possible. For our resources are plainly unequal to support the remaining crowds of Catholic students, although this year our most holy lord, in his incredible generosity, has added to his previous monthly munificence of a hundred crowns , fifty more every month And not only was necessary provision made by him, but the English Ambassador resident at Paris, seeing and hearing that very many noble youths were travelling hither, and that some were becoming priests, others religious, but all going to the seminaries , is reported to have said that he would advise his mistress and her counsellors to take early steps withregard to this matter bythe imprisonmentof the parents, unless they not only kept theirsons at home, but also recalled them thither. Yet they arrive daily, and they are of such standing
that now there are among us the heirs and eldest sons of good families, whom their parents desire to be made priests . One especially , about twenty years old, a fine lad, formerly educated at Douay, having lately resigned a very rich inheritance , and renounced the world, beingaltogethersui juris, aspires to theecclesiastical state. And about these young men of ours this is a fact altogether wonderful, and of peculiar and singular advantage to our nation, namely, that thereare so manywho of theirown accord , most earnestly desire the priesthood even against the wishes and sometimes against the commands of their parents , and this, though no reward is offered them but imprisonment and other trials. All this is not (as we hope) without great promise of divine clemency towards our nation in the future. Whereas usually there are very few of good family who desire the priesthood, and these only when they have first obtained a rich benefice There are also other noble youths in the College who, being born at a time when heresy began to gain the mastery, have been brought up by their parents to this day in such a manner that they have never been contaminated by any association with heresy or schism, and have ever been in the bosom of the Church from their infancy. And therefore I mention this as a very noteworthy thing, because , as it is notorious that others seek the benefit of reconciliation from our priests that is that they may be reconciled to the Church from which they had gone outthese stand in no need of this reconciliation. And that I may also speak of others not of commonbirth, there are two of high rank at our table, advanced in age and of ripe prudence , who not so long ago at home were, first, studentsat the Inns of Court, then men of high repute publicly practising law , and who are now devoted to sacred theology and contemplating the priesthood. A third of the same description was this year ordained deacon And, what is more, there have arrived four whom the Calvinists call ministers, two of whom are already priests and the other twowill be Towhat shallwe attributethis concourse , greaterthan everbefore,except in part to our priests, more ofwhom have been sent out this year than previously, and who daily touch the hearts of more people ; and partly and chiefly to that Roman College which this year has begun to flourish exceedinglyunder the Fathers of the Society, through the wonderful good offices and extreme favour of our most illustrious and most kind protector, Cardinal Moroni ? Almost all our students are so inflamed with the desire of going to the Roman College that nothing gives more trouble to the Presidentthan this insatiableand ceaseless ambition of his own subjects to be sent to the Roman teachingand training But as we must act with moderation and discrimination in this matter, there have been sent during this space of time to the College and to the teaching of the Fathers eighteen scholars besides the eight who are being sent now, and some of high rank besides who live at their own expense in the same house and under the same discipline.
But during the same space of time, that is, since the latest relation last year, there have set out for England, into that harvest of the Lord, thirty-five priests from this seminary, of whom one is fiftyyears ofage and ofvery highrank, beingthe brother ofacertain illustrious Councillor of the kingdom. And to these have been added sixteen priests from Rome. And this is the year in which not onlythat our College, but the most flourishing societyofJesus for the first time has sent priests to us and to our England. All these labourers the most illustrious and most holy Cardinal Borromeo embraced with wonderful charity, and inviting them to him, hospitably entertained them. And so the Archbishop of Milan has become to us such another patron as we had before in the most illustrious Cardinal of Bononia, who was worthy of all praise. What fruits in that English harvest are not (with the help of God) promised by the arrival of these Fathers, which before was so muchdesired, but nowthat they have safelylanded, is so welcome to all good men in England ? This harvestis so abundant that Mr. Wright, licentiate of Sacred Theology (whom we mentionedin our previous reports), and who has for two years andmorebeena prisoner for Christ, writes that nothing is wanting but labourers. For he states that the harvest in the northern parts is incredible, and certainly in one provinceof the kingdom, not very large, a hundred or two hundredpeople hear mass and sermonsnot in the churches, for they have none for the purposebut in places which aresecret and spacious. There are to be found in that district about five thousand people known by name, who are called " the reconciled , " that is restored to the bosom of the Church, from everyschismatic contagion and association The Chief Counsellors have a list of them under this name, and they have decided that an enquiry is to beheldwith regardto them What will be done we do notyet fully know , except that the people wish to avenge this annoyance by theirdeath. But now even in their chains the priests win over many, so that in the devil's gaol is the Churchof Christ, and in the midst of chains the Word of God is not bound Wealthy London ladies are separated from their husbands, husbands from theirwives, children from their parents and the reverse, if not in their daily livesyetin faith One widow, on the deathof her husband , whowas aCatholicand a great lawyer, has crossedthe sea to takethereligious habit Nay, furthermore, many men belonging to the people (a class of man among us of very respectable position) are forced like thievesto plead before the bar and answer the charge ofhearing Mass; and on their confession or conviction they are compelled to pay fines. On their release they immediately resume the same worship of God , not fearing the fines, but labouring with their hands that they may have wherewithal to pay them. How often , oh good God ! at London and elsewhere are men of good position with their wives, and even the wives without their husbands (as they are more religious), summoned to court, not out of zeal for religion, but for the sake of the fine, which when often extorted
brings great gain to certain courtiers who solicit these penalties And from the least of the heretics to the greatest they entirely measure all things not by any religion, but by their own profit Yet Mistress Norton (otherwisecalled Jonson , from her husband's name), the devout daughter of the old man Norton, an illustrious lady, who two years previously sought for her father even as far as Rome, she , I say, returning to her husband, was castinto prison, and cannot yet buy her liberty But seeing the Catholics increase dailymoreand more, andthat the Truth, which is mightyandwhich will prevail, is quietlycreeping into houses, cities, counties, and into the Royal palace itself, hearingthat the Fathers of the Societyhave arrived and not knowinghowto discoverthemor being able to hinder them because the finger of God is heredespairing, in a measure , they are for ever afraid of I know not what happening to their temporal possessions They are afraid, like the Jews , "lest the Romans should come, " and so they suspect that every fleet , every warlike armament of the Catholic princes is directed against themselves ; and the words of the poet are fulfilled in them : " Greater than war is the fear thereof. " This fear is also increased by the earthquake this year which, though it took place overseas and in neighbouringcountries , yet was verygreatthere, and very authentic and manifest visions in the air as of two armies in combat Whence it happens that besides other preparations of a warlike kind three fast days were enjoined in one week (a wonderful thing among heretics), and that which they scorn to do religiously at the bidding of the Church, they do in a heretical and secular way through fear of losing their property. Would that they did not fearin vain, andcertainly, when it shall be Heaven's will, this their fast, which the Lord hath not appointed, will be of small benefit to them. Meanwhile, with expectation we have waited for the Lord and in patience alone ,through God's grace, shall we possess our souls . Nor doI speak onlyof us who are in the seminary, and whose fortunate condition scarcely affords opportunity for patience , but of those to whom patience is much more necessary, those who in England have for so many years lived in prisons, hidden themselves in secret places, gone about in sheepskins, wherever the salvation of souls called. And those outside England, thrust from their homes and so fromtheir monasteries, and, as it were, again exiled from their exile, that they consider it a great benefit that they are expelled and notkilled, andthat they can in safetyescapetogetherelsewhere Among these are our nuns at Mechlin, some of whom this year past are nowsecretlysupported in Englandby Catholics ; and others, on the capture of the town by the heretics, lately went to Rouen. OurCarthusiansat Bruges, who have been driven hither and thither in different ways, at length have settledin misery andin dangerat Louvain, that is at the very city whence on account of fear at the impending dangers and the extreme dearness of all things, the rest of our countrymen have fled to Namur, Rhemes and elsewhere. The phrase is a strange one , "quando voluntas fuerit in cœlo.
Andnow (woe to our sins !) Parisalso is threatenedwith tribulation , so that those who want to travel together thence out of England to us, as they daily used to do, now on account of the pestilence , which is on the increase, cannot do so lest danger should come both upon us and upon this city. Very opportunely in thisvery year the Reverend Mr. Hyde, formerly a distinguished preacher in Queen Mary's reign, and afterwards an exile in Belgium, wonderfully consoled all these in a certain lengthy epistle, that is in his little book to all English Catholics , and among the rest he addresses us, too, in our native tongue , in these words: " You who depend on the very famous and renowned seminaries of Pope Gregory at Rome and Rheims, the growing hope and support of our falling country." Thus he wrote, and we have applied his words to the honour of God and His Holiness May this word prove true in his mouth, and may God Himself perfect to His glory that which He has begun in us. Certainly we live as before; we study as before ; not for fear of the law , for there is none, but out of a love and reverence for the superior which is not common Prayers , confessions, communions , and sermons go on as was described in previousyearly relations The less instructed are catechised ; those who ought to be initiated and those who have already been initiated into the recitation of the Breviary are publiclytaught, so that it may be said moreeasily, more exactly, and more uniformly As to the more important exercises this year, the Master of the Sentences was used , being taught first by Mr. Bernard, Doctor of Theology, then by Dr. Allen himself after his return from Rome Lectures on the Summa of St. Thomas have never been wanting or laid aside, being taken from allthe best dictatesof the Societyof Jesus, whichquite recently have beenreduced to a verybrief compasson questions ofcontroversy for the sakeof the more rapid forwarding and brieferinstruction of our priests who are preparing for England After the return of Dr. Bristow from his professorship at Douay (for he was teaching the Master of the Sentences there in the absence of Dr. Allen) the ectures on the New Testament were resumed, which briefly but clearly explain the text, and everywhere demonstrate Christ and His Churchagainst the heretics Formerly there was given to our priests a written form of catechising and also of winning souls. To this is now added another form by Dr.Allen, which teaches how persons should be treated according to their rank, condition, and character , in order to their conversion . There has been printed a certain table of divisions in the Summa of St. Thomas ; and now thereis in the press andwill shortly be publisheda bookby the same author, Dr. Bristow, in our native tongue, answering at length the book of a certain heretic called Fulk, who, almost alone in England, now dares to prate in writing against our men. Moreover, there has been published and disseminated in England a little book, written byMr. GregoryMartin, Licentiate in Sacred Theology, for the sake of those about to be converted, on the subject oftotal
withdrawal from heretical churches and discourses For to this one point many stick who are otherwise Catholics , and they think that it is a matter of small moment, and one which can easily be allowed and condoned in them There is also complete but not yet published a very Catholic translation into the vernacular of the Bible, which is enriched with selected notes and commentaries from the chief Fathers against the heresies of our time. These are for the instruction of our people, who on account of importunate heretics who display nothing except the Scriptures, most eagerly demandthis of us, and are waiting for it So that we think in very truth, and we experience daily from many sources, that no book can do so much to strengthenus or even to convert or confute our adversaries There are some other books writtenboth in Latin and in English, and now ready for the press, but there is no opportunity of printing them
During the course of this year the Right Reverend the Bishop of Ross, on account of his Scots College now begun at Paris, asked us for our constitutions and all the rules of our College just as the distinguished man Vendeville, counsellor of His Catholic Majesty in Belgium, had done lastyear. Whatmoreneed we write? Unless the fact whichalsoconcerns theglory of God, that a youngLondoner, twenty-two years of age, who had always been brought up in heresy and accustomed to read all books of errors , simply by some sort of wish and desire to see a relation whom he himself did not know but had heard of, wanted, againstthe wish of his relatives, to cross the sea , and to find his way to Rheims , though he did not know the way and the journey was all uncertain He arrived ; he heard what he had never heard before ; and finally, after one month, he was so changed by divine grace that he made his confession and communion, and most devoutly received even the smallest sacred signs of the Catholic Faith. Finally, although pressed by want , he was unwilling to depart; yet he left weeping, and intending to return a little later, that he might become a priest Finally, to conclude andtoround offeverything withcertain definitefigures : twentypriests have been ordained this year, six deacons and three subdeacons ; 26 were sent to Rome to the seminary there, and 51 Rhemish and Roman priests were sent to England. To these a certain very skilfulphysician joined himself, havingfirst been made doctor at Rheims, with the intention of devoting all his care to Catholics who are sick. Altogether we are 112 in the present Seminary. But behold ! even as we write this, letters have just reached us saying that the Fathers of the Society* have landed safely in England, and that a secret concourse took place for the purpose of saluting them and hearing them. But four Catholics, that about that time, namely three priests and one man of good position, making their way hence were taken, and are still held prisoners The writer added that it was incredible except to eyewitnesses,andnot easilyto be believed howgreatwas theharvest
Blessed Edmund Campion and Father Robert Persons
in the City of London alone, especially among well-born and other young men, who give themselves entirely to the Catholic Faith But that there is muchless hope of older men because ofthe worldliness which is now thoroughly established and grown inveterate in theirminds " you (he " There "
And, see, other new letters have come from one of our priests who has been imprisoned for some years already, and who writes from his prison in these words: " There is greatjoy among us here because of the safe arrival of those who last came from means the Fathersof the Societyand their companions) is inclose custodymyneighbour, who will say hisfirstMasswithme (this priest, for certain reasons, crossed over to England after his ordination). " Hart was discharged on a surety " (he setting out at the same time was also captured). "We care nothing fordangers of that kind: the harvest prospers (praise be to God !) whether by bondage or by liberty: theirfaith is our joy We, by the grace of God, have cast away all fear We can do all things in Him who strengtheneth us . We see clearly that we or our successors will crush under foot this heresy and every height that lifts itself against the knowledge of God. " Thus he writes
JOHN FAWETHER , THE SPY
In the Westminster Archives (MSS. Archiv Westmon vii, 215) there is a contemporary transcript of a document signed by John Fawether, containinginformationabout Douay, whichappearsto have been meant for the English Government . This document, which is printed below, is dated 10 April 1602. To appreciate the circumstances, it is well to recall some dates. 1601. Oct. 2
1601. Nov. 29
1602. Mar. 24
Mar. 25
Mar. 30 .
April 3 .
April 10.
John Fawether, according to his own statement , entered the English College The Diary says he arrived on October 18 Ven RobertWatkinson , alias Wilson, his victim, arrives from Rome
Christopher Reyner ordained priest. Robert Watkinson ordained priest Fawether departs secretly from the College accordingto the Diary He himself says April 3 Christopher Reyner and Robert Watkinsonleave the Collegefor England. Fawether wrote this report
Between April 10 and April 15 he meets Robert Watkinsonin London and betrays him . April 15. Jury find true bill against RobertWatkinson. April 20. He is martyred.
From this we gather that the document was certainly written on April 10 , 1602, and probably in London . The question then arises: When and where and howwas this transcript made ? The arresting circumstance that strikes us at once is the unexpected fact that the transcript is in the same writing as the Diaryitselffrom January1600 , to April 3, 1602. The next curious fact is that the last entry in the Diary in that particular handwriting is the record of the departure of Christopher Reyner and RobertWatkinsonon April 3. As Watkinson was only a recent arrival at Douay, the inference is immediatelysuggestedthat Christopher Reyner was the writerof theDiaryfromJanuary 1600, to April 3, 1602. Moreover, this portion ofthe Diary shows that a great part of it was entered up as a whole between March 30 and April 3. For the entry for October 18, 1601, includes a reference to the departure of Fawether on March 30, 1602, and theentry for Nov. 29 goes on to speak of Watkinson's ordination on Lady Day following. Now, ifit was Christopher Reyner's duty to keep the Diary, we can well understand that on receiving orders to accompany Watkinson (who was then very ill) to England, he should have wished to complete his task before going, and so should have sat down and written the Diary up to date, including his own departure on April 3rd. If he is the writer of the Diary he is also the writer of the transcript, and one is left to conjecture howit becamepossible for him to discover and copy a report drawn up by a spy presumably for the Government We know that he arrived in London just about the time when Fawether wrotethereport, and if he had met Fawether, the latter would certainly have betrayed him just as he betrayed Robert Watkinson But if KK
it was not Christopher Reyner who copied the report, it is difficult to conjecture how this paper, written in London on April 10th, was copied by a writer who was certainly at Douay as late as April 3rd
With regard to the report itself, it is worth while noting :-
I. The discrepancy between the account which Fawether gave of himself to the superiors at Douay (see p 36), and that which he relates in the report (see below).
2. The special knowledge he claims to have of the Yorkshire students, including Ven Robert Watkinson, called by him Wilson ; he was himself a native of Hull
3. The difficulty he owns he had in discovering the real names of his fellow-students
4. The discrepancy between the names he gives of the newlyordained priests and thosein the Diary. Both agree thatthese priests were ten in number We can identify eight of the names given by Fawether with those named in the Diary, but there are two disagreements, for Fawether does not mention John Brian of Bristol and Robert Bastard of Norfolk, but in their stead gives " Mr. Reynold of the age of fiftie yeares" and " Mr. Tirrell son and heir to some gentleman in Essex . " The difficulty of identifying these is increased by the fact that a third sourcea letter of the Bishop of London to Robert Cecil, dated 27 April 1602gives a list derived from " a young man lately come from Douay " (presumably Fawether himself), in which thenames of Brian and Bastard are replaced by those of Tirrell and Wyndems , thus agreeing with Fawether in one name and differing from him on the other. (Foley, Records Eng. Prov S. J., ii , 138-142)
The two namesArcher and Parker, added as a note at theend ofthe report, refer to the visit to Douay of Giles Archer and Richard Parker, the priests sent by the Archpriest to represent him at Rome They stayed at the College Feb. 23-25, 1602 .
Of John Fawether himself nothing is known but this discreditable cpisode in his career and the fact that he was a native of Hull Probablyhe was a near relative of John Fawther or Fairweather , * who was chamberlain of Hull in 1567, sheriff in 1571, and mayorin 1576 (Gent's Historyof Hull) These offices were inconsistent withhis being a Catholic Administration of the estate of John Fawether of Hull was granted 5 Nov. 1593. (Yorks Archl Soc Rec Series, xxii, 169.)
All efforts to trace the subsequent history of the spy have failed, except the letter Bancroft to Popham, 5 June, 1602 (C.R.S., v, 391), and on all counts this document remains baffling How or why it was made and how it caine to be among the Westminster Archives, and what is its true relation to the writer of the Third Diary, remain unsolved problems
Douay (MSS. ARCHIV. WESTMON. vii, 215.)
Colledge LAUS DEO THE 10 OF APRILL 1602
Mr. doctor Worthington Præsident of the Colledge of Englishe semynaries in Douay in the Countie of Artoys established by CardynallAllen and maynteined by the Spanishe Kinge and the Pope
Mr. doctor Harrison Vice præsident and reseaver of all monies geven to the saide Colledge
Lawrence Kighley of Newhall, Otley, in his will of 20 Oct. 1540 (Thoresby Soc ., xix, 42), mentions" my farmholde at Fawatter other waies called Fayrewether" It is between Otley and Bingley, and frequently mentioned in Bingley registers (Yorks . Par . Reg. Soc ., ix).J.S.H.
Doctor Webb examyner of those that be newlie come out of England
Mr. Thomas Connyers a Jesuytt and second brother to Mr. Connyers of*Cockbourne in Yorkshire he is the generallconfessor and doth p[rea]che ev[er]y sonndaie of controversies and of the markesof the true church as they call it appointed theirunto by ffaither Parsons the Rector of the Colledge of Rome
Mr. Wyllis, Preist, generall præfect for the Philosophersand humanists he was some five yeares since a Minister benyficed in London he commeth shortlie for England
Mr. Umpton, Preist, he was confessor the lastyeareto the English regyment with the Archducke he haith bene verie conversant about the Court of England
Mr. Lowe a layman Stewardand Purveyor for the Colledge.
Mr. Coffin , Providerfor the sicke schollers andthe mr ofmusicke he is the King of Spaines Pensioner : all thes above named arethe Superiours of the said Colledge, and have recourse to the Table and Parlour of Mr. President as assistantts to him. Thes following weare maid Preist since the second weeke in Lentt and have taiken their oathes to come presentlyfor England:
Mr. Reynold of the age of fiftie yeares he was eighteineyeares prisonerin England he was the first maid preist.
Mr. Gamadge Preist he is a graduat in Oxford and borne in Worstershire.
Mr. Willm. Browne Preist a gentlemanof good desert .
Mr. Tirrell Preist sonn and heir to some gentlemanin Essex.
Mr. Evans Preist borne in Wayles
Mr. Hughes borne about Bristow he escaped out of Bridwell the last yeare
Mr. Young a Yorkeshireman borne he haith a brother preist also [In the margin:-I know Young and all his friends.]
Mr. Wilson preist by dispensačon from the Pope being onlie twentie two yeares of age. [In the margin:-I know the plaice of his birth and his friends also ]
Mr. Dougell Preist borne in Rippon and is a schole dyvine. [In the margin:-his freinds also I know.]
The Conyers family were seated from early times at Sockburn in thecounty of Durham, but part of the parish is in Yorkshire . When Christopher and his brother Clement (who both became Benedictine monks) entered the College(p 2), they were described as Douglous alias Raynerus, the spelling varied on page 4 as Dougleus On page 27 Christopher is called son of Richard Reyner, the name the brothers are generally known by The spy's evidence as to Christopher's name and birth in Ripon may be correct In the other list he is called Mr. Dowgell As a place -name Dowgill is aboutseven miles south-west of Ripon, and the indexes of wills and administrations( Yorks Arch Soc . Rec Ser ) give references to five of the nameaboutthis time in the extensiveparish of Ripon, including the will of Richard Dowgill of Ripon, mercer, dated 8 Nov. 1600 , and proved 3 Sept. 1601. The Reyners are also often found in the West Riding, notably in Birstall parish Robert Reyner, a merchant of Hull, died intestate about 1599, and another merchant of Hull, Marmaduke Reyner, had his will proved 9 May 1608. The IIull spy had thus some special means of selfintroduction to the brothers, if not acquainted beforeJ.S.H"
APPENDIX A
Mr. ffallar Mr. of Art in Oxford thes come all for England. Thenames ofDyvynesnot yet entered into ecclesiasticall orders :
Mr. Knot, a Northumberland man one of their best schollers
Mr. Hassell , a sommersetshireman borne
Their is a devyne borne in Wiltshire whose name I know not
Mr. Gervaise borne about Plymouth.
Mr. Parsavall borne about Hampshire. Their be three ould Priests whereofone is to come for England:
Mr. Parson Murton preist
Mr. Clarke Preist
Mr. Smarthwhaite who is to come for England with the first The names of the Philosophers in the said Colledge of Douay.
Mr. Answorth Batcheller of Art in Cambridge .
Mr. Bearne student in the said Colledge but not graduat
Mr. Redmanne , a Yorkshireman borne
Mr. Bridges a lawyers clarke in London
Mr. Sweet a marchante in Colchester
Mr. Grene of Lancashire
Mr. Parkinson of lancashire .
Mr. Lowe sonn to the Steward.
Mr. Webb nephew to Doctor Webb
Edward Williamson borne in Chesshire
Mr. Trewer a Welshman .
Mr. Breather of Somersetshire
Phælix Chance a scholler in Oxford
John Gregorie Borne about Southampton
Moreover their be xiiij younge humanists whose true names as also those above named I know not because theire is headfull regard geven for avoyding the knowledge theirof
Mr. doctor Weston is to come over shortlye a proper man of person and for all sort of knowledge and learninge they maike the comparison betwixt him and Campyan to be equall he haith maid a booke called de triplice homine
Per me Johannem ffawetheru
Determining to travell in to Hungarye to serve against the Turcke I purposed to goe thorow Germanie but at the towne of St. Omers I was staidd by the govnour and delivered to one Doctor Hall a Englishe preist who so farr prevayled with me in alteryng my purpose he has placed me a scholer in the Colledge of Englishe Semynaries in Douay wher since the second of October anno 1601 I have remayned untill the third day of aprill last anno 1602 . By me John Fawether. Below Archer and Parker,
DR KELLISON'S REPORT TO FLACCI
There is in the Westminster Archives (MSS Archiv Westmon xvi, 635-645 sqq .) a contemporary transcript of Dr. Kellison's Report to Flacci, divided up into two portions , which, when pieced together, correspond to the report as foundin the Third Douay Diary. The two portionsof the Westminster MS have no resemblanceto one another , being written in different handwritings on paper of differentsize The first part (pp. 635-644) is the description of the English College at Douay : De Collegio seu Seminario Anglorum Duaceno , which the Report itself states was originally a separate document drawn up for the information of the Archbishop of Bari, when he was Nuntio Apostolic at Brussels The second part (645 sqq.) consists of the rest of the Report divided up into numbered sections. The title andthe first three sections exactly correspond to the beginning of the Report as printed in this volume (p 195). The long section on the English College is omitted, and the fourth section begins " De Collegio Audomarensi. " In the Diary this numbering ceases with the third section . The remaining numbers as supplied by the Westminster MS are : -
5. Familia Patrum Societatis
6. Præterhas est quædam residentia
7. Patres S. Benedicti
8. Patres S. Francisci
9. Monachi Carthusienses
IO II 12
Feminarum sex computantur
Proximum fæminarum domicilium
Tertia familia virginum
13. Quarta familia est
14. Quinta familia Antverpiæ.
15. Sexta familia Bruxellis
16. Quantum ad externas
17. Scoti Collegium habent
18. Habetur Lovanii .
GEORGE GAGE , PRIEST, AND THOMAS GAGE , THE APOSTATE DOMINICAN
[An intended footnote on page 242 , expanded to such an extent as to be out of place It had also to be further extended to deal even lightly with a difficult subject]
George, third son of John Gage of Haling, Croydon, Surrey, and St. John's Street, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, by his first wife , Margaret daughter of Sir Thomas Copley of Gatton, Surrey. His parents were condemned to death for harbouring the Ven George Beesley, who was martyred 2 July 1591 , and although pardoned, suffered several years' imprisonment. Like his eldest brother, the heroic and celebratedCatholic soldier, Colonel Sir Henry Gage, when a student at the English College in Rome, he assumed the name of Howard, or rather Hoard (Gillow, Dict Eng Caths ., ii, 357) Their father, by will dated4 Dec. 1625, proved 3 Jan.
1627 , bequeathed to his daughter Helen £20 per annum out of the manor of Arundel, payable by Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel (G. S. Steinman , Manor of Haling) It may have had something to do with Haling going to Lord Howard of Effinghain, of Armada fame, and the modified spelling to there being no consanguinity. Sir Henry being born about 1597 , George's birth would be about 1600 , so disposing of the statements about his being the Catholic gentleman and political agent in 1614 and 1621-3 , whose birth is set down in 1582probably not a priest The one in the text was an active memberofthe Chapter, Archdeaconof London, and prothonotary-apostolic in England Our member , Fr. Raymund Stanfield (who has promisedseveral letters of George Gage, and also of Dr. Richard Smith, Bishop of Chalcedon ), says he was probably educated with the Vincentians at St. Lazare , and that he was the "Puny Bee, " the author of The Christian Solality, or Catholic Hive of Bees , &c Before 17 Dec. 1649, he had been apprehended by Capt Peter Giffard, one selected for discovering priests, Jesuits, thieves , and robbers , who was himself arrested later for some malpractice (State Papers , Domestic , 1649 ; see also Middlesex Records , iii, 193) On examination, George Gage is stated to have confessed to being agent to the King of Portugal (in whose embassy he is said to have resided), but he refused to answer as to his priesthood, and was committed to Newgate (Ibid .)
Subsequently , two English merchants , Richard Beare and John Bushell, were arrested in Lisbon, and negotiations were opened for their exchange in his place The enormous recognisances of £30,000, and three sureties , each in the same amount, are dated 13 Sept. 1650, to enable him to go to Portugal or Holland to effect the exchange The bail still existed on 24 May 1651 , when his sureties were called on to return him prisoner to Newgate (Ibid) During March in this interval, these Diaries show that Dr. William Hyde, then President ofthe College, was summoned to Brussels bythe Spanish authorities, to detach Gage from the rival Portuguese interest The Bishop of Chalcedonhad in 1649 urged this on him (com by Fr. Stanfield) Before Nov. 1651, a statement shows that he was in Newgate, and a week later his case and that of the merchants was ordered to be reported to the Rump Parliament (State Papers, Dom ) A letter of the Bishop of Chalcedon , then in Paris, dated 14 Aug. 1652 , shows he had heard of George Gage'sdeath (com by Fr. Stanfield)
Lingard gives a list of thirty-seven "Jesuit and Romish Priests as have been apprehended and prosecuted by Capt James Wadsworth, Francis Newton, Thomas Mayo, and Robert De Luke, " and signed by the four (Hist of England, viii, 45 , edit 1849) The last entry is, " George Gage, indicted by us, and found guiltie, and since is dead The above particulars show that the paper is about a year later than the historian imagined, the last date available to him being Wright's martyrdom on 19 May 1641
The Middlesex Records (iii, 198) show that a true bill was found against George Gage, 24 Dec. 1650, he being " at large"; but an endorsementon the bill varies the names of the prosecutors and witnesses against him Francis Newton's name does not appear They read "James Waddesworth, Robert de Luke, Thomas Mayo, and Thomas Gage" It is almost too horrible to think of; but, had not the confessor been " at large, " he would have faced his own elder brother, the apostate Dominican, whose Recantation Sermon in St. Paul's Cathedral, 28 Aug. 1642, in the dedication, deplores his " lying in this misery (the Catholic Church) neare 38 years, " from an early age The title -page states it more sensationallyand saleably: " By Thomas Gage, formerly a Romish Priest, for the space of 38 yeares , and now truly reconciled to the Church of England " He duly deplores the estrangement from his Papist kindred, and the financial loss to himself by the step taken, and was speedily rewarded by the rectory of Acrise, Kent, and about 1651 , that is shortly after the true bill, appointed minister and preacherof the word of God [] at Deal (Dict Nat Biog , xx) The apostate is known to have given evidence against the martyrs Arthur Bell, O.S.F., and Peter Wright , S.J. , whose names appear on the list as " executed at Tyburne, " and partial evidence against Fr.Thomas Dade, O.P. (Challoner's Miss Priests ) When foundguiltie of being a priest, George Gage may have met his Cain in this Judas ? As with most apostate priests , there was a woman in the case; for his widow was recommended for a pension of 6s 8d per week (equal to as much per diem now)for his services to the State (State Papers, Dom, 16 July 1656) Steinman says that John Gage , in his will, passed over his second son Thomas, who had displeased him Perhaps
he had early cause? The writer in the article in the Dict. Cath. Biog. attributes it to the father's objection to his son joining the Dominicans On the other hand , earlier provision may have been made for him ; and any public provision, as in a will, would have caused the bequest to be sequestrated The words and deeds of Thomas Gage, Preacher of the Word of God , seem a likely field of study of sensationalism
Another Jesuit martyr, the Ven Thomas Holland , was condemned on 7 Dec. 1642, on a parody of evidence Francis Newton and his servant, John Cook, who saidthey had seen him " speak to Mr. Smyth, who they say is a Jesuit priest"; whilst John Wadsworth and " one that it pains me [the martyr] very much to name, a man on whom I pray God to have mercyand to bring backto the Church, from which he has apostatized miserably,-Thomas Gage, an unfrocked Jacobin priest, " who reported that they had " seen him studying at the seminaries on the Continent and nothing more"(Rev. J. H. Pollen, Actsofthe English Martyrs) The martyr seems in doubt whetherthe last two were even present Bishop Challonercertainly mentionsfour witnesses in the case This may have seemed to him a reasonable reading of such evidence as he had to his hands ; and he may be right It is possible , however, that the Bishop maynot have weighedthe value of some words Areport not liable to cross-examinationwould be no evidence , but only an exparte statement , repugnantto equity and true jurisprudence Whether therewere two orfour witnesses , however, we cannot, in the face adduced againstThomas Holland in the cited Acts , wonder at Challoner's narration of the surprise of the Lord Mayor of London (Sir Isaac Pennington), and others in court, at such a verdict beingfound Only two ofthe thirty-seven convictionswere before Thomas Gage landedat Rye on 29 Sept. 1641 , and there may be some significancein the word " report." Bythe description ofJacobin, it seems that his studies had been at the Dominican schools attached to their church of St. Jacques at Paris.J.S.H.
THOMAS MEYNELL OF NORTH KILVINGTON, 1564-1653 , WITH SOME MEMBERS OF HIS FAMILY
The short notice on pages 297-8 of Thomas Meynell alias Markenfield and his anonymous father and grandfather , especially the fifteen imprisonments of the last, seem to call for more than passing notice. The main points of descent of the family at the time are sufficiently distinct to identify each person, viz .:-(1) Thomas Meynell of North Kilvington, a notable sufferer for religion ; (2) his eldest son and heir, Anthony; and (3) Thomas, who assumedthe alias of Markenfield, the eldest son of Anthony, who did not succeed to the estates, owing to his death whilst his two predecessors were alive.
Strenuous advocate as I am of restricting our work to printing full records, with the shortest possible notes and useful references , there is more than justification for callingattention to and thereby eliciting facts about such a glorious confessorof the Faith Fifteen imprisonments fifteen testimonies to Godfifteen curbs on his own flesh ! And these only items, glorious no doubt, of his sufferings in his duty, the greatest of all duties, to God He might have saved himself all his sufferings by periodical visits to the profaned parish church of Thornton-le-Street, where there was " no priest, no altar, and no sacrifice" as the people used to say, taking a drink of wine and a bite of bread, which he knew to be only wine and bread; given indeed as such. The Head, which alone could confer Christianpriesthood, had been twice repudiated . The altars had been twice torn down. Transubstantiation , the sacrifice, had been twice declared an idle folly
The sacraments had been changed into state functions , administered by the state officials of this little island. We ought to know more about such a man.
Mr. John Burke, in 1833 , wrote an account and pedigree, having had access to family muniments . He subsequently modified this in his Commoners , i, 401-5 ; but the information is scanty and not free from error. We are not dealing now with the pedigree of the family in its descent from its Norman origin Settled first in places on either side of the River Tees, then at Hilton in Cleveland, and later atNorth Kilvington and the Fryerage, Yarm, allied with much ofthe best blood ofthe district, it is distinctly a Yorkshire and Catholic family for eight centuries
We have rather to consider here matters relating specially to the three persons referred to in the Diary
(1) Thomas, the eldest son and heir of Roger Meynell of North Kilvington, near Thirsk, by Margaret his wife, daughter and coheir of Rowland Tempest of Holmside, co. Durham, was born in 1564 . He married twicefirstly, Winefride, daughter of Thomas Pudsey of Barforth, Forcett, and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of John, eighth Lord ScropeofBolton. The Pudseyswere of ancient and distinguished lineage. He married, secondly, Mary, daughter of Gale of Acomb Grange, in the Ainstey, but by her he had no issue
In the Recusant Roll of the Exchequer for the year 1592-3 , these entries appear "Thomas Mennell de Kilvington in parochia de Thorntonin le Streete armiger260 li , " and "Wynifrid uxor Thome Mennell de Kelvingtonin parochia de Thorntonin le Streete armigeri― 180 li. " That is a full year of thirteen lunar months for his own , and nine months for his wife's refusal to go to thestate church.
In Peacock'slist of 1604, under" ThorntonStreete, " are " Thomas Meynell of North Kelvington, Esquier, " amongst the old recusants; and Thomas Cooke, Gilbert Browne, Richard Robinson, and Dorothy Watson, spinster , his servants, non-communicants two years; also Thomas Lyones and Grace his wife, for over a year; whilst under Forcett parish , Thomas Lyones and Grace Pearson, his servants , were reported as secretly married. The North Riding Records (i, 66, and ii, 72 and 147) give further notes of his staunch recusancy in Jan. 1606-7 , July 1614, and July 1616. Everyyearmust have given further proofs, if the necessary records were available A later evidence of his constancy is contained in N. Riding Records (iv, 195-6) Thirty-nine inhabitantsof North Kilvington were presented for recusancyat Thirsk on 4 May 1641. They include , Thomas Mennell, esquire ; Anthony Mennell, gentleman, and Mary (Thwaites) his wife; Richard Mennell, gentleman (the second son); Hugh Mennell, gentleman (third son of Anthony, described in 1665 as dead and unmarried); and six named Lynas, evidentlythe same nameas Lyones in 1604 . The family archives record only two of his fifteen imprisonments . In 1600 ,he was committedto the Block-House, Hull; on 1 June 1601 , he was imprisoned in York Castle A mass of records in York Castle , overlooked for years, have lately been removed to the Public Record Office.; and we may hope, when they are sorted, to obtain further testimonyof this valiant confessor, and others like him .
On 5 March 1604, King James I granted him a general pardon ; and on 10 Feb. 1626, Charles I granted him a like general pardon. In 1627 , he obtained some mitigation by compounding for his estates
regarding the recusancy of himself, his son Anthony, and their wives , at £40 per annum, increased in 1629 to £100 The Parliamentarians finally sequestrated two-thirds of his income for his recusancy (Yorks Arch. Soc Record, xx, 120)
Bornin 1564 ,fouryears before his father's participatingin the rising in 1569 of the Earls of Northumberlandand Westmorland , he may have remembered that father's trial for treason. Survivingpersecution, imprisonments , and fines, he lived throughoutthe horrors ofthe Civil War, the murderof his king, must have heard of the persecutions and ignominious exit of the Rump Parliament , which he survived a few months. Hewas blind at the timeof his death, whichoccurred 13 July 1653, aged eighty-nine His grandson, William Meynell alias Ireland, a priest, whosename appearsin these Diaries, maywellhave described him as weary of this world and fit for heaven "
(2) Anthony Meynell, married Mary, daughter of James Thwaites of Long Marston, near York We see him relieved of some penalties by the composition made by his father. Again, when the Parliament sequestered the estates, their names are associated, perhaps as joint owners As eldest son and heir of his father, the latter may well have wished to keep him near in his old age, with blindness perhaps creeping on At the visitation made by Dugdale (Surtees Society, xxxvi, 95) on 23 Aug. 1665, Anthony's age is given as seventy-four (b 1591), that of his deceased son, Thomas, omitted, whilsthis grandson and heir, Roger, wastwenty-five Anthony Meynell was buried at Thornton-leStreet, 22 Sept., 1669
(3) Thomas Meynell alias Markenfield , the student mentioned on page 297, was born in 1615, and married , in 1637, Gerard, daughter of William Ireland of Nostell Priory, in the parish of Featherstone. By her he had several children , of whom only two marriedRoger, born 1639, who marriedMary, daughter of Sir John Middleton ofThurntoft ; and a daughter , Mary, who became the wife of Thomas Brigham of Wyton Thomas Meynell, dying in the lifetime of both his father and grandfather, about May 1648, did not succeed to the family estates , as his son Roger did In Lord Castlemaine's list of Catholic officers slain in the royal cause is, " Captain Meynel at Pontefract" After several sieges the castle had been captured bythe Parliamentaryarmy in 1645. The Royalists are known to have attempted its recapture, and they finally succeeded on 8 June 1648, when a number of persons secretly armed, under the command of Colonel John Morris, after a skirmish , obtained possession Garrard Saltmarshe (Thomas Meynell's widow ) petitioned for her dower on 17 May 1650 ; the report dated four days later says Thomas Maynell "died about 2 years since' (see below). The Rev. W. Gell, vicar of Pontefract, has courteously searched his registers, and informs me that no such burial is recorded in them "
No obvious blood relationshipsuggests itself for Thomas Meynell taking the alias of Markenfield May it have been a spiritual one ? The Markenfields of Markenfield Hall, near Fountains Abbey, in the parish of Ripon, lost their estates owing to Sir Ninian Markenfield taking part in the religious rising of 1669. On 21 Feb. 1625, administration of the affairs of Anne Markenfield alias Anderson of Sowerby, was granted to Francis Anderson, her husband And in 1612 , Thomas Meynell (the senior in these notes) bought the manor of Sowerby , next Thirsk
Thomas Meynell's widow (Gerard Ireland) married, secondly, in July 1649, Captain EdwardSaltmarshe, who had " been in theservice of the Parliament ever since the beginning of the wars " (Yorks Arch Soc Rec , xx, 120-1) When she and Captain Saltmarshe claimed her dower in 1650 , no mentionwas made of his religion; but if a Catholic at the time, his militaryservices may have been taken as excuse (?) Herrecusancy was in doubt, but " no convictionfor recusancyisfound" against her (Ibid.). Their children and descendants were clearly Catholics (Cath Rec Soc , iv, 382 note). The family continued, and still continues, true to the Faith, giving several priests to the Church By maintainingtheir private chaplain, they kept the light burning from 1690 at least The Rev. Edward Crane expressed his conviction in the registers that the mission was certainly founded by that time It was maintained by the family at North Kilvington until Bishop Cornthwaite moved it to Thirsk about 1867. It is now represented by a member of our Society, Mr. Edgar Meynell of North Kilvington, to whom I am indebted for assistance in these short and unworthy notes .
J.S.H
AND
*An asterisk signifies more than one entry on a page "n" indicatesthat the name is in the notes to the page
Abbatia St. Gisleni , see St. Ghislain
Abbatia Laetiensis , 147**
Abbas Aquicinctensis , see Anchin
AbbatisVilla , seeAbbeville
Abbayes , Abbeyes, Robert 239, 253* , 269
Abbeville, Abbatis Villa, 3* , 318
Abbeyes, see Abbayes
Abbington, see Abingdon
Abbots, John 114 , 115* , 363
Abcourt, see AppsCourt
Abigael, Lady 431, 463 , 474*
Abingdon, Abbington, Berks , 208,520
AcombGrange, Acumgrange , Yorks, 275 *n 574
Acrise Rectory, Kent, 572
Acton, Ammia 283 ; James, als Jones, 102 , 113 , 115*; Robert, als Bridges, 283 , 287, 311 ; William 283
Acton-Burnell, Salop, 512"
Acumgrange , see Acomb
Adams , John 530 ; William 109 , 112 , 113 , 114, 363
Adamson , John 64, 263* , 416* , 417*
Erius, see Eyre
Eton, John 116
Eyrus, see Eyre
Aieria, see Aire
Aiinscome , see Anscombe
Ainsty, The, Yorks , 574
Ainsworth, Aynsworth, John, als Sherringtonor Skevington, 35 , 55 , 87, 93, 103, 104 , 350*
Aire, Aieria, 192 * , 390, 455"
Aiscough , Ascouius , Askouius , Henry 192 ; Robert, als Browne, 30 , 34 , 35 , 39 , 41, 336; Walter 192
Aishill, see Aisholt
Aisholt, Aishill , Somerset, 295*
Aketon, Featherstone , Yorks , 502n
Alabaster, William 43, 74
Alan, William 195, 198 , 199 ; als of Heskett, Thomas
Albaldeston , see Osbaldeston
Alberry, William , als More, 176, 193 , 206, 231 , 232
Albert, Archduke, of Austria, 16 , 325
Aldington, Thomas, als Crackmore , 104, 105 , 106, 108 , 111, 357
Aldemius, John , als Barnaby, 287
Alfild , Thomas , 530
Alford, Michael 71 ; Robert, als Griffith, 37, 38
Alison, Dalison, als ofPrice, Edward; Mr. 144
Allan, Francis 428, 430, 507 ; George , als of Andrews , Gilbert ; John 189, 209 ; Morgan 189
Allen, William, Cardinal, 1st President of Douay College, xiv, xv, 33* , 173, 338 , 391, 554, 557* , 560 , 564, 568
Alleyne, Anne308 ; Charles, alsGray, 308 ; Walter 308
Allibond, James 516 ; Job: als Ford, John , 522*; Margaret 516, 522 ; Peter, als Ford , 516
Allison, see Alison
A[I]mand , see Almond
Almond, A[1]mand, Hammond,Ven John , martyr, xxvii, 45*a
Alveston, Auson , upon Avon, Warwick
, 440
Ambassador to the AustrianArchduke, 129; Belgium, 127; England, 144 ; the Belgian ,at Paris, seeBuescotte ; the English, at Paris, 554, 560 ; from King ofSpain, 34
Ambianum, see Amiens
Amias, Jo: 530
Amiens , Ambianum, 3* , 318
Anchin, Aquicinctensis , Abbey of, 252* , 410* , 505
Anderson , Francis , of Sowerby, 575 ; Robert 506* , 436 ; Thurston, als
Thurstan; see also Anderstone
Anderstone -Winterbourne, Anderson , Dorset, 442
Anderton, Anna 299 ; Christopher, als Ashley, 192* , 221 ; family of, 62, 299 ; George 228, 235 ; James 299 Nicholas , als Bardsea or Bardsay , 299* , 312; Ralph 56 ,60, 61 , 70 ; Robert 530 ; Roger 19 ; Thurstan, als Thurstan, Thomas, 455* , 487 ; als ofBlount, Thomas ; als ofSalkeld , Thomas
Andover, Earl [? Viscount], 515
Andover, Hants, 296n
Andraepolitanae , sec St. Andrew's Andrew, (brascator), 429
Andrewe, Francis 282 ; John, als Wilmore, 282, 287, 294. 303, 311 ; William 282
Andrew[s], Gilbert, als Allan, George, 138 , 141 *; George 138 ; als of Payne, John
Angraff, Quintin 505, 516*
Anlaby, William , martyr, 531
Anmar, Norfolk, 294
Anscombe, Anscome, Arthur286* , 306 Aiinscome ,
Answorth, Mr., B.A., 570
Antrobus, Ralph 341 ,6,70
Antwerp, Antverpia, 8 , 22, 35, 50 , 51 , 52, 72, 82, 104, 133 , 137 , 146 , 181, 204, 205, 206* , 217, 244* , 249 , 261, 286, 314, 337 , 368* , 397. 398 , 399* , 410, 442, 463* , 464, 492, 509, 517, 571 Castle of, 261 ; Governor of, 410
Ap Harry, see Parry
Ap Rhys, see ParryPrice
Aparius, Apharius, see Parry
Apricius, Apretius, see Ap Rhys
Apleton, Norfolk, 512
Appleguard , Frances 38, 336
Appleton, Alice 292"; Roger292"
Appleton-upon-Wiske , Yorks , 185"
Apps Court, Surrey, 298*n
Aquator, Petrus429, 430
Aquicinctensis , see Anchin Archbishop'sHouse,xiv
Archduke, The, 569
Archer, Giles 39, 46, 334, 335, 568, 570
Archidalea, Archidapalitanus, bishop of, in partibus , seeGiffard
Archpriest (1599 to 1608), see Blackwell, George ; (1608 to 1614), sec Birkett, George ; (1614 to 1621 ), see Harrison, William
Aria, see Aire
Arismendy, Francis , 273; John, als Hill, 273, 274; Margaret, 273
Aristsmittheus, see Arrowsmith
Armenteriae , see Armentiers
Armentiers, Armenteriae, 445*"
Armstrong, als ofBoys, George
Arnold, Richard 57, 66, 70
Arousmyth, seeArrowsmith
Arras, Attrebatum , Attrebatensis, 1*n, 8, 16 , 17, 19 , 27* , 31* , 37-39 57, 62, 64, 67 , 69* , 71 , 75, 76 , 82, 96 , 97, 105, 112 , 113* , 121-127 pass , 132 , 133 , 134 , 145, 147 , 178 , 216, 218-222 pass , 231, 232* , 241 , 251, 262* , 263, 265, 267, 269, 273, 279 , 289, 332, 352, 357, 400, 416 , 427, 435 , 436* , 446* , 504, 511 , 521 ; Archdeacon of, sceStravius,Richard
Paul Bishop of, see Baudot, Moulert, Ottemberg , Richardot Provost of, see Laurence , Laurenten
Arrowsmith, Aristsmittheus, Arousmyth, Edmund, S.J., ven martyr, als Bradshaw , 79* , 93, 99, 115 , 121, 122, 272, 363, 417, 531 * ; Edmund (martyr's uncle) 198
Artois, 568
Arton, William 55, 62, 74 , 340
Arundell, xxviii, Anne, Lady, 434"; family of, 180; George, als German , 180, 193 : Henry 238 ; John 304 ; Katherine 434 ; Mary 304 ; Mary, Lady, 511; Thomas 180; Thomas , als German, 139, 180 ; Thomas, 1st Lord Arundellof Wardour, 434**; Manorof, 572
Asaphensis, see St. Asaph
Asche, George 5* , 8
Ascot, Wing, Bucks , 294 ; Viscount of, see Dormer
Ash, als of Fezard, Edward; sec Eshe
Ashbourne , Derby, 527 , 528
Ashe, Isle ofWight, 276
Asheton , Charles 519 ; Janc 502"; John 519 ; Mary 502"; Ralph502
Ashburnham , Battle, Sussex, 306
Ashly, als ofAnderton, Christopher
Ashton, als of Fisher, George, Richard and Thomas
Aske, Henry, als Dalton, 506, 507 , 526
Askew, Askuus, George 19, 29, 32 , 37 326, 331* , 332*; Henry 223, 230 , 243 ; Samuel 37
Askouius , Aiscough Asconius , Asonius , see
Askuus, see Askew
Aston-Cantlow, Warwick, 498"
Atkins, Athanasius , 78, 95, 98, 100; Frances 312 ; Philip 312*; Robert 100, 312 ; William 37, 52
Atkinson, Anthony 502"; Dorothy 502 ; N. 531; als of Lockwood , Johnand Matthew
Attlebrig, Norfolk, 273
Attre in Hainault, 438
Attrebatum, seeArras
Audley, Thomas , als ofButler, Audley
Audomaropolitanus , see St. Omer
Auson, see Alveston
Audomarensis ,
Austria, Archduke of, see Albert ; Archduchess, seeIsabella
Aynsworth, see Ainsworth
Ayscowe, see Aiscough
Baberlye, Norfolk, 294
Babington, als of Watkins, James
Babthorpe, Robert, als Smith or Smythe, 71, 88 , 89
Baccius , Octavius117
Backhouse, Richard, als Bassett , 105 , 109, 113 , 116, 122, 125 , 126, 364
Bacon, Jane 278, 305; Matthew, als
Boyer, 305, 315 ; Richard, als
Boyer, 277, 278 ; Richard278-305 ; Robert, als Boyer, 286, 301, 314
Bac-St . Maur,MaurontisVillam,461*n, 491* , 542
Badelew , see Badulay
Badulay[gh], Badula, Badelew, Francis, als Rosse , 66, 74 , 79, 88, 93, 98
Bæs , D . 125
Bagshaw, Christopher 38, 334 ; Thomas, als Spencer, 124 , 131 , 132 , 133 , 136, 368
Bagshald, Thomas 112
Baker , Cecilia 280
Bald , als of Ballis, Simon
Bale, John, quoted 379"
Bales, Ven Christopher530
Baley, D 88, 351
Balles, Ballis, Bals, John 189 ; Simon 233, 234 ; Simon, als Bald, 189
Balneo a, Guidus, see Guidi
Baluinus, P. (probably Bawden , William, S.J.), als Baldwin, 33
Baltonsburrow , Somerset, 280
Bamber , William , als Worthington, Peter , 54, 135, 179 , 252 , 253 , 259, 267, 269, 271, 272, 274 , 418
Bancroft, Richard, angl bp of London, 568
Bandini, Octavius, Cardinal, 229, 230
Bangor[iensis], 3, 68, 74 , 182 , 194,518
Bank Hall, Lancs , 436
Bankes, als of Medcalf, Peter and Robert
Barbaria, see Barbary
Barbary, Barbaria, 93, 350
Barber, Francis xi, xxvii, 99, 122 , 124 , 129 , 134 , 138, 140, 141 , 142 (bymistake written Barneus 140* ), 182, 194, 246, 255, 261 , 266, 268, 279, 285, 286, 289, 291 , 367 , 372 , 416, 423, 470 ; Richard315
Barberini, Cardinal , protector of England, xx, 243 , 423* , 424* , 425, 427, 453 , 470, 471* , 474* , 499* , 519, 535 , 544 , 548
Barbiani, Vestrius26 , 331
Bardsayin Urswick, Lancs., 299* ; see Bardsea
Bardsea Hall, 299"
Bardsea, Bardsay , Nicholas 299"; his daughter, 299" ; als ofAnderton , Nicholas
Barforth, Forcett, Yorks , 574
Bari, Archbishop of, 195, 391
Baricke, see Barwick
Baring-Gould , Sabine, quoted 379"
Barker, Alexander, als Parr, 186, 243 , 250, 253 , 285, 289, 292 * , 295, 420 ; Edward, alsVernalty, 444,492,498 , 501, 503, 506, 507, 511 ; Margaret 178; Richard 178, 186 ; Thomas , als Parr, 178, 191, 216, 233, 236
Barkham, Berks, 232
Barkway, Royston, Herts , 510A
Barlamont, Comtesse de 218, 249, 407
Barlow, Barlous, Edward, ven martyr, als Ratcliffe, 89, 95* , 104* , 116, 123 ; Edward, als Vernalty, 436* , 461 , 491* , 495, 511, 542 ; Edward (senior) 461*; Lewis 49 , 55 , 337 Rudescind , Rosendus, O.S.B. , 192, 200 ; William , Ratcliffe, 42, 61, 65, 69, 70
Barnaby, Francis, 38, 334 ; als of Bradford, Barnabas ; see Aldem, John , als Barnaby als
Barnbow, Barrenbowe ,Yorks , 286*n, 306 , 519
Barnes, Barneus , Barnesius , Anne 288, 520 ; John, O.S.B. , 200 ; als of Coldham , William ; Stephen 51 , 52 , 55 ,65, 68, 98, 99, 106* , 112 , 338 , 342 , 354
Barney, see Berney
Bark, comitatus, see Berkshire 579
Barnsley , Henry, als Holland, 149 , 208, 233, 247, 253, 262* , 265, 266, 272, 418 ; William 149
Barr, Robert 50, 337
Barrembowe , see Barnbow
Barret, Edward, als Gower, 494* , 511 ; Edward, President ofEnglish College, Douay, xvi*, xxiii, 1 , 3* , 5, 6* , 20; Dr. 217; Richard 198 ; Thomas , als Gower or Goer, 217, 248
Barrowes ,Christopher ,otherwise Bartlet, als Harding, 183, 194 , 217* , 315, 389, 390
Barthelmew, Matthew, see Smith, Bartholomew , als Barthelmew
Bartlet, Bartholomew, als Harding, Christopher, 315 ; Basil, als Stapleton, Thomas , 315; see Barrowes
Barton, Edward 115 , 209, 243 : Edward (senior) 209 ; Richard 528 ; Robert 96, 102 , 109 ; als of Brittonor Bretton, Thomas ; als of Fletcher, Richard
Barwicke, Baricke, Yorks , 286
Basset, Anthony 521 ; Catherine 518a ; Edward518a; Frances 521 ; John, als Stansby , 521*; Mary 521
Bastard, Robert 32, 34 , 39 , 74 , 336 , 568*
Bateman, Baytman, Philip, als Fyt- ton, Francis , 6, 8 ; Margaret288n
Bates, Battey, John , als Headlam, 134 , 141 , 389; see Batt
Bath[oniensis], 9, 180 , 190, 276, 280
Batt, John 28 ; John, als Headlam , 180, 149 ; see Bates, William, als Breether, 2 , 15, 28, 62 , 63, 70 , 342
Batteus , see Bates
Battey, see Bates
Baudot, Boudot, Paul, bishop of St. Omer, and afterwards archbishop ofArras, 253* , 262, 265, 267 , 269, 271, 273, 276* , 279, 282 * , 287* , 289, 292* , 293, 295, 304
Bavaria, 38
Bawden , see Baluinus
Bayaert, Beyart, William , als Hide , Hyde, President of Douay from 1646 to 1651 , xxii, 207* , 213, 231, 233, 238, 247, 249, 260, 268* , 269, 272 , 276, 279, 285, 286, 294* , 406, 416, 424-428 pass , 441, 445, 447,449,45,453,456,457* , 459 , 466* ,467 472* , 481, 485 486 , 487 * , 488-499 pass , 513* , 514* , 522, 528 , 542,543,544* ; 207
Bayley, Bayleus , John7
Baynes, Stephen 283
Bayshall , Thomas 116
Baytman, see Bateman
Beare, Richard, merchant, 572
Bearn , Berne, John 37, 55
Bearne, Mr., student, 570
Beauley , Robert 179; see Bewley
Beaumont , Elizabeth 295"; Henry 295* ; als ofMuttlebury, Francis
Beausay, Bewsey, Warrington, 518
Beckwith, Barbara502"; Joseph 60 , 66, 68 ; Marmaduke , als Nateby, Thomas, 502 , 513*; Thomas 502 , 513
Beconsawe, Mary 311 ; als of Corn-. wallis, William
Becquett , Bequettus , Apostolic Notary, 116 , 130*n
Bedell , France (sic), 514* , 515; 522 -
Bedford , William 114*; als ofDrury, William
Bedfordiensis , 184
Bedinfield, Katherine314"
Bedingfeld , Edmund294"; Elizabeth 525; Mary 294"; als of Cobs , Henryand William
Bedon, Pierre 428
Beesley, Ven George 571 ; John 251"; Margaret251 ; Richard42 ; als of Scrope, John , see Bisley
Be[e]ston, als of Paston, Augustine; als of Paston, Wulstan ; als of Paston, William
Begenitas, see Beginages
Beginages, Begenitas, Nuns, 52
Beilby, Bilbie, Anne 305"; Thomas 305 ; als of Wyvell, Thomas
Beke, als ofSpeke, Francis
Belasyse, Bryan, 503" ; Mary 503" ; see Bellasis
Belfeld, Belfild, John , als Egerton,45,
Belfild48,50,340 , see Belfeld
Belgium , Apostolic Nuncio to, see Morra ; Religious Men in, Benedictines, 395 ; Carthusians , 396 ; Franciscans, 395; Recollects, 399 ; SocietyofJesus, 394 , 395; Religious Women , Benedictines , 396; Carmelites , 398 ; Poor Clares, 397 , 398
Bell, Ven Arthur , O.S.F., martyr, 572
Bellarmine , Cardinal , 65, 342
Bellasis, Katherine456" ; Mary 526; William, Sir, 456 ; see Belasyse
Belley, Bellecensi, 246* ; bishopof, see Camus
Belphante , Dominic, 286 ; Elizabeth 286 ; Joseph, als Zannini, 286, 307
Belson, Anne 254" ; Augustine or Austin 254**; Augustine, als
Clifford, 448* , 494, 502 * , 509 ; Edward, als Clifford, 448* , 494, 513 ; Edward, als Tempest , 254 , 298, 305, 308, 421 ; Margaret254"; Mildred 254"; Robert254" ; Thomas, martyr, 254"; William 254"
Bendlowes , Benlowes, Benloes, Andrew 216 ; Clare 251 , 297" , 440* ; Edward 251" , 260* ; Francis 297 ; John, als Smithson , 297, 307 ; Henry, alsWilson, 251*n, 252, 274, 282, 286 ; Phillipa 251" William 251 , 297"; William, als Wilson, 216, 238, 240, 252, 260
Benicourt, 125
Benignius, Jacques [Soete], Rectorof Douay University, 54 , 339
Benley, see Bentley
Bennet , Edward 175 : John 175 , 188* , 191 *n, 193 , 207, 212 , 216 , 225* , 290* , 399, 400* , 402* ; Peter 269, 296, 313 ; Ralph296 ; Benson, Anthony 525 ; als ofWilkinson , Henry -17
Bentivolus , Guido, Archbishop of Rhodes and Apostolic Nuncio in Belgium, 34, 45, 96, 112 , 115 , 117 , 120* , 121 , 122, 123* , 352* , 357, 358 , 359* , 363
Bentley, Sussex, 216, 251 " , 254" , 290 , 498 , 505
Bentley , Rowley, Yorks , 506
Bentley, Benley, Andrew 498* , 499 ; Edward56 ; Henry36*; Frederick, als Walker, Francis, 3 , 16 , 37* , 39; 325 ; als of Skinner, Andrew, Anthony, Edward and James and George
Berbock , John 9
Berceriensis, see Berks!.ire
Berinton, als of Seaborne, Benedict and Richard
Berkett, see Birkett
Berkshire , Berceriensis, Berkensis , 57, 121 , 178 , 188, 208, 210, 232, 234 , 235, 495, 496, 497
Bernard , Francis , Sir, 502; Mary 502"; Philip 184 , 216 ; 557 , 564
Bishop, George, als Harris, 135 , 136 , 184; Henry, 189 , 209, 235 ; John 32, 34 , 232, 336; John, als Fallowes , 39 , 41 ; Richard, als Harris, 135 , 139, 179, 184; Richard, als Phillips, 232, 248, 249 ; William , bishop of Chalcedon, x, xviii, xxvii, 199, 200, 210, 212, 213, 216* , 222-225 pass., 358,400 , 401*,402*,532, 546°
Berne, see Bearne
Berney , Barney, Alice 292 " ; Henry 292 ; John 292*n; Mary 292"; [Richard], 1st Bart , 292" ; Thomas 292 ; Thomas, als Thurstin, 292
Berry, George 491 , 494, 505 , 543 ; Mr. 540 ; Thomas 494, 514, 54°
Bertincourt, 183
Best, Thomas 185"
Biskina(? Biscay), provinceof, 273
Bislaeus, see Bisley
Bisley, Bislaeus, Edward 28 ; George 530; John 21, 28 ; John, als Parker, 263, 276, 285* , 287, 301 , 416 ; Margaret 263 ; Richard 36 ; als of Scrope, Scroope, John, see Beesley
Bitham, see Betham
Blackdon, Devon, 230
Beswicke, Edward292* , 420
Bestunic[us], Nicholas 147
Betham , Bitham, Bytham, Thomas 152; William , als Palmer, 152 , 179 , 237, 260, 266 , 267, 269, 271, 272 , 281 , 418
Bethem, Westmorland , 313
Betquettus, see Becquet
Beum ... m , D100
Beverege, Robert27 ; Thomas 19 , 27 , 29* , 63
Beverlett[us], see Bretton, Beverley
Beverley, John, als of Bretton, Beverley
Bewley, Beuleus, Robert 194 , 209 , 210 , 219 , 401 ; see Beauley
Bewsey, see Beausay
Bewtrop, 222
Bexhill, Boxill, Sussex, 509"
Bexington, 229
Beyart, see Bayaert
Beyleus, see Bayley
Bichi , Antony, Abbot of St. Anastasia, 452, 458* ,486, 516
Bickley, Ralph , S.J., 50, 337
Biddle, Peter, als Fytton, see Bidulph
Biddlecom [b]e , Martin, als Martin , Edward, 176, 270, 418
Bidulph, als of Fytton, Peter, see Biddle
Biflet, see Byflet
Bilbie, see Beilby
Binfield, Berks, 511*n
Bingley, Yorks , 568
Bird, als of Blundeville, John
Birkbeck, John 50, 337
Birkett, Berket, Birkhead, George, Archpriest, xvii, xviii*, 9, 95, 98, 99, 103 , 116, 121 , 357* 358, ● 532 * 545 *
Birkhead, see Birkett
Birstall, parishof, 569
Birtwisle, Mr. 540*
Blackfan, Richard, S.J., 200
Blacklow, als of White, Jerome and Thomas
Blackwell, George, Archpriest, xv*, xvii, 12 , 17 , 18, 21 , 22, 24 , 26, 29 , 30 , 32, 35, 37 , 38 , 39 , 43 , 44* , 46* , 48* , 51 , 52* , 56, 58* , 60* , 62* , 63* , 67 , 68, 72, 74, 338, 341, 532 , 545"
Blaize, see Blaze
Blake, John, als of Sayer or Sagar or Sager, Stephen or John
Blakiston, Blaxton, Anne 503"; Humphrey 503 ; Margaret 503"; als of Rolls, Francis ; als ofSmith, Francis
Blaxton, see Blakiston
Blaze, Blaize , Jacques, O.S.F. , bishop of Namur, and later of St. Omer, 27* , 63, 68*n, 130" , 202, 395
Blenkinsopp , Blinkinsop, Francis 42 , 45, 121* , 335, 363
Blinkinsop, see Blenkinsopp
Block House,Hull, 574
Bloomer, Anthony, als Greene, 513, 526, 545 family of, 513* , 518n
Bloomfield, Francis , quoted518
Blount, Blunt, Cecilia 280 ; Elizabeth Lady 436* ; Henry, als Greene , 280, 281, 308-421 ; Richard 280 ; Thomas, als Anderton, 443* 448 ; (William cancelled), 436 ; Walter, Sir, 436* , 489* , 541 ; William, als Greene, 280* , 287, 309 , 310
Bludeville, see Blunderville
Bluett, Thomas 38, 334
Blundell, James 74
Blunderville, Bludevill, James , als
Bird or Bord, 179, 261, 279* , 281* , 282* , 287 , 419 ; Margaret 179 ; Thomas 179
Blundestone , Daniel, als Campian , Robert, 179 , 190, 272, 278, 282, 400 ,
419; Danielby mistake for Robert 268* ; Nicholas 178 ; Robert, als Campian , 194 , 219, 266, 268; Thomas 240, 248
Bowker , Boucherous, Alexander , als Butler, 43, 61, 66, 70, 71, 77, 84 . 87* ,89, 92, 352
Box , Wilts , 303
Boxhill, see Bexhill
Bodwell, Peter 539
Blunt , see Blount ; - , priest, 127
Bohun , see Bounus
Bois, see Boyes
Bold, Anne275"; William 275"
Bold Hall, Lancs , 275"
Boldes, Bouldes , George, als Parre , 147, 148 Richard 302 ; Thomas, als Parre, 147*; als of Parre, William ; als of Lassels, John and Thomas
Boles, als ofLassels, John and Thomas
Bolney, als of Bowerman , Robert
Bologna , CardinalArchbishopof, 555 , 562
Boloniensis , see Boulogne and Bologna
Bolton, Yorks , 574
Bolton, John 50, 337 ,
Bolton-by-Bolland Yorks , 291 , 292 (Holland sic),
Bolton-by-Holland, see Bolton-by- Bolland
Bonhoseau, Dr. 507
Bononia , see Bologna
Boold, als ofLassels, Thomas and John
Boone, Boune, als of Good, John, Thomas ; see Bourne
Booth, als ofYates, John
Bord, als of Blunderville, James
Borghese, Burghesse, Camillus , Cardinal, Vice-Protector of Douay, 20 , 30, 327; Scipio, Cardinal, 147
Bormished , Westmorland, 285
Borne, John Gregory570
Borrowbridge , Yorks , 307
Boste, Ven John, martyr, 531
Boston, Lincoln, 492
Boswell , John 175
Bouchaërt , Boukaert, Judocus, Cong. Orat Bishop of Ypres , 443* , 445
Boucherous, see Bowker
Boudot, see Baudot
Boughton-under-Bleane, Kent, 295"
Boukaert, seeBouchaert
Bould, Thomas, als of Perrotte, John
Boulds, see Boldes
Boulogne, Boloniensis , Bishop of, see d'Ormy
Boulthorpe, Wilts , 280"
Bounde , see Boone
Bounus , Bourne, Bohun, Abraham , Canon of Tournay, 32, 332*
Bourne , Cardinal, xiv, xxix
Bowen, Hugh, 74*
Bowerman , Elizabeth, 308 ; Robert, als Bolney, 308; William, 308
Bowes, Catherine 306 ; Sir William 3064
Boxley, Kent, 509"
Boyce, Boys, George 114 , 116, 125* , 129, 130 , 131, 364 , 366, 367
Boyer, Wm , see Scudamore, Benedict, als ofBacon, Matthew, Robert, and Richard
Boyes, Bois, George, als Armstrong, 229* , 231
Boys, see Boyce
Brabant, 91 ; Duke of, see Albert ; Duchess of, see Isabella
Bradford, Barnabas , als Barnabie, John , 283 ; Magdalen 283; -283
Bradley, Durham, 306"
Bradley, Alice 299 : George 148 , 182 , 188, 231, 255 ; Mark, als Hill, 150 , 243, 253*; William 151 ; als of Leyborne , George, Thomas, and William
Bradshaw , Robert, als Gamage, 16 , 27 , 34 , 35 , 39* , 41, 336 ; Roger 192 (of Haigh) : Roger, als Whitaker, 192, 243 ; Thomas 27, 80; Thomas , O.S.B., 346 ; als of Arrowsmith, Edmund, S.J., ven martyr ; als of Pouncett, George
Braham,Braim,Spofforth,Yorks ,265"
Brailes, Warwickshire, 210, 400
Braim, see Braham
Braithwaite, Anne 468 ; John, als Tolson, 519; Philip, als Tolson, 500* , 508 ; Richard285, 468, 519; Richard, als Tolson, 468, 492, 494 , 501 , 514, 517 ; Robert, als Tolson, 338, 495* , 496, 503, 505, 508, 517, 526, 528 , 529, 539 , 543 , 552 ; Thomas, als Errington, 285, 289
Brakenborrow , Yorks , 217, 275**
Brambletye, Sussex, 290
Brampton, Norfolk, 299, 517 , 518
Brampton, Alice 517 ; Charles 517"; Edward517 ; Joan 517 ; Philippa 517 ; see Bramston
Bramston , Thomas 50, 74..76 , 337 , 345*
Brandsby , Yorks , 468
Branton, Yorks., 539. 552
Bratton, Somerset, 276 , 289
Bray, Alice 517 , 518 ; Breather, Mr. 570
517"
Brecon, Brechinae , Wales , 513
Breether, als of Batt, William
Breham , see Braham
Bretton, Britton, Beverley , als Beverley, John, 125, 136-338 ; Dorothy 284 ; Frances 284"; Francis , als Burdet, 284 ; John 291 ; Luke
284 ; Mary 284* , 291 ; Richard 291 , 295 ; see Britton
Bretton, Brittona , Yorks , 284* , 291
Brett's Hall,Brott's, Tendring , Essex , 293**
Brian, John , of Bristol, 568*
Brian, John, see Bryant
Bridges, Bridgeus, Brigges, Briguess, Edward27 John7, 21 , 27, 36 ,50, 340, 570; als of Acton, Robert; als ofStreet, Thomas
Bridwell prison, London, 569
Briet, Dr. 507, 510, 514
Brigittines in Spain, 203
Brigges, see Bridges
Briggeus, see Bridges
Brigham, Mary (Meynell ) 575; Thomas , of Wyton, 575
Brill, Bucks , 254"
Bristol[iensis], 35, 39, 177 , 186, 261, 276, 285* , 287* , 309, 311, 312 , 313 , 501, 504 , 507 , 508, 568
Bristow [Bristol], 569
Bristow, Dr. 178, 289, 557 , 564 ; Lewis 178, 389 ; Richard 198 , 199
Britton , Bretton, George, als Burdet, 316; James 277, 300, 418, 420 ; Matthew, S.T.D., 7, 14, 18, 39, 52 , 53 , 57 , 199, 338; Richard 7 , 102 , 115 , 123 ; Thomas, als Barton , 194 , 247, 249, 254, 268 ; William 238* , 277, 284, 289, 301, 303, 307, 313
Brocke , Elizabeth297
Brockholes , Thomas 540
Broode, John 429
Brooke , Southampton , 521
Brooke, Brucke , Edward, als Goodman , 176 , 180
Brooke[s], Basil , Sir, 506"; Elizabeth 510 ; Francis 276 ; Joan 276"; Mary 506 ; Richard 510 ; Robert 145 , 176; Thomas 507 ; Thomas , als Shepheard, 145 ; William 507 ; als ofMore, Cressacreand William
Brookesby , Brouxby, Edward 525"; Mary 525 ; William, als Green, 98
Broome Hall, Suffolk, 311 , 421
Brott's Hall, see Brett's
Brough , Caterick, Yorks , 503"
Broughton, Edmund (senior) 142; Edmund, als Edmunds or Edmundson ; William 142 , 177; Richard, V.G. in England, 175, 200, 310 , 421
Brouxby, see Brookesby
Brown, George, als Wakley (Wakleus) orWhatley, 58* , 341 *
Browne, Dr. 127 ; Francis 99* , 513 : George 52 ; Gilbert, servant, 574 ; John, als Stanley ,William, 189 , 191 , 569 Thomas (Bronus) 57 , 58, 80 , 340, 341 ; T., Sir, 3 , 317 ; als of Aiscough , Robert; als of Greene, LL
583
Hugh; als of Heneadge, Robert; als ofManocks , John and Francis ; als ofMatthews, Francis ; Thomas , als ofNapper, John; als of Roper, George; Frances, daughterofViscount Montagu, 513
Broxtowe, Nottingham, 506
Bruche , see Brooke Bruges, Brugæ, 203, 287, 295, 396, 516, 526 ; Carthusians at, 557, 563
Brussels, Bruxellæ , xx, xxi , 3, 8, 9* , 10, 22, 27, 28, 30 , 31 , 33, 39.45.49* 50, 52, 57, 64, 70, 74 , 75 , 84 , 88* , 100* , 101 , 102 , 103* , 108 , 109 , 110 , 113 , 117 , 121 , 126, 132 , 136, 137* , 140 , 145 , 151 , 160, 175, 194 , 195 201 , 203, 208, 216, 230, 231* , 237 , 238, 243* , 247, 248, 249, 254, 255. 259, 260, 268, 272, 280, 283 , 314 , 336, 337 , 344, 353 , 359, 33, 365 , 368 , 371, 372, 374 , 390, 394, 398, 400, 402 , 406, 407, 411* , 443* 444 449 , 479, 494, 495 , 497, 499, 501 , 502, 504 , 506, 508, 509, 511* , 513 . 515 , 516 , 517, 524, 525, 526, 533, 542, 543 , 544 , 571* , 572 ; St. Gudule's Churchat , 203, 249 , 397 : Dean of, seeClement Cæsar Bruton, Somerset, 276**
Bruxellæ, see Brussels
Bryant, Brian, Alexander530; John 31 , 34 , 336
Buck , see Burke Buckenham , Bucknam , Norfolk, 294. 304*n Buckingham , Buchamgamiensis , 9, 237 , 315
Buckland, Berks, 513
Buckland, Jane 283 ; Ralph 74 , 212 , 400
Bucknam, see Buckenham
Budbrooke , Budbroke, Warwickshire, 305*
Buescotte ,. dor atParis , 137
Bulent, Belgian Ambassa3
Bulie, Robert 148 , 151
Bullin, Thomas , als Ingleby, 133
Bullion, de, Peter 21
Burch, van der, Francis, Archbishop of Cambrai, 134 , 138 , 140, 141* , 142 , 147 , 149 , 178* , 183* , 187 , 188 , 190, 194, 207 , 209, 210, 223 , 229* , 235,236,237* , 239 * , 248, 249, 281 , 284, 285, 286, 300, 302 , 309, 312* , 313, 438* , 442
Burden, Edward 530
Burdet, Anthony 428 , 437, 438, 478
Burdet, als of Bretton, Francis, and of Britton , George
Burghese,Scipio,Cardinal ,see Borghese
Burgundy, Duke of, see Albert of
Austria Duchess of, see Isabella of Austria
Burhant, Hants, 520
Burie, George 461, 467
Buriehall, near Solyhall [Solihull], Warwick, 192
Burke, John 574 ;, quoted 304"; (Burquus ), Buck, Robert 3 , 4, I5, 17, 18 , 28* , 332
Burnett, Paul , als of Stevenson, William
Burnley, Lancs , 502
Burschous, see Burscoe
Burscoe ,Burscough , Burschous, Burscouus , Thomas 70, 72 , 74 , 78, 80, 89, 342, 346
Burscough, Burscouus, see Burscoe
Burt[e], William , als Parker , 33, 34 , 46, 47 , 57 ; William 340
Burton, Edward, S.J., xxi*; George 21 , 22*
Burton-Constable, Yorks , 271*D
Bush, John, als Shrub, xxviii; als of Shrubbe , Thomas
Bushell , John , merchant, 572
Busquel, Edmund428
Butler, Alban xiii* , 27 ; Anne 518n; Charles xiii ; Audley, als Audley, Thomas, 512, 513, 520; John, 3 , 15 , 27, 35* , 45, 47, 51 ; John, als Ellison, Elinsonor Eliseus, 151, 233, 234, 243 406; Theobald 513; Thomas 8 , 15 , 17, 18, 24, 74, 75, 332 ; Thomas , Sir, 518"; William 151 ; als of Bowker, Alexander; als ofConiers, Francis; als of Porter, John
Butley Abbey, Suffolk, 304"
Buxton, Ven Christopher530
Byflet, Biflet, Anne276 ; Francis , als Worsley, William, 311 ; Edith289"; Edward 276 ; John 276ª, 289"; Mary 276* , 313 ; Robert 276* , 313; Robert, als Worsley, 313 , 436 , 438, 441, 478, 519 , 524 , 525, 526, 539 * Thomas 276"; William 276ª; four daughters 276 ; William , als Worsley, 276** , 287, 315, 507
Bytham, see Betham
Cadwallador , Charles, als Powel or Elmor, 232, 252 , 253, 259,264 , 266 ; Howel 232 ; Ven Roger 531
Caernarvon [iensis], 4
Cajetan , Caetan, Cardinal, 15* , 23, 219,320 , 325*
Calais, Caletum , 19, 21 , 86* , 127 , 219* , 253, 278, 326, 401
Caldwell, Robert 41
Caletum , see Calais
Calikus, Nic: [Ven NicholasGarlick] 530
Callard, als ofGreen, Ven Hugh Camaracensis, Cameracum, see Cambrai
Cambrai , Camaracensis, Cameracum , xvi, 44, 46 , 47, 48, 50, 57, 87, 92, 94, 96, 112 , 113 , 122 , 134, 138 , 140 , 141, 146, 147 , 149 * , 178 * , 183 , 194 , 207, 208* , 218, 223, 239, 281, 284 , 285, 286* , 300, 303, 352 , 400* , 401, ? 545* , 529,538,551,523*.525; Archbishop of, see Van der Burch, see Grimberg Archdeacon of, see Carondelet Duke of, see Archbishop of, Bishop of; and Archdeacon of Mechlin , 397
Cambridge , Cantabrigiensis , 4, 8, 34 , 35, 37, 43 , 44, 52, 53, 91, 104* , 134, 135, 136, 148, 278, 494, 507, 512, 536 549
Cambridge , Peterhouse, 507, 543, 57°
Cambriensis, seeWales
Camm , Dom Bede, quoted338
Camp at Ostend, 40* , 42, 60
Campian , als of Blundestone , Robert
Campion , Blessed Edmund, M., 50, 200, 337, 530* , 565* , 57°
Campion , Elizabeth, 275
Campion's Hall , Epping, Middlesex , 275"
Camus, John Peter , Bishop of Belley (Bellenci ), 246* , 310, 421
Canning[e], Dorothy 510" ; Grace 510 John, O.P., 510" ; Nicholas 510 ; Richard510"; Thomas 510"; William 479, 511 ; William, als Harewood , 442, 493 ; William, als Fowler, 510 ; Richard, senior, 510n
Cantabrigiensis , see Cambridge
Canterbury, Canterburiensis , Cantuariensis , 26, 32, 55, 116, 148, 179 , 494,500,507,509,528
Cantius, see Kent
Cantrill, als ofYeatman, John ; Anne 520
Cantuariensis , see Canterbury
Capponi , Card , ProtectorofEngland 457* , 459* , 460, 467* , 490,491, 509, 542
Car, Thomas 278, 279*
CardinalProtector, xvii, xviii* ,xx,xxi
Careys, als of Kirkham, Ægidiusand Robert; see Carr
Careys, Caries, John, als Huddleston , 209,247, 248,260, 261 , 266 ; Thomas 209
Caries, see Careys
Carleoliensis , see Carlisle
Carleton, Richmond, Yorks , 231
Carleton, Thomas 144 , 148, 152, 176, 181 , 188, 217, 388 ; als of Norton , John ; als of Medcalf , Thomas
Carlilensis , see Carlisle
585
Carlisle, Carleolensis, Carlilensis , 4 61, 64 , 70 , 71, 96, 97, 112 , 113* , 126, 177, 178 , 179, 194, 209, 210 , 211 , 231 , 233, 237, 239, 253* , 259 , 260, 264, 285* , 287, 311, 312 , 313 492, 495, 496, 500, 504, 505 , 506 , 514,519
Carlisle , Carlillus . . . . , als Night- ingale , 105
Carnarvon , Earl of, see Dormer
Carne, Charles 523 ; Henry 523 ; Jane 523
Caron, Pierre, 428, 462
Carondelet , Carodolet , Francis , Archdeacon of Cambrai , 208 * , 400; see Burch
Carous [Carus], Catherine 313
Carpenter , Sebastian 2
Carr, Anne 296 ; Robert 406 ; Thomas 296, 534* , 547 ; William, als Huddleston, 296; see Carre
Carr[e], als Pinckney,Miles
Carre, Robert212* , 233 , 234, 508*; see Carr
Carrington, als ofSmythe, John
Carter , Thomas 84, 85, 89, 92 ,94, 109 , 284 , 352
Carus, see Carous
Carvajal, de, Aloysia 201 , 395
Cary, Prudence 297"; Richard 63 ; Robert297 ; als ofRowe, John
Cassano, Bishop of, see Owen
Castle-Acre, Norfolk, 525
Castlemaine , Lord 575
Caterall, als of Constable , Philip, John, Robertand William
Caterick, Yorkshire, 503
Catharall, Catherall, see Caterall
Catherforth, written for Rotherforth
Catherick , Anthony 138 , 231 ; Ven Edmund, M., als Huddleston,xxvii, 231*n, 285, 287 , 301 , 433* , 476 , 531 ; George, als Huddlestone , 138 , 179, 183 , 187, 209
Catton, Norwich, 517
Cawdmer , als ofHarbutt, Robert
Cecil, Robert 568; William 67, 98 , 115, 116, 124
Cervia , Cerviensi , Archbishop of, see Guidi, 262
Cestrensis, see Chester
Chadock , William 49, 51 , 337
Chalcedon, Bishopof (1623-1624), see Bishop, William ; (1625-1655) see Smith (Richard)
Chalin[us], see Chaliner , als ofCoram , George 105 ; John 343 : als of Coram , George Challoner , Bishop, quoted xii, xiii, xxv,xxvii,40 , 74" , 185 , 345 , 423 , 573 Francis , als Williamson, 261 ,
269, 275 ; William 261
Chamberlin , Robert, vere Verder
Chambers , George, vere Fortescue , Edward; Margaret 516, 522; Matthew 512* , 513 , 519, 523* , 524 , 545; Peter, als Peterson, 55 , 68, 69, 70, 71, 84* , 493*; Peter 343*"; Richard30, 512; Robertxviii, 117* , 121 , 512 , 513, 358* , 359* , 360* , 362* , 363* , 523 , 524, 545 : Susan 512
Champian , see Campian Champney , Chamnaeus, Anthony, Vice-President of Douay Coll , xviii* , xix , xx, xxi, 149 , 153, 155* , 176, 188* , 191 , 192, 195, 199* , 209 , 213, 220* , 223, 243, 246, 249, 252 , 255, 259, 266, 268, 272, 280, 358, 373, 374 , 376 , 381 , 407, 416, 417 , 425* . 472
Chance, Chancey, Felix, vere Foliott, John, 570 Chancellor of DouayUniversity, 96
Chancey, seeChance
Chandler , James 181, 232, 233 , 238 ; John 181
Chapman, John 33, 34; Stephen 75
Charles, Prince, afterwardsCharles I, 386 , 390
Charles I, xxviii, 406, 432, 475 , 495" , 505, 574 II, xxiii, 527 , 543
Charlton, Surrey, 293"
Charnack , Robert, als Manley, Archdeacon of Lancaster , 537* , 550*
Charnock , John 181 ; Richard, als Cooper, 181, 230, 236, 249, 252, 271 , 418
Chatcull, Chatkull, 265
Chatterton, Henry41, 74
Chawner , 104*
Chaytor, William 185"
Chelston, Hereford, 506*
Chester, Cestrensis, 3 , 4, 5* , 17 , 18 , 19 , 21 * , 27* , 28* , 32 , 39 , 40 , 46 , 48, 50, 56-9, 61, 62 , 63, 64, 68, 69 , 70 , 75 , 77, 78, 80, 89* , 95 , 96, 97, 99* , 100 , 102 , 103 , 105, 106, 109 , 112 , 113* , 115 , 116 , 121 , 122 * , 123 , 124* , 125 , 147 , 177 , 178* , 179* , 181* , 185 , 187, 189, 190* , 191, 192, 194 , 206 , 209, 210, 212, 222 , 228* , 231 , 233* , 234 , 235, 239, 246, 253, 259-271 pass . , 273 , 274, 285* , 286 , 287* , 289, 291, 292* , 300, 302, 303, 310 , 461, 502, 504, 507* , 508, 509
Cheston [? Chediston ], Suffolk, 314*
Cheswarden, Salop, 302
Chichester, Cicestrensis, 67, 102 , 112* , 113* , 267 , 271 , 273, 290, 302, 310* ,
490, 491, 507 , 511
Chidiocke , Dorset, 180 , 304"
Cholmeley , Francis , als Thorneton, 468 , 492, 494 ; Katherine 275"; Sir Richard275"; Marmaduke468; Ursula 468*
Christian, Andrew246
Church, Roch, 63
Churchhill, Catherine 455 ; Edward 455 Thomas , als Downham , Dunham, 455, 456, 493, 507, 511, 519, 520 , 522, 523* , 524 , 545
Chyney, Charles 144, 179 , 190 , 191 , 208
Cicestrensis, see Chichester
Cliffe, Henry 52* ; John, vere Jordan
Clifford, Henry, 2nd Earl of Cumberland, 281 ; Frances 281"; als of Belson, Augustine; als of Belson, Edward; William, als Hockley, Hooley, 315 ; Barons, 523 ; Henry 245 246 ; Aug. 500 ; Wm . , als Phillips, 183 , 189 ; Edward 500-501 William 244, 533. 547
Clifton, als of Tylsly, William
Clinton, als ofHipwell, Charles
Cirby, [?] Yorks , 307
Claiton, see Clayton
Clampett, George 180; Philip 180 , 188, 190, 231 , 233* , 236, 406
Clapton, John, als Lepton, 178 , 182 ; William 178
Clargenett , Clarjenett, William 49, 51 , 74 , 83, 337
Clark[e], Cleark,Christopher235 , 271; Edward 235 John, als Collins, 9 ; Anne 306 ; John 306"; Mr. Pt 570; Roger 41; Thomas 149 ; William 137: als of Grayen , Grayin, Groney , Groyne (vere Hawton), Robert; als of Hawton, Robert; als of Remmington , Francis ; see Clerk
Clarken -Well, see Clerkenwell
Clarkson , Thomas 9, 10 , 14, 16, 19, 332
Clavus, priest, 309
Claxton, als of Hall, William
Claxton, Ralph 68, 89, 112 , 113 , 122 , 363 ; Ven James 530
Clay, John W. , F.S.A., 518
Claythorne, Ralph494
Clayton, Claiton, Cleyton, James, als Cutler, 45, 50; seeCletan ; Francis 495 , 497 498 ; als of Grimeshe, Grimsche [Grimshawe ], Thomas ; Francis , vere Whitaker, Humphrey
Clayton, Lancs , 506
Cleark , seeClarke
Clegg, als of Massey, Edward
Clement , Caesar, dean ofSt. Gudule's , Brussels, xviii, 116 , 117 , 121 , 198, 203, 358* , 359* , 360* , 362" , 363* , 397
Clement [Dowgill als Reyner?],Abbot of Lambspringin Westphalia, 449, 617
Clement VIII, Pope, 24* , 38 , 172 , 173 , 257, 325 , 329, 330, 383* , 413 , 532* , 545
Clenock , Clymachus , Morgan 26 , 175
Clerk, Edward133; Thomas133 , 134 , 438, 439 ; William 134 ; see Clark[e]
Clerkenwell , London, 291 , 571
Cleton, Cletan, see Clayton, Edward and Richard, als Grimshe
Cliderow , see Clitherow
Clitherow, Clideroe, Cliderow , Clytherow , William, als West , 57, 61 , 69, 70, 84, 87 , 89, 90 , 93, 352
Cloughe, Richard, als Fostinne , 308 ; Christopher308 ; Maria 308
Cloughton, Scalby, Yorks , 275°
Clovelly, Devon, 297
Clymachus , see Clenock
Clytherow, seeClitherow
Cobb[es], William 70; Elizabeth 294 ; Mary 294" , 521 ; William , Sir, 294 ; Frances, als Thaightes , 294* ; Geofrey ,als Thaightes ,294* , 308 ; Godfrey, 294; 2 daus. 294"; Henry 294
Cobs, Elizabeth 525; Henry, als
Bedingfield , 525; William , als
Bedingfield , 525; William 525
Cockerham , Lancs., 296*
Cockbourne [Sockburn], 569
Cocks, Thomas , als of Ven John
Sugar, martyr
Coffin, Edward S.J., 50, 337; Mr., music master, 569 : Peter 77 , 85; Thomas, als Collier, 138 , 180; William 138 ; -77
Colbeck (Colbeccus), als of Probyn, Edward
Colbertus (error), see Colbeck
Colchester , 57°
Coldham , Mary 520*n ; Wm 520**; William, als Barnes, 520*
Cole, Elizabett 297**; Hugh 297"
Coley Hall,Yorks, 290*
Colford, Gabriel64*
Colier[s], Edward William orWilliam Edward71 , 72*.74
Coller, Edward 26
Colleton, Collington, 135 , 140, 143*;Catherine 461 ; John190, 191 , 195, 200, 240, 441 , 463 : 430, 479; als of Kynne, John ; als ofKinn, see Collington
Collier, Thomas 143 , 144, 148 , 152; 429 : Wm. 343 als of Coffin, Thomas
Collington, Edward 507 , 512 , 518 ; Edward, als Kin, 491 ; Thomas 315; John, dean, 299 : see Colleton
Collingwood , Collingwoddus , John78 , 93
Collins , John 14 , 27,32* ,33,54,56,334
Collins , Coulins , Coulingus, Richard, S.J., 28 , 33 , 67
Collinson , Peter36
Collinson , Collison , als of Morse, William
Collison, seeCollinson
Colman ,Walter , als Whitgreeve, 132 , 136
Cologne , 397
Coloma, Charles, Governor of Cambrai, 192
Coombe , 297"
Cooper, Coper, Richard, als Palmer , 45 , 50 , 94 , 95; als of Charnock , Richard; John352
Coper, see Cooper
Cople[us], see Copley
Copland , John , als Street, 498 * , 499* , 542
Copledick , Coupledicke , Francis , als [blank], 222, 240
Colvenor , Dr., 461, 487
Colton [? Staffs], 276
Comberford , Tamworth, Staffs, 284
Coming[s], Martin and Robert, als Hartburn
Compton -Wynates ,Warwick,290,298
Compton , Cecilia , Lady, 290, 298 ; Edmund 290 ; Henry, Lord, of Compton Wynates, 290 , 298 ; Henry, Sir, 290* , 420 ; Richard, als Farmer, 290 , 298 ; William 420 ; William, als Farmer, 290, 298
Concett, Edward 185"
Conestable, seeConstable
Congam, Congum, Norfolk, 293 , 302
Coniers (Conierus, Connierus), Francis, als Butler, 44 ; George 59, 60, 112 , 357 Joseph 540*; Mr. 540 , 569 ; Roger 101 , 110, 114 ; Thomas, S.J., 33* ,46, 336, 569 ; see Coniyer, Conyers
Coniers-Norton, see Conyers-Norton
Conisby , Simon 26, 28
Coniscliffe , 297
Coniyer, Thomas 70
Conquest , Elizabett 525* ; Henry, als Houghton, 525 ; John Thimbleby525 ; Richard525* ; Richard, als Houghton, 525*
Constable , Conestable, Cunstable , of Everingham, Yorks , 494"; Elizabett 456 ; Henry 16 ; John, als
Copley, Copleus, John 45, 74 ; Margaret 571 ; Sir Thomas, ofGatton, 571 ; Lord, 45
Coram , als of Chaliner, George; George, als Chalineror Chalin, 89
Cornaille, B. 436
Cornthwaite, Bishop576
Cornubiensis , Cornvallia, see Cornwall
Cornwall, Cornubiensis, Cornvallia, 2, 4, 66, 82, 98, 103, 132 , 146, 288
Cornwallis , Cornwaleys , Cornelius 27; Francis 27 Mary 311 ; William 21; William, als Beconsaw , 311 , 421 ; William , senior, 311 ; als of Huett, Huyt (Hewett)
Cornwaleys, seeCornwallis
Cortracensis , Cortracum, see Courtrai
Cother, Jo 540*
Cottam, Bl. Thomas 530
Cottington, Edward45
Cottrell, Antony, als Tuchiner, 6* ,9
Coulins, seeCollins
Coulsdon, Cullesdon, Surrey, 290"
Count, le, Dr. 513
Coupledicke , see Copledick
Courtfield, Hereford , 255"
Courtrai, Cortracum, Cortracensis, Curtracensis , xvi, 41, 45, 51, 79 ,80, 81, 82 ; dean of, see Wright, John
Coutinho, Peter de, 252 , 270 ; sec
Continho
Coventria, Coventry, 276
Coverden, Dr. 491*
Cox , als of Sugar, Ven John, martyr
Constable -Burton, Yorkshire, 506
Caterall, 150, 247, 254, 289* , 292* , 293 , 303, 310, 420 ; Michael 141, 494 , 496, 498, 510, 542 ; Philip 131 , 496, 501 , 518 ; Philip, Sir, Ist Bart., 456 , 494"; Robert150; Robert, als Caterall, 131* , 136, 139, 186, 187 ; William, als Caterall, 141 , 191
Continho, Coutinho, Don Pedro 418
Conyers-Norton, Coniers-Norton, Basil, als Winbush,? John, Francis , 390; Francis179, 183 , 187* , 190; see Coniers , Coniyer
Cook , John, spy, 573
Cooke , Christopher 59, 67, 92* ; Thomas, servant, 574 ; William, als of Prince , James
Crackmore , als of Aldington, Thomas
Craft, Edward 190; Roger, als
Montan, 190 , 233, 237 ; als of Goodwin , Jamesand John ; William 428, 462, 507, 515 , 516* , 544
Crammish , — 32
Crane, Rev. Edward576
Crathorne, Craythorne, Bridget 492"; Dorothy 469"; Francis 469"; John 469 ; Margaret469* ; Ralph 469* , 492 ; Ralph, als Yaxley or Yakley469* , 492* , 529
Craven in Burnsall, Yorks , 307
Craythorne , see Crathorne
Crecy, see Cressy
Cressing Temple, Essex , 297
Cresswell, Fr., S.J., x, xxi*; George 456 ; Joseph 57, 202 , 395, 517 ;
Katherine 456 ; Richard, vere Langdale
Cressy, Crecy, James 304" ; Letitia 291 , 304 ; Robert291
Cridlam, Mary 51
Crockett, Ralph 530
Croft, Yorks , 185ª
Croft, Roger 540* ; William 540
Crombock , Robert 35
Crosse, James 48 , 61, 66, 69, 88 ; 262 Robert, als Wolful, John 502, 508 ; pursuivant, 411
Croston , Anne503" ; Richard 503"
Croston , Lancs , 503"
Crouder , Arthur69
Crouther, Thomas 74
Crow, Ven . Alex 530
Croxdale , Durham, 503 , 504
Croxtall, Durham, 526
Croydon, Surrey, 520 , 571
Crumpe , Thomas 490, 499*
Cuffold, Catherine 313; Thomas, als
Hubbert , 298, 299
Cullesdon, see Coulsdon
Culverius , 89
Cumberford , Thos 463
Cumberland , Archdeacon of, see Medcalf, John ; Earl of, see Clifford
Cunstable , see Constable
Curle , de, -, S.J., 206, 399
Curson, Francis, Sir, 2920 ; Mary 2921 ; 448
Curtes, Curtis, Curtesius , John57, 61, 64* , 67 , 69, 95, 98 * , 343 ; Mr. 30 ; Peter 465* Thomas 4, 9, 10, 14, 16, 31 , 332
Curtis, see Curtes
Curtracensis , see Courtrai
Curwen, Francis, vere Preston , Ferdinand; Magdelene 529 ; vere Duckett, Anthony
Cusac, de, Daus 205, 398
Cusson, Alexander 180**
Cutler, als Clayton, James
Dade, Dadus , Thomas , O.P., 67, 572
Dalbey, Ven Robert530; William 59
Dalison , see Alison
Dalton, Elizabeth 296, 526 ; Henry, vere Aske ; Robert, als Holland, 526 Robert, als Hulton or Hilton, Colonel , 296**; Thomas 526; William, als Smith, 4, 5
Damford, Edward, als of Wrench (Ruince ), Bernard
Danby-on-Yore, Yorks , 251
Danby, John, als Talbot, Richard, als Moore, 438, 444
Dancaster , seeDoncaster 432 ;
Dancastle , John, als Griffin, 511 *0 ; family of, 511
Daniel, Rev. Edwardxiii*
Daniell, John, als Pickford, 141 * , 142 , 372 ; Thomas, afterwards Isaac, 254 ; William 540 ; als of Pickford (or Pigford ), John and Thomas
Danvers, William 135, 138, 141 * , 149, 181, 369 , 386
Darbiensis , see Derby
Darbishere , William 116* , 124
Darby, see Darley
Darcy, Darsy, als of Dormer, Charles and Edward
Darell, Thomas 198
Darley, Chester, 300°
Daubeny, Christopher 517"; Joan 517ª
Davenport, Christopher , als Lathroppe, 132 , 136
Davies, see Davis
Davis, Davies, John 428, 449, 511* ; Mr. 425, 427, 472, 473. 482 ; William 55, 58 , 61, 85, 342, 531
Davison , Dr. 61
Dawson , Edward 74
Day, John, vere Mulsho
Daye, William (senior) 232 ; William, als Min, 232, 270, 418
Deal, Kent, 572
Dean, William 530
Debdall, Robert 530
Dee, Edward 66
Denbigh[ensis], 9* , 251
Dencestrensis (sic), 316
Denis , Dr. 507
Denton , Northampton, 282
Denton, Margaret 265"; 265°
Derbiensis , see Derby Thomas
Derby, Derbiensis , 3 , 19, 29 , 51 , 56, 77, 112 , 115 , 265º, 315
Devenis[c]h, Thomas , als Gawin (Gawen)
Devon[iensis], 37, 58, 76, 78, 79, 89, 230
Dibder, Richard 141
Diconson , Francis 530 ; Roger 530
Dieulouart, Dolworth, 183 ; O.S.B. Orderat, 389
Dimock, Edward, als Marwin or Marvin, 124 , 126*
Dinglet, John, als Ffaulconer, 17
Dirdo, James 540
Disco , see Discove
Discove , or Dishcove , Somerset, 276**
Ditchfield, Edward, 112 , 116 , 124 , 147,372 389
Dodd [Church History], quoted xiii, xvi, xix, xxv, xxvii, 153° , 170º, 1721, 176, 342 , 386 5461
Dodsworth, Christopher363
Doilaus, Thomas 86
Dolman, Elizabeth288"; Marmaduke 288* , 419 ; Thomas, senior, 288" , 419 ; Thomas , als Rudston , 287 , 288, 298 ; Ursula 288n
Dolwarth, see Dieulouart
Doncaster , Dancaster , see Dancastle , Griffin, 176; John , als Griffiths, 176, 182 , 390
Donington, Lincoln, 290
Dorcestrensis , see Dorchester
Dorchester , Dorcestrensis , 37, 61, 63 , 66* , 69, 78, 101 * , 102, 113* , 115, 134, 176, 180, 186, 206, 230 , 276 , 437 , 477 , 494* , 501 * , 507
Dormann, Thomas 200
Dormer, Alice 293 , 294 ; Anthony 305* , 420 ; Anthony, als Savage ; Charles, als Darcy, 315 ; Edward, als Darcy, 315 ; George 305 ; Francis 420 ; Francis, alsStandish, 294; Margaret305* ; Mary, Lady, 402 ; Marie 225 ; Nicholas, als Fairfax ; Richard 420 ; Richard, als Norris, 293* , 294 ; Robert305"; Robert, Lord Dormer, 305" ; Sir Robert made Lord Dormer of Wenge or Wing 293"; Robert, Viscount of Ascot and Earl of Carnarvon , 294"; Rowland, Sir, 4th Baron Dormer, 305" ; William 293 ; Sir William 293, 294" , 420
Dorobernum , see Dover
Dorset,Baron, 298 ; Earl of, seeSackville
Doto, Richard 34, 333
vere
Dougell, Dowgell , Dowgill, Dougleus, Douglous , Clement , als or Reyner , O.S.B. , 2, 4, 569; Christopher, O.S.B. , 2, 4, 569; Richard, ofRipon, merchant , 569; see Reyner
Dougleus, Christopher and Clement, als Dougell, Reyner
Dover, Dorobernicum , Dovorensis , 78 , 132 , 134, 137 , 225, 253, 261, 282 , 402, 410* , 419*
Dovorensis, see Dover
Dowening , Bridget 456
Dowgill, see Dougelland Reyner
Dowgill, Kirkby-Malzeard,Yorks ,569
Downing, John 490, 492, 497
Dracot, Draycott, Staffordshire , 505
Dracot, see Draycot
Drae, John , or Drue , als ofTrevelyan
Draper, John, als Ley or Lee, 43 ,47
Draycot, Dracot, Alban, als Parker, 518* ; Albion 578n; Anne 518"; Catherine 518" ; Edward 518*n ; Edward, als Tomson , 182 , 222 , 232 , 243 ; Elizabeth518 ; George 5180; John 518 ; John, als Parker, 505* , 511 Margaret 518" ; Philip 518"; Ralph 258 ; Richard518
Driland, Christopher49, 55 , 337
Droitwich, Worcester , 436n
Dromè, François 462
Dronie, Françoise 428
Drury (Druroeus ), Anne293*n; John 293 ; Sir John 293" ; Mark, vere Harrington ; Mr. 368, 372 ; Robert 293 ; Southwell 293 ; William 148, 185, 186, 372 ; William , als Bedford, 293* , 304, 311
Duacum , see Douay
Dublin, Archbishop of, see Eugene, i.e. Owen, Matthews, 188
Duckett, Anthony, als Curwen, 529; Christopher (? Francis ), 133 , 177 179, 181 , 185, 189, 222, 233, 236, 247, 248, 252, 259* , 260* , 270 , 274, 279, 296, 307* , 315, 415, 428 ; Francis 311; James 103 , 114 , 124 , 125 , 126 , 127, 129 , 177 , 179 , 194, 217 , 222* , 223 ; John , als Girlington, 311; John , Ven M., 180 , 410 , 417, 444 , 445, 531 John 123 , 191 * , 206* , 219, 221, 235 see Ducquesius , 246, 252, 260, 263 264* , 266* , 311 ; John, Prior of Charterhouse , 480 ; Magdalen 529 ; Robert, vere Sanford(? Samford )
Duffield, Thomas , als Thirkill, 436, 455* , 487, 497* , 526
Dugdale , Sir William, 575
Dunelmensis , see Durham
Dungannon , Baron, 86, 349
Dunkerd, see Dunkirk
Douay, Duacum, ix, xiii, xiv, xvi*, xviii,xx, xxii, xxvii, xxviii*, xxix, 1* , 13 , 14 , 19, 21, 31 , 33* , 45* , 53" , 62, 75, 81 , 100* , 107 , 108 , 110 , 112 , 114 , 117, 124, 125 , 128, 130* , 135 , 145, 146 , 151 , 167 , 168 , 170*-181 pass., 191 , 197, 198, 202, 218, 219* , 224, 234, 241, 243, 244* , 245, 249 , 251 , 253, 255, 256, 263, 268, 301 , 309, 310, 314* , 315, 317* , 318* , , 320 , 323, 324, 325, 333* , 344 , 345, 348 , 352, 353, 355, 357, 358* , 369, 371 , 381, 382* , 383* , 384* 387* , 389, 391, 393, 395, 400* , 402, 403, 405 , 407* , 409* , 410* , 411, 416, 417, 420 , 421, 422, 423* , 425* , 427, 429, 432, 433 , 435 , 449, 453, 454, 458* , 470* , 471 , 472* , 474* , 475* , 477 , 488, 505* , 507, 508 * , 512* , 514* , 515, 517* , 520, 533* , 534* 535* , 536 , 537* , 546, 549* , 550, 551, 552, 553* , 554 , 559, 560* , 561 , 567* , 568* , 570* , 571*; Jesuit College at, 153 , 155, 157, 158, 162 , 163 ; Churches at St . Albin's , 241*0,407; St.Amatus's, 353: St. James's, 436; S.J. Superiorat, 374* , 376 , 379* 589
Dunkicem, see Dunkirk
Dunkirk, Dunkerd, Dunkicem , Dunkerkanorum, Dunquerq, 40, 247* , 264, 314 , 407 , 428,526
Dunmow, Dunmuw, Essex, 510*
Durham, Dunelmensis , 17 , 18 , 21, 26-29, 36, 41, 78* , 80, 86, 87 , 89* , 90, 95, 97, 99, 112 , 113 , 134 , 179 , 184, 233 , 237, 244, 289, 292* , 293 , 297, 433, 502, 504* , 507, 512, 536* , 549, 569, 574: Anglican Bishopof, 536* , 547
Dutton, Barbara275"; Edmund, als Ireland, xi, xii, xiii, xxii, 187 , 208 , 233, 238, 239, 247, 249, 250, 259* , 260 , 261-266 , 272, 296, 301 , 303, 390* , 410-415 , 425, 426 , 427* , 428, 449 , 451, 453, 455 , 456, 459, 460, 462* , 465, 472* , 475 ; Katherine 275 ; Matthew, als of Gale , 48o * n , 482, 485, 487, 488, 492, 493 , 494 495, 516 ; Richard275"
East , Richard (senior) 269 ; Richard, als Jerningham , 269, 279, 291 , 292* , 293 , 301, 305, 310, 420
East Coker , Somerset , 442
East Ness, Hovingham, Yorks , 469"
EastNewton, Yorks ,456" , 468 , 469"
Eaton, als ofSimon, John
Eccleshall , Staffs, 265
Edgerton, Egerton, John, als Osbaldeston or Asbaldeston , 77 , 103, 115 , 122 , 123* , 126, 364 ; als of Belfeld, John ; Simon, als Eaton, vere Pottinger
Edmundburiensis , see Edmundbury
Edmundbury, Edmundburiensis , 53
Edmunds, Robert 46, 49 ; William, als of Broughton, Edmund
Edmundson , William 147
Broughton, Edmund
Edwards , Lawrence 56, 58* , 340 , 341 ; als of Monke , Richard ; Richard 313
Effingham , Surrey, 572
Egerton , see Edgerton
Egmont, Count, 507. 543*
Egton, Yorks , 185
Eldrington, Elrington, Edward, als Lutton , 518* ; Francis 518* ; Ralph 518*n
Elie, see Ely
Elinson, John, als ofButler
Eliolensis , Eliensis , see Ely
Eliseus, see Ellis
Elizabeth, Queen, x, xiv, xxiii,xxviii, 49* 59 , 75 , 336 , 337, 341 , 349
Ellice, see Ellis
Ellis, Ellice, Eliseus, Anne 307 ; Philip 307 Ralph307 ; Humphrey and William, vere Waring
Elmor[e], Charles, verePowel
Elrington, see Eldrington
Elton, Anthony 136
Elverton, Charles, 93
Elvet, Durham, 306
Ely, Eliensis , Eliolensis , 17 , 18 , 22, 55, 122 , 123, 124
Ely, Elie, Humphrey 199
Emersam , BrotherRalph,S.J., 50, 337
Enderby, Enderbie , Edmund, als
Percy, John , 233 ; Edward 290; Edward, als Manby(Mambie), 289 ; Elizabeth 290*n ; George 290 ; Percy, als Percy, John, 150; Thomas 150 , 290*
Englefield , see Inglefield
Epping , Essex , 275"
Erdeswick , Dorothy 265"; John265"
Errington, John, als Tunstall, 297, 301, 302, 420; John, senior, 297 ; Mary 297; Thomas, vere Brathwaite
Eshe, Ask, Lanchester , Durham, 506" , 512"
Eskdaleside , Yorks. , 185"
Esne, d' , Michael, BishopofTournai , 31*n
Essex[iensis], Essextiac , 7, 189 , 194, 236, 568
Eure, Catherine 306*n; George, 5th Lord Eure of Malton, 434*" , 495; Mary 306 ; Peter 306 ; Ralph 434 Thomas, Major, 306 ; William, als Hetherton, 306; William , senior, 306* ; Sir William 306"; William, 2nd Lord, 306" ; William, als Philipson, George
Euxton, Lancashire , 192
Evans, Evens, Gueathan 513 ; Hugh, vere Philips, 513; John 513* , 526, 539; Lewis 123 , 124 ; Mr., Pt , 569 ; Thomas 3 , 5, 9, 14, 17, 58, 63, 324; William 90, 92 ; William, als
Meredith, 4
Evelith, Iveleth, Shifnal, Salop, 276*n
Evens, see Evans
Everard, Edward, als Paston ; Elizabeth 189; Francis 189 , 206 ; Nicholas 428 ; Thomas 41 ; William 189; William , als Talbot, 143, 146* , 193 , 212 , 223, 232 , 239, 250, 261 , 272, 278, 279, 287, 298, 301, 307 , 313 , 401
Everingham, Yorks , 456" , 494"
Exeter, Exoniensis , 95, 96, 97* , 103, 122 , 179, 180, 189 , 230, 253.259 , 260
Exoniensis , see Exeter
Eyre (Erius), Dorothy 510"; Jane 527 John77 ; Peter, alsStafford, 24; Roland 527"; Thomas 510"; Vincent 32
Fabri, Joannis 428
Face, see Facey
Facey, Face, Anthony 269 , Hugh269
Facon, see Falcon
Fairfax, Nicholas , als Dormer, 150 , 222 Thomas 150
Faiwather, see Fawether
Falcon , Facon, John229* , 232, 405
Fallowes, John, als ofBishop, 84
Farmer, John 63 , 65, 67 , 68* , 343
Farnese, Odouardo ,Card : Protectorof England , xx, 20, 22, 41, 74 , 117* , 118* , 145, 147 , 149, 150 , 153* , 155, 159, 175, 243, 325, 327, 344 , 358* , 374, 376, 377 , 381
Farrar, Ferrar, William, als of Harewell, xxvii, 86, 121 , 129 , 130, 188* , 191* , 193 , 194, 208* , 212, 228 , 366 , 367, 390 , 400 , 405
Farrington, vere Osbaldeston, Alexander and Francis
Farthing,Halfe-farthing, in Coulsdon , 290*
Fathers , Thomas 89, 90, 98, 115 , 116 , 121 ; Thomas , als Greene, 180 , 190 , 192, 208 , 390, 400
Fawatter, Fayrewether , Yorks , 568 Bingley,
Fawether, Faiwather, John (Spy) xxviii, 36* , 335* , 567* , 568* , 569* , 570
Fayrewether , see Fawatter
Feasby, Thomas, vere Rowden , Roudon, Rouden , 493, 498 503, 507
Featherstone , Yorks , 575
Featly, Dr. 310, 421
Febure, Februe, Antoinede, 428, 462, 496
Felton, John , als Gross, Thomas 530
Femington, see Ilmington
Fenell , Gerard 509, 512 ; John52, 96
Fenix , see Phoenix
Fenn, James 530 ; Jo 540 ; Peter540
Ferar, see Farrar
Feria, Duke of396
Ferrara, 323
Fesand, see Fezard
Fettiplace, Edward, als Fitzherbert, 212, 268, 275, 432, 447, 475 , 492
Feules, M. de 248, 407
Fezard, Fesand, Edward, alsAsh, 58* , 341
ffallar, Mr., M.A., 570
ffaulconer , als ofDinglet, John
Field, Fildus, Fyldus, George, als
Nelson, 57, 67, 81, 82, 347 ; Simon, vere Maxfield; Ven Thomas, M., 122 ; vere Maxfield
Filbey, Bl William 530
Fildus, seeField
Filton , Peter 229
Finch, Thomas 65
Finchingfield, Essex, 297
Fingall, Fingle, Yorks , 271* , 506
Fingle, see Fingall
Fingley,Ven John530
Fisher, George, als Muscot, Musket, als Ashton, President ofDouay,xii, ххіі , ххііі, 15, 16, 35 , 83, 85, 90, 93, 137, 262, 289, 290, 325, 410, 423* , 424* , 425, 431, 448, 451, 453* , 457 , 463-466 , 470 , 474, 481-489, 493, 496, 541 George 515 ; Ralph2*; 318; Richard, als Ashton, 9, 45, 47 , 51 , 56; Thomas 340 ; William, als ofHeneage
Fitchherbert, see Fitzherbert
Fitter , Edward, als Green, 2, 4, 15 , 28 , 43 ; Gilbert, vere Foster, George ; William 28
Fitton , see Fytton
Fitzarbert, see Fitzherbert
FitzCharles , Charles, Earl of Ply- mouth, 527
Fitzherbert, Fitchherbert, Edward, als of Fettiplace, 536, 549 ; Rector of English College, Rome, 536 , 549
Fitzjames, Nicholas 9, 14 , 21 , 27 , 31 , 32 , 33 , 334 ; Richard27
Flaccius , Chrysogonus, Apostolic Nuntio to Brussels, 195* , 390* , 391* , 571
Flanders , 147 , 202, 339, 371 , 444 462, 464 ; Count of 395; Nuntio in, 155
Flather, Ven Matthew or Major, M., 60* , 61 , 66, 69, 70, 71 , 73, 90, 343 , 345, 351 , 352, 531
Flaxen, William, als Johnson , 14 , 17 , 18,35,332
Fledborough , Notts , 518
Fletcher, John 249 ; Richard, als Barton, 496, 497, 499, 501 ; Robert, als Parker, 249, 253, 285, 287 , 298, 307, 310, 313, 314, 315
Flint, 57, 296, 434
Flint , Thomas 41* , 44, 47, 65, 70, 74 , 342
Flixton, Suffolk, 291 , 304**
Floid , see Floyd
Flood , Flud, John 507, 526, 540
Floyd[e], Floid, Floyed, Elizabeth 294* Hugh 42 ; John (senior) 232 ; John232, 278, 294 , 301 , 302, 309, 419 ; Roger 50 ; Roger, S.J., 327
Floyed, seeFloyd
Flud, see Flood
Flushing, Vlishinghum, 3 , 49, 317 , 521
Foley, Brother, S.J., quoted 351
Foliott , John, als Felix Chance or Chauncey , 38, 62, 69, 70, 76, 77* . 93 , 350
Forcer, Mary 306 ; Peter 306 ; Thomas, als Langley, 483
Forcett, parishof, 574*
Ford, Catherine 294 ; Charles 304"; Francis , vere Hoord; James 62 ; John and Robert, vere Kynvet ; als of John Monford; Katherine 304 Thomas 530
Forge, Forgs, Bartholomew 22; Christopher, als Wheatley, 60*n , 66,78.350
Forgs, see Forge
Forster, Foster, Elizabeth276 ; Francis 2* ,4, 70 , 74, 318; George270" ; George, als Gilbert Fitter, 276 , 279 , 280 Henry and John, als Samowayes Joan 276"; Walter 276
Fortescue, Fortiskew, a Forti Scuto Cicely 303 ; Edward, als Chambers, George, 187 ; George, als Chambers, 135, 137 ; George 439* , 442, 443 Hugh 303"
Forth, Andrew79
Fosche, Robert, als Green, Thomas , 3
Foscut, see Foxcote
Fosser, Father, 391
Foster, Allen, als John Smith, 248, 253 , 308, 437; William 248; Joseph, quoted 275 , 281ª, 305ª, 306 , 456" , 489 , 492 , 495º, 502"
Fostinne , Richard , vere
Richard Cloughe,
Fott, Christopher(error Tott), 40, 48, 62 , 34°
Foüet, Antoine 428
Fouler, see Fowler
FountainsAbbey, Ripon, Yorks , 575
FountainsHall, Ripon, Yorks , 510*n
Fourquier, D. 510
Fowler, Fouler, Edward 510" ; Grace 510 Ralph 234
Fox, Matthew558 ; Thomas 46, 56
Foxcote, Foscut , Warwick, 509*D
Foyel, Robert, als Francis Walton, 134, 136, 181
Framingham, 337 ; see Framlington
Framlington, Framingham , Prison of, 49
France , de, Christopher , Bishop of St. Omer , 4, 36* , 445* , 446, 455 , 498*0
Frank, Francis , als of Kettlewell (error Pettlewell), Wilfrid
Frecknam , Norfolk, 304
Freeman , Michael , afterwards S.J., xi, 2, 9, 72 , 73* , 75, 80, 81, 83, 90, 343 , 344, 346, 347, 349 * , 351 ; William 531
Freland, Thomas 38
Frederick, The Elector 390
Frithe, Nicholas 29
Frius, John Rocus 186
Frogmorton, see Throckmorton
Fryerage, Yarm, Yorks , 574
Fuggers, 378* Fulke, William, 558, 564
Furness Abbey, Lancs , 489" Fursden, Mary 276, 313
Fyld, see Field
Fytton, Fitton , Francis 6, 8 , 14 , 17, 18 , 19 , 332 ; Francis, als of Bateman, Philip ; Jo: 230 ; Peter, als
Bidulph or Biddle, 232, 234, 236, 238, 239* , 247, 249, 252, 261, 262 , 406, 410 Peter 406, 466* ; Mr.490
Gage, Anne 288* , 5200; Edward 103 , 251, 498" ; Elizabeth 498"; Francis, als White, 314 ; Francis, President of Douay, 288* ; Francis 237, 240, 248, 249, 254* , 269, 410 , 417 George 288* , 464* , 465* , 466* , 488, 492 * , 509 * , 543 ; George, als Haward, Howard , Hoard, Francis 237, 240, 248, 249 , 254 , 269, 410, 417, 571 * , 572 : Helen 572 Henry, als Daniel, 493, 494, 499 Henry, Col. Sir, 571 ; John 103, 254 , 288*n, 520"; John, als Morley, 314; John, senior, 288* , 571, 572 ; John, als White, 310, 314; John or Francis 520"; Margaret254 ; Mary 520" ; Mildred 254 Philippa 251"; Thomas, apostate , 571, 572 * , 573* ; Thomas, als Markham, 505, 525 ; GovernorofGravelines , 204, 397
Gaile, see Gale
Gale, Gaile, Gailie , Barbara_275 **; Francis 275*n ; Mary (Pudsey) 574 Matthew, als Dutton, 275, 277,279, 301, 305; ofAcomb Grange, 574
Gamage, Robert, als Bradshaw , 569
Gandavum , see Ghent
Gandavo, Maximilian, see Villain
Gant, seeGaunt
Gardiner, Michael 46, 47, 50, 340
Gardner, John , als Hasley
Garnett, Henry, S.J., 45, 49, 58, 76, 345 ; Gaspar, Jaspar, 74, 95, 100 ; Michael 70; Richard 93 , 101 Thomas 74*
Garsten, Francis , vere Gilpin
Gascoigne, Gascon, Anne 286*n
Anne, Lady 519; Francis , als Johnson, 286* , 496* , 497, 567 ; John 519; John, Sir, Bart , 286*n ; Thomas,Sir, 519 ; Wm , als Meynel , 510, 511 , 519, 524* , 525, 526
Gascon, seeGascoigne
Gaterton , Herefordshire , 206 Gatton, Surrey, 571
Gauche , la ,Marie 428, 429
Gaunt, Gant, James 42, 61, 66, 70, 96 , 98, 263* , 416* , 417*; John, als
Osbaldeston, 126; Thomas 67 , 283*
Gawen, Gawin, Robert, als Devenish, 37, 88 ; Thomas, als Devenische, 30
Gawin, see Gawen
Geldred , Anne469
Gell, Rev.W. 575
Geffry, seeGeoffrey
Geneson, als ofWithes, Edward
Gennings, see Jennings
Geoffrey , Geffry, George and John , als Warham
Gerard , Ven Miles 530 ; Thomas 75
German, Thomas 139 , 143 , 148, 180; see Arundel, Thomas
Gertman , Dnus493
Gerningham , see Jerningham
Gervase , Ven George, M., xxvii, 28 , 42, 50 , 51, 60, 74, 84, 85, 90, 318 , 340, 349, 351*; John 28; William 60
Gettisham , Devon , 295"
Ghent, Gandavum , 201 *n, 247 , 249.
335, 394, 445, 449, 510, 519
Gibbon , Alice 293
Gibbons , Richard 70 , 80 , 346
Gibson , Richard30, 31
Giffard, Gifford, Capt Peter, spy, 572; Dr. 540 ; William Gabriel, O.S.B. , Bishop of Archidaliae, in partibus (1618), Archbishop of Rheims (1621), 148* , 198, 199 , 255* , 261 ; 255
Gifford, see Giffard; Dr. 5, 37; M.D.,509"; Henry, verc? Hide (? Hick) ; Margaret509 , 528
Gifford Hall, near Stocke,Suffolk,282, 419
Gildon, John , als Worsley, 501 , 508; Richard, als Worsley, 501* , 510 , 519*; Robert, als Worsley, 501 , 504; William, als Worsley, 507
Giles, the butcher, 193* , 430
Giles, Philip 515, 520
Gill, Peter74
Gillow, Joseph, quoted xxii, 296º, 510
Gilpin, Arthur, als Thomas Green , 105, 109, 116, 121, 122, 134 , 262 , 266, 363 Francis, als Garsten, 146, 189; Martin 146
Girlington, Frances 311
Gledge (Clegg), Edward, vere Massey
Glen , Henry 442 , 479
Glocestriae, see Gloucester
Gloucester Hall, see Oxford
Glostocke, see Lostocke
Gloucester ,Glocestriae ,60,66, 299, 496
Goar, Goer, Henry, als Jackson, 186, 208, 233, 240, 249, 259, 262, 265, 266, 267, 275, 390, 418 ; John 186
Goathland , Yorks , 185"
Goderick , Thomas 282* , 283, 295, 305, 419
Goer, seeGower
Godfrey, Godfrid, Arthur, als Lacy, 81, 82, 347
Godfrid, see Godfrey
Godstall , see Godstow
Godstow ,Wolvercott, near Oxford, 59, 77
Godwin , see Goodwin
Godwyn , James 180" ; Robert 180"; see Goodwin
Golding, Edward497* ; Frances 396 ; Richard , als Green, 189
Goldsmith, Francis37 ; Peter95, 96 , 97, 98, 353 Peter, als Middleton, 209
Goldwell ,Thomas, Bishop, xv,553,560
Gondomar , Gundomar , Count, legate, 145, 169, 237, 371, 386, 406
Gondy, Jean François de, Archbishop ofParis, 246, 262
Gooch[e], Thomas 53 , 55, 56
Good, Charles 284"; Elizabeth284**; John 284* ; John, als Boone or Bounde , 228, 268 ; Sebastian 284 ; Thomas , als Bound , 284, 290, 291* , 420
Gooderiche, Anne 271; Philip 186, 219 ; Robert 271 ; Thomas 217 , 253* , 271
Goodlake, Goodlucke , Gudlacke , Robert, als Younge , 235* , 253 , 273
Goodlucke , see Goodlake
Goodman, Charles , vere Edward Brooke ; Daniel428 ; Gawen 182; John 182 , 190, 194, 228, 389
Goodwin, Godwin, James (senior) 180; James, als Craft, 180 , 193 , 194; John, als Craft, 192 , 193, 194 , 273 , 277 Robert 180"; als of Okenden, Thomas
Goodyer, Richard30, 32
Goss , Bishop, xiv
Gothridge, Gothrigius, Gutteridge, see GotteridgeGotteridge ,William, vere Harper
Gould , Edward297" ; Juliane297"
Gouy, Jean de 517
Gower, Goer, Charles and John, vere Hawkins; Edward and Thomas, vere Barrett ; Edward501 ; William 539*
Gowin, Edward, als Green, 127; see Gawen
Gradell (Gradwell), John 122 , 130 , 134, 138 , 140, 151, 152 , 367, 37°; Thomas 487 ; Thomas, als Middleton, 436, 455 , 505
Gradwell, sec Gradell
Grafton, als ofJohn Hawton
Graine , see Groyne
Graise , Essex , 274 ; see Grays
Grand, le, Ægidius , 428 , 462
Grange,Graunge, Gregory , als William Errington, 151, 179 , 208 ; Thomas 151
Graunge, see Grange
Gravling, see Gravelines
Gravelines , Graveling, 203* , 20+ , 397* Governorof, see Gage
Gravener , Francis , als Gregory, 9, 21 , 28, 70, 71 John, als Gregory, 9,21 , 28, 36 , 43 John 345 ; Richard 28*
Gray, vere Charles Alleyne ; Anne 308 ; Edward 507%; George 434 ; Robert 5 , 8 , 10 ; William 434
Grayen, Grayin, see Groyne
Grayne, see Groyne
Grayrigge , Kerkby-Kendal ,Westmorland, 527
Grays, Essex, 275; see Graise
Great Barfield, Bardfield, Essex, 251"
Greaves, Greves, vere Francis Green , 79 , 105* , 106, 109, 357
Green, Greene, Grene, Grenus, Catherine288* ; Edith289 * ; Edmund, als Ogle, 193 , 253* , 286, 298 , 301 , 309, 312* , 421 ; Edward, als Fitter; Edward , Sir, 2880; Frances 288 ; Francis (senior) 236 ; Francis63, 66, 110* , 148, 184 , 185 , 186, 288 Francis , als Hunt or Hutt, 104* , 105, 126; Francis, vere Russel, 236, 243 , 246 ; Gabriel, als Stockman ,Ægidius , 289; Henry 230, 252, 253, 259 , 262* , 265, 266, 268, 269 , 418 ; Hugh, Ven M., als
Browne , Ferdinand , als Collard, Richard, xxvii , 103* , 112 , 113 , 115* , 363. 437, 477 ; Hugh 531 ; James 193 John 50 , 288ª, 337 ; John, als Russell, 236* ; Margaret 288 Paul , als Washington, 51 ; Ralph 61 , 341 ; Randolph 37 ; Rooke (Rochus), senior,2880; Rooke (Rochus), als Russell, 288* , 289 , 315 Thomas 35. 74, 105. 134, 264 ; Thomas, als Gilpin, 206, 240, 262 ; Thomas, Ven M., als Reynolds , xxvii, 432* . 531 * ; William, als Russell, 288* , 289, 298 ; 10.4 , 109 , 144, 145, 146 ; als of Blount, Henry and William ; als ofBrookesby (Brough) ; als of Fathers , Thomas ; als of Fosch[e], Robert; als of Gilpin, Arthur ; als ofGolding, Richard; als of Gowin, Edward; als of Greaves, Francis; als ofHunt, James ; als ofMarston, Richard als of Pickering, John; als of Wyles, Richard; als of Yorke , Richard
Gregory XIII, Pope, 173, 196 , 329, 391 , 553 , 557, 559, 564; XV, Popc, 218, 401 ; als of Gravener , Francis and John
Grene, see Green
Greves, see Greaves
Griffin, Richard, 3, 6 ; Richard, S.J.,22
Griffites, see Griffiths
Griffiths, Griffites, John , als Dancaster or Doncaster
Griffon(Griffith), Griffen, Hugh, als of Alford, Robert, 218* , 401
Grimberghe , Guillaume de, Archbishop ofCambrai , 46, 47, 48* , 49** Grimsche [Grimshawe ], Richard, als Cletan, Clayton, 125 , 186, 194, 208*; Thomas , als Cletan, 125 ; als of Griton, Richard
Grimstone , Thomas 5
Grinstead , East, Sussex, 290n
Grisald, Richard 74 , 75
Gross, John, als Fenton , 52 , 53
Grove Park, Warwickshire, 305"
Groyne, Grayne , Grayen , Graym, Robert, als ofHauton and Clarke
Gudlacke , see Goodlake
Guidi, John Francis, Titular Archbishop of Patara, afterwardsArchbishop of Cervia , Apostolic Nuncio in Belgium, 193 , 195
Guinnus, seeGwyn
Guisborough , Yorks., 185"
Guise family 388 ; Lady Abbess at St. Peter's , Rheims , 388
Guiseley, Yorks , 265"
Gumelle , Secretary , 27
Gunter, William 530
Gwyn, Guinnus, William 59, 60 ; William, als Powell, 35*
Gyngwgvechan ,Montgomeryshire ,232
Haberly, Thomas 49, 52, 337
Hackshot, Hawksee, John , als Hammond, 131 , 137, 179, 186, 208, 233, 235 , 236, 406%;B Ven Thomas, M., 131*D
Haddacke , Da, als Hodgson , 217
Haddock, Haydock, George 530 ; Richard45 , 51, 52* , 198
Haies, see Hayes
Hailesworth, Suffolk, 314"
Haines, Joseph, als ofHarris
Hainton, Lincolnshire, 443"
Haire, William 508
Hakins, see Hawkins
Hale , John 364
Halfe-farthing, see Farthing, Surrey, 420
Halford, Thomas 530
HalingManor, Croydon , Surrey, 5200, 571
Hall, Alice 306; Andrew 176, 182 , 367 Andrew, als of Hallam; John 74, 86; Richard, Dr., xvi, 8* , 11, 16, 22* , 23, 24, 31 , 41* , 198 , 199 , 322* , 323* , 325, 327, 328* , 332 , 335, 570; Rodulph 306 ; Thomas 540; William, als Caxton, 306
Hallam, Andrew, als Hall, 132* , 134 , 138* , 147, 187, 369, 370
Hamburghamin Holland, 6
Hame , Dorset , 176
Hamelton, Alexander85 ; Thomas 69
Hamelyn, Boniface 456; Bridget456; John , als Downing, 456, 459* , 468
Hamerton, Dorothy 502"; John 502 ; Mary 297 ; William 445 , 492, 513, 514* 516, 517, 524 , 529 , 540, 543 , 544*.545
Hamford, Edward, als Stanley, 184 , 243 ; John, als Stanley, 222
Hammon , Helen 308
Hammond, als ofHackshot, John
Hampshire, Hantoniensis , 138* , 144 , 57°
Handes , Edward, als Johnson, 82 , 110 , 113 , 115* , 116; see Hanne
Handsam, see Hansom
Hanne , Handes , Edward 72 , 530 ; Edward, als Johnson, 82; Robert 71, 75 , 76, 77, 79 , 350
Hannie, Liford, Berks, 280
Hannonia, 333
Hansam , Thomas , alias Smith, see Hansom
Hansom , Handsam ,Hansam, Hanson , Anne, als Cusson, 181"; John 181"; John, als Smith, 180* ; Joseph
Stanislaus xxv ; Mary, als Smith, 180 ; Robert 181"; Thomas 181*n; Thomas , als Smith, 180*n, 245, 248, 270, 277, 279* , 281 * , 282, 419
Hantoniensis , see Hampshire
Hanworth, John 28, 34; Joseph 28
Harbour House, near Durham, 306
Harbutt , Joseph 28 ; Robert, als Cawdmer , 185ª
Harding, Christopher , als of Bartlet, 183, 188; als of Barrowes, Christopher
Hardingham, Norfolk , 294"
Hardrope, see Hatherop
Haregate , see Harrogate
Harewell, William , als Ferrar, 121 , 122* , 124, 125* , 136, 213, 216, 364
Hargrave, James 37, 53 , 115;William, als Hunt, 210, 217* , 231, 239 , 247 , 249 , 250, 254, 260, 272, 278, 279 , 284, 285, 301, 307, 419
Harley, Thomas , Provostof Cambrai , xviii, 218 , 219 , 358 , 400
Harlow, Thomas 212 , 213, 218
595
Harmer , Anne 290 , 309 ; Isaias, als Udall, Laurence , 290, 305 ; John 290, 300 ; William , als Toby, Tobie , 309* , 421
Harper, William 55, 57 , 342, 343 344 William , als Gothrigius, Gutteridge, 72 , 73 , 75
Harries, Harris, Francis 269,417; see Harris ; Henry, als ofPratt
Harrington, John, alsWate, 179, 216 ; Mark, als Drury, 131 , 132* , 133* , 138, 145 , 146, 147 , 190, 194 , 213 , 217, 230 , 231, 246, 247, 248, 249 , 250, 251 , 252 , 255, 259, 268* , 270 , 368, 410, 411* , 416* , 418 * , 489,490, 541 ; Robert 114
Harris, Francis 229, 230, 235* , 236 , 237, 238, 239, 240, 247, 249, 252, 406*; George, als Bishop, 178; Henry 176 , 182, 188, 389 ; Mr. 539; Richard 124 , 129 , 148, 366; William 146; als ofCharles Newport ; als of Henry and William Pretty
Harrison, Edward 95, 96, 121 , 353*; George 431 , 463; James , als Hayles, 531 ; John 144; Matthew 531 ; Paul 540 ; William (Procurator, afterwardsArchpriest),xxi, 5* , 7 , 14 , 31, 47, 52, 94, 97, 149 , 164 , 165 , 170* , 175 , 198, 310* , 332, 336, 352* , 370, 373 , 381 , 386, 430, 463, 515, 568
Harrogate, Haregate , Yorks. , xxvii, 469 , 502
Harsnies , 183
Hart,William 231 , 268 , 416, 426 , 427 , 473, 474 , 530 ; als of Hargrave, 559 , 566
Hartburn , John 95, 96, 97, 101 , 353 ; Martin, O.S.B., alsComings , 86, 89, 95, 112 , 122; Robert, als Comings, John , 68 , 78, 95: written for Merriman, 87
Hartley Green, Staffs , 265"
Hartley, William 530
Harvey,George 105* , 356; George,als ofHastings; Joseph, als ofHaynes
Haselbury, Wilts , 303
Hassell , Mr. 57°
Hassels , Walter 5, 10 , 324
Has[s]elwood, Hazlewood , Catherine 455 ; James, als Wood , 142, 210 , 218, 235* , 238* , 239, 267 , 406 , 455 * , 538,55
Hassop, Derby, 510 , 527
Hastings, George, als Hervey, Herveus, 105 , 540
Hatherop, Hardrope, Gloucester , 513
Hatley, St. George, Cambs , 437"
Haudecœur ,Abbéxiv
Hauton, see Hawton
Havets, Antoine 428 ; Pierre428
Haward, Francis, als ofGage, George
Hawes, John 336
Haworth, John 15; Joseph, als Parkinsonor Larkinson, 3 , 4* , 15 , 36, 43, 62, 81* 82, 347
Hawkins, Hakins, Anne295* ; Catherine 295 ; Charles, als Gower, 295; Frances 295 ; John, als Gower , 295, 301 , 313; Mary 295* ; Richard 295* ; Thomas, Sir, 295; Thomas , als Gower , 295, 301
Hawkshee, see Hackshot
Hawley, John 503, 507 , 512 , 518 , 528
Hawton, Hauton, Robert, als Clarke, Groyne, Grayner, and Groney, 179 , 187 , 193 , 194 , 217, 231 , 233, 248, 249, 254, 258, 261, 262 * , 265, 266, 269, 272, 276, 278, 279, 305* , 310 , 418, 419 ; John, als Grafton, 207 , 217, 222 , 399, 401 ; Ralph207, 399
Haydon, Thomas, als of Palgrave , Henry
Hayes, Haies, Hay, Hayns, Alexander 46, 48 , 340; John, als Rouse, Timothy 37, 57, 61 , 66, 69, 76, 96, 98, 112 , 353; 123
Haynes, Joseph, als Harvey, 268 , 270 ; see Heynes, 274, 418 ; 96, 124
Hayton, Yorks, 288
Hazelwood, see Haselwood
Headlam , als ofBates and Batt,John
Hearst , N. and W. [? Richard Herst], martyr, 272, 417
Heaselwood, see Haselwood
Heath,Ven Henry,440, 478 ; James 57
Hebborne , Margaret 503
Heburn (? Hepburn), Anthony 62
Hensley, als of Jones, John
Henslow[e], Anne520 ; Thomas 520 ; Thomas als Ford, 138, 141; Thomas , als Tomson , Wm , 520
Herbert, Alfred, M.A., xxv; Catherine 299 ; D 310 ; William, Sir, afterwards Lord Powis, 299* ; 138 ; als of Johnson, William Hereford[iensis], 4, 44* , 60 , 61, 65, 82, 87, 102 , 105 , 108 , 133 , 134 , 139 , 151 , 182 , 184 , 191, 206* , 207, 223, 231, 232 , 234, 235, 239, 270, 283 , 285, 287, 507
Herigner , Claude 428
Heskett, George 115; Henry 59, 66 ; John 62, 66 , 93 ; Thomas 59, 62
Heth, John 228
Hewes, Hues, Edward 37, 55 , 77 , 78 : Francis, als Meverill, 236, (Howe) 284, 294, 295 ; John 22 , 39*; Nicholas 237; see Hughs
Hewett, see Huett ; als of Sander, AnthonyHewitt, Jo: 530
Heynes, Heyneus, Joseph 175; see Haynes
Hickman, John , als of Page, Ven. Francis, martyr
O.S.B. , 462, 529
Heley, George 58 , 61, 63
Helm, Thomas , vere Tunstall, Ven
Hec[c]art ,,
Thomas , 76 , 79 , 89, 96
Helmes, Hugh 3, 7; William 308 ; als of Tunstall, Ven Thomas, M.; see Helm
Helmsley , Yorks , 185"
Hemisse, Hemety, John , als Venables, Francis , 151 , 179, 187 * , 188* , 232 , 390 **
Hemetius , seeHemisse
Hemety, see Hemisse
Hemeuneurs, see Lemeuneurs
Hendlam , see Henllan
Heneage, Heneadge, Charles 443"; Elizabeth 443* ; George 443"; George, Sir, 443**; Robert, als
Browne , 443-445
Henin , Monasteryof, 39
Henllan , Hendlam, Denbigh, 251"
Henrietta Maria, Queen, xxii, 474* , 525º
Hide, Hyde, Anthony, als Tempest , 178, 179, 230 ; Cecilia 441"; Henry, als Gifford, 208, 219 ; Hugh 441"; Humphrey63* , 208 ; Mr. 557, 564 ; William 239 , 572; William , als of Beyaert ,President ofDouayCollege [g.v.]
Hidruntinus, seeOtranto
Hildreth, John 134; Richard, als Tayler, 134, 141 ; Thomas 113
Hildsley, Elenore 526
Hill, John, als ofOwen; John, als of Arismendy; Mark 250, 260, 418 ; Mark, als of Bradley; Richard 530; Thomas 44
Hills, Henry and John, als ofOwen
Hilton, Yorks , 510, 574
Hilton, Christopher , als Sy[d]ley, 177 , 209; John 177 ; Robert, als of Dalton; Thomas, als Musgrave , 61, 70, 79, 91 ; see Hulton
Hinde, George 20, 327 ; Thomas 20 , 327
HinkelsomHall, see Hintlesham
Hintlesham ,Suffolk (HinklesomHall), 297*
Hipwell, Clinton or Charles, als Mallereus [? Mallory], 57, 66, 68
Hispanus , Antony 240, 241, 407*
Hockley, Hocley, William, als Clifford Hodgson, John , als Langlie, 237, (Langley) 247, 249, 252, 291 , 292* , 293 , 295, 420; Richard 237 ; Richard , als of Reyner; als of
Haddock, 6; - , Archdeacon of York, 537, 550
Hodson , Thomas 74
Hoellus, Howell, Henry, als of Leventhorpe
Hog[ge], Gregory , als Wharton, 492 , 494, 508, 528; see Hooge ; Joa : 530
Holden, Houlden, Henry 499* , 504 , 514 , 519, 524, 525, 534 , 547 ;
Henry, als Johnson, 140, 179, 187** , 188 , 190, 219, 400 ; Richard 146
Holland , 572
Holland, Henryxviii, 69, 70, 200, 358; John 59, 60, 549; John , als
Serjeant , 536 ; Ven. Thomas 573*;
Henry, als of Barnesley ; als of Kemble, Ven John, M.
Holliday, Daniel, als Whitaker, Leonard 190 , 208, 213, 222 ; John 190; Richard 530
Hollowood, Christopher , S.J., 337
Holmes, Hugh4 ; Thomas 97
Holmside , Durham , 254 , 574
Holt, Robert466; William, S.J. , 200
Holtby,Houltbye,Richard, S J.,79,200
Honoré , George 514
Hoocley , see Hockley
Hooge, Hogg, Anne 469 ; George (? Gregory), als Wharton, 469 ; William 469 ; see Hogge
Hoord, Hoard, Catherine 313; Francis 515; Francis, als Ford, 313 ; John 313
Howell, Henry 519, 526; als Leven thorpe
Howley, John 510, 520
Hubbert, Thomas , alsofCuffold
Huddleston, Andrew, als Parkinson, 5, 15, 28, 29 ; Anne 296 ; Edmund, Sir, 436 ; Frances 436 ; George, Archdeacon of York, 350, 537; see Catterick, George; Richard, als Parkinson, 5, 15 , 28 , 35, 72, 75, 76 , 87 , 88 ; Richard 350 ; George, als ofCatherick; Edmund, als ofCatherick, Ven. Edmund, M.; John, als of Caries, Carey ; William, als of Caries , Carey
Hues, see Hewes
Huett (? Hewett), Huyt, William, als Cornwallis , 8, 29 ; Anthony, als ofSanders ; see Hewett
Hughes, Edward 49, 100, 337; John 7 , 14 , 41 ; Mr., Pt , 569
Hull[ensis], Yorks , 36, 506, 568* , 569, 574
Hulton, Hilton , Elizabeth 296*"; Robert 296
Hulton Park,, Lancs, 296
Humphrey,Umphrey, John2
Hungate, Philip 60* , 66, 69 ; Robert 60, 64, 69 ; Thomas 66
Hungerford, Thomas 431, 474
Horde, Alan 297 ; Dorothy 297"
HordeHome, Bridgnorth, Salop, 297"
Hopwood , Hopwodd, Edmund, changed to Arthur, als Middleton, *344 , 74 , * 73 . * ס 7 , 69 , 65 , 6x , 53
Hornby, Great Smeaton , Yorks , 185
Horner, Richard 91 , 93; Ven. Richard, martyr, 531
Hoskins , Anthony 229, 235, 259* , 260, 269, 270, 405, 415
Hough-on-the-Hill, Lincoln, 524**
Houghton, John 510 , 520 ; see Hoghton
Houghton Conquest, Bedfordshire , 525
Houlden, seeHolden
Houltbye, see Holtby
Houlteus, see Holt
Hovingham, Hovengam , Yorks , 271 , 469*n
Howard, Bernard 527 ; Edward, als Talbot, 527*; Elizabeth, Lady Arundell, 527; Francis 527 : George, als of Gage, 571: Henry, Lord Arundel, 527; of Effingham, Lord , 572 ; Thomas, Earl of Arundel , 572
Howe, see Hewes
Hunt, Hutt, Edward 502, 507, 518 ; Francis, 179, 230 ; 104* , 105: Gilbert 62 , 64, 65, 67* , 69, 72 , 343; als of Green, Francis; James, als Green ; Ven Thurston531
Huntingdon[iensis], 43, 441, 502
Hustin , Robert428. 429
Hutchins, John , quoted 442
Hutt, see Hunt
Huyt, seeHuett
Hyde, see Hide and Bayaert
Ilmington (Femington, sic), Warwick , 510*n
Ingam (Ingham), John 35 , 42
Inglebee, see Ingleby
Ingleby in Saxilby, Lincoln, 180"
Ingleby, Inglebee , Anne 286" , 306; Frances 306, 530 ; John 286"; Thomas, als Bullin, 133 ; Thomas, als Johnson, 306 ; William , als
Savell, 182, 186; Inglefield (Englefield ), Anthony, als
Mulling, 234, 240 ; Frances 210 , 234 John, als Mulling, 231 , 234 , 240 ; William, als Mulling, 210
Ingolus, Francis 230, 241, 242 , 408 , 409* , 453* , 468* 540
Innocent X, 457, 467, 481 , 486, 487 , 488
Insulae, seeLille
Iprensis, see Ypres
Ireland, Edmund, als of Dutton, xi, xii, xiii, xxii*; Gerard (Meynell) 575 Richard 182, 389, 429, 430, 431 , 463 , 510 ; William, vere
Mennell (Meynel ), 423, 493* , 575
Iremonger, seeIronmonger
Irnham, Lincoln, 525"
Iron-Acton, Gloucester , 442"
Ironmonger, Iremonger , James ( John), als Ireland, 265* , 277; Dorothy 265* ; William 265**; 265"
Isabella, Archduchess of Austria, 16 , 325
Isam , Francis 30, 35
Ivelith , see Eveleth
Jackman , Mgr Arthur, D.D.,xxix
Jackson, Jaxson, Bernard 52 , 63, 64 , 73* , 342 , 343, 344 ; Francis 91, 343 John ix, x, xiv, 1*n, 14 , 18 , 175, 318, 462, 467* , 492 ; Henry, als ofGoar
James I of England , x, xxviii, 49 , 53, 337, 338, 406, 574
James , 429
Janviere, Martin 428
Jaxson, see Jackson
Jeames, John 558"
Jeanes, Robert55, 61 , 62, 64, 71* , 83 , 345
Jee, Jeus, Nicholas , als Wade, 74 , 77 , 79
Jeffrey, George 122 ; John 110
Jenegallus, Antonius425, 471
Jenison, Michael538 , 551
Jennings, Jennyns, Gennings, Anthony 516 ; Charles, als Newport, 510, 511, 519, 524* , 525, 526 , 529, 545; Charles 510n ; Edmund 530; Elizabeth 510 ; George 510 ; Jerome 510 ; John, als of Powell, John 26, 29, 35, 44, 52, 61, 78, 82, 86, 87* , 94 , 350, 510 ; Michael 456, 458, 490* , 493* , 503* , 504, 507 , 511 , 512 , 520 , 528*; Richard 510 ; Robert 510" ; four daughters 510n
Jennyns, see Jennings
Jermingham , Jerningham , Gerningham , Catherine 300; George, senior, 300; George, als Wotton, 300 ; Richardals ofEast ,xx
Jesuits,College atDouay, Superiorof, 374,376, 379*: Provincial (1624), 404 ; General of(1624), 404
Jhones, see Jones
Joanes, 285
John , the cook, 428, 430
John , a servant, 67, 430
Johns, awarder, 285
Johnson, Charles 519 , 520 ; Francis 57 , 61, 67 , 68, 73 , 479* , 503 , 507 , 511 , 512 , 516, 520, 521, 522, 528 ; Henry 181 ; Bl Lawrence, als Richardson, 530; Mistress 556* , 563*; Richard43, 49, 51, 53, 63, 235, 340 ; Bl . Robert530;William,alsHerbert, 191 , 217 , 231, 238, 239, 247, 249, 250 , 259 ; William 4 : 556* , 563; als of Edward Handes and Robert Hanne; als of Flaxen, William ; als ofGascoigne, Francis ; als of Holden, Henry; als of Ingleby, Thomas ; als of Keeling , John ; als of St. George, William ; als of White, Richard
Johnsons, Catherine 244
Jones, Joanes, Jhones, Edward 530 ; Elizabeth 296 : James 98, 363 ; James, seeActon ; John 28 ; John, als Hensley, 315; Laurence , als Richardson , 530, 538, 552 ; Peter 315 ; Robert 540 ; Thomas, als Johnson, 509, 511* , 520 ; William 15 , 21, 28, 30, 55, 56, 66 ; Dr. 540*; als of James Acton; als of William Trevors; als of Wyard (Peter)
Jordains, Somerset , 295
Jordan, John, als Cliffe , 84, 89, 99 , 109, 357
Jorosie, Thomas 428
Jowsey, Joucy, Jane 461 ; John 459 , 461 , 462, 467, 490, 491 * , 492* , 497* , 502* , 513 , 542 ; Thomas 461
Julian the porter, 428, 430
Keeling, John, senior, 284 : John, als Johnson, 284 , 287, 291, 313; Mary 284 ; Thomas 14 , 21 , 27 , 32* , 36, 334 ; William 27
Keen, Henry337 ; see Kene
Keighley, Kigheley, Bridget 275 ; Lawrence , of Newhall, Otley, 568 ; Thomas 275
Kellam, Lawrence 53
Kelley, Thomas, als ofWoodward
Kellison, Kellisone , Matthew, S.T.D. (afterwards President of Douay in 1613), x, xviii*, xx* , xxi* , xxii* , xxiii, xxvii, 7 , 14 , 16 , 26, 30 , 31* , 32, 34 , 38, 52, 53 , 55, 62, 63, 104 , 122, 123-144 pass , 147, 151 , 152 , 153 , 159, 165 , 166, 170 , 174 , 175 , 186, 188 , 190 , 199* , 210, 212 , 213 , 218, 219 , 221, 241-271 pass., 281 , 309, 310, 314, 319, 325, 328, 329, 331, 332 , 333 , 338* , 357, 358, 364 , 365* , 366 , 367* , 368* , 369* , 370 , 371* , 372* , 373* , 374* , 375 , 376 ,
377 , 379* , 380, 381 , 382 383 , 384 , 387 , 388* , 389* , 400, 401* , 406, 407 , 410-417 * pass , 421* , 423 , 424 , 429 , 450, 470* , 471 , 484, 486, 489, 496, 508, 541*; Thomas273 , 274
Kemble, Ven John, Martyr, als Holland, 232, 234* , 236, 406* , 571
Kemish, Thomas 59, 68 ; see Kemys
Kemys, John 27; Thomas 27, 29; see Kemish
Kendall[ensis], Kerkby,Westmorland , 81, 89, 303; see Kerby-Kendall
Kene, Henry 50; see Keen
Kennion, Jane 521
Kensington, Thomas 8
Kent,Cantia, 57, 65, 66, 71 , 116, 572
Kerby-Kendal , Westmorland, 529
Kettlewell, Wilfrid, als Frank, 79, 88
Kigheley, see Keighley
Killerbyin Cayton, Yorks. , 305
Kilvington , Yorkshire, 298, 573* , 574* , 576
King, als ofKnight, John
Kingstonin Staverton, Devon, 297**
Kingstone, Monmouth, 509
Kinn, see Kynne
Kniveton, Catherine 527 , 528 ; Gilbert, Sir, 527 ; als of Whithall (Andrew)
Knot, Mr. 570
Knott , John , als ofMatthiasWilson Knowles, Anthony 515
Knox, Thomas Francis , D.D., Cong Orat , ix*,xiv,xvi,xxii,xxix
Knype, Elenore 526 ; George 526; George, als Kildsley, 526*
Knyvet, Catherine 294, 304*n; John 420; John, als Forde, 294, 304; Philip 294 Philip, Sir, 304*"; Robert, Sir, 304 ; Robert, als Forde , 294
Kynne, Kinn , Collington, als Colling- ton (Colleton ), John 299, 441, 495 ; Catherine 298, 461 ; Edward, als Colleton, 461 , 496, 501 , 523* , 524 , 545 John, als Colleton ; John 299 , 461*; -442, 500
L , Mr. [Lewkenor] 317
LaLoëuve , 147"
Laborn, see Leyborne
Lagonissa, de, Fabius, Nuncio in Belgium , 287, 419
Laiborne, seeLeyborne
Kinsmell, John , als ofKirton
Kinsman, Edward, 100 ,208 , 233, 243 , 262, 264, 415;100"
Kirby, Bl Luke530
Kirby-Thewer, Westmorland, 504
Kirby-Wiske, Yorks , 275
Kircham, Henry, see Kirkham
Kirk, Dr. xiii*,xxv
Kirkham, Kirrham, Kirrkam , Giles , (Ægidius), als Careys, 230, 236 ;
Henry, 45 ; Robert, als Careys, 230 , 277 , 296 ; William 230
Kirkman, Richard530
Kirrham, Kirrkam, see Kirkham
Kirtleys, Lancashire, 207
Kirton , John , als Kinsmell, 179 , 233 ; Thomas 179
Knapton, Norfolk, 290, 309
Knaresborough , Yorks , 469*
Knatchbull, Snatchbull, Snathbolt, John, Vice-President of DouayCollege, xvii, xviii, xix, xx, xxiv, 64 , 70, 75, 77, 99, 100* , 102 , 103* , 105, 106* , 107 , 108, 112 , 118 , 128, 132, 137, 342 , 354 , 358,359 , 366 , 368 * ; John , als Reynolds (Reginaldus ), 137 , 140, 146*n
Knight, Andrew 27 ; John 334 ; John , als King, 9, 14, 21 , 27, 31 , 32 , 34 Mr., music master , 133 , 136 , 137 , 140; -50, 337
Knightley, Anne521 ; Bridget 521"; Edward 521 ; John 521 ; Robert 521 ; Robert , als Parker, 521 ; Valentine, als Parker , 521
Laithwayte, Laithwait, Adam 8 , 21 , 28, 35, 43 ; see Lathwatt
Lallaigne, Chateau of, 248, 249* , 250, 251, 407* , 409,410
Laloe, David 428 ,429, 462 , 494
Lambert, Nicholas 523 ; Robert523
Lam[b]spring, 449, 517"
Lampton, Jos : 530
Lancashire , 570*
Lancaster , Francis , als Willowby, 56 , 61, 63, 67, 342 ; Roger 3, 318 ; als ofNorth, John
Lancaster , Lancastriensis , 2-7 pass , 28, 36* , 37 38, 42 * 43 , 44, 49, 53* , 59, 60, 61*-70pass , 74 , 78-84 pass., 89, 109, 112, 116 , 123, 126, 127 , 130 , 134, 142 , 146, 147, 151 , 187, 189, 190 , 192 , 195 , 209, 212, 249, 263* , 272,277 * , 296, 299 * , 417, 342, 438, 456, 496, 498, 503* , 504* , 514, 531 , 537 , 538 , 550 , 552 ; Archdeacon of, seeCharnock ,Robert; VicarGeneral of, seeSherborne
Lanchester , Durham, 506
Lanchrey, Lanchre, Amatus 428, 462 , 492 ; Michael 505
Landafensis , Landaphiensis , Landavensis, see Llandaff
Landmoth, seeLanmoth
Lane, als of Pounds, William
Langdale, Langdall, Anne 456*n; Bridget 456 ; Elizabett 456"; Joseph, als Creswell, 496* ; Philip,
als Creswell , 456* ; Richard, als Creswell, 501 , 504 ; William 456**; William, als Creswell, 494, 501
Langdall, see Langdale
Langhorne , Benjamin 41 , 46, 47 , 50, 57, 60, 72 , 73* , 83 , 85, 340, 343, 344
Langley, Langlie, Christopher288"; Richard288 ; Ursula 288n; als of Hodgson, John ; als of Forcer, Thomas ; als ofLawson, Francis
Langthorpe, Swine, Yorks , 456"
Langworth, John 295**; Mary 295**
Lanmierth, see Lanmoth
Lanmoth, Landmoth, Lanmierth, Leake, Yorks , 193*n
Lanthony, Gloucester , 461
Larkinson, John, als of Haworth, Joseph
Lascelles, Lassels, Anne 275"; Christopher74 ; Elizabeth275"; John , als Boldes or Boold, Archdeacon of Norfolk, 144 , 179, 190, 193 , 194 , 208, 231, 234* , 235, 406, 534 , 535 , 548* Ralph or Rudolph, als Boldes or Boold, 275* , 276, 314 , 428, 433 ; Richard, als Boldes or Boold, 217 , 243, 279, 285* , 286 , 287 , 300, 301 , 310, 312, 421 ; Richard 255 ; Thomas, als Boldes or Boold, 144, 179 , 190, 229* , 237 , 406 ; William 144, 217, 275*
Lassels, see Lascelles
Latham, Lathom, George 62, 66, 101 , III, 112 , 124, 125 , 126, 127 , 129 , 130, 364, 366, 367 ; Thomas 43 62 , 70; William 62, 66, 84 , 99, 109 , 115 , 121 , 363
Lathom, see Latham
Lathom, Lancashire , 502
Lathroppe, als of Davenporte, Christopher
Lathwatt , Edward 64, 66, 79 , 93; Francis (formerly Ralph) 66, 74 ; Henry 28 ; John 43, 53 : Thomas 43.74 see Laithwayte
Lauretan, Secretary , 219 ; Charles , Archdeacon , 507 ; Gaspar, Provost of Arras Cathedral and V.G., 446 , 452, 458* , 459, 481* , 482, 486, 487, 490, 496*; Brother of Gaspar and Canon of Arras, 481* , 482, 487
Laus, see Lawe
Lawe, Laus, Loe, Low, Francis 15 , 50*n; John 26, 29, 52, 57* , 60, 342,570; Nicholas 57 , 61, 64, 67 , 76 , 85, 345 : Thomas 28* , 44, 47, 52 , 57, 61 , 118 , 140, 336* , 359 , 370 , 569: 570; Thomas the younger28, 44, 52;William 124 , 127, 129 , 131* , 140, 367, 368
Lawson, Anne 468 ; Francis, als Langley, 503, 504 , 525
Layborne, see Leyborne
Layton, Thomas 429 ; als of Malton , Thomas
Leak, Yorks , 193*
Lealholm , Yorks , 185
Leander , Father (O.S.B.), vere John Jones, 202, 395
Leban, Mr. (? Leyborne) 540
Lecestrensis, see Leicester
Lechmore, seeLetchmore
Leckonby, John, als Hawley, 502* , 504
Lee, Leus, Ley, Loei , Augustine 52; John 367 ; Roger, S.J., 204, 397; Stephen 123 , 124, 125 ; Stephen, see Stevenson, Richard ; William 364 ; als of Draper, John; als of Maxwell, Robert; als ofSherborne , Richard; als ofSouthworth, John , Ven Martyr; als of Tildesley, Edward
Leicester , Lecestrensis, 19 , 110 , 115
Lemeuneurs , Hemeuneurs , J213*
Lemmyshe , Thomas 19
Leodium, Leodiensis , seeLiége
Leonard , M509
Lepton, als ofClapton, John
Lesley, John, Bishopof Ross (1566-1596), 196, 205 , 206
Letchmore , Lechmore , Edmund, als
Stratford, 136, 139* , 140, 142 , 143 , 148, 152 , 176, 182, 186, 187 , 199 , 206 , 207, 210, 217, 232, 239 , 246 , 254, 268* , 269* ,272, 279 , 285, 287* , 296, 298 , 300, 301 , 307* , 310 , 314 , 315* , 370, 400, 416, 421* , 426, 473 ; John, als Stratford, 184, 247, 249, 250* , 259, 261, 287, 307, 437 , 444* , 446, 480, 481 ; Thomas 139 ; see Litchmore
Lethecaduan in Caermarthen , 306
Leuchester , Durham, 307
Leucom, see Lewisham
Leus, seeLee
Leusom, see Lewisham
Leventhorpe , Henry, als Hoellus , 42 , 46 ,47, 50 , 340
Lever, 502
Levison, Andrew, 540*
Lewes, Christopher246
Lewisham , Leucom , Lewisom , Leusom , Kent, 509* , 528
Lewkenor, Edmund 1* ; Francis, als
Sheldon, Baldwin, 2
Ley, see Lee
Leyborne, Layborne, Laiborne (? Leban), Laburn, Barons 548 , 535; Catherine 281, 303 , 313 ; George, als Bradley, President of Douay College (1651-3), x, xii ,
xxiii , 123 , 134-136 , 137 , 143 , 144 , 152* , 180 , 194, 231 , 234, 236 , 237, 238, 240, 247, 249, 259, 261, 284, 293 , 308, 311 , 406, 407, 419, 421 , 431 , 434, 435, 463, 476 , 477 , 513 , 519 , 52 , 5529 , 537 , 539*, 544 , 550, 552*; John (senior) 281, 313; John, President ofDouayand V.A. of England, V.A. London District,
xxiii, 303 , 313* , 535* , 539, 548 , 552 Joseph 537 ; Thomas, als Bradley, 303 ; William, als Bradley, 303
Leyden , 541
Leyton, als ofMalton , Thomas
Lichfield[iensis], xiii, 2, 5* , 7, 17, 18* , 21 , 24, 27 , 28* , 32* , 36, 61 , 70* , 112 , 116* , 122 , 124, 179* , 187 , 188* , 190* , 210, 239, 265, 276, 291 , 302, 458
Liége, Leodium,Leodiensis ,338,395* , 398
Lille, Iusula, 332, 399, 505*
Lincoln[iensis], 9, 21, 27 , 28, 32 , 36 , 40, 41, 43, 46-50 pass , 56-63 pass , 66, 67, 112-116 pass , 122 , 124 ,
125, 150, 180*n, 181" , 183 , 184* , 190, 233 , 237, 253, 267* , 269* , 271 , 279, 280, 281 , 289, 290, 291 , 292* , 293* , 305, 310* , 494, 496* , 507*; Christ'sCollege, 180"; St. Peter's atArches " Church, 181"
Lingard, 572
Linkinholt , Hants, 495"
Linn, Richard 71, 75, 76 ; 60; see Lyne 59 , Lisbon, Ulissipons , Vlisipons, (? 41),
270, 410, 418* , 490, 510* , 512, 513* , 521,533, 536,537.543.546,550*,572
Lister, Christopher65; Thomas 99 ; Thomas, als ofMassey , David
Litchmorus, Stratford, John446 ; see Letchmore
Littleboes, Littlebois, see Littleboys
Littleboys, Littleboes , Littlebois,Anne 306* ; Frances 306"; John, als Webster, 305, 311
Liverdun[ensis] in Lotharingia, 59 ,65
Liverpool, xiv
Llandaff, Landafensis , Landaphiensis , Landavensis , Wales, 5* , 17 , 18 , 19 , 26, 27, 35, 39, 64, 100, ΙΟΙ* , 102, 509, 511
Llanvilling, Montgomery, 294
Llewellyn, ap, Edward, als Hosyer, 518 ; Elizabeth518
Lloyd, John74
Lockwood, Barbara 502 "; Christopher 502 ; Dorothy 502"; Edward 130, 132, 368 ; John (senior) 502"; John , als Atkinson, 506, 519, 522; John, Ven Martyr, xxvii, 475* ,
601
502 , 511 ; Matthew 502 *n ; Matthew, als Atkinson, 511 ; -531*D
Lodey, Guillaume428
Lodge, Richard 185"
Loe, see Lawe
Lomax, John , als Maxel (? Maxwell), 315
London, Londiniensis , xiii*, 6* , 17 , 18 , 19 , 21 , 22, 27 , 36, 37, 40, 46, 54* , 51, 58, 61, 65-70 pass , 76, 77. 89, 90, 103 , 112 , 113 , 115* , 124 , 125 , 131 , 132 , 144, 176* , 179* , 184 , 189, 194* , 207, 216, 217, 222 * , 225 , 228, 231-236pass , 238* , 253 , 259 260* , 265, 269, 271, 273 , 274* , 278-282 pass , 286, 287, 288* , 299* , 302* , 305, 306, 308, 309* , 326, 335, 345, 351 , 364, 388 , 411-424* , 425 * 432 * 434 437, 444 455 , 456, 463, 464, 466, 472, 475, 477, 488 , 493, 501* , 504, 507* , 509 , 511 , 512, 515, 521, 528* , 533* , 536* , 538 , 541* , 543* , 547, 549 , 500, 551, 555 , 556,559, 562* , 566,567 * , 568 * , 569 , 570 , 572, 573; Bishop of, 568; Churches in, St. Clement Danes, 287, 295 ; St. Paul's, 572 ; College of Physicians , 180° ; Fleet Street, 278, 287, 295 ; Holborn, 299, 512 ; Lincoln's Inn, 300 ; Inns of Court, 555, 561 ; Long Acre, 518 ; Pater Noster Row (Rooe), 286, St. John's Street, Clerkenwell , 571 ; Strand, ix ; PrisonsClink, 312 ; Newgate , xxii, 65, 342, 572*; Tower, 248 ; Turneball Street , 295
Long Marston , seeMarston
Lorraine, Lotharingia, 40, 51 , 57 , 59 , 200 ; Duke of, 439 ; de, Louis, Cardinal, Archbishop of Rheims (1605-21), 152*
Lostocke , Glostocke , Lancs , 192 *n
Lotharingia, see Lorraine
Lous, see Lawe
Louvain, Lovanium, 4, 5-46, 60, 89 , 90, 93, 110, 112 * , 131 , 136, 139 , 174 , 198, 201, 203, 206, 217, 222 , 247 , 275, 283, 351, 368, 395, 396, 399 , 498, 516, 553, 557* . 559. 563* , 571
Lovanium, see Louvain
Lovat, see Lovett
Lovell, Lady 205 ; William 140; Samuel 32; 398,540
Lovett , Lovat, als ofMartin, Thomas
Low , see Lawe
Lowberry, Gaspar , 5, 9, 324
Low Countries ,xxvii
Lowe, see Law, Thomas
Lucy, Edward 510, 511 ; Henry 510
Luddington, Robert261 ; Walter, als
Smith, 269, 275 ; William, als
Smith, 261
Ludlam, Ven Robert, 530
Ludovisi, Cardinal241 , 242, 408, 409
Luke, Robert de, spy, 572 *
Lumley, Baron , 535, 548
Lusitania, see Portugal
Lutesia, Lutetia Parisiorum, 457, 497, 499, 501 see Paris
Lutetia, see Lutesia
Lutton, Mr., 231 , 536, 549 ; als of Eldrington, Edward
Lyford, West Hanney, Berks , 280"
Lynas, see Lyones
Lyne, Humphrey 22 ; John 21 ; see Linn, Lynn
Lyngen, Anne255" ; Richard255"
Lynn, Richard 78, 82, 350 ; see Linn, Lyne
Lyones, Lynas, Grace (Pearson) 574 ; Thomas 574
Lys (Laetia), River 147"
Mabbs, James 136, 143 ; William 136
Machell, George 124 , 129 , 131 , 139 , 141 , 143, 366, 372 ; Lancelot, als Nicholson , 81, 84
Maddison , Edward, als Messondin , Missendin , 112 , 124 , 125 , 126* , 127, 129, 130, 135 , 144 , 177, 364 , 366, 367 , 388
Madely, Shropshire , 506, 566"
Madrid, Madritum, 202 , 394.395
Madritum, seeMadrid
Mahew , Maheu , Edward 200 ; 132
Mailer, see Maler
Maldon, Meldon , Surrey, 284*
Maler, Henry, 122 , 127* , 129 , 137 , 199, 365* , 366*
Mallereus, als ofHipwell, Charles
Mallett, John 6 ; Francis 150 , 187 ; als ofMuttlebury , Motlebury, John
Malone, Mallonus , John 62, 64, 66, 81 , 82, 347 als of Matthews , John
Malpas, Cheshire, 122
Malton, Yorkshire, 434**
Malton, Thomas , als Leyton ΟΥ Layton, 436, 444 ; Thomas 478
Mamby, Mambie, als of Enderby, Edward
Manchester , Earl of, see Montague
Manley, als ofCharnack , Robert
Mann,Antony, als Pearson, 81 , 82, 347
Mannering, als of Tankard, John and Thomas
Manning , Cardinal xiv ; Thomas, als Detton,439,441; Henry,als Detton , 439 , 44I
Mannock, Dorothy 282 ; Francis, als
Browne , William, 282 , 312, 419 ; Francis 282, 419" ; Henry, als
Young, 64, 77, 99, 115 , 121 , 122
MapleDurham, Mapeldurham ,Oxon ., 280*D
Maraldus,, M.A., 435 , 455
Marchiennes , Marchianensis , Abbey of 252 , 337 : Abbot of 31 , 410 , 332 ; near Douay, 50
Maria, daughterof King ofSpain, 390
Markam, William 251 , 252
Markenfield, als of Mennell , Thomas and John, 573, 575* ; Anne (Anderson ) 575; Sir Ninian 575
MarkenfieldHall, Ripon, 575
Markham, als ofGage, Thomas
Marsden, Ven William 530
Marsh , D 519: William 507 , 510 ; als ofWall, William
Marshall, Martial , John 200 ; Peter 98, 111 Thomas 64; als ofSmith, Richard
Marske-by-the-sea , Yorkshire, 185ª
Marston or LongMarston, Yorkshire, 1850, 209, 259, 281* , 575
MarstonMoor, Yorks , 502"
Marston, John 184 ; Richard, als Yorke, als Greene, 184
Martial, seeMarshall
Martin, Catherine 284 ; Edward, als of Bidlecombe , Martin ; Francis 364 Francis, als Reymirez , 89, 98, 114, 116 , 124, 249 % ; George 200, 284, 287 ; Gregory 558, 564 ; John 284 Thomas 284, 285, 287 , 301 , 305, 306, 309, 311 ; Thomas, als Lovat, Lovett , 85 ; William 540 ; als ofPercy, John
Marvin, als of Dimock, Edward
Mason, John, als Gennings, 436, 439
Masseus, seeMassey
Massey, Massie, Masseus, Catherine 299 ; David, als Minshall, John, als Lister, Thomas , 97, 98 , 114 , 121 , 122 * , 129 , 133 * ; Edward 78 , 89, 92, 105* , 106, 109, 111 , 357 ; George 540; Herbert 299 ; William
299
Massie, see Massey
Maston, see Marston
Ma[t]thew[s], Bridget 275; Elizabeth 275 ; Eugene(i.e.Owen),Archbishop of Dublin, 188; Francis, als Browne, 275 , 287 ; Francis (senior) 275* John, als Malone , 63**; JohnHobson, quotedxxv; Richard 275 , als Raysin , 126 ; als of Nuttall,Edward; alsofParkins,John
Maucicidor, John 34. 333 .
Maupas , de, Abbot of Monastery of St. Denis at Rheims , 368 ; Charles , Baron de Tour, 131 , 135 , 368; his sons, 135 , 368
Maurice , Mauritius, James 14, 17 , 18 , 19 , 20, 30, 60* , 332
Mauritius, seeMaurice
MaurontisVilla, see Bac St.Maur
Maxel (? Maxwell), als ofLomax, John
Maxfield (Macclesfield), Simon , als
Field, 48, 66, 78, 85, 87, 98 ; Thomas
603
288, 289* , 292, 293, 298, 313 , 315* , 420 ; Thomas, als Wake, 68, 78 , 87, 92, 94 ; Thomas (first written Hartburn), als Wake, 87
Merston , Lancashire , 502*
Mesplant , Nicholas 428, 462
Maxwell, Robert(senior) 222 ; Robert, als Lee , 222, 251
Mayhew,Mr. 368; Mayland, Henry 418
Ven Martyr, als Field, xxix, 48*n , 66* , 79, 102 , 114, 122 , 123 , 124 , 126* , 131 *0, 217, 218 , 353, 364* , 368* ,400 , 531 368
Maylard, Henry 270
Mayne, Bl Cuthbert , Martyr, 344 , 530 , 531
Mayo, Thomas , spy, 572*
Mechliania, see Mechlin
Mechlin, Mechliania(Malines), 51, 75 , 202, 203, 359, 396, 557, 563 ; Archdeacon of, seeClements ; Bishopof, 203* , 396 ; Prior ofEnglishCarthusians at, 46
Medcalf, Anthony 153 ; Ferdinand , als Warde, 43, 35* , 335 ; John, Archdeacon of Northumberland and Cumberland , 536, 549 ; Peter , alsBankes , 153 , 179, 237 , 247 , 254 , 270, 418 ; Robert, als Bankes , 153 , 192 ; Thomas , als Carleton , 125, 141, 179, 181 , 190, 236, 364, 460 ; Thomas , als Proctor, 103, 104 , 113*; 540*; als of Carleton, Thomas ; als of Rawlinson , John; see Metcalfe
Mediolanum , see Milan
Melcombe , Dorset, 284
Meldon , see Maldon
Melling, John 62, 66, 80, 88, 99, 115 , 121 , 123 , 363 ; Ralph or Rudolph 191 , 208, 233, 243, 249 , 271, 272 , 273, 274, 301, 303 , 419 ; Richard 122, 127 , 178 , 181 , 184 , 274, 389 ; Robert 191
Mellini, Mollini, Cardinal, Vice-Protector of England, 165, 381
Meneral , Menerell , als of Waynman, William
Menevensi [St.David's,Wales],306,513
Mennell , John, als Markenfield, 428, 437 Thomas , als Markenfield , 297 , 301, 308, 420, 428 ; William, als Ireland, 437, 445, 446, 447, 457 , 485, 495, 538, 551 * ; Barons , 538, 551 ; see Meynell
Meredith, Jonas 63, 70 ; Humphrey (? Meridale ) 82; als of Evans, William
Merick, William, Sir, 495
Meridale , Humphrey 340
Merriman,Michael, als Wake, Wacke, 126, 177, 230, 237, 247, 249, 259 ,
Messenden, als ofMadison , Edward Messenger, Evans, als Smithson, John, 315, 510* , 511 ; family of, 510 ; William, als Smithson , 498* , 510*n
Metcalfe, John H., quoted 251ª, 314"; Walter C., quoted 524"; see Medcalf
Metham, Mettam, Bridget 456"; Dorothy 456 , 468"; Henry 515 ; Ralph 80, 122 ; Thomas 456 , 468"
Metham , Howden , Yorks , 468"
Mettam, see Metham
Meverill, als of Hewes, Francis
Meynell, als of Gascoigne, William ; Anthony 573, 574 , 575*; Capt 575; Edward 576 ; Gerard (Ireland, als Saltmarshe ) 575* ; Hugh 574 Margaret 574; Mary (Middleton) 575 Mary (Thwaites) 574 , 575 Richard 574; Roger 574,575; Thomas 573 , 574* , 575;William,als Ireland, 575; Winefride (Pudsey) 574 ; see Mennell
Michel , Francis 78, 93, 96
Michelgrove , Clapham , Sussex , 254" , 297"
Michell, John 175
Middleburgh[um], Holland, 3 , 317,521
Middlesex , 317,571
Middleton, near Lynn, Norfolk, 517" , 518*n
Middleton, Anton 530 ; Elizabeth 526 ; Sir John, of Thurntoft , 575 ; Mary (Meynell) 575 ; Nicholas 426, 472, 500 ; Philibert, Philip 55 , 72 , 105 , 133, 368*; Thomas 437, 458 , 459, 487, 501* ; als of Goldsmith, Peter ; als ofGradell, Thomas ; als of Hopwood , Edmund;. als of Stricland, Nicholas , and Thomas
Midelburga, see Middleburgh
Milan, Mediolanum , 218 ; Archbishop of, 555, 562
Milburie, Elizabeth290
Milburne, Millard, Jerome 54° 34 als of Paine,
Millington, Yorks , 288, 419
Min, als ofDaye, William
Minshall, John, als ofMassey, David; John 367; Thomas 69, 78, 92, 94, 95, 352
Missenden, als ofMaddison , Edward Mitchell, Francis353
Molinax, seeMolyneux
Molins , John 18, 31
Mollini, see Mellini
Molso[n], see Mulsho
Molyneux, Molinax, Mullinax, Alice
293 , 294* , 302 ; Christopher302; Richard, Sir, 294* , 302, 307 , 421
Momford, see Montford
Monington, Richard304"; Sibyl 304"
Monke , Edward 237 ; Richard, als Edwards , 239, 285 , 287, 301 , 311 , 312 , 313, 421
Monmouth, Monumentensis , Monumothensis , 44, 124 , 259, 260, 521
Mons Acutus, see Montague
Mons Aquila, see Mounteagle , Lord
Mons in Hainault (Montes Hannoniae), 147, 311 * , 312* , 313*
Montague , Montescue, Mons Acutus, Anthony Mary Browne , Viscount, 225, 278* , 279*; Walter, Abbot
Commendatory in France , 537* , 551 *; 537,551 ; 537 , 551 ;
Lord Chamberlain , Earl of Manchester, Viscount , 403 , 419 , 535* , 548 ; see Browne
Montalto, Cardinal 216
Montan, als ofCraft , Roger Monte Leon, Spain, 146
Montes in Hannonia, seeMons
Montescue, see Montague
Montford, Momford, John 89 , 104 , 112 , 122 , 123 ; John, als Ford, 104
Monumentensis , see Monmouth
Moore, als of Danby, Richard; sec
More
Morant, Philip, quoted288n
Morce, see Morse
More, Morus, Basil 506" ; Cressacre , Chrysacerus, als Brooke , Thomas , 246, 506* , 512 ; Hugh 530 ; Jane 436* ; John 436" , 506" ; Thomas 506 ; William 506 ; William , als Brooke, 506*n, 512; als ofAlberry, William ; als ofMossock, Richard; als of Perkins , Edmund
Morgan , Antony, als Williams, 60, 66; Edward, Ven Martyr , xxvii, 57*" , 434* 476, 531; George44, 61 ; Jane 512; John 74 , 519 , 520 , 521 , 523 , 526 , 527, 528* , 529* , 540, 545 : Thomas 512
Morice , Thomas 246
Morley, Baron, see Parker; Baroness , see Parker
Moroni, Cardinal 555, 561
Morrha, de, Lucius, Archbishop of Otranto (Hidruntinum), Papal Ñuncio in Belgium, afterwards Archbishop of Salerno, 145, 146, 153 , 155, 162 , 165* , 172, 176* , 372, 374 , 376, 377. 381
Morris, John , S.J., quoted 345";
William 84: Maurice , Morice, Morys
104 ; SEB
Morse , Morce , Ven Henry, als Warde, Martyr, 124* , 144, 181 ; William , als Collinson , 110 , 122 , 123 , 124 , 129, 132 , 133, 134 , 146, 367, 37°
Morton, Francis 332 ; Richard14, 17 , 18; Robert 530 ; Morton, 503
Morus, seeMore 122
Morys, James 5, 27 ; see Maurice , Morris
Moser ,Martin 139
Moss, als ofTimperley, Thomas
Mossock, Henry 436 ; Jane 436"; Richard,alsMore, 436, 444 , 449.498
Mostin, seeMostyn
Mostyn, Mostin, als of Pennant, Thomas
Motlebury, see Muttlebury
Moulart, Matthew, Bishop of Arras, 1*n, 16
Mounteagle , Baron , Baroness, see Parker
sec Parker;
Mudford, Somerset, 280
Mullin, John 28
Mullinax, see Molyneux
Mulling, als of Inglefield, John and William
Mulsho, Molso[n], John , als Day, 93* , 94.97, 352
Munden , John 530
Muscott,George, vere Fisher , President of DouayCollege
Musgrave, als ofHilton, Thomas
Mush, John 92, 352; William 92* , 352*
Musket, als of Fisher, George; scc Muscott
Mussipontana , see Pont-à-Mousson
Mutesius , John 449
Muttlebury, Motlebury, Muttleberye, Dorothy 295 ; Elizabeth 295" ; Francis , als Beaumont , Beuamont , 295 , 315, 441 ; John, als Mallett, 21 , 27 , 31 , 82, 84; Robert 27; Thomas 295
Myles, Edward 2, 4
Myrcaston, 527"
Nach, Glamorgan , 523
Namur[censis], 27 , 557
Nanconan , Peter , als Simons, 57 , 66 , 78, 95, 96, 97, III, 353
Napier, Napper, Ven George, Martyr, xxvii, 1 , 51*n, 52, 53* , 317 , 338 , 531; see Napper
Naples, Neapolis , Kingdom of, 171
Napper, Andrew 299"; Anne 299"; Arundell 299" ; Catherine 299"; Edward 299 ; John 299" ; John,
als Browne, Thomas, 299"; Katherine 299 ; Robert 299" ; Shelton 299 ; William 299" ; William, of Puncknowle , 299 ; see Napier
Narbonne [ensis], 2
Nash Court, Kent , 295"
Nateby, als ofBeckwith , Marmaduke; als of Salthouse, Arthur
Neapolis , see Naples
Need[h]am, Nidam, Nidon, Nicholas, als Sturmer, 9, 14 , 16, 22, 332 ; Oliver 85, 89; Oswald 2, 104*; William, vere Nicholas , als Sturmer, 14*n
Nelson, John 52, 182, 389 , 530 ; John, ven martyr, 338 ; Thomas 51 , 52 , 217, 338*; als of Field, George
Neoport, Wm. 32; see Niewport, Flanders
Nevell, als of Palmes, George ; als of Sale, John
Neville, Nevyll, Fulco, als Riddell or Ruddell, 2, 14, 17 , 24, 74 , 332 ; Fulco, als of Riddell or Ruddell, Francis
Nevyll, see Neville
Newbury, Berks. , 296 , 306n
Newgate Prison, Nova Porta, see London , Prisons , xxii
Newsame, Newshame, Andrew, als
Worthington, 77, 179, 187 , 189, 233, 234, 235
Newport, Charles, als Thomas Harris,
I,4, 15 , 21, 27, 29, 32* , 35* , 68, 69, 74, 334 Edward 29 ; Newpo : 27 ; Richard74; Robert36; Thomas 41
Newsham, Andrew, als Worthington, 406
Newton,Francis, a spy, 572* , 573
Nichols, Richard 507, 508* , 543*; Ven George 530
Nicholson , Lancelot 84 ; Mr. 540 ; als ofLancelot, Machell
Niewport in Flanders , 266* , 305, 308 , 444, 447, 480, 495, 504, 505, 506
Nightingale, Richard 68 , 70; 74 als ofCarlillus
Norcot, Abbington [Abingdon], 208
Nordovicensis , see Norwich
Norfolk, 37, 52, 82, 86, 89, 110 , 122 , 151 , 289, 419, 535, 549, 568
Norice , Edward71 ; Silvester74
Norres, Edward, als Salisbury, 304 ; Margaret 304; William 304
Norris, Anne 518"; als of Webster , Thomas ; als of Dormer, Rd
North, Andrew 311; John, als Lancaster, 195, 247, 248, 250, 260,272, 279, 285, 286, 292* , 293 , 296, 301,420
Northampton[iensis], 9, 43, 63, 65, 66* , 67, 69, 81, 89, 116 ; Marquis of, 290
Northland,Saffron Walden ,Essex,510n Northumberland, 463 , 570 ; Archdeacon of, see Medcalf , John ; Earl of, 570, 575
Northwood Barningham, 265* Norfolk , Norton, Anna 314* ; Basil 122 ; Basil or John, als Winbush, 146*; Edward 314"; Elizabeth 314"; Frances 314 ; Father 394 ; Francis 314; Grace 314 ; Henry 314* ; John 199; John , als Carleton, 314; Katherine 314"; Margaret 314 ; Mary 314"; Mistress, als Johnson, 556 , 563 ; Richard 151 , 387, 389 : Walter 314* ; N 124 , 201, 556, 563 ; als of Throckmorton, George ; als of Knatchbull, Dr. John
Norvicensis , see Norwich
Norwich, Nordovicensis , Noruvicensis , 21, 27, 36, 39, 64, 67, 69, 75 , 124 , 125 , 184 , 189, 222, 231, 233 , 265 , 302, 310, 314, 461, 507, 508, 525*
Nostell Priory, Featherstone , Yorks , 575
Nottingham[iensis], 4, 9, 497
Nova Porta, see Newgate
Numan, William 270, 418
Nuncio Apostolic, see Bentivolus; see Guidi ; see Morrha
Nunkeeling, Yorks , 456"
Nuportus in Flanders , see Niewport
Nutt, Davidix
Nuttall, Edward, als Matthew, 63, 66, 68, 81, 83, 347, 348
Nutter, Elizeus 51 ; Ven John 530; Ven. Robert 531
Ockley, Ocleus, Michael , als Stanford, Francis
Ocleus, see Ockley
Odewenus, see Owen
Oenus, see Owen
Offchurch -Bury,Warwick, 521
Ogle, Edmund, als of Greene, 193 ; William 2* , 318
Oglethorpe , Oglethrop, Oglethrob, Francis , als of Paver(Power) ; Jane 265 ; Robert 265"
Okenden, Thomas , als Goodwin, 148 , 176, 186, 390 ; William 148
Olbaldeston , seeOsbaldeston
Old Hall, Herts , xii, xxviii, xxix,45º, 218 , 490
O'Neill, Hugh, Earl ofTyrone, 349*
Oratory, London, ix, xix* ; Oratorians,xxv, xxix
Ormskirk, Lancs , 436
Ormy, d' , Claude, Bishopof Boulogne, 19*n
Ortemberg , see Ottemberg
Orton, Charles 64, 115, 116 , 124 ; Henry 32, 64 ; William 51 , 85
Ortoni, d' , ..
8
William ; als of Cooper, Richard; als ofPorter, John Palmes, George, als Nevel , Nivell, 67, 78, 86, 87, 93, 350
John
Osbaldeston, Albaldeston , Olbaldeston, Osbaston, Alexander , als Farrington, 142 , 179, 231 , 236, 251 ; Edward 142 , 531; Francis, als Farrington, 142, 179, 191 ; John (Theology student, here called Albaldeston ) ; see Egerton; (a boy) 115*n; als ofGaunt
Osbaston, see Osbaldeston
OscottCollege, xiii, 176
Osgodby in Cayton, Yorks , 305
Osmington , Dorset, 299"
Ostend , Ostendan , 34, 40, 333
Otley, Yorks , 568
Otranto, Hidruntinum , Archbishop of, Nuntio, seeMorrha, 155, 376
Ottemberg, Ortemberg , Hermann, Bishopof Arras, 127 , 132* , 134 , 145, 178 , 181 , 212* , 213, 217 , 218 , 222, 223, 228, 231, 241, 400, 407
Overton, Paul, als Snod
Owdoenus, seeOwen
Owen , Odewenus, Oenus, Owdoeus , Dr., Bishop of Cassano, 401 ; Francis, of Godstow , 59 , 66, 92 ; Henry, als Hills (of Godstow), 59, 66,77, 109; Hugh 33, 34 , 36; John, als Hills, 59, 66, 94, 109* , 111 ; Mr. (Godstow) 59 , 77; Richard 2, 4,5, 6,324
Owsthorpe , Pocklington, Yorks, 288n
Oxford, Oxoniensis, xxviii, 2 , 3* , 4, 17* , 18* , 21, 46, 59* , 66 , 78, 91 , 97,
132 , 179, 182, 187, 188, 207, 228, 230, 231, 243, 244 , 253, 254 , 261 , 280* , 290, 302 , 310-317, 389 , 432, 475 , 495 , 498, 569, 570 ; Christ Church College, 489* , 541 ; Magdalen College, 495" , 500, 542 ; New College, 317, 495 ; University of (Academia ), 148 , 311
Padstow, St. Patroci, Petrocstowe , Cornwall, 295**
Page, Ven Antony 530; Ven Francis, als Hickman, John, Martyr, xxvii, 1 , 4 , 14, 17, 18 , 22, 317, 318, 332, 531; Richard, als Harriot, 81, 89, 92, 101 * , 102* , 116, 262, 356 , 411
Pagrave, see Palgrave
Paine, Jerome, als Millard, 33 , 38, 332, 333 , 336 ; Peter 67
Palgrave, Austin (Augustine), Sir, 265 ; Elizabeth 265"; Henry, als Haydon, Thomas , 265* , 270
Palley, Thos 341*; see Pellay Palmer , als of Betham, Bitham,
Pannal, Yorks , 469 Pannell , Robert 123* Paris , Parrhisii, Parres, xiv, xxvii, I, 2* , 5, 6, 9, 16, 21, 28, 33, 38, 42,47, 52-60, 62, 64, 67, 70, 89, 104 , 107 , 136, 137, 139* , 145 , 146, 149 , 152, 182 , 190, 219, 224, 231, 233 , 237240 pass., 243, 246, 247, 249 , 255 , 261, 262, 265, 267, 274* , 278, 279* , 285, 296, 298, 300, 307, 312, 318, 333 , 334, 336, 355, 388, 402, 406, 407 * , 427 , 442 * , 444 , 474, 492 , 493*
497 , 504, 507-512 pass , 521 , 533* , 534 , 535 , 536 543 * , 546 , 548 , 557, 564, 572, 573 ; Archbishopof, see Gondy; Augustiniannuns at, 534 , 547 College of Navarre at, 535 , 548; President of Parliament at, 388*; Sorbonne of, 373 ; see Lutetia Parisiorum
Paris, Parris , Philip 517"; Magdalen 517 Margaret517" , 518
Parker, Charles 291 , 295, 298, 420 ; Elizabeth, Baroness Morley and Mounteagle , 291 ; Henry, Baron Morley and Mounteagle , Baron de Rie, 283, 285* , 291, 298, 419, 489* , 541 ; Isabella 287 ; John, als of Penny, George ; Richard39, 46, 86, 334, 335, 568 , 570; Robert 287 ; Thomas 287; William 230 , 234 , 283; William, Baron Morley and Mounteagle , 420 ; als of Bisley, John; als of Burt, William ; als of Draycote, Alban and John ; als of Fletcher, Robert ; als of Knightly, Robertand Valentine
Parkins, John, als Matthew, 69; Matthias 60, 66
Parkinson , John, als of Haworth, Joseph ; Mr. 570 ; Robert 198; als of Huddleston , Andrew and Richard
Parlington, Aberford, Yorks , 306
Parr, John 124; William, als Boldes, 176, 181 ; als of Barker, Alexander and Thomas ; als ofBoldes, George; William, als Salesbury, 188
Parret, Stephen 4, 16
Parrhisii, see Paris
Parris, see Paris
Parry, Ap Harry, Ap[h]arius , Apri- cius, Apritius, Blanche 251" ; Henry 251* ; Hugh, als Salisbury, 92* , 98, 103 , 104; John 53 , 54; Richard 251*n; William, als Salisbury (possibly called Ap Rhys as well), 248 , 254, 407 , 410
Parsavall, Mr., priest, 570
Parson Murton,Mr., priest, 570
Parsons, see Persons
Pasgrave, Edward 39; see Presgrave
Paston, Augustine , als Beeston , 231 , 248; Edward, als Everard, President ofDouay (1688-1714), 512**; Edward 539 ; family 420 ; Thomas (senior) 302, 420 ; Thomas , als Farmer, 302 ; William 479 , 512 ; William, als Beeston, 443 ; Wulstan, als Beeston (Birston), Augustine 289, 301 , 437. 442, 443.449 ; 539. 540*
Patara, Patracensis, Archbishop of, seeGuidi
Patensen, Ven William 530
Patroci , St., see Padstow
Paul V, Pope, 96, 112 , 117, 129, 130 , 165 , 170 , 342 , 344, 352 , 356 , 365 * , 366 , 367 , 381 , 384 , 385, 386
Paul , Father, see Heath, Ven Henry
Pauntley, Gloucester, 511*n
Paver, Francis, als Oglethrop , 153 , 208, 209, 216, 231 , 233, 239, 247 , 248, 264, 265, 268, 270, 315 , 418 , 422 Jane 265" ; Margaret265**; Richard 153, 276, 441 ; Richard , als . Oglethrop , 265* ; William 265*n
Payne, Francis 314: John (senior) 314; Bl John , 530 ; John, als
Andrew, 314; J. Orlebar, quoted 422 , 511
Paynesley, Staff . , 505, 518
Peacock, Edward, quoted 185" , 284"
Peale, Robert29
Pearson, Grace (Lyones) 574
Pearson, als ofMann ,Antony
Percehay, Richard 101
Percie, John 243
Percival, Persivall, Persiwall , William 36, 44 , 54 , 335 , 339
Percy, John, als Martin, 316* ; John, als ofEnderby, Percyand Edmond; William 199
Peregrine , als ofShort, Thomas
Perkins , Edmund 442" , 521 ; Edmund, als More, 521* , 524; Jane orAnne442*n
Persivall, see Percival
Persons , George 336, 429, 442 , 445, 479, 480 ; Robert, S.J., rector of EnglishCollege at Rome, xv, xvii* , xviii, xix, 15* , 26, 30, 35, 42, 74 , 90, ΙΟΙ, 173 , 353*η, 357, 569
Perrotte, Humphrey 139 ; John, als Bould, Thomas , 139
Perse, Pierce, Clare 440* ; Thomas 440* ; Thomas, als Greene , 449
Perugia , 33 , 332 , 333
Peter , Christopher428
Peter theorganist261
Peterborough , Peterburgensis , 21, 27 , 35, 56, 70, 101 , 102 , 179* , 194 , 207
Peterburgensis , see Peterborough
Peterson, als of Chambers, Peter
Petit, Anne295"; Ciriack 295"
Petite, Charles 67
Petrocstowe , see Padstow
Pett, Henry 8, 9*; Robert 9 , 15, 32* , 99, 334
Pettlewell, evrov for Kettlewell
Pettons , Anne521 ; John, Sir, 521"
Philip II of Spain, 388, 391
Philip III ofSpain394
Jane
Pegge , Anne 452, 527 ; Catherine 527 ; Christopher 527* ; 527 Thomas 527* ; William 527 ; William , als Hastings, 527"
Pellay, Palley, Thomas 57 , 58*
Pen, als ofWinchombe , William
Penkevell , Mark 4, 14 , 28, 324
Pennant , Thomas, als Mostyn, 177 , 179, 186, 233, 234* , 235, 406
Penne, see Penny
Pennington , Sir Isaac, 573
Penny , Penne, Anne442* ; Anthony, als Smyth, 442* , 509 ; Anthony 494 Dorothy 442"; Edmund, als Smith, 501 ;Elizabeth442"; George (senior) 230 , 442* ; George, als
Parker, John , 230, 238, 494 : George, als Smyth, 442* , 502, 506 ; Giles 442 ; Jane or Anne 442"; John 442 Poyntz . 442
Pentreth, Richard 33 , 38
Peraltus, Francis, rector of English College in Spain , 57 , 58* , 341
Philips, Hugh, als Evans, 26, 27, 34 , 35 , 39 , 41 , 336 ; Philip 27: Morgan244 ; William, als Vincam and als Williams, 60, 78, 94 , 102* , 105 , 106 , 108-111 pass., 356*; als ofBishop, Richard; als ofClifford, Williams; als ofWorthenal,Richard
Philipson, Anne 434: George 493 ; George, als of Eure, William ; Miles434
Phoenix, Fenix, Thomas, als of St. George, Baldwin
Pickering -Lythe, Yorks. , 185"
Pickering, John264 ; John, alsGreen , 264, 296
Pickford, Pigford, Edward, als Daniel, 146, 147, 179, 193 , 194 , 212 , 213 , 239, 253, 259, 260* , 267, 270, 415418 ; Jerome 276; John, als
Daniel 132 , 141 ; Richard 146; Thomas , als Daniel, 246 ; sec Daniel, John , als Pickford
Pierce, see Perse
Pigford, see Pickford
Pilchard, Ven. Thomas 530
Pinkney, Miles , als Carr, Thomas ,
143 , 179 , 190, 191, 193 , 233 , 236* , 237, 238, 251 , 252, 260, 266 , 268, 273* , 280, 288 , 291 301, 310, 312 , 406, 410, 416, 421 ; Miles (senior) 143
Pits, John, xxv
Pius IV, Pope, 266
PiusV, Pope, 195, 391
Plantin, als of Platt, Francis and Laurence
Plas-y-Werd, Denbigh , 251
Platt, Francis, als Plantin, 250, 25+ , 274 ; Laurence , als Plantin, 188, 208 , 210, 217* , 231, 233, 239, 243 , 246, 275, 410
Pleasant , Marie428 Pleasaunt ,
Pledger, Thomas 177 , 187
Plunkett, John 52 ,66
Plymouth, 570
John 507; Plymouth, Earlof, sec Fitz Charles
Pocklington, Yorks , 288
Poins, Poyns, Hugh 62 ; Robert, als of Prater, Richard; see Poyntz
Pole, Gervase 22
Polewheele, als ofWarham, George
Pollard, als ofSharpe, James
Pont-a-Mousson, Mussipontana , 199*
Pontefract, Yorks., 575* n
Pophan, John, chiefjustice, 568
Porter, John, als Butler, 32* ; John, als Palmer, 181, 183* , 187 , 390 ; Simon , als Price, 79 , (misnamed Potteron 112), 113* , 123, 363
Portugal, Lusitania, 41 , 572 ; King of, 509, 543 , 572
Postgate , James 185*"; Jane 185 ; Nicholas 185 ; Ven Nicholas, als Watson , als Whitmore, martyr, xxiii, xxv, 185* , 208 , 259* , 261, 262, 265, 266, 283* , 389, 418 , 419, 513 540
Potter, Edward 10 , 16 , 324 ; Simon (error for Porter) 112 ; als of Stransanı , John
Potter Hanworth, Lincoln, 180"
Pottinger, Nathaniel 15, 22, 59, 62, 324, 346, 349 Simon , als Edgerton, Egertonand Eaton, 5, 9, 10 , 14 , 22 , 74, 78, 80, 83, 91, 104
Poulain , Servatius , ApostolicNotary, 264* , 417*
Pounce, see Pouncett
Pouncett, Pounce, Pounch, Bridget
275* Henry 275*D ; George, als
Bradshaw , 274, 275 , 281 ; George
275°; Thomas 275"; William
275"
Pounch, see Pouncett
Pounde, als ofSamuel , Henry
Pounds, William, als Lane, 315
Powell , Anne 281 ; Charles, als Elmer, 273, 418 ; Henry 232, 243 ; Jolin 180, 281 ; John , als Jennings, 281, 285* , 287, 299 ; William 15 ; als ofCadwallador , Charles ; als of Gwyn, William
Powis, Lord, of Powis Castle, see Herbert
Poynter, Bishop, xiii*
Poyntz, Dorothy 442"; John, Sir, 442 see Poins
Prannel , als ofQuintin, Robert
Prater, Richard, als Poins, 42, 57* , 60, 342
Pratt, Henry, als Harris, 178* , 181, 185 Henry 345; Henry, als
Walker, 66, 67, 70, 71* , 78
Presgrave, Edward 28 ; John 28; see Pasgrave
Preston , Ferdinand , als Curwen, 147 , 190 ; Francis, als Curwen , 193 , 208 ; ---- 147,48g * , 54I
Preston , Dorset, 299
Preston Gobalds, or Gulbals , Salop, 518"
Pretty, Henry, als Harris, 114 , 127; William , als Harris, 114 , 127* , 136
Price, Edward 294 ; Edward, als
Alison ΟΥ Dal[1]ison , 93, 95 ; Elizabett 294 ; Humphreyor Humfred, als Vaugham , John , 294, 313; William (ordained 1598) 2*; William (ordained 1607 ) 76 , 77* , 78, 85, 318, 350 , a priest, 8 ; als of Porter, Simon ; als of Williams, Thomas
Prince, James, als Cooke, William, 184 , 233, 266, 267* , 269, 271, 272, 273 , 418
Proberts , Edward 112 , 113* , 125; see Smith, Edward
Probyn, Edward, als Colbeck, 57, 66, 99, 102, 114 , 122 , 123 , 127* , 129, 130 366 , 367 , 368 , 540
Procer , John 441
Proctor, Richard389 ; als ofMedcalf, Thomas ; als of Shawe, Richard
Progers, Thomas 539*
Protector of England, Cardinal, sce Barberini ; see Farnese
Protector, Vice-, of England, Cardinal, seeMellini
l'udding-Norton, Fakenham , Norfolk, 517°
Puddington, Chester, 299
Pudsey, Anne 292" ; Elizabeth, 291 ; Elizabeth, als Scrope, 574 ; Mary (Gale) 574 Stephen , als Banester, 292, 301 ; Thomas, als Banester , 291 *0, 295, 420, 574 ; William 291 *n, 292D
Pugh, Hugh 68 ; Robert 538,55%
Pullan, Joshua 21 ; Mary 284* (? Pulleyne)
Puncknowle , Bridport, 299"
Purston - jackling, Yorks , 502¹
Pybus Ven. John 531
Featherstone ,
Quintain, Quinten, Robert, als Prannell, 438, 444, 478, 502
Rabone , Edward 97*
Radepol , Dorset , 284
Rainer , see Reyner
Raismes, de, Nicholas Petrus 429 428, 462 ;
Ramery, John Baptist 430 ; Romanus 428,462
Ramirez , see Martin, Francis
Rand , Fr., S.J., xxi
Randour, D 493 Valentine429*
Rasin, Raysin , als of Matthew (surnamenot given), 100, 124, 126
Rassius, Arnoldus, quoted, list ofmartyrs, xii, 545
Ratcliffe, Helen 308; John Collington, Richard, als Turret, 308; Richard 308 ; als of Raynes, William
Rathbone , William 28, 53, 61, 62, 64, 82, 87, 95, 350*
Ravenscroft , George, als Rider, 441, 502, 506, 509 ; James, als Rider, 441, 502 John , als Rider, 502 ; Mary 441 Thomas, als Rider, 441 , 493, 494
Rawdon , 265
Rawlinson, John , als Medcalf, 436, 438,439, 478*
Rayner, see Martin, Francis
Raymerez , Reymirez, see Martin, Francis
Rayner, see Reyner
Rayne[s], Edward 14 , 17 , 18, 29, 332 ; Robert 116* , 121 ; William , als Ratcliff, 116
Raynsford, 265ª
Read, Thomas , President ofMagdalen Hall , Oxford, 494, 495* , 497, 500* , 542*
Redman , John , D.D., Canon of St. Omer, 8* , 14, 26, 36, 53 , 88, 127 128 * , 137, 138 , 199 331 , 365 * , 369 * , 370 Mr. (John or William ?) 570 ; Thomas 27 William 3 , 15 , 27, 31 , 35. 36, 45, 52, 54 * , 94, 1o1 * , 335 , 339* , 353, 356
Reeves, John 185"
Reginaldus , see Reynolds
Reiner , see Reyner
Remensis, scc Rheims
Remmington, Francis, als Clarke, 30* Henry 33 , 38, 54* , 339*
Remy, Dr. 513, 514* Reymirez , als ofMartin, Francis
Reyner, Rayner, Christopher , als Dougell, Dowgill, 2, 4, 15 , 27, 37* , 39* , 40, 61, 334* , 336, 567* , 568 ; Clement , als Dougell , Dowgill, 2, 4 , 15 , 28 , 35, 59, 71* , 569 ; Marmaduke, a merchant, 569; Richard 27, 28, 569; Richard, als Hodson , 86, 89, 90, 92, 103 ; Robert, a merchant, 569
Reynes, see Raynes Reynold , Mr. 568, 569
Reynolds (Reginaldus ), William, als of Knatchbull, John ; William 200 Rheims, Remensis, Rhemi , xvi, xxv, xxvi, 1 , 3* , 5, 6, 7* , 8 * , 20 * , 33, 34* , 38 , 52 , 55 , 63 , 73 , 75 , 79 84 * , 85 89, 91 , 95* , 131 , 140 , 148* , 152, 153 , 178 , 198, 255, 261 , 319* , 327* , 333* , 338* , 374, 381, 389, 557* , 558, 563, 564, 565* ; Archbishopof, see Giffard; Canon of, see Barrett
Rhemi , see Rheims
Rhodes (Rhodiensis ), Archbishop of, see Bentivolus, 363, 364 * ; Rhodiensis, Rodiensis , 34 , 45, 96, 112 , 115 , 117, 120* , 121* , 122, 123*
Rhodiensis, sce Rhodes
Rhotomagum , see Rouen
Richardot, John , Bishop of Arras, 62, 64.65,97
Richardson , Francis 40%; John 512, 525*; John, als Wats, 545 ; Richard, als of Touleus (Tooley) ; alsofYaxley, Richard(? John)
Richmond, Yorks, 231, 306
Richworth, seeRishworth
Rickley, Rickbie, John, als White ; see Rigby
Ridale , Thomas , als Carter, 283
Riddell, Ruddell, Ryddell, Francis, als Nevyll, Fulk, 4, 17
Rider, Frances 458 * , 494, 498 , 508* , 519 , 543 ; George 507
Ridley, Roger, als Umpton, William, 3 , 14, 17 , 18 , 20, 33 , 34 , 37, 40, 327, 332
Rie, Baron de, see Parker(283, 285*)
Rigby, Rigbie, Rickbie, John, als White, 228 , 234, 282, 300* , 301 , 302, 305, 310* , 312, 314, 315, 421 ; N 228 ; (a martyred priest), 531 *n
Rigmaden , John44
Rigworth, see Rishworth
Rile, Whitchurch, Dorset , 200
Ripley, Yorks , 286"
Rip pjon, Yorks , 306, 569 * 575
Rishton , Edward 200
Risley, Deiby. 265"
Rishworth, Richworth, Rigworth, William, als Rossel, Charles , 114 , 116, 124 , 125 , 126* , 127 , 129 , 130 , 141, 364
Roane, Edward(senior) 184; Edward, alsSmith, 184, 216, 222
Roberts , Ven John, O.S.B., Martyr, 50* , 74 , 337*; Anne455 ; Edward 363
Robguethus , Balthaser , 216
Robinson , Christopher74 , 123 ; Ven. Christopher , martyr, 531 ; Edward 518, 520, 522, 524, 528* , 529, 539*; Edward, Thomas , als of Whall, William ; Francis 4, 49* , 50 , 337 ; John 520; Ven John, martyr, 530; Michael , als Taylor, 146, 179 , 194, 217, 229, 231 , 240, 406 ; Miles 146; Peter 315; Richard 67, 99, 111 , 116 , 126, 363 ; Richard, servant, 574 Robert 507
Rochester , 379"
Rocksavage, Chester, 505
Rocroe, see Recroi
Rocroi , Rocroe, 20* , 327
Rodiensis, see Rhodes
Roe, Rous, Ven Bartholomew , afterwards Alban, M. als Rolfe or Roe, als Rowe , James xxvi, 86* , 89,99, 106 , 107 , 108 , 354* , 355, 356 , 422, 475
Rogers, John 58, 61
Rokeby , Ralph 185"
Rokewood, Robert69
Rolf, James, als ofVen Barthol Rowe
Roling, Alexander531
Rols, Rolls, Francis , als Blakestonor Blaxton, 433 , 436, 438, 439, 478* , 507
Rome, Roma, 2, 9, 18* , 22 , 26*-105 pass., 109 , 110, 114* , 123 , 124 , 126 , 134 , 181 , 186, 191 , 193 , 195, 199, 200, 204, 206, 212, 216, 218, 232, 236, 237, 241, 242, 279, 290, 324, 326, 332, 333* , 334, 335, 348, 349, 351 , 353 , 358, 363, 364* , 372 , 390-401 pass . , 405, 424, 433, 434, 435 , 455, 466, 471 , 474* , 475, 476 , 477 , 490, 492, 495" , 504, 506, 528, 538, 551-565 pass , 567, 568, 569, 571; Church of St. Laurence in Damaso, in, 471; Roman College, XV
Rondon , see Rowdon
Rood, see Rudde
Rooke, Thomas 53, 65
Roose, Timothy, als Hayes, 56
Rooter, John, als Flud, 498
Rooth, de, 205 , 399
Roper, Catherine 524"; George, als
Browne , 497"; Henry, 2nd Lord
Teynham , 524 ; John 66 ; Thomas 450* , 485* , 493 ; William, Sir- 402 ; William 103, 225
Roscowe, John, als Williamson , 192 , 221 ; William 192
Rose ,George60
Rospigliosi ,Julius435 , 477
Ross, D152 ; Bishop of, 392, 399 , 558, 565 ; see Lesley ; Felix and George, als ofWoodson
Rosse, Charles 366, 367; Charles, als of Rishworth, William ; Francis,als of Badulay; als ofFrancis (no surname given), 53 ,77
Rotherfuth, John 184; William , als
Shelley , 184, 233* , 243
Rotomagum , see Rouen
Roudon, see Rowdon
Rouen, Rotomagum,204,397, 557 , 563
Rountree ,Rowntree ,Leonard 103,104 , 105* , 106, 108, 109* , 132, 357
Rous, see Rowe
Rouse (Rouseus), Anthony 74 : John, als Hay[es], Timothy, 110; als of Hay (Hayes), John
Rouseus, see Rouse
Rowdon , Roudon, Rouden, Thomas , als Feasby, 446, 523* , 526, 545
Rowe, Rolfe , Alban, als of Roe , Ven Bartholomew
Rowe, Dorothy 297"; George 297* ; John (senior) 297 ; John , als Cary, 297 ,410; Juliane297"; Prudence 2972
Rowley, Rowleus, Richard 115*
Rowsham , Ven. Stephen 530
Rowntree , see Rountree
Roxby, Yorks , 275
Royle, Roger 17* , 18
Royston, Herts , 510"
Rudde , Rood, Henry, als ofWivill
Rudiscind, Fr., [Barlow] 275 , 517
Rudston, John 288 ; Ursula288
Rufforth, Yorks , 275
Ruince, see Wrench
Rushforth, Elizabeth 290"; Robert 290
Rushton, Northants , 443"
Rushworth (? Rishworth), William, als Ross , Charles , 145
Russell, Frances 288 ; George (senior) 316 ; George 316, 429, 436, 437, 443 445 * 48o 492 , 496 * , 497 , 498, 503, 505, 506 ; John , Sir, 288 ; Richard (senior) 513; Richard513 , 524, 525* , 528, 545; Thomas 271 , 299; als of Greene, John,Rooke and William ; alsofWaldegrave , Charles
Rutland, 492*
Rye, Sussex, 573
Rylands, W. Harry, quoted297
Rysden, Bartholomew 50
Sacfelde, see Sackville
Sackville, Sacfelde, Thomas 201 , 395 ; 1st Earl of Dorset, 296" ; 2nd Earl of Dorset290 ; 3rd Earl of Dorset 290"
Sadler ,Walter 18 , 28 , 32 , 34;
Sager, see Sayer
Sainctgeorgius , seeSt.George
Saine, see Sayne _ 88
St. Amatus' Church , Douay , 481
St.Andrew's, Andraepoletanae , 46, 48
St. Asaph, Asaphensis, xv, 2, 4, 21 * , 27 , 28, 32 , 44, 55, 177 , 179, 232, 233, 251, 253* , 259 , 262 , 265, 296 ; Bishopof; see Goldwell
St. George, Sainctgeorgius , Sengeorgius, Baldwin, als Phoenix, Thomas , 437 , 438, 449, 456, 494, 497 family of 437" ; Frances 437 ; Francis, Norroy King of Arms, 438 ; Henry, Sir, Garter King of Arms, 437" ; John 437"; Richard, Ulster King of Arms, 437 Richard, Sir, Norroy King of Arms, and Clarencieux King of Arms, 438 ; Thomas 437 ; Thomas, Sir, Garter King of Arms, 437" ; William 364 William, als Johnson, 104 , 122 , 123 , 124 , 126, 133 , 140, 144, 146
St. Ghislain, Guislan , Abbey Church, 147*
St. Giles in the Fields , London, 438" , 518º
St. Jacques, Douay, 436 ; Paris, 573
St. Lazare , Paris, 572
St. LucarCollege, xv
St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, London, 438º, 521º
St. Omer, Audomaropolis , 3* , 22, 27 , 30, 34, 41, 43, 44, 45, 48* , 52, 59, 6o * , 62 , 63, 64 , 68, 77, 79 , 85, 86 87* , 93-98 pass , 112 , 116* , 137 , 138 , 148 , 159 * , 161, 163, 171 , 183, 186, 189* , 200, 202 , 204, 206, 218, 243, 247 , 254 , 264, 265, 270, 279 , 280, 289, 292, 293 , 296, 297* , 299, 303, 308* , 311, 357, 365* , 369* , 381 *.389* , 392, 394, 395* , 397,443 , 446, 455, 456, 516, 524, 526, 570 ; Bishopof, see Baudot; see Blaze ; see de France , 398 ; Rector of, 62
St. Patroci Parochia , see Padstow
St.Thomas' Priory, Staffs , 510
St. Vedast, Monasteryof (Arras), 192, 332; Abbot of 31 , 192
Sale, John, als Nevell, 231 , 235, 239, 240, 406
Salerno ,Archbishopof, see Morrha, 387
Salesbury , als of Parr, William
Salisbury, Sarisburiensis , 16 , 18* , 176, 178 , 188 , 208, 210, 232 , 233* ,
235, 246, 253, 270, 280, 283 , 303 438, 441 , 445, 496, 507, 508, 524
Salisbury, John 53, 54 ; als of Parry, Hugh and William
Salkeld, Thomas 297, 420 ; Thomas , als Anderton, 297, 301 , 307,
Salkins, Salkyns, Henry 104 ; Richard 105
Salkyns, see Salkins
Salmanticensis , 448
Salopiensis, see Shropshire
Salthouse, Arthur (senior) 306 ; Arthur, als Nateby, John 306, 315; Catherine 306
Saltmarshe , Capt Edward 575, 576 ; Gerrard (Ireland and Meynell ) 575, 576
Salvin, Anne 503 " ; Charles, als Hebborne, Heberon , Hebron, 503 , 504 , 512 Gerard 503 , 526 : Gerard (senior) 503 John , als Heberon, 526 Mary 503 , 526
Sameford , see Samford
Samford , Sameford , Francis 148, 181, 188, 254 als ofDuckett, Robert
Samowayes, Sammoyes, Henry 283 ; Jane 283 ; John , als Foster or Forster, Henry, 283 , 287, 301, 439
Samuel ,Henry, als Pounde, 6
Sanall , see Sandal
Sandal Magna,Yorks , 284" , 291
Sandas, de, Eustachius 429
Sanders, Anthony, als Huett, 207, 247, 254, 259, 271 , 418 ; George 191 , 194; Thomas , als Huett, 235, 247, 249, 273, 280; William 207 ; 102 ; als of Smaleman , Benedict
Sanderson, John 198
Sandes, Ven John 530
Sandford ,Michael , see Sanford ; Francis, als ofDuckett, Robert
Sandringham ,Norfolk, 525
Sanford , Sandford , Santford, Francis 426, 428, 429 , 431, 472, 473 ; Matthew 98, 103 ; Michael 63 , 66, 92* , 94, 112 , 113, 122 * , 364
Santford, see Sandford , Sanford
Saragossa, 273
Sarbonica , see Sorbonne
Sarisburiensis , see Salisbury
Sarjante, Francis30* , 35
Sarnesfield , Hereford , 304
Saunders,Anne293" ; Edmond293"; als ofStyche, John
Saunderson , Dr. 29
Savage, Richard 505* , 508
Savell , als ofIngleby, William
Sawston , Cambs , 436
Sayer, Sager, John, als Blake, Stephen, 189 , 208, 233 , 243 , 246, 265* , 410 ; William 189
Sayne, Saine, Monasteryof, 276 , 287
Scarborough , Yorks , 275 , 305
Scarisbrick , Edward436";
Scarisbrick, Lancashire , 436"
Scarning, Margaret 254"
Scarpe, 421, 422
Schelton , see Skelton 436"
Schidmore , seeScudimore
Schinner , see Skinner
Scot , Ven Montford, 530
Scrimshier , Elizabeth276
Scrope, Scroop, Scroup , Antony, als
Morgan , 69; Christopher116, 251"; Elizabeth(Pudsey) 574 ; John, 8th
Lord Bolton, 594; John, als Beesely, 216, 248, 251* , 271 , 418 ; Margaret 251
Scudimore [Scudamore], Schidmore , Scuidesmore, Benedict , als Boyer, William,151,191,209,223* ,228*,406
Scuidesmore, see Scudimore
Se[a]borne, Benedict , als Berington, 304 Christopher 303 ; Richard, als Berington, 303, 304 ; Sibyl304"
Searle, als ofSpicer, Edward
Sedberg,Yorks , 311
Sefton, Lancs. , 294
Semley, Wilts , 526
Sengeorgius, see St. George
Sensom, Sensomes, 102, 103
Sensomes, see Sensom
Sergent, Ven Richard 530
Seville, xv, 350, 389, 392
Seymour -Spencer, Mrs. xxix
Shantrine, wife , 507 501 , 507; his
Sharpe, James, als Pollard, 72, 73* , 77,344
Sharrington, Norfolk, 517
Shaw, Berks, 511"
Shawe, Richard 125 ; Richard, als
Proctor, 178 , 179, 181, 191, 209*
Shelby, als of Rotherfuth, William
Sheldon, Baldwin, als of Lewkenor, Francis
Shelfield , Aston-Cantlow, Warwick , 498º
Shelley, Anthony, 229* , 235, 239 , 250 , 261, 266, 271, 273* , 274* , 405, 418 ; Edward363 ; Edward, als Whitby, 100 , 102 , 112 , 113, 125, 177 , 182; Elizabeth 297 ; John 297 ; Margaret 254"; Mr. 249 ; William 254"
Shepheard, Thomas 216 ; Mr. 536 , 539* , 549 ; als of Brookes, Thomas
Sheprey, Sheprevus, William 198
Sheprevus, seeSheprey
Sherborne , Matthew 125 , 536, 550 ; Richard, als Lee, 434 ; see Tunstall, Matthew, Richard, and Thomas
Sherrington, als of Sherwood , Robert
Shert , Bl. John 530
Sheroudus, see Sherwood
Shervin , see Sherwin
Sherwin , Shervin, Bl Ralph 200, 530
Sherwood , Sheruodus, Richard 51 ; Robert, als Sherrington, 114 , 116; Bl Thomas 530
Shiers, Ambrose28*
Shifnal, Salop, 276*
Shipman , 123
Shirley, als ofWhitewall, Charles
Shoby, Leicester , 525
Short, Jane 525; Peregrine 525 ; Thomas , als Peregrine, 525
Shrewsbury , 518
Shropshire , Salopiensis, 2* ,4,7,9,43. 66, 69, 276, 507, 518 ; Archdeacon of, see Bayaert, William
Shrubbe , Thomas, als Bush, xxviii, 10
Sichem, Sichen, Brabant, Belgium, 91 , 102 , 351
Siclemor , John 74
Sikes, Ven Edmund530
Simson, see Simpson
Simons, Anna 519 ; John, als Eaton, 105; Lawrence , als ofSwaiston or Swinston , Lancelot; Symons , als ofNanconan , Peter
Simpson, Cuthbert 185"; John 185"; Richard 185 ; Ven. Richard 530; Robert 185 ; Thomas 430 , 525 , 528
Singleton , Singliton, George 127; Dr. John xvii,xviii, xix* ,xx* , xxi* , 145 , 358 , 365 , 367 , 370 * , 371 , 372, 380 ; John, alsWaddington, 445,446,458 , 490, 492, 493, 495, 496* , 498, 502 , 503* , 506, 507, 510, 512* , 514,515, 519* , 520 , 521, 526, 527, 536,537 , 549, 550 ; Mary 277 ; Robert, als Standley, 277, 287, 291, 294, 298, 438 ; Thomas 277; William 74,77, 99* , 103, 105, 106, 128 , 130* , 139, 142 , 143 , 199 , 354
Singliton, see Singleton
Siser, see Sizergh
Sizergh, Siser , Westmorland, 211* , 230*
Skelton, Yorks , 251"
Skelton , Schelton , Simon 126 , 134 , 141* , 178 , 182 , 389
Skinner,Andrew498*n; Andrew , als Bentley, 290, 498* ; Antony 135 , 193, 498 ; Antony, als Bentley, 193 , 234, 290, 301, 302 , 498, 499* , 542; Edward, als Bentley, 135, 137 , 192, 193 , 498"; Eleanor498 ; Elizabeth498; George, als Bentley, 270 ; George, als Smith, 230, 249 ; James 498 ; James, als Bentley, 193* , 248, 249, 264, 269, 276, 296 , 315; John (senior) 290 ; John 230; John , als Warren, 290,313 ; Mary 290 , 498 ; William 498n
Skevington, als of Ainsworth, John
Slade, Ven John530
Slyne, Lewis523 , 528
Smaleman , Benedict , als Sanders
Smalmann , Samuel 55*
Smarthwaite, Smarthwatt, Cuthbert 334,570
Smeaton , Yorks , 185"
Smith, Anthony, als of Winchcombe , William Bartholomew , als Barthelmew, Matthew, 3 , 4, 5, 17 , 18* ; Dorothy 182 ; Dr. 538, 540* ; Edmund 55 ,67, 343, 507 ; Edward 81, 89* , 125, 128, 142, 209, 366; Edward, als Gray, 506,512; Francis, als Blaxton, 506, 509 ; family of 5120; George 60 ; George, als Gray, 433, 444 James 540*; Jane 512 John, als of Foster, Allan ; Lucy 519; Mary 180 ; see Hansom ; Nicholas , S.J., 17, 18, 20, 28 , 29, 42 ; Richard 20, 34* , 42, 47, 53 , 55, 72, 73* , 100, 103 , 113 , 127* , 140 , 180º, 199, 200, 333* , 338 , 343 , 344 , 366 ; Richard, als Marshall, 182* , 208, 223, 389, 406 Richard, Bishopof Chalcedon, xvi , xxi, 246, 248 , 250 , 262, 270 , 274, 277, 281 , 286, 291 , 296, 450, 456, 484, 509 , 511, 532, 537 , 545, 546 , 548 , 572 ; Thomas, als Gray, 506, 512, 523 , 527 ; als of Hansom , Thomas ; Walter 182 ; 217 ; William , als Gray , 433 , 439; als ofLuddington, Walter and William ; als of Skinner, George ; alsof Roane,Edward; als ofThome, William ; als of Thwaites , James ; als of Waldegrave , Nicholas and Thomas ; see Smythe
Smithson, Bryan 28 ; Christopher2 , 28, 41 John 53, 516; John , als Duckett, 433 ; William 501 , 516 ; als of Bendlowes , John ; als of Messenger, John and William Smythe, Clare 297 ; John 19 , 29, 433 John, als Carrington, 27; Mr. , S.J. , 573; Nicholas 327 ; Thomas 297 Walter, Sir, 512"; als ofBabthorpe, Robert; families of, Acton Burnell, Salop, 512ª ; Eshe, Durham, 512"; Wooton Wawen ,Warwick, 512 " ; seeSmith
Snatchbole , Snatchbull, Snathbole , als ofKnatchbull ,John
Snell , Edward22
Snod , Peter , als Overton, Paul, 186, 190 , 191 , 400
Snow, Ven Peter 531
Sockburn, Durhamand Yorks., 569
Sodington , Worcester , 436ª, 489ª
Somers, Ven Thomas , Martyr, 65* , 66* , 70, 71 , 73, 343, 345
Somerset[ensis], 8 * , 89, 122 , 180, 192 , 276*0, 570
Sommer , Thomas 125 : als of Wilson,
Sommerton , Oxford, 244
Sorbonne, Paris, 139 , 149 , 176, 190 , 210, 212, 373. 418
Souch, see Zouch
Southampton, 570
Southcott, als ofGage, John
Southerne , Sutheron , Ven William, Martyr, xxvii, 9*ª , 14, 531
Southleigh , Southly, Oxon ,230,290*"
Southly, see Southleigh
SouthStainley, Yorks. , 469
Southwell,for Southworth, Ven John, Martyr, 531*n
Southworth,Ven John, als Lee, 123, 124 , 127, 129 , 130, 134 , 138 * , 140* , 142, 151 , 177, 222 , 230, 372 , 531**
Sowerby, near Thirsk, Yorks , 502ª, 506 , 575
Sowthrne , see Southerne , William
Spain, xvii, xx, 340; King of, xxii, 34, 372 , 386*2, 568 , 569
Spaldington, Yorks , 288
Sparke, Matthew 18
Sparkford, Somerset, 289
Spawforth, seeSpofforth
Speake, Hugh, als Yeatman
Speke, Elizabett 303 ; Hugh 303 ; Francis, als Beke, 303, 311
Spelsmere, Westmorland, 281
Spencer, Thomas 129 , 567; George, als Fenwick, als Warwick, 448, 449 ; Ven. William 530 ; als of Bagshaw, Thomas
Spenser, als ofSpicer, Thomas
Spicer, Edward, als Searle, 134, 142, 143* , 370* , 371 ; Thomas , als Spenser, 81, 82, 347
Spinula, Marcus, 146, 372
Spinythorne (Spennythorne ), Yorks. , 216
Spofforth, Spawforth, Yorks , 265" , 512 , 516
Spratt, Ven. Thomas 531; see Sprott
Sprott , Spratt, Edward 57, 67,74
Stafferton, Francis74
Stafford, als ofEyre, Peter ; Viscount 538
Stafford[iensis], 2, 48, 57* , 66* , 67* , 69, 74 , 78, 79* , 105 , 109 , 123, 124* , 132 , 149, 150, 151 , 182, 265, 274, 284, 458, 497*
Stainsby , Stainton, Yorks , 185"
Staithes, Hinderwell, Yorks , 185°
Standish, James 46 ; als of Dormer, Francis
Standlench, Downton, Wilts , 283
Standley,Edward 102, 109 , 114* , 125, 126 , 127 als of Singleton , Robert
Stanfield, Rev. Raymund, xxv, xxvi, 572*
Stanford, Francis, als Ocleus, 71*
Stanford Hall, Essex , 288
Stanford-Rivers, Essex, 288
Stanley, Colonel 55 ; Edward 55* , 66 , 123 , 129, 136, 364 , 366 ; John 55*; Robert 428, 438 ; William 21 , 37 , 40, 66, 75 ; als of Browne , John ; als of Hamford, Edward;
Stanney , Thomas 74
Stannington, Suffolk, 517"
Stansby, als of Basset , John
Stanstead , Sussex, 275"
Stanton, William 114 77
Stapleton, Brian 4, 5* , 10, 324* ; Jane 271 ; Robert, Sir, 271"; Thomas 198, 199 ; Thomas, als of Bartlet , Basil
Stark, A., quoted 181"
Starkey, Edward 300 ; Henry (senior) 300*n; Henry, als Lee, Bernard , 300 ; Jane 300* ; Thomas 300n ; 490*
Starre, Thomas 191 , 193
Staverton, Devon , 297*
Stedham, Sussex, 520
Stegrensis, 446
Stephens, Dorothy 280* ; Richard 198 ; Nicholas 280
Stevens, John 283; als of Yates , Thomas
Stevenson, Richard, als Lee, Stephen, 134 , 137 , 144 , 148, 177 , 179, 190* , 192* , 206, 216, 400 ; Richard, als
Stevens, Vicar-General, 535, 549 ; William (senior) 229 ; William 185 ; William, als Burnett, Paul, 229, 234, 239, 248
Stewart, Elizabeth 527
Stillington, Thomas 198
Stricland, near Bormished , Westmorland, 285, 468 , 519
Strood, Kent, 379"
Sturton, Matthew, als Williamson,436
Stych[e], Shropshire , 501"
Styche, Stitch, John , als Saunders, 501* , 519 ; family of501"
Suffolk[iensis], 60, 61 , 63, 66, 85, 89, 99, 115 , 121* , 122 , 135, 143 , 184 , 282 , 497 ; Archdeacon of, see Warrham, George
Sugar, John (senior) 27 ; Ven John, als Cocks or Cox, xxvii, 7, 14 , 21 , 27, 32, 36 , 334,531
Suliard, see Sulyard
Sulyard,Suliard, Anne314*"; Edward 314"
Summerset , Charles, als Johnson , 511; John , Sir, 511* ; Mary,Lady, 511; Thomas, als Johnson , 511
Surq, le, Dr. 513
Surrey, 571*
Sussex[iensis], 135, 145, 351 , 456 , 494 , 498 ; Archdeacon of, see Warrham, George
Sutcliffe, Matthew, Dr., Dean of Exeter, 53
Sutheron , see Southerne
Sutton, Hereford, 304**
Sutton, Abraham74 , 77, 79 ; Gaspar, als Swift, 10 ; Ven Robert 530
Swaiston , Lancelot, als Simpson or Swinton, 86, 89, 90, 92, 101 , 110 , 112 , 113
Swale, Dorothy 469"; Henry, Sir, 469 Solomon , Sir, 469
Sweet, Mr., merchant , 570
Sweete, Henry, als of Meridale, Humphrey
Swetus , 96
Swinston, Lawrence 363
Stockman , Egidius [Giles], als of Swinston, seeSwaiston
Greene, Gabriel
Stonegrave , Yorks , 469
Stonor, John Talbot, Bishop, 176"
Stransan , see Stransham
Stransham , Stransan ,Ven Edward530
Stratford, als ofLetchmore, Edmund and John
Stravius, Richard Paul, Archdeacon ofArras, 250, 251 , 254, 255* , 256, 281, 409, 411* 415*
Streatlam, Durham, 306
Street, John 206 ; John , als Bridges , 231 ; Thomas , als Bridges, 206, 232 , 234, 406
Stricland , Nicholas , als Middleton, 211 , 247 , 249, 268, 276, 285 , 287, 301, 309, 312 ; Roger 175 : Thomas 211, 230; Thomas , als Middleton , 230, 243 Stringer, Richard 185
Sydley, als ofHilton , Christopher
Sydney, Robert, Sir, 3, 317
Syley, als of Hilton, Christopher
Sylvius, Francis 446, 447, 459, 461, 481, 487* , 491*
Symon , le, James 498 509* , 512 , 514 , 517
Tailer, see Taylor
Talbot, Bishop, 218 ; George 38* , 61 ; John 428 ; William 176 , 177 , 181, 182, 188 , 192 , 193 , 199, 237 , 246, 268, 416 ; 148, 238 , 259 ; als of Everard, William
Taller, see TamworthTaylor , Staffs. , 284
Tankard (? Tancred), John, als Mannering, 184, 248, 271 , 276 , 284 ; Thomas , als Mannering , 184 , 210 ; Thomas (senior) 184
Tasburgh , Tasborough , Charles 507 ; John 420 ; John, Sir, 291 , 304* , 420 Laetitia 291 , 304 *n ; Peregrine, als Tredway, Augustine, 304, 420
Tatlocke, als of Wilson, John
Tattersall, Edward 95 ; Edward, als White, 108 ; George 501, 507, 526, 540 William 95 79 238 ; Tauler, Taylor, Tailer, Taller, Hugh 430 ; Richard 183, 246, 252, 264, 266 , 268, 279, 285, 286, 289, 291 , 298, 300, 389, 416, 431, 463 ; als of Hildreth , Richard ; als of Robinson, Michael
Tempest , Anne 254 " ; Francis , als
Wilmot, 441, 442, 446, 452, 485 ; Martha 441* ; Nicholas , als Wilmot, 496* , 499* , 500, 501* , 510, 513, 520, 523, 526, 539 ; Richard 305 Richard, als Todkill , 314 * , 409 ; Robert 7, 22, 26, 51, 52 , 199, 244* , 245* , 338 * 409* , 430, 432 , 454 ; Roland, of Holmside, 574 ; Thomas 244, 245, 441* , 442, 463 ; William, als Wilmot , 314 ; als of Belson, Edward ; William 244* , 314 als ofHide, Anthony Tendring, Tevering 293
Terrington, Henry, Sir, 305" ; Margaret 305"
Tevering , see Tendring
Teynham, Lord, see Roper
Thaightes , Thawets , Thawtes, see Thwaites
Thefruict, Jean 428
Thelwall, Blanche 251" ; Edward251 "
Thibault, Jacques 457, 458
Thimbleby, Thymbleby, Charles 57, 66, 67 Edward 538, 551 ; Elizabett525* ;Mary 525"; Richard525"
Thirkell, Thirkill, Bl Richard 530; Thomas 444-493" , 516, 520, 521 , 522* , 526
Thirsk, Yorks , 502 , 574* , 575.576
Thomas, Hugh 35, 44, 64* , 67, 70, 85 , 343 Jane 523 ; John Williams, vere John Thomas, 28 ; see Williams; William 64
Thompson , John 428 ; Rev. W. G. xxv; als ofWoodward, John
Thorne , William, als Smith, 194 , 273
Thornell, Edmund 18 ; John 18 , 20, 21, 327
Thorneton-le-Street, Yorks , 298, 573, 574*
Thorn[e]ton, Anne 456*n ; Dorothy 456 , 468 Francis, als Cholmeley, 468 , 492 , 494, 500 ; Margaret 469* Robert 456 , 468 " , 469"; Ursula468
615
Thorold, Anthony, als Benson, 524 ; Catherine 524"; Edward 524: John 524 Robert, Sir, 1st Bart , 524* ; Robert, 2nd Bart , 524º
Thorp, Robert 530
Threele, Thril[1], Andrew 509" ; Charles 509 Henry 509" ; Henry, als Web[be], 528, 529 ; John 509" ; Lawrence 509" ; Margaret 509" , 528 ; Maurice or Morrice , als
Webbe, 509* , 511 , 519, 523 ; Thomas 509 , 528, 529
Thril[1], see Threele
Throgmorton, Throckmorton, Frogmorton, George, als Norton, 150 , 179 , 186; John 150 ; 317
Thules, Ven Jo: 531
ThurlandCastle, Lancs , 275"
Thurnham, Lancs , 296, 526
Thurntoft , 574
3, 148 ,
Thursby, Charles 2 , 4, 27, 29, 36, 50, 51, 56, 340; Roger 2, 41 ; Thomas 8, 9 10 14, 16 22, 27, 29*, 49, 74, 332 , 337
Thurstin, als of Berney, Thomas
Thurston, Robert 444, 493, 497, 500, 503* , 506*
Thwaites, Thwates , Thaightes , Antony 294 ; Charles 519; Eleanor 281* Elizabett 294 * ; Francis 519; George (senior) 259 ; George, als Williams, 209, 219, 259, 271, 277 James, als Smith, 519* %; John 519 John , als Williams, 209, 236 ; Lucy 519%; Mary (Meynell ) 574 , 575 Philip, als Williams, 281 , 284, 294 ; William 209, 281**
Thwenge, Thwing, Ven Edw. 531 ; Ferdinand496* ,500 ; Ven Thomas 17 , 21 , 456, 468, 492 * , 501 * , 531 *n ; 28* see Twenge
Thymbleby, see Thimbleby
Tias, see TichbornTyas , Tichbourne , Tichburne, Dorothy 295 ; Peter 295" ; Simon 67
Tierney, Canon, quoted xiv* , xvi* xix*, xxvi, xxvii, 13 , 14 , 153" , 154 , 155, 159ª, 166ª, 176ª, 191" , 213 , 215 , 323ª, 343" , 357" , 363* , 423 , 432
Tildesneus , see Tildsley
Tildsley, Tildesneus, Edward502, 507 , 516, 522, 526, 529 ; George 61, 66, 78 , 111 , 112 , 123
Tiletson, Mr., Pt , 50 ; 337
Timperley,Elizabeth297 **; Thomas , Sir, 297 ; Thomas, als Moss, 297 ; William, als Haire, 497, 515
Tindall, Edmund, Edward, 94 ,95, 352
Tirrell , Mr. 568, 569
Todde, John (syntaxian) 9* , 10 , 324; John (anotherstudent) 9
Todhill, Todkill , Richard(senior) 243; Richard, als Tempest , 243 , 253 , 276, 284, 286, 298, 301 , 302 , 303 , 304, 307, 310, 314* , 421
Toledo, Toletum, 73
Toletum, see Toledo
Tollard, Royal, Tollorth,Dorset,275**
Toller-Welme, Dorset, 442
Tollorth, see Tollard, Royal
Tolson, als of Braithwait, Philip, Richard, Robert
Tompkins, Alice 280; Nicholas (senior) 280 ; Nicholas , als Kingston, 280, 287, 290
Tomson, als of Dracot, Edward, Frances 518 ; Bl James 530; John 493 ; Ven William 530
Toole, Richard, als Richardson , 52 , 53, 75
Torington [? Tortington], Sussex , 313
Tornacum , see Tournai
Torquatus, Thomas 200
Tott, Christopher , see Fott
Tottal, Tottell , Symon 505, 508
Tottell, see Tottal
Touleus, Richard, see Toole
Tour, Baronde , seeMaupas
Tournai, Tornacum, 31* , 32* , 75 , 101 , 102 , 105 , 106* , 108, 147 , 196, 206, 311* , 399, 498, 500* , 508* , 542, 543; Abbot of 332 ; Bishop of, see d'Esne ; see Villain
Towneley , Charles 502 ; Charles, als
Ashton, 502* ,503, 510,526 ; Francis 502 ; Jane 502"; John 502 ; John, als Ashton, 502 ; Richard502
Towneley, Lancs , 502*
Trafford, Anne503 ; Cecil, Sir, 503"; Cecil , als Howell, 497* , 502, 504*; Henry, als Howell, 503, 504, 523, 524 , 525 ; de, Humphrey, Sir, 503"; John , als Howell, 503* , 504
Trafford, Lancs. , 503"
Transam , Transum, als of Tyas,Tias, Tyus , George andWilliam
Travis, als of Wetherbie , Peter
Tredway, als of Tasburgh, John and Peregrine
Tregean, Tregian, Francis 74 , 280º , 344 ; Mary 280
Tregonwell , Anne442"; Thomas 442"
Trent, George 508
Tresham , Tressham, Elizabeth443** ; Frances 443
Trevelyan, Trevelian,Anthony 303* ; Cecily 303* ; John, als Drue, 303 , 309
Trevor, Singleton 101 ; William , als Jones, 9
Trewer, Mr. 570
Trichoneliae , see Tyrconnell
Trim, Trym, Richard 99, 104
Trollope, Cuthbert 1 , 2 , 175
Trym, John 1
Tuchinor, Tychener , Anthony 10 , 14 , 16, 18, 85, 332; als ofCottrell, Antony
Tudhoe , Brancepeth , Durham , 503"
Tufnell, John , als of Vavasour, Francis
Tuite, Rev.Francisxiii,xiv
Tunstall, Elizabeth 275"; Francis 275 ; Matthew134, 144 ; Matthew, als Sherburne , 148 , 152, 279 , 186 , 194 , 209, 210, 313; Richard, als
Sherburne , 125, 141 , 179, 188 , 190 , 238, 400 ; Ven. Thomas , M. , als
Helmes, 76 , 79, 89, 96, 103 , 116 , 122 , 531 ; als ofSherborne, Richard andMatthias
T .. uler (? Tauler), 34"
Twenge, Thomas 506; see Thwenge
Twist, Robert 34 , 42 , 45 , 335
Twyford, Buckingham, 311
Twysog , Henllan, Denbigh, 251
Tyas, Tias, George, als Transam (ordained 1597), 2, 145 , 179, 208 , 233, 243, 249, 260, 268, 269, 271 , 272, 273, 279, 286, 297, 298, 306, 307 , 312* , 418 ; George (ordained 1628) 317*; Frances 312 ; Robert 144 , 145 ; William, als Transum , 144
Tyburn,xxvii, 131 , 572
Tychener , see Tuchinor
Tyldesley, Tylsley, Thomas , Sir, 537 , 550; William, als Clifton, 190
Tyrconnell, Earl of86* , 349
Tyrone, Earl of 85 ; seeO'Neill, Hugh
Tyroniae, see Tyrone
Ufton, Berks , 442
Ugglebarnby , Whitby, 185"
Ulissipo , see Lisbon
Umphrey, see Humphrey
Umpton, William, als of Ridley, Roger
Urban VIII, Pope, 241, 408* , 416, 423, 434 , 435 * , 452, 47o , 471, 476* , 477 , 569
Urcy, d' , Richard505
Ursinus , de,S216 ;, M., 216
Ushaw College, xxix,490
Uxley, George 82
Durham, xxviii,
Vahamus , see Vaughan
Valencenae, see Valenciennes
Valenciennes , Valencenae, 51 , 52, 527 , 545
Valladolid, Valesoletum , Valesoletanum , xv, xviii, xxvii , 1 , 16, 30, 32, 33, 43 ,48, 52* , 55, 56, 57, 60* , 64, 71, 74, 77, 82, 83, 85, 93* , 94, 95* , 98, 101 , 105* , 113 , 114* , 115* , 177 , 178 , 184, 189, 191 , 194 , 196 , 200, 206, 235, 259, 270, 356, 392
Valliaunt, Jude428, 429
Vallisoletanum , see Valladolid
Van derBurch, archbishop , see Burch
Varvicennės , see Warwick
Vaughan , Vahamus , Anne 255 ; Cardinal xiv ; John 36 ; John, als Williams, 9 ; Thomas 260, 269, 271 , 415 als of Price , Humphrey
Vavasour, Vaveser, Francis , als Tufnell ; Henry 237* , 406 ; James 199 ; John 186, 234 ; Peter, als Wyke or Whyte, 497 * , 498** ; Thomas 191 , 231, 508
Vaveser, see Vavasour
Vechiis , de, Internuncio at Brussels, 533, 546
Veer, Anne 455 ; Henry 455, 456 ; Robert 455; see Vere
Velue, D- 507
Venables, Francis , als of Hemesse , John
Vendeville,Vindiville , Jean, Bishopof Tournai and Councillorto King of Spain, 196, 391, 558, 565
Venner, Venerus, Veramus , Vernamus, Robert76** , 79, 89, 96, 97*
Veramus, see Venner
Verder,Robert, als Chamberlin , 83, 85
Vere, Francis, Sir, 43 ; Henry 493, 494, 498, 504, 507, 511 , 519, 521 , 522, 523* , 528, 529, 545 ; Mr. 540*; see Veer
Vermeil, Dr. 493
Vernalty, Edward, als of Barlow (? Barker), Edward
Vigorniensis , see Worcester
Villain, Maximilian, Maximilian a Gandavo , Bishop of Tournai, 260* , 311
Villanie, Antoine 428
Vincam , als of Phillips, William ; als ofWilliams, William
Vincent,Marmaduke185
Vincentiansof St. Lazare, 572
Vintoniensis , see Winchester
Vitus, see White
Vlischon, 125
Vlishinghum, see Flushing
Vlisiponensis , 513 ; see Lisbon
Wacktendonckc , D.D., 517
Wade, Justice 3 , 19* ; Mr. 317 , 326 ; als of Jeus, Nicholas
Waddington, John , als ofSingleton
Wadsworth ,Capt James,spy,572*.573
Waferer , Eleanor 463
Wake, Michael 136, 144 , 181, 429 ; 426, 492 ; Lionel 475* ; Mr. 472 als of Merriman, Michael and Thomas Wakley, Wakleus , als of Brown, George
Waldegrave , Walgrave, Charles 420 517 ; Charles, als Buller, 184 , 188; Charles, als Russell, 19 , 27, 29. 63 ; Edward 289, 304, 419 ; Edward senior 151 , 184; Edward, als Buller, 151 , 177 , 178 * , 181, 193 ; Frances 304 Magdalen 517"; Nicholas 420; Nicholas , als Smith, 304 ; Thomas 419; Thomas, als Smith, 289, 303, 312
Walden, Edward, als Warrenford, 299, 315 (als Warneford also) ; John 299 ; Margaret299
Wales, Wallia, Cambriensis , 85, 281, 569
Princeof, see Charles
Walgrave, see Waldegrave
Walker, Francis , als Bentley, Frederick Robert 367, 389 ; Mr., Priest, 104 Mr. 372 ; Robert 41 , 114 , 122, 124 , 129 , 134, 136, 144, 149* , 176, 182, 186, 188 , 189 ; Mr. 146 ; Henry, als of Pratt
Wall (Walleus ), Father, S.J. , 30%; Dorothy 443 Wm., alsMarsh, 443, 444* , 504, 505 ; Wm (senior) 443
Walmesley, Wm , als Hammerton, xi, xiii, 436, 443* , 456* , 462 , 480, 487
Walpole, Michael , S.J., 60
Walsh, Robert 74
Waltenshewe ,529
Walters, William 104
Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, 298"
Walton, Francis , als ofFoyel, Robert; R , als Tompson , 280, 283 , 288 , 289, 290
Wandsford, als of Yorke, Peter
Wantage , Berks, 441 *n
Ward, Thomas 185"; Mary 204"
Warde, als of Medcalf , Ferdinand; als ofMorse, Ven Henry, Martyr
Wardour, Lord Arundell of, SCC Arundell ; Baron , see Arundell
Wardour Castle, Wilts , 434
Warford, William , S.J., 58
Warham,Warram, Wharram, Edward 299 ; George 63, 66, 78, 97, 112 , 113* , 122 , 335*; George, als Polewheele, Archdeacon of Sussex and Suffolk, 206, 284, 285 , 287 , 301 , 307, 311, 312, 313* , 363 , 421, 515, 535, 549; John, als Jeffrey, 63, 66, 78 , 101* , 102* % ; John 356; Katharine 299* ; Thomas 206
Wariner ,Richard62, 64, 75; 51.4
Waring,Warring,Warine,Charles 192 ; Humphrey, als Ellis, 192 , 247, 249, 254,270,418,533 * , 537,546 *n , 550 ; William, als Ellis, 192, 247 , 249, 270 , 418
Warmington, William 62 , 69
Warmford, see Warrenford
Warnell, Cumberland , 265"
Warner, Jo : 539 ; Mr. 539*
Warnford, Peter, als West, 62, 68
Warram, seeWarham
Warren, John, als ofSkinner
Warrenford, Edward, als ofWalden
Warring, see Waring
Warvicensis , see Warwick
Warwick,Varvicensis ,Warvicensis , 19 , 52, 53, 79, 132, 150, 152, 193 , 210, 498*
Washington , Paul, als ofGreen
Wate, John , als ofHarrington
Waterford, 302
Waterperry, Oxon , 292
Waterson, Ven. Edward 531
Wathood, Isabella 287 ; John 287 , 301, 302 ; William 276 , 284, 287, 292* , 420 ; see Watwood
Watkins, James (senior) 184 ; James, als Babington, 184, 216
Watkinson, Ven Robert, als Wilson , xxvii,xxviii, 3, 4, 9, 36 , 37* , 39* , 40* , 318 * , 333 , 334* , 336, 531 , 567* , 568*
Watson , als of Postgate, Ven Nicholas, M.; his grandmother, 185"; Dorothy, a servant, 574
Watten, Watton, Wattenum, 202 , 228,395
Watton, see Watten
Watts, John, als ofRichardson , 498* , 501, 506, 525* , 527
Watwood, John 249, 252, 309, 314 ; William 177 ; William (mistake for John) 252
Waynman, William, als Meneral , Menerell , 497,523
Wear-Gifford, Devon , 303"
Weaver, F. W., quoted304
Webb, als of Thrill, Threele, Henry and Maurice
Webbe, Dr. 339. 569; his nephew , 570 ; Edward 3, 27, 36, 43, 83, 84 ; Lawrence 8,14, 29, 54 , 73 , 78, 79 , 87 , 88, 199, 343 , 344 , 348, 349* , 350* , 351, 352 Thomas 9; William 27
Webster, John 67 ; John, als of Littleboys ; John , als Norris, 282; Ven William, 62 *n, 66, 69, 70, 86, 92, 94, 352
Wedacre in Lancs , 44
Weddington, see Waddington
Welcombe , Jane 428 , 462, 493
Weld, Humphrey489, 541
Welford,Northamptonshire, 207
Wellensis , see Wells
Well House, Hampstead - Norris, Berks., 511
Wells, Wellensis , 21* , 27 , 28, 32* , 33 , 46, 57 , 59, 61, 62 , 63, 64, 116,180* , 273, 276, 280
Welsh , 533, 546
Welton, Lincoln, 180n
Wendam , Nicholas 199
Wenge, seeWing Wensley , Yorks , 502n
West , James 42 , 47; Peter 102; Peter , als of Warnford ; William, als of Clitherow
Westby, Westbie (? vere
Webster), John , als Norris, 212,282, 284, 294 , 295 ; Thomas (senior) 212; Thomas, als Norris, 212
Westen, Dorset, 230
Westmerlandensis , see Westmorland
Westminster, Westmonasteriensis ,xiv, xxviii, 278, 305 , 308*
Westmonasteriensis , see Westminster
Westmorland , Westmerlandensis , 42 , 66* , 69, 74 , 79, 81 , 105 , 116 , 121 , 151 , 177, 211, 230, 264, 285 , 504 , 509; Earl of 575
West Ness , Stonegrave , Yorks , 469
Weston, Dr. xxi, 116 , 128 , 130* , 136, 137, 570 ; Edward 8 , 14 , 22, 39 , 199* , 336 , 365, 367* , 380 ; Roger 22* , 27, 35; William 27
Wetherby, Wetherbie, Peter, als
Travis, 130, 179, 189, 194 , 229*0 , 238, 406
Wetherhed , Thomas 56 , 63
Whaddon, Cambs , 441
Whale , see Whall
Whall[e], Whale, Augustine 517"; Augustine, O.S.B., 517"; Charles , O.S.B., 517 ; Charles, als Robinson , 518 ; Edward 517 ; Edward, als
Robinson , 273, 276, 301 , 315, 517 , 518, 523 , 528, 545 ; George, O.S.B., 517,518 : Margaret517 ; Philippa 517* , 518 ; Thomas 228, 229, 284 , 285, 294, 301, 517* ; William, als
Robinson , 229, 309, 518
Wharram, seeWarham
Wharton, Christopher 531 ; Eleanor , Lady 281 ; Frances, Lady, als
Clifford, 281"; George 519; Gregory 519, 524; Philip, Lord 2810; Stephen, als Rud, 504* , 509
Whatley, George, als ofBrown
Wheatley, als of Forge, Christopher Whenby, Yorks, 209
Whitaker, Humphrey, als Clayton, Francis , 493, 494 , 499; Leonard, als of Holliday, Daniel; Robert, als of Bradshaw
Whitaff, see Whitolf
Whitalf , see Whitolf
Whitall , see Whitolf and Whitewall
Whitbred, see Whitebread
Whitby, Whitbie, Edward, als of Shelly
Whitby, Yorks , 185ª
White, Albius (Vitus), Andrew57, 74; George 185 Jerome, als Blackloe, 223, 247, 268, 269, 276 ; John 198 , 421 ; Mark 186; Philip 540 ; Richard, als Johnson, 186, 233 , 238 , 239, 278, 279, 281 , 282, 283 , 419 ; Ven Richard 3 ; Thomas, als
Blackloe , 131 , 134, 138 , 139 , 142, 143, 144, 145 * , 148, 152, 176* , 182 , 188* , 195* , 199, 216, 217, 218 , 223, 225*, 238 , 239 , 243 , 247 , 368 , 369 , 370, 371, 400, 401 , 453 , 504, 506, 533-536 pass , 540, 542, 546, 547, 549 , 551 , 552, 556* ; William 3 , 36* , 111 ; als of Rigby, John ; als of Tattersall, Edward ; see Whyte
Whitebread, John, als Turner, Peter , 127 , 138, 148, 152, 186, 208, 229, 233 , 234 , 235, 406 ; senior , 138
Whitechurch, Dorset , 206
Whitewall, Whytehall, Whytall, Andrew, als Kniveton, 524* , 525 , 527 , 455, 495, 513; Anne 452, 527**; Charles, als Shirley, 527; John 452, 527*n
Whitford , Flint, 296
Whitgreeve , als ofColman, Walter
Whitley, Richard96
Whitmore , als of Postgate, Ven
Nicholas
Whitolf, Whitaff, Whitalf , Whitall, Hugh 10 , 74 , 84, 85, 104 * 324 ; Nicholas (meant for Hugh) 75*
Whittingham, Adam, afterwards Paul, 49, 53, 66, 74
Whittington , Salop, 502
Whittington ,Whytington, Lancs , 296
Whytall, see Whitewall
Whyte, Edward 97 ; Peter, als of Vavasour; see White
Whytehall, see Whitewall
Whytington, see Whittington
Wibild[us], Alexander , als ofWickliff
Wickliff ,Alexander, alsWibild , 42, 48, 340
Widdrington, Roger 128* , 129 * , 130* , 365 * 366 * , 367 *
Wigan, Wiggon, Lancs , 207
Wiggon, see Wigan
Wighill , Yorks , 271"
Wigorniensis , see Worcester
Wilcheriae, see Wiltshire
Wilcox, Ven Robert 530
Wild, Henry 116 , 121
Wildon, John 185"
Wilkinson , Dorothy 283 ; Henry, als
Benson, 282, 287, 310, 313, 315 ; Jane 306* ; Robert282
Willes, William Rufus , 518" ; John , als ofWilliams
Williams, Willyams, Wyllyams, Charles 521 Jane 306; John, als Willes, 4, 5, 15, 27, 28 , 31, 32* , 33 , 44 John 334; Lewis 100 , 101 , 102 * , 110, 356 Price 306 ; Ven Thomas , als Price, 306, 308 ; William 27 ; William , als Vincam ; George , John, and Philip, als of Thwaites; als of Mannock, Francis; als of Vaughan
Williamson, Edward 28* , 36 , 43, 94 , 95, 101, 106, 125 354, 458 , 570 , Francis, als of Chaloner ; John, als of Roscowe
Williscot, Edward, als Fitzherbert, 497
Willinot, Cecilia 441"; Martha 441 " ; William 441"
Willowby, Willowbeus , Elizabeth 265 John 265"; Francis , als of Lancaster
Wilmore, John , als ofAndrewe
Wilmot, William, als ofTempest
Wilson, Christopher249 , 251 ; Edward 28 John 70; John, als Tatlocke, 502 , 503 ; Matthias, als Knott, John, 9, 15 , 28* , 42 ; Mr., Priest, 104 , 105 , 569 ; Ven Thomas, als Sommers, 531 ; als of Benlocs, Bendlowes, William ; als of Watkinson , Ven. Robert
Wilton,near Guisborough ,Yorks , 185" Wiltoniensis, see Wiltshire
Wiltshire, Wilcheriae, Wiltoniensis, 2, 283, 303 , 313, 497, 57°
Winbush, als ofNorton, John
Winchcombe , Winchon, Winchton, William, als Smith, Anthony, 121 , 122 William, als Pen, 495, 496, 503
Winchester , Wintoniensis , Vintoniensis, xxviii, 3 , 4 , 9 , 36 , 37 , 45, 48, 50, 57, 59, 61 , 62, 64* , 66, 67, 69, 89, 96, 97, 98, 116* , 124, 179, 183 , 186, 233, 236, 237, 248, 279, 281 , 284 , 290, 298, 313 , 317 , 389 , 5oo ; Marquis of, 534,547
Winchon, see Winchcombe
Winchton, seeWinchcombe
Windall, Anne520
Winder, Alice 299 ; Peter 299 ; William 299
Wing, Wenge, Buckingham , 293* , 294
Winslade , Tristam 70, 343
Winslayde , Mr. 108'
Wintoniensis , see Winchester
Wisbech Castle, Cambs , xv, 127*
Wiseman , Elizabeth 510" ; Mary, nun, 396* Thomas 510ª
Witham , Wytham, Dr. xii, 521 ; George 540* ; Mr. 538, 551%; Robert539. 540, 552 ; 538
Withes, Edward, als Geneson, 82
Witolf, see Whitolf
Wivill, see Wyvill
Wodson, see Woodson
Wolfall , John507
Wolford , John97
Wolley, George I
Wolsey, Cardinal298"
Wolstonholm , Richard 44, 46, 47, 50, 34°
Wood, James, als of Hasselwood ; N- 207 , 212
Woodfen , Ven Nicholas 530
Woodlocke , Balthazar 302 , 311 ; James 302
Woodruff, Robert, als Worth , 49, 86, 337
Woodson, Wodson, Felix, als Rose, 64, 66* George, als Rose, 70; Leonard115 , 116
Woodward , John, als Thompson , 456 Lionel 63 ; Philip 74, 75 , 80, 81, 83, 85, 92, 346, 347, 348
Woodward, Woodworth, Thomas, als Kelly, 228, 233, 238, 239, 240, 406, 407
Woodwath , 104 -(? Woodward ), Philip
Woodworth, Thomas, see Woodward
Wookey, Somerset, 180
Wooley, Richard 341 ,60
Woolverton, Worcester , 283
Woosley (? Wolsley), Worsley, Edward, als Broughton, 149, 179 , 190 ; Thomas 149
Wooton-Wawen , Warwick, 512" Worcester , Worcestrensis , Wigorniensis, Vigorniensis , 2* , 27* , 28, 35, 38, 39 , 41, 43, 57, 102, 112 , 113* , 115 , 135 , 138 , 139, 147, 149, 176, 178* , 179 , 183, 184, 192, 193 , 233* , 239, 253* , 261, 262, 265, 283, 288, 498, 511 , 569 ; Archdeacon of, see Bayaert, Wm., als Hyde
Worcestrensis , see Worcester
Worsley,Anne276; Giles 276; John 507, 526, 539 ; als ofByflet
Worth, Robert, als ofWoodruff
Worthinal, Richard, als Phillips, 103 , 108 , 112 , 122 , 125* , 126, 364*
Worthington, James 43, 44 , 52* , 105* , 109* John , S.J., 57, 76, 79, 89,95,96, I22, I26,345,353 ; Peter , als of Bamber , William ; Richard 98, 185, 444 ; Thomas , Presidentof Douai , x, xvi* , xvii *
xviii*, xix* , xx, xxiv, 7 * , 8 * , 9* , 14* , 15, 17* , 18* , 20-27 pass., 30*-36* pass., 38, 40 , 41, 43, 44, 46* , 47* , 51* , 52, 54* , 58* , 59, 62* , 66, 70-110 pass , 126, 140, 145-240 pass,, 243, 254* , 320-339, 343 364 pass , 406, 474, 568 ; Andrew, als of Newsame, Newsan ; Thomas's servant, Francis 33 ; William 44* , 61 * , 83, 84, 91 , 95, 96* , 102 , 109, 114 , 136, 351, 353
Wotton, als of Jerningham , George, xxviii
Wrench, Ruince, Bernard, als Damford, Edward, 144 , 179, 189 , 206 , 208, 231, 233, 250, 259* , 260* , 270, 272 , 274 , 415
Wricht , see Wright
Wright, Wricht , Anne 307; Francis, als Tovey, 137, 141* , 179, 187** , 188 , 189 , 390 ; John, als Zouch , Souch, 189, 217 , 218* , 230 , 243 ; John, dean of Courtrai, xvi, 8* , 11 , 16 , 22 , 24, 30, 41, 79, 80 , 81 , 82 , 88, 320 , 322* , 323 * , 325 , 327, 328 * , 335* 346,347 . 555, 562 ; Ven Peter , S.J., 572 Richard43, 48 ; Thomas 2, 36, 51 *; 137
Wyard, Elizabeth 296 ; Nicholas 296 Peter, als Jones, 296, 301, 305
Wyke, seeWhyte
Wylde, Elizabeth 436*"; Frances 436 George436*
Wyles, Richard, als Green, 48, 58, 65 , 341*
Wyllis, Mr., Priest, 569
Wyllyams, see Williams
Wylson, see Wilson
Wyndems , 568
Wyon, Mark 428
Wytham, see Witham
Wythes,Edward76 ; see Withes
Wyton, Yorks , 575
Wyvill, Wivill, Anne 305" ; Christopher 153 , 271* ; Edward 271 ** ; Edward, als Roode or Rudde , 271 ** , 276 , 285 , 305 ; Frances 305" ; Francis , als Gascoigne, 506; Henry, als Roode or Rudde, 153, 203 , 237 , 243, 296, 301 ; Jane, Lady 271 * ; Marmaduke , Sir, Bart , 271"; Roger 305 ; William , als Beilby, Bilbie, 305, 311
Yardley, Thonias 68, 71
Yarnscomb , Yearnscomb , Devon , 308*
Yarum[ensis], [Yarm ], Yorks , 297
Yates, Dorothy 280** : John 280" ; John, als Booth , 2* , 318 ; Mary 280 Thomas , als Stevens, 280*0,
287, 421 ; Thomas (senior) 280* , 309 ; William 280"; five daughters , 280
Yaxley, Alice 293 ; Bridget 492"; Henry 222 , 223 ; John 286, 293 : John , als Richardson , 293 ; M222 ; Ralph, als Craythorne, 529 ; Richard293* , 492"; Ven Richard, 492* , 530 ; Thomas 540*; William 492"
Yaxley, Suffolk, 492
Yearnscomb , see Yarnscomb
Yeatman, Anne 520 ; Hugh, als of Speake ; John 520 ; Thomas, als Cantrell , 520
Yong, seeYoung
Yonger, James 198
York, Eboracum , Eboracensis, I10 pass., 16-22pass , 27 , 28* , 35, 36* , 37, 39 , 43* , 48, 50-70pass., 75-80 pass. , 84 , 89 , 90, 100-115 pass., 122 , 124 , 125, 131 , 133 , 141 , 144153 pass., 178-190 pass , 194 , 212, 217 , 228 , 230-238 pass., 253* , 255, 259,262* , 265,271,275 * , 281 *n 282, 284, 285 , 286, 287* , 288, 291 , 292, 300, 302, 309, 310, 312 , 316 , 318, 352, 433* . 444 , 445 , 455 ,456, 468, 475, 492, 494, 496* , 497, 501,
502, 504, 506, 507* , 508* , 511* , 512 , 538, 551, 575 ; Archdeacon of, see Middleton, George ; see Hodgson ?
Yorke,Yourke, Peter, alsWandesford , 310 ; Peter 307 ; Richard, als
Marston als Green ; Thomas 69, 70; William 307 ; als of Yowarte , John ; als ofMarston, Richard
Yorkshire, 569, 570, 573
Younge , Yong, John 212, 248 , 267 , 285, 287, 298, 301 , 302 , 303* , 310 , 421, 538, 552 ; Mr. , Priest, 569; Robert 30, 34, 39* , 336 ; Thomas , als Vavasour , 501 * , 502, 509 ; als of Goodlake , Goodlucke (Robert) ; als ofMannock(Henry)
Yourke, see Yorke
Yowarte, Yoward, als Yorke als
Smith, 100
Yprae, see Ypres
Ypres, Yprae, Iprensis, 18 ; Bishopof, see Bouchaert
Zannini, als of Belphante , Joseph
Zeeland, 261*
Zouch, Souch, als ofWright, John Zuffo, Joannes 466