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Godly Globalisation: Calvinism in Bermuda

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2015

POLLY HA*
Affiliation:
University of East Anglia E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

This article explores the reception of the European Protestant Reformation in the British Atlantic using the early Bermudan Church as a case study. It offers an alternative model for Puritan colonisation which was driven by a reformed vision for godly globalisation and evangelisation rather than flight from persecution in England. By shedding light on ecclesiastical ties between the reformed Churches on the continent and the British Atlantic, it extends the ideological foundations for the establishment of British America beyond the theories of empire and economic opportunism usually addressed by historians.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

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References

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25 ‘There is one Mr Alday a printer of my acquaintance that (as I thinke) wilbe glad of it. He dwelleth in a garden house by the brick wales as you goe from Christ Church to Smithfield. Mr Abot of Coulmanstreete who is Bishop of Canterburie his brother and one of the Adventurers, it may be if you speak unto him will get it licenced’: ibid. 106. Along with a copy of the text, Hughes sent detailed instructions to Nathaniel Rich in 1617/18 on procuring a printer, including name and address and also a potential licenser.

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46 In a later treatise, he wrote of one ‘Sir Richard Reinolds Warriner, had his head cloven, his skull rent into three pieces … his braines fell intire and whole into the next seat behind him … his body was left in the seat as though it had been alive, sitting asleepe, leaning upon his elbow, his elbow resting on the deske before, with the fore-part of his head and face whole, as some say’: Hughes, The covenant of grace, 33.

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48 Ibid. 222.

49 Ha, English Presbyterianism, 176.

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51 Ibid. 225.

52 Ibid. 221.

53 Ibid. 220.

54 Ibid. 320.

55 For a comparative discussion of disciplinary cases in reformed Churches see Benedict, Christs churches purely reformed, ch. xiv. Despite the infrequency of sexual sins in Bermuda, they were strictly disciplined. For instance, one Martin Wetherall, yeoman at St Georges, confessed to adultery in October 1616 and received ‘threescore lashes with a whippe upon the naked backe at a Post upon two severall dayes in viewes of the congregation’, and the woman ‘forty lashes in the same manner and upon the same dayes’ for her consent and fornication: Lefroy, Memorials, 125, 320.

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