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The English Conventicle
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
In the midst of the nervous excitement of the autumn of 1640 a Londoner called Roger Quatermayne, a puritan and, as we might say, barrackroom lawyer, was investigated by Archbishop Laud and other Privy Councillors for the offence of holding religious meetings in circumstances which were politically as well as ecclesiastically suspect, since it was thought that Quatermayne and his friends had made treasonable contact with the Scottish army, then at war with its king and in occupation of English soil. Quatermayne, charged with holding a conventicle, asked the archbishop to inform him ‘what a Conventicle is.’ Laud replied: ‘Why, this is a Conventicle, … when ten or twelve or more or lesse meet together to pray, reade, preach, expound, this is a conventicle.’ Laud’s definition may appear uncontroversial, particularly if to his ‘ten or twelve or more or less’ is added the formula of the 1664 Conventicle Act, ‘over and above those of the same Household’. But Quatermayne objected: ‘My Lord, I do not so understand it.’
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References
1 Quatermayne, Roger, Quatermayns conquest over Canterburies court (London 1641) pp. 28–31. See Tolmie, Murray, The Triumph of the Saints: the Separate Churches of London 1616-1649 (Cambridge 1977) pp. 30–1.Google Scholar
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13 The Records of a Church of Christ in Bristol, 1640-1687, ed Roger Hayden, Bristol Record Society’s Pubns 27 (Bristol 1974).
14 I have followed William Hawkins, A Treatise of the Pleas of the Crown (5 ed 1771), Sir Matthew Hale, Pleas of the Crown (1707) and Holdsworth, History of English Law with some guidance from Dr John Stevenson.
15 Lambarde, William, Eirenarcha: or of the office of the Iustice of Peace (London 1592) p. 197. Cf Lambarde, William, The duties of constables (London 1604) pp. 49–50, Dalton, Michael, The countrey Iustice (London 1619) p. 341.Google Scholar
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19 Compare the argument of ‘Magistracy and Ministry’ in my The Religion of Protestants: the Church in English Society 1559-1625; (Oxford 1982) pp. 141-88.
20 Bodleian Library Ms Tanner 65 no 35 fols 67-76; Winthrop quoted in D.G. Allen, In English Ways: the Movement and the Transformation of English Local Custom to Massachusetts Bay in the Seventeenth Century (Chapel Hill 1981) p. 181.
21 Holdsworth, History of English Law 8 p. 327.
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30 Bodleian Library MS Rawlinson D 1136 p. 145. I am grateful to Mr Anthony Fletcher for supplying the reference and to Dr Kenneth Fincham for securing a transcript of Sir Thomas Schlater’s ‘Doubts in the Act for Conventicles’.
31 ‘Sir Roger Bradshaigh’s Letter-Book’ (absit author) Transactions of the Historic Society for Lancashire and Cheshire 63 (1912) pp. 120-73; William C. Braithwaite, The Second Period of Quakerism (2nd ed Cambridge 1961) pp. 22-3.
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35 Collinson, Godly People pp. 486-7, 521 n98, 538-9.
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41 Thompson, Later Lollards pp. 5, 72, 81, 241.
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50 William Wilkinson, A confutation of certaine articles delivered unto the Family of Love (London 1579) Sigs iiii, Air.
51 Cameron, Reformation of the Heretics pp. 68-9.
52 Acts and Monuments of Foxe 6 (London 1838) p. 677.
53 BL MS Harleian MS 419 fols 117-22. Compare William Perkins’s list of ‘common opinions’ (old-fashioned and popish) which his late Elizabethan catechism was designed to replace with acceptable and godly opinions. (The foundation of Christian religion (London 1641), Preface ‘to all ignorant people’.)
54 I owe this point to Dr Susan Brigden.
55 See my ‘The Godly: Aspects of Popular Protestantism’ in Godly People pp. 1-17. The locus classicus for this type of religious culture is Sir Julius Caesar’s description of a ‘conventicle’ in the Essex parish of Aythorp Roding, BL MS Lansdowne 157 no 74 fol 186.
56 The Diary of Lady Margaret Hohy 1599-1605 ed Dorothy M. Meads (London 1930).
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58 The argument of Master Nicholas Fuller in the case of Thomas Lord and Maunsell, his clients (London 1607) p. 1.
59 Udall, Two sermons, Sig I iiiij.
60 See the narratives of Thomas Newcome, Adam Martindale and Oliver Heywood, cited elsewhere in this essay.
61 Quoted, Cragg, G.R., Puritanism in the Period of the Great Persecution, 1660-1688 (Cambridge 1957) p. 140.Google Scholar
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63 But see Oliver Heywood’s vignette of his brother-in-law Thomas Crampton, ‘a man of stupendious memory, that I have heard him repeat a sermon almost verbatim, memoriter …’ (Oliver Heywood 1 p. 36).
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67 In the title of his study of the Waldenses of the Alps, already cited.
68 The heart opened by Christ (London 1654) pp. 1-2. ‘Forms of Religion without Life do not profit’, We read in The invisible power of God known in weakness with a Christian testimony of the experience and sufferings of Edward Brush aged ninety-one years (London 1695) p. 6.
69 Diary of Henry Newcome pp. 14, 36, 41, 83; Oliver Heywood 1 p. 199. Cf. Humphrey Mills’s recollection of Richard Sibbes’s ‘sweet soul-melting Gospel-sermons.’ (Rogers, Obel p. 410).
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74 Records of a Church of Christ pp. 82, 85-6, 97.
75 Canterbury Cathedral Archives and Library MS X.9.1, fol 5. I owe this reference to Dr. R.J. Acheson.
76 Records of a Church of Christ pp. 88-9.
77 tBrowne, John, History of Congregationalism and the Memorials of the Churches in Norfolk and Suffolk (London 1877) pp. 393–5; Nuttall, G.F., Visible Saints: The Congregational Way 1640-1660 (Oxford 1957) pp. 27–9, 52. Katherine Chidley was the author of The iustification of the Independent Churches of Christ (London 1641)Google Scholar.
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81 See examples in Acts and Monuments of Foxe (London 1839) 8 p. 330, 499. It was not some Lollard hedge-priest but Bishop William Barlow who in November 1536 preached that ‘where so ever ii or iii simple persons as ii coblers or wevers were in company and elected in the name of God, that ther was the trewe Churches of God.’ (BL MS Cotton Cleopatra E.V fol 415).
82 Acts and Monuments of Foxe 8 pp. 118, 728.
83 References to Newcome, Martindale and Heywood earlier in this essay; add The Note Book of the Rev. Thomas Jolly … Extracts from the Church Book of Altham and Wymondhouses, ed Henry Fishwick, Chetham Society n.s. 33 (Manchester 1895) pp. 120-1.
84 Two Elizabethan Puritan Diaries by Richard Rogers and Samuel Ward ed M.M. Knappen (Chicago 1933); Heywood’s Life of Angier.
85 Autobiography of Newcome I p. 14.
86 The Diary of Ralph Josselin 1616-1683 ed Alan Macfarlane, Records of Social and Economic History 3 (Oxford 1976). See also Alan Macfarlane, The Famil Life of Ralph Josselin A Seventeenth-Century Clergyman: An Essay in Historical Anthropology (Cambridge 1970).
87 Diary of Josselin p. 1; Autobiography of Newcome p. 7. And cf. Heywood: ‘When I was a little child I delighted in imitating preachers and acting that part among my playfellows.’ (Oliver Heywood 1 p. 157).
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90 Richard Rogers, Seaven treatises (London 1605) fol 478’. Rogers insisted that their meetings were not conventicles ‘for the disturbance of the state of the Church and peace thereof.’
91 Heywood Oliver 1 p. 42. See my ‘The Role of Women in the English Reformation Illustrated by the Life and Friendships of Anne Locke’, in Godly People pp. 273–87 Google Scholar. I hope to write more extensively elsewhere on the implications of women’s ‘soul troubles’.
92 Life of Martindale pp. 61, 66-7.
93 Collinson, Patrick, ‘“A Magazine of Religious Patterns” An Erasmian Topic Transposed in English Protestantism’, in Godly People pp. 499–525.Google Scholar
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95 Clarke, Samue, The lives of sundry eminent persons in this latter age (London 1683) p. 170; Clarke, Samuel, A general martyrologie (London 1677) pp. 120, 126, 56–7; Clarke, Samuel, The Lives of two and twenty English divines (London 1660) p. 73.Google Scholar
96 Quoted, Stephen Foster, Notes from the Caroline Underground Studies in British History and Culture 6 (Hamden Conn. 1978) p. 27.
97 Certaine observations of that reverend religious and faithfull servant of God and glorious martyr of Jesus Christ, M. Randal Bate (Amsterdam 1624?) pp. 177, 183-9. For Bate, see Foster, Notes, p. 89 n37.
98 Quatermayne, Quatermayns conquest p. 18.
99 Jeremy Corderoy, Warning for worldlings (London 1608) Sig A 10.
100 Collinson, Religion of Protestants p. 277.
101 Corderoy, Jeremy, A short dialogue wherein is proved that no man can he saved without good works (Oxford 1604)Google Scholar, Epistle.
102 Darrell, Treatise of the Church pp. 28-9.
103 Or so I would argue. But strictly speaking, the Separatist platform was laid by Henry Barrow in the form of a quadrilateral, of which the second plank was ‘the profane and ungodlie people receved into and retayned in the bozom and bodie of ther churches.’ (Henry Barrow, ‘Foure Causes of Separation’, in The Writings of Henry Barrow 1587-1590 ed Leland H. Carlson, Elizabethan Nonconformist Texts 3 (London 1962) p. 54).
104 Bernard, , Christian advertisements p. 86; Bredwell, Stephen, The rasing of the foundation of Brownisme (London 1588) p. 20. See also Alison, Richard, Aplaine confutation of a treatise of Brownisme (London 1590): ‘In the visible Church of God there will be tares, yea untili the harvest: chaffe among the wheat, goates among the sheep, hypocrites among the true professors: nay to go further, Antichrist for a time sitting in the temple of God, and other monstrous men abiding in the Church, turning the grace of God into wantonnesse.’ (pp. 12–13)Google Scholar
105 Ainsworth, Henry, The communion of saints (Amsterdam 1607) p. 137.Google Scholar
106 Canterbury Cathedral Archives and Library MS X.II.16 fol 103v.
107 Thomas Hooker: Writings in England and Holland, 1626-1633 ed George H. Williams et al., Harvard Theological Studies 28 (Cambridge Mass. 1975) 110-11; Bernard, Christian advertisements p. 108; Lancelot Dawes, Two sermons preached at the Assise holden at Carlisle (Oxford 1614) pp. 33-5, 38; Richard Kilby, The burthen of a loaden conscience (Cambridge 1608) p. 95; William Crashawe, The sermon preached at the Crosse Feb. xiiij 1607 (1608).
108 Bredwell, The rasing of the foundations p. 39.
109 Wrightson, ‘The Puritan Reformation of Manners’ pp. 24-5.
110 Life of Martindale pp. 133, 79, 122.
111 Ibid. p. 129.
112 Note Book of Thomas Jolly pp. 120-1, 128, 133-4; Wrightson, ‘The Puritan Reformation of Manners’ p. 281.
113 Diary of Josselin pp. 31, 33, 77-9, 81.
114 Ibid. pp. 77, 230, 516, 83.
115 Ibid. pp. 102, 105, 124, 126, 132, 235, 137-8.
116 Ibid. pp. 197, 127, 140, 134-5, 204-5, 210.
117 Ibid. pp. 235, 238, 244, 313.
118 Ibid. pp. 376-7.
119 Wrightson, “The Puritan Reformation of Manners’ p. 273.
120 Diary of Josselin pp. 492, 505.
121 lbid. pp. 516, 546, 553, 574, 621.
122 Autobiography of Newcome ed Richard Parkinson, Chetham Society 27 (Manchester 1862) 2 p. 257.
123 Life of Martindale p. 173.
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