Persecuters. | Martyrs. | The Causes. |
MarginaliaMartyrs of Couentrie. Maistres Smyth, Rob. Hatchets. Archer, Haukins. Thomas Bond. Wrightham. Landsdale, Martyrs. Simon Mourton the bishops Somner. The Bishop of Couen- try. Frier Staf- ford Warden. | Maistres Smith wi- dow. Rob. Hat- chets a sho maker. Archer a shomaker. Hawkyns a shoomaker. Tho. Bond a shoomaker Wrigsham a Glouer. Landsdale an Hosier. At Couen- try. An. 1519. | THe Persecution in Coventry Foxe's first account of the Coventry martyrs , burned in Coventry in 1520 and 1522 appeared in the Rerum (pp. 116-17). In it, Foxe relates that the widow of a prominent man named Smith, was arrested with six other unnamed people outside the walls of Coventry. The woman was reprieved, but as she was escorted home, the man who led her by the arm discovered that she had a copy of the Lord's Prayer, in English, hidden in her sleeve. Because of this discovery, she was led back to be burned with the others. Foxe dated this episode to around 1490. Foxe's source for this story may well have been his wife, whose father was a citizen of Coventry. (Foxe stayed briefly in Coventry in the 1540s). [Back to Top]In the 1563 edition, Foxe redated the executions to a more plausible, although still slightly inaccurate, 1519. He also added the names of the mayor and sheriff at the beginning of the account, which - as Shannon McSheffrey has observed - suggests that he consulted a mayoral list or civic annals. However, Foxe also supplied the names of the martyrs and the warden of the Coventry Franciscans which, with the other details Foxe added, indicates that he had a local informant or informants. This may, or may not, have included the Mrs. Hall, cited in the 1570 edition. He specifically cites Mrs. Hall in this edition in order to rebut Harpsfield's scepticism that the martyrs were executed for reading prayers and Scripture in English. [Back to Top]In 1566, Nicholas Harpsfield attacked Foxe's version of this story, claiming that it was preposterous to assert, as Foxe had done, that these people were burned merely for reading and owning the Scriptures and the Lord's Prayer in English (Dialogi sex, pp. 827-8 and 833). Foxe responded by asserting in the 1570 edition that these were indeed the very 'crimes' for which these people were burned. Foxe also stated that there witnesses to this story and cited one of them: Mrs Hall of Baginton. Nevertheless Harpsfield had a point. Foxe dropped the account, given in the 1563 edition, of Robert Hatchet declaring to Bishop Blyth, that all that he and his defendants wanted was the Lord's prayer and other essentials of the Christian faith in English. Apart from terse narratives in civic annals, Foxe's account is the only source for these executions. The annalists do report that the seven were burned for hearing and saying prayers in English, but they also report that Robert Silkby was burned for believing that Christ was not really present in the Eucharist. (See Lollards of Coventry, 1486-1522, ed. and trans. Shannon McSheffrey and Norman Tanner, Camden Society, Fifth series 23 [2003], pp. 54-55 and 315-18. This book is indispensable for an understanding of this episode). It is quite likely that the seven who were executed (many of whom, as Foxe notes, had already done penance for heresy) held further unorthodox beliefs. [Back to Top]Thomas S. Freeman pall cause of the ap prehension of these per sons, was for teaching their children and familie, the lordes pray- er, and x. commaunde ments in English Foxe added a new beginning to this story, to flatly contradict Nicholas Harpsfield's scepticism that these people were executed for no other reason than reading and reciting prayers in the vernacular. which they were vpō Ashwedensday, taken and put in prisō, some in places vnder the ground, some in cham bers and other places about till Friday fol- owyng. Then they were sent to a mona sterye called Macke- stocke abbey 6. myles from Couentry. Du- ring which tyme, their children were sent for to the Grayfriers in Couen- try, before the Warden of the said fri- ers, called frier Staf- ford John Stafford was the warden of the Franciscan friary in Coventry until 1538. (See Lollards of Coventry, 1486-1522, ed. and trans. Shannon McSheffrey and Norman Tanner, Camden Society, Fifth series, 23 [2003], p. 347). minyng them of theyr belief, and what here sie their fathers had taught them, charged them vppon payne of suffering such death as MarginaliaThe Lords prayer in Englishe forbidden of the papistes. their fathers should in no wise to meddle any more with the lordes prayer, the Crede, and commaundements in English. &c. |
Which done, vpon Palmesonday, the fathers of these children were brought backe again to Couetry, and there, the weeke next before Easter, were condemned for relapse (because most of them had borne fagots in the same Citie before) to be burned.
In 1563 (p. 420), Foxe goes on to relate that Robert Hatchet declared to Bishop Blyth that he only wished to read the Lord's prayer in English. Foxe may have dropped the passage because he believed that the remark was invented or possibly he dropped it because he thought that the mention of Blyth was inaccurate; there is no other indication that the bishop presided at the 1520 trials.
[Back to Top]Persecuters. | Martyrs. | The causes. |
Only Maistres Smith was dimissed for that present, & sent away. And because it was in the euenyng being soōewhat darke, as she should go home, the foresayd Simon Mourton the Somner offered him selfe to go home with her. Now as he was leadyng her by the arme, and heard the rattelyng of a scrole within her sleue: yea (sayeth he) What haue ye here? And so tooke it from her, and espyed that it was the Lordes prayer, the Articles of the faith, & x. Commaundemētes in Englishe. Which when the wretched Somner vnderstode, ah serrha (said he) come, as good now as an other tyme, and so brought her backe agayne to the Byshop, where she was immediatlyMarginaliaMaistres Smith condemned for hauing the Lordes prayer in Englishe. condemned, and so burned with the vi. men before named, the fourth of Aprill, in a place therby called the little parke. an. 1519
I.e., 1520. Foxe was misled by the fact that the Coventry annals dated events by mayoral years which commenced in Easter.
Marginalia1521. Rob Silkeb Martyr. | Robert Sil- keb. At Couen try. an. 1521. | IN the same number of these Couentrye men aboue rehearsed, was also Robert Sil keb, who at the appre- hension of these, as is aboue recited, fled a- way, and for that time escaped In 1563 (p. 420), Foxe stated that Silkeb fled to Kent; this was omitted in subsequent editions. yeares after, hee was takē again, & brought to þe sayd Citie of Co- uentrie, where he was also burned the morow after he came thether, which was about the xiij. day of Ianuary. an. 1521 13 January 1522 in modern reckoning. immediatly þe Shriffes went to their houses, & toke all their goods & cattel to theirowne vse, not leauing theyr wiues & children any parcel therof to helpe |
them selues with all. And for so much as the people began to grudge somewhat, at the crueltie shewed, and at the vniust death of these innocent Martyrs, the Byshop, with his officers and priestes, caused it to bee noysed abroade, their tenauntes, seruauntes, and fermers, that they were not burned for hauing the Lordes prayer and Commaundementes in Englishe, but because they dyd eate fleshe on Fridayes and other fastyng dayes: Which neither could bee proued, either before theyr death, or after, nor yet was any such matter greatly obiected to MarginaliaTestimonie of this story.
Note how these Martyrs holding wyth the popishe sacraments, yet were burned of the Papistes, onely for a few Scriptures in Englishe. them in their examinations. The witnesses of this historie bee yet alyue, whiche both saw them and knew them. Of whom one is by name mother Halle
Foxe mentions that witnesses to what happened are alive, and he specifically cites Mrs. Hall, in order to rebut Harpsfield's scepticism that the martyrs were executed for reading prayers and Scripture in English.
Marginalia1527. The story of M. Patricke Hamelton, in Scotland. Iames Be- ton, Archb. of S. An drew M. Hew Spēs, deane of diuinitie in the vni- uersitie of S. Andrew M. Iohn Weddell Rector of the Vniuer- sitie. | Patricke Hamelton | P Atricke Hamelton a Scotish mā borne Patrick Hamilton The account of Patrick Hamilton is the first of two extended sections in the Acts and Monuments tackling Scottish affairs. Foxe's willingness to extend his scope to Scotland was partly a routine matter of Protestant internationalism, reflecting the cosmic scale of his enterprise. More importantly, it reflected a 'British' idealism common amongst English and Scottish Protestants in the second half of the sixteenth century, an idealism first forged in the shared Anglo-Scottish exile of the 1550s. The first edition of the Acts and Monuments proclaimed on its title page its focus on 'this Realme of England and Scotlande': strictly speaking, a meaningless statement before the union of the crowns in 1603, but an eloquent testimony to the aspiration to see a common British Protestant culture. (See Jane Dawson, 'Anglo-Scottish Protestant culture and integration in sixteenth-century Britain' in Steven G. Ellis and Sarah Barber (eds), Conquest and Union: fashioning a British state, 1485-1725 (New York, 1995).) Subsequent editions also retained Scotland on the title page, despite the relative paucity of Scottish material in the book. [Back to Top]For the problem - as Scotland's own martyrologist, Foxe's friend John Knox, acknowledged ruefully - was that Scotland had produced relatively few martyrs. There was a single medieval burning (that of Paul Craw, mentioned in Foxe: 1563, p. 360, and subsequent editions), and twenty-one further executions during the period 1528-58 (see Alec Ryrie, The Origins of the Scottish Reformation, p. 42). However, two at least of these were of internationally prominent figures, including the first Scottish martyr of the Reformation era, Patrick Hamilton. Hamilton's commonplaces on justification, which John Frith published as Patrick's Places, won him posthumous renown in England as well as in Scotland. The case also had a major impact in Scotland, and there are numerous independent accounts of his death. Foxe's account in 1570 and subsequent editions, however, is amongst the most detailed. On Hamilton, see Ryrie, Origins, pp. 31-3; ODNB; and Gotthelf Wiedermann, 'Martin Luther versus John Fisher: some ideas concerning the debate on Lutheran theology at the University of St. Andrews, 1525-30', in Records of the Scottish Church History Society vol. 22 (1984), 13-34 [Back to Top]As with all his Scottish material, Foxe's account of Hamilton appeared in two distinct forms. In 1563 there was a short and imprecise account padded out with moralising but short on detail. This followed closely the account which he had earlier written in the 1559 Rerum in ecclesia gestarum, itself based on the account in John Bale's Scriptorum illustrium maioris Brytanniae ... Catalogus, vol. 2 (Basle, 1559), apparently derived principally from Francis Lambert's memorial of Hamilton. The account was almost completely rewritten, and greatly extended, in 1570, and remained unaltered in the two subsequent editions. This new material is detailed, circumstancial and strikingly accurate. It includes text which purports to be taken from the 'registers', presumably those of the archbishop of St. Andrews (which do not survive), as well as a letter from the university of Louvain to Archbishop Beaton. Foxe never went to Scotland in person, and he does not reveal the identity of his informant(s), beyond stating that this material was gathered in 1564. Thomas S. Freeman has argued persuasively that all of this material was provided to Foxe by John Winram, the superintendent of Fife who had (before his late but sincere conversion to Protestantism) been subprior of St. Andrews. See Thomas S. Freeman, '"The reik of Maister Patrik Hammyltoun": John Foxe, John Winram and the martyrs of the Scottish Reformation', in The Sixteenth Century Journal vol. 27 (1996), 43-60.Alec Ryrie [Back to Top]of an high and noble stock, & of the kynges bloud Hamilton was the illegitimate son of Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow; his mother was a granddaughter of King James II. He was legitimized in 1513, at the age of about nine years. shing age, & excellēt towardnes, of 23. yeares called abbot of Ferme, first commyng out of his country with thre companions, to seeke godly learnyng, wēt to þe vniuersitie of Mar- purge in Germanye, which vniuersity was then newly erected by Philipp Lantgraue of Hesse: whereMarginaliaOf thys Philip Lātgraue of Hesse, read before, pag. 866. he vsing conferēce & familiari- tie with learned men, namely wt Franciscus |