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The second volume in what will be a complete biographical record of
all parish priests in Lincolnshire. The parish churches of
Lincolnshire are justly celebrated. The spires of Grantham and
Louth, and the famous Boston Stump, provide a focal point from the
surrounding landscape of fen, wold and marsh. The charms of remote
country churches along the byways of the county have been extolled
in prose and verse by writers such as Henry Thorold and Sir John
Betjeman. Their architecture, their stained glass and sculpture,
furniture and fabric, have all been carefully recorded. Yet little
is known of the people who served these churches, the rectors and
vicars who, in word and sacrament, taught the Christian faith to
successive generations of parishioners. This volume forms the
second part of a much-needed survey of Lincolnshire parish clergy.
It covers the deaneries of Beltisloe, comprising twenty-one
parishes clustered around Colsterworth and Corby, and of
Bolingbroke, with twenty-five parishes centred on Spilsby. Starting
from 1214, when Bishop Hugh of Wells introduced the earliest system
of episcopal registration in Western Europe, the parish lists set
out the succession of rectors or vicars for each church. Brief
biographical sketches demonstrate the rich variety of the county's
parsons - pastors, scholars, athletes, travellers and writers,
soldiers and schoolmasters. This register gives to each of them his
place in the history of Lincolnshire. DrNicholas Bennett is
Visiting Senior Fellow of the University of Lincoln.
The growth and development of the Lincoln Record Society in its
first hundred years highlights the contribution of such
organisations to historical life. In 2010 the Lincoln Record
Society celebrates its centenary with the publication of the
hundredth volume in its distinguished series. Local record
societies, financed almost entirely from the subscriptions of their
members, have made an important contribution to the study of
English history by making accessible in printed form some of the
key archival materials relating to their areas. The story of the
Lincoln society illustrates the struggles and triumphsof such an
enterprise. Founded by Charles Wilmer Foster, a local clergyman of
remarkable enthusiasm, the LRS set new standards of meticulous
scholarship in the editing of its volumes. Its growing reputation
is traced here througha rich archive of correspondence with eminent
historians, among them Alexander Hamilton Thompson and Frank
Stenton. The difficulties with which Kathleen Major, Canon Foster's
successor, contended to keep the Society alive duringthe dark days
of the Second World War are vividly described. The range of volumes
published has continued to expand, from the staple cartularies and
episcopal registers to more unusual sources, Quaker minutes,
records ofCourts of Sewers and seventeenth-century port books.
While many of the best-known publications have dealt with the
medieval period, notably the magnificent Registrum Antiquissimum of
Lincoln Cathedral, there have also beeneditions of
eighteenth-century correspondence, twentieth-century diaries, and
pioneering railway photographs of the late Victorian era. This
story shows the Lincoln Record Society to be in good heart and
ready to begin its secondcentury with confidence. Nicholas Bennett
is currently Vice-Chancellor and Librarian of Lincoln Cathedral.
The key theme of the Hall Book remains Borough Governance. The
town's charters and rights were confirmed and extended in 1664 by
the Charter of Charles II. The key theme of the Hall Book remains
Borough Governance. The town's charters and rights were confirmed
and extended in 1664 by the Charter of Charles II. James II's
Charter of 1685 led to the Alderman becoming Mayor, the First
Twelve becoming Aldermen and the Second Twelve becoming
Councillors. James also sought to extend his powers with more
rights to interfere, as with other cities and boroughs across the
country. The Quo Warranto issued in April 1688 and the removal of
six Aldermen resulted in an un-sought for Charter later in 1688 but
this may not have even been physically received in Grantham as the
events of the Glorious Revolution intervened and governance was
restored under the terms of the 1631 Charter of Charles I. The
borough of Grantham was then governed in these terms until the
Municipal Corporations Act of 1835. Subsidiary themes include the
precautions against plague in 1665; the issue and recall of the
town's half-pennies in 1667-1674; references to non-conformity in
1668-69 and the lives of some of the Corporation members.
The first volume in what will be a complete biographical record of
all parish priests in Lincolnshire. The parish churches of
Lincolnshire are justly celebrated. The spires of Grantham and
Louth, and the famous Boston Stump, provide a focal point from the
surrounding landscape of fen, wold and marsh. The charms of remote
country churches along the byways of the county have been extolled
in prose and verse by writers such as Henry Thorold and Sir John
Betjeman. Their architecture, their stained glass and sculpture,
furniture and fabric, have all been carefully recorded. Yet little
is known of the people who served these churches, the rectors and
vicars who, in word and sacrament, taught the Christian faith to
successive generations of parishioners. This volume forms the first
part of a much-needed survey of Lincolnshire parish clergy. The
starting point is 1214, when Bishop Hugh of Wells introduced the
earliest system of episcopal registration in Western Europe. The
magnificent series of Lincoln bishop'sregisters provides a
framework for the parish lists, setting out the succession of
rectors or vicars for each church. Brief biographical sketches
demonstrate the rich variety of the county's parsons - pastors,
scholars, travellers and writers, soldiers and schoolmasters; while
some, like John Wycliffe, achieved a wider fame. This biographical
register gives to each of them their place in the history of
Lincolnshire. Dr Nicholas Bennett is General Editor of the Lincoln
Record Society. Prior to retirement, he was Vice-Chancellor and
Librarian of Lincoln Cathedral, where he was responsible for the
historic collections of books and manuscripts.
Burghersh revealed as conscientious diocesan; new light on his
involvement in invasion of Isabella and Mortimer in 1326. Henry
Burghersh, bishop of Lincoln from 1320 until 1340, has not been
treated kindly by historians. The largely hostile view expressed by
early fourteenth-century chroniclers gives us a portrait of a man
promoted to the office ofbishop solely as a result of family
influence and royal intervention, but who subsequently betrayed the
monarch who had favoured him, lending support to the rebellion of
Thomas of Lancaster in 1322 and plotting with Queen Isabellato
overthrow her husband. This edition of Burghersh's episcopal
register reveals a different character. The bishop emerges as a
conscientious diocesan and an administrator of considerable
ability, while the evidence of his itinerary throws new light on
the question of his involvement in the invasion of Isabella and
Mortimer in 1326. The volume includes the first part of Burghersh's
institution register, comprising admissions of clergy to parochial
benefices, appointments of heads of religious houses, and
ordinations of vicarages and chantries in the archdeaconries
Northampton, Oxford, Bedford, Buckingham and Huntingdon. Dr
NICHOLAS BENNETT is Vice-Chancellor and Librarian of Lincoln
Cathedral.
Burghersh revealed as conscientious diocesan; new light on his
involvement in invasion of Isabella and Mortimer in 1326. Henry
Burghersh, bishop of Lincoln from 1320 until 1340, has not been
treated kindly by historians. The largely hostile view expressed by
early fourteenth-century chroniclers gives us a portrait of a man
promoted to the office ofbishop solely as a result of family
influence and royal intervention, but who subsequently betrayed the
monarch who had favoured him, lending support to the rebellion of
Thomas of Lancaster in 1322 and plotting with Queen Isabellato
overthrow her husband. This edition of Burghersh's episcopal
register reveals a different character. The bishop emerges as a
conscientious diocesan and an administrator of considerable
ability, while the evidence of his itinerary throws new light on
the question of his involvement in the invasion of Isabella and
Mortimer in 1326. The volume includes the first part of Burghersh's
institution register, comprising admissions of clergy to parochial
benefices, appointments of heads of religious houses, and
ordinations of vicarages and chantrys, in the archdeaconries of
Lincoln, Stow and Leicester. Dr NICHOLAS BENNETT is Vice-Chancellor
and Librarian of Lincoln Cathedral.
Diaries and account books provide rich evidence for daily life at
the time - and the early years of Matthew Flinders, credited with
naming Australia. This volume presents [and completes] the edition
of the diary and account books of Matthew Flinders, surgeon and
apothecary of Donington in south Lincolnshire. His son, also
Matthew, who later won renown as the first circumnavigator of
Australia, appears here as a schoolboy, choosing not to follow his
father as an apothecary but pursuing instead a career at sea. The
diary records the social life of Donington - magical deceptions at
the Bull and the visit of a theatre company - and the joys and
sorrows of family life. Flinders's success in business led to
investments in land and government securities, yet his fear of
poverty was never far away and his wish to sell up and retire was
never realised. The war with France is a recurring theme, both in
the ever-increasing taxes imposed to pay for it, and in the local
patriotism evoked by Nelson's victory at the Nile, and that of the
'Glorious First of June' in which the young Matthew took part.
Other national events shown to impinge on country life and
mentioned in the diary include the king's recovery from madness in
1789 [celebrated by the illumination of the whole town]. Overall,
it affords a rare glimpse into everyday life at the time.
Diaries and account books provide rich evidence for daily life at
the time - and the early years of Matthew Flinders, credited with
naming Australia. Matthew Flinders, surgeon and apothecary of
Donington, in south Lincolnshire, in the late eighteenth century,
was the father of the Matthew Flinders, sailor, navigator and
explorer, and one of the central figures in the early history of
the Australian nation. His diaries, published here in full for the
first time, reveal a wealth of detail about the home, the family
and the village in which the future explorer grew up. The daily
routine of business, socialising with neighbours, unusual events
such as the beaching of a whale near Boston, or the visit to
Donington of Mr Powell the famous fire-eater are recorded alongside
family joys and sorrows, the births and deaths of children,
thepassing of Flinders's beloved wife Susanna and his subsequent
remarriage. The childhood and schooling of Matthew junior are a
recurring theme, and the purchase of a two volume edition of
Robinson Crusoe in 1782 gives a hint of things to come, though as
the diaries reveal, his later career was a radical diversion from
the original plan for him to follow in his father's path.
Newly-edited documents, showing the activity and ability of one of
the foremost clergymen at the time. The abilities of Henry
Burghersh as an administrator were recognised in his tenure of some
of the highest offices in the government of King Edward III:
Treasurer, Chancellor, and subsequently a diplomatic envoy
overseas. The register of his memoranda as bishop of Lincoln from
1320 to 1340 reveals the exercise of his talent in an
ecclesiastical sphere. The huge quantity of business relating to
the clergy and people of the most populous diocese in the country
prompted the division of the register into classified sections, of
which the first five are included here. There are dispensations
under the papal constitution Cum ex eo, permitting rectors of
parishes to be absent from their duties while studying at a
university. There are licences allowing incumbents to be
non-resident for other reasons: to go on pilgrimage, to seek
recreation, or to serve in the household of a great lord. There are
commissionsdealing with testamentary business, to grant probate,
audit the accounts of executors, or protect the interests of
minors. Among these are six copies of wills, the earliest to be
preserved in the Lincoln registers, providing a wealth of
incidental detail of medieval life. There is a lengthy series of
letters dimissory, permitting clerks from the diocese to be
ordained by bishops elsewhere. A short section interpolated into
this deals with the issue of licences granted to those permitted to
hear confessions, an issue that aroused not a little ill-feeling
between the friars and the secular clergy. The documents here are
presented with elucidatory notes and other material. Dr Nicholas
Bennett is Vice-Chancellor and Librarian of Lincoln Cathedral.
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This
IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced
typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have
occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor
pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original
artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe
this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections,
have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing
commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We
appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the
preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
This is the story of one man's forty year odyssey working to help
reduce third world world poverty, and give hope to some of the most
morginalised and exploited people in the world. Throughout his long
career Nicholas Bennett worked in some of the most remote and
difficult places in the world, faced frequent coups and
revolutions, whilst at the same time raising his family.
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