Records Volume 74: English and Welsh Jesuits 1555-1650

Page 1

CATHOLIC RECORD SOCIETY PUBLICATIONS (RECORDS SERIES) VOLUME 74


Editorial Committee: A. F. Allison D. M. Rogers V. A. McClelland Michael Hodgetts


ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650 PART 1: A-F

By

Thomas M. McCoog, S.J.

CATHOLIC RECORD SOCIETY 1994


Š The Catholic Record Society

ISBN 0 902832 15 8

Printed in Great Britain by Hobbs the Printers of Southampton


v

CONTENTS

Page Preface Abbreviations

3

llistorical Introduction Pre-Elizabethan England Elizabethan England Early Stuart England

5 8 13

List of Manuscripts Cpnsulted

35

List of Manuscripts Contained in the Monumenta Angliae

68

Bibliography

80

English Jesuit Rectors and Superiors

91

Biographical Summaries

97


PREFACE

In writing my doctoral thesis at the University of Warwick I frequently consulted the extant catalogues of the English province. They contained a wealth of information that had not been sufficiently incorporated into recusant historiography. As I prepared to return to the United States in 1984, I suggested to Mr. Antony Allison that publication of the catalogues would be an important contribution to recusant studies. The CRS approved and, working with microfilm, I began to transcribe the catalogues in 1985. As the work progressed, I wondered whose permission was needed to publish material from the Jesuit archives in Rome. I wrote to Father Charles ~ . O'Neill, SJ., of the Jesuit Historical Institute. He reminded me that publication of such material was the purpose of the Monumenta series. In the ensuing correspondence, it was decided that the Jesuit Historical Institute would initiate a new sub-series of the Monumenta, the Monumenta Angliae, with the English catalogues and that this volume would be co-sponsored by the CRS. In 1988, on a trip to Rome to consult the original documents in the Jesuit archives, I stayed at the Historical Institute. In discussions with Father Ladislaus Lukacs, SJ., whose editions of Austrian catalogues served as a model and whose editorial advice was often sought, he suggested that it would be even more beneficial for historians if I included all English and Welsh who had entered the Society. We know very little about the men who entered the Society before the initiation of the English mission in 1580. Many are simply names; others became important figures in provinces as disparate as India and Lithuania. This suggestion demanded that I consult all the extant catalogues and thus more than doubled my work. Once the focus was expanded to include all extant catalogues, the size of the Monumenta volume increased considerably and was eventually published as two volumes in 1992. Its terminus ad quem was 1640, thus treating the first centennial of the Society's history. This terminus ad quem posed a problem for the CRS. An earlier volume in the same series, that of Father Geoffrey Holt, SJ., treated the English Jesuits after 1650. Thus, if I stopped at 1640, there would be a gap of ten years. On the other hand the inclusion of ten more years would probably have necessitated a third volume. Subsequent discussions resolved the problem: the volumes published by the Historical Institute and those published by the CRS would be separate and independent. The Monumenta volumes would contain the catalogues for the original


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1555-1650

period, i.e. until 1640; the volumes for the CRS would contain the biographical summaries, with the essential data and full bibliography, and the historical introduction, both of which would be extended until 1650. The CRS also contains new information discovered in the archives after the Monumenta volumes had gone to press, and corrections of various mistakes made in those volumes. A final word of appreciation should be given to Brother Henry Foley whose Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus have been the foundation for historical investigations of the province for more than a century. A comparison of this edition with Foley will reveal many errors and omissions in the latter. Nonetheless, armed only with scissors, paste, pen and paper, Foley produced a monumental work, more accurate than I had originally thought. I, despite all the advantages of modern technology, stand in awe of his achievement. Throughout the preparation of these volumes, I enjoyed the support and encouragement of three distinct communities: the Jesuit community at Farm Street in London, who prevented my interest in the English Jesuits from becoming too antiquarian; the Jesuit Historical Institute in Rome, whose members always provided much needed linguistic and historical knowledge; and the Jesuits and the Department of History at Loyola College, Baltimore. I especially wish to thank Father William Davish, SJ. whose enthusiasm and encouragement was always appreciated, the kindly tolerant women of the Word-Processing Center, Marian Wielgosz, Melia Peisinger, and Carla Bundick, as well as Dr. Jack Breihan, Dr. Chuck Cheape, and Dr. David Roswell, at Loyola College; Fathers Holt and Francis Edwards, SJ. of Farm Street; Fathers Michael O'Halloran, SJ. and Frederick 1. Turner, SJ. of Stonyhurst College; Mr. Allison and Mr. Philip Harris, and Mr. Michael Hodgetts of the Catholic Record Society; Fathers O'Neill and Lukacs of the Jesuit Historical Institute; Fathers Wiktor Gramatowski, SJ., and Jozef De Cock, SJ. , of the Jesuit Archives, Rome; Father Thomas H. Clancy, SJ., and finally Father James A. P. Byrne, SJ., of Georgetown Preparatory School (Washington, D. C.).


3

ABBREVIATIONS AASI. AHSl.

AR.

AR Foreign.

ARSI. b. c. Cat. Provo Austr. cf. Clancy.

Cons. cons. CRS . CSP. d.

DDS. dis. Doc. Ind.

Douay Diaries. e. Epp.Ign. H~jer.

Gc. Holt.

Inst. S.I. Lainez.

Liber Ruber.

Archivum Angliae Societatis Iesu. Archivum Historicum Societatis Iesu. Allison, A. F. & Rogers, D. M. A Catalogue of Catholic Books in English Printed Abroad or Secretly in England 1558-1640. Bognor, 1956. 1 Allison, A. F. & Rogers, D. M. The Contemporary Printed Literature of the English Counter-Reformation between 1558 and 1640. Volume 1: Works in Languages other than English. London, 1989. Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu. born. circa. Lukacs, Ladislaus, SJ. (ed). Catalogi Personarum et Officiorum Provinciae Austriae S.1. 2 vols. Rome, 1978, 1982. MHSI 117, 125. confer etc. Clancy, Thomas H. SJ. English Catholic Books 1641-1700: A Bibliography. Chicago, 1974. Ganss, George E., SJ. The Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, translated with an introduction and commentary. St. Louis, 1970. consecrated. Catholic Record Society. Calendar State Papers. died. Fejer, Josephus, SJ. Defuncti Secundi Saeculi Societatis Jesu. 4 vols. Roma, 1985-1990. dismissed. Wicki, Joseph, SJ. (ed.) Documenta Indica. 18 vols. Roma, 1948-1988. MHSI70, 72, 74, 78,83,86,89,9 1,98, 103, 105, 113, 118, 123, 127, 132, 133. Knox, Thomas Francis (ed. ). The First and Second Diaries of the English College, Douay. London, 1878. entered. Monumenta Ignatiana. Sancti Ignatii de Loyola epistolae et instructiones. 12 vols. Madrid, 1903-191l. MHSI 22, 26,28,29,31,33,34,36,37,39,40,42. Fejer, Josephus, SJ. Defuncti Primi Saeculi Societatis Jesu. 2 vols. Roma, 1982. General Congregation. Holt, Geoffrey, SJ. The English Jesuits 1650-1829: A Biographical Dictionary. London, 1984. CRS 70. Institutum Societatis Iesu. 3 vols. Florence, 1892-1893. Lainii Monumenta. Epistolae et acta Patris Jacobi Lainii secundi praepositi generalis Societatis Iesu. 8 vols. Madrid, 1912-1917. MHSI 44,45, 47, 49, 50, 51, 53, 55. Kelly, Wilfrid (ed.). Liber Ruber Venerabilis Collegii Anglorum de Urbe. 2 vols. London, 1940, 1943. CRS 37,40.


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ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

MHSl. MHSI Cons. More, Elizabethan Jesuits . Nadal . NFB. NGB. o. p.

PoL. CompL. Polgar. PRO Responsa. Ribadeneira.

Sc. Seminary Priests. SP. Storni. Third Douay Diary v.

Valladolid.

1555-1650

Monumenta Historica Societatis Iesu. Monumenta Ignatiana. Constitutiones Societatis Iesu . 3 vols. Roma, 1934-1938. MHSI 63, 64, 65. Edwards, Francis, SJ. (ed.) The Elizabethan Jesuits: Historia Missionis Anglicanae Societatis Jesu (1660) of Henry More. London, 1981. Epistolae et Monumenta P Hieronymi Nadal. 5 vols. Madrid-Roma, 1898- 1962. MHSI 13, 15,21,27,90. Poncelet, Alred, SJ. Necrologe des Jesuites de La province Flandro-Belge. Wetteren, 1931. Poncelet, Alred, SJ. Necrologe des Jesuites de la province Gallo-BeIge. Louvain, 1908. ordained. professed (final vows). Epistolae et Commentaria P Joannis Alphonsi de Polanco e Societate Iesu. 2 vols. Madrid, 1916-1917. MHSI 52, 54. Polgar, Laszl6, SJ. Bibliographie sur l'Histoire de la Compagnie de Jesus. 3 vols. in 6. Roma, 1981-1990. Public Record Office (London). Kenny, Anthony (ed.). The Responsa Scholarum of the English College, Rome. 2 vols. London, 1962-1963. CRS 54, 55. Patris Petri de Ribadeneira Societatis Jesu sacerdotis Confessiones, epistolae aliaque scripta inedita. 2 vols. Madrid, 1920-1923. MHSI 58, 60. Stonyhurst College. Godfrey Anstruther, The Seminary Priests. 3 vols. DurhamGreat Wakering, 1968-1976. State Papers. Storni, Hugo, SJ. Cata,logo de los jesuitas de La antigua Provincia del Paraguay (cuenca del Plata) 1585-1768. Roma, 1980. Subsidia ad historiam S.l. 9. Burton, Edwin H. (ed.) The Douay College Diaries: Third, Fourth and Fifth (1598-1654).2 vols. London, 1911. CRS 10, 11. vows (first or renewed). Henson, Canon Edwin (ed.). Registers of the English College at VaLladolid: 1589-1862. London, 1930. CRS 30.

Notes 1. For the compilation of this edition, Mr. Allison has graciously allowed me to use a photocopy of a revised edition of this invaluable work that will be appearing shortly. Because the pagination is yet undetermined, all references to this catalogue are to the entry numbers within the catalogue.


5

INTRODUCTION: 1

mSTORY: PRE-ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND During his years as a student at the University of Paris, Ignatius Loyola was forced to make periodic excursions to beg alms to support himself. Thrice between 1529 and 1531 he travelled to Bruges and Antwerp to seek assistance from Spanish merchants there. On one of these trips he met the Spanish humanist Juan Luis Vives, who had recently returned from an increasingly troubled England. Apparently Vives suggested that Ignatius expand his tour to include England. 2 In 1531 the latter crossed the channel. About this expedition he made only one brief statement ¡n his laconic autobiography: 'Once he even went to England and brought back more alms than he usually did in other years. ' 3 Some subsequent biographers have attempted to reconstruct Loyola's path and have deduced visits to Carthusians, Westminster Abbey, and Syon Abbey.4 However interesting these analyses may be, they remain conjecture. Ignatius may have visited Spanish merchants on the south coast and not ventured into London. A second contact between the Society of Jesus and England was even more brief. Robert Wauchope, an instructor at the University of Paris and an early supporter of the Ignatian circle, was appointed administrator of the Irish diocese of Armagh in 1539 after the incumbent succumbed to heresy. Because of his involvement on the continent, Wauchope was not able to depart immediately. In March of 1540 he asked the pope to send two men to survey the situation. Pas chase Broet and Alfonso Salmeron left for Ireland on 10 September 1541. On the journey they called on Reginald Pole, to whom Ignatius wished to be remembered and whose advice they sought. Pole warned them of the dangers and urged them to leave Ireland at the first sign of danger. A later visit to David Cardinal Beaton, Archbishop of St. Andrews and Primate of Scotland, at Lyons resulted in a strong attempt to dissuade them from their mission. Despite the cardinal's warnings the two Jesuits sailed from Flanders to Scotland in December. The voyage lasted twenty days because of high winds and turbulent seas. Twice the ship was forced to seek safety in English ports. The foreign dress of the two Jesuits and their ignorance of English aroused the suspicions of the English. The Jesuits identified themselves as simple Spanish travellers, a successful ploy because of an AngloSpanish treaty directed against France that was then under negotiation. After a stop at the Stuart court in Edinburgh, the Jesuits travelled to Ireland, where they remained for a month with disappointing results. s


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The first serious attempt to involve the Society of Jesus in England's religious history came with the accession of Mary Tudor in 1553. Shortly after Loyola heard of the accession of the Catholic Mary, he wrote to Reginald Pole that he thanked God 'from the depths of my heart for the door which he has deigned to open for the restoration of the kingdom of England to the bosom of our holy Church and the purity of the Catholic faith.' He promised the Society's prayers in the restoration. He had instructed each Jesuit to offer one Mass a month for the spiritual needs of England and Germany.6 Ignatius, however, was eager that his Society playa more active role than that of a prayerful bystander. Pole had been a friend and supporter of the Society since its foundation, and Loyola hoped that Pole would continue so after his return to England as papal legate. The announcement of the engagement of Queen Mary Tudor to Prince Philip of Spain intensified Loyola's hope that the Society would be invited to England to take part in the restoration. He first met Philip through the prince's governess Dona Leonor Mascarenas, another early supporter. 7 Ignatius's confidence was so great that in May of 1554 he instructed Father Bernard Olivier to prepare for an English assignment. 8 At the same time he discussed the possibility of sending his nephew Antonio Araoz to negotiate a mission with Prince Philip. Ignatius was extremely disappointed when an invitation was not proffered. 9 In August and September of 1554 he explained that the English mission was postponed. IO Philip and Mary were married on 25 July 1554 at Winchester. Final reconciliation between England and Rome was reached on Christmas Eve in 1554. Loyola was quick to offer his congratulations to Pole on the restoration of Catholicism. In a letter of 24 January 1555 he brought Pole uptodate on affairs of the two Jesuit colleges recently founded in Rome: the Roman College was opened in 1551 and the German College in 1552. At the latter was an Englishman 'of talent and character' who could be of use to the cardinal. Behind Ignatius's stories of successful missions undertaken by Jesuits were thinly disguised hints at the Society's availability.!l Pole's reply, delayed by illness, was noncommittal: he asked nothing more than to be remembered in the prayers of the Society.l2 Pole remained equally unmoved despite attempts by mutual friend Giovanni Cardinal Morone to plead the importance of Jesuit involvement. 13 Subtlety was abandoned in the summer of 1555 when Loyola offered both to accept any English candidates for priesthood at either the Roman or the German College and to place the new English


INTRODUCTION

7

and Irish members of the Society at Pole's disposal. Again Pole did nothing. 14 Concurrent with the pursuit of Pole was a persistent interest in Philip. Ignatius renewed his appeal to Philip in the summer of 1555 when he made his men available to Pole. Bernard Olivier was again told to prepare himself for a mission, this time to Philip's court in England with a proposal that the Society establish a college there. IS The trip was cancelled because of Philip's return to Flanders for the abdication of his father, Charles V, at Brussels on 25 October. During his stay in Flanders Philip promised to include one Jesuit in his personal entourage upon his return to England. Pedro de Ribadeneira was in Flanders, with some opposition promulgating the Society's new Constitutions. He was chosen to accompany Philip.16 It was the hope of Ignatius that Ribadeneira would provide Pole with current information on the Society'S missions and projects, and answer any questions that the cardinal might have. This discussion might result in an invitation for more Jesuit involvement. Pole's reply, aside from a polite willingness to receive Ribadeneira, was again noncommittal. 17 The Society remained frustrated in its efforts. Philip did not return to England until May of 1557 and then for only a few months. For some unexplained reason Ribadeneira did not accompany him. Despite the many promises no Jesuit entered the kingdom before the death of Ignatius on 31 July 1556. In the summer of 1558 the Duke of Feria petitioned the general for Ribadeneira's services as his confessor as he prepared to depart for England. With or without Pole's permission Ribadeneira sailed to London in November of 1558 shortly before the deaths of Queen Mary and Cardinal Pole. From his sanctuary in the Duke of Feria's London residence he watched the religious changes that followed the accession of Elizabeth and with them the destruction of any hope that remained for a Jesuit mission. Dispirited he left for Brussels on 20 March 1559. l8 In his memoirs Robert Parsons discussed England's religious history before the arrival of Edmund Campion and himself in 1580. Believing in Pole's friendship with the Society, he noted that some wondered 'why he did not call in some fathers of the Society in those days to help to set forward the Catholic religion.' 19 Subsequent historians have asked the same question. Dermot Fenlon thought that it was the Society's flair for 'individuality and initiative' that explained Pole's reluctance.2° D. M. Loades concluded that 'Pole simply did not want men with the fire of the counter-reformation in their bellies trying to implant in his flock a vision


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1555-1650

of the church and its doctrines which he did not share.' 21 Arthur J. Slavin's explanation is similar: Pole did not invite the Society into England because 'he distrusted [the Jesuits] and regarded [them] as savage persecutors. '22 Joseph Crehan, whose discussion is more nuanced than most, blamed the failure not on theological differences but on Juan Martinez Siliceo, former tutor of Philip of Spain and now Archbishop of Toledo, and on Melchior Cano. They turned Philip against the Society.23 None of these interpretations adequately explain Pole's reluctance. The truth probably has more to do with Pole's programme for reform and with the personnel within the Society. Commenting on the Marian religious restoration, John Guy echoed Loades' sentiments and noted that Mary and Pole both 'saw the future in terms of the past.' Their error, like that of Lot's wife, was their backward glance. Their interest was the reestablishment of a religious world that had been destroyed by Henry VIII. Consequently their reform lacked fire. 24 Within this programme there was no place for the new religious orders. Even if the Society had been invited to England, it would not have had Englishmen for the mission. The first Englishman entered the Society in June of 1555. Few folJowed during the period in question. All the Society could offer was foreign assistance, the subjects of Spain. The overidentification of Catholicism with Spain was something that Pole sought to avoid. As a result he accepted the Society's prayers and nothing else. In a letter to the Duke of Feria, Diego Lainez confessed that he did not understand Pole's behaviour. He knew, however, that when the time was ripe, the cardinal would not be able to prevent their involvement: 'this will of God is leading us on gently in hope, as I think, until it has supplied to our Society sufficient strength and numbers to enable it to extend further in the service of God, and then it will open the doors which at present remain closed.' 25 ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND Because of the influx of Englishmen the Society retained an interest in the affairs of England. In 1561 Everard Mercurian relayed to Lainez the rumor that the Society had been the subject of a number of sermons in England. Preachers warned their congregations that the Jesuits hovered dangerously outside the kingdom, waiting anxiously for an opportunity to enter and to do tremendous harm. 'May the name of the Lord always be a terror to heretics!,' was the future general's appraisal of the story.26


INTRODUCTION

9

In 1564 Simon Belost asked Juan Polanco to assign someone in Rome to relay English news to him. Thomas Darbyshire and Jaspar Heywood, his earlier sources, were now stationed in Germany.27 To the best of our knowledge the first Englishman to return to his country as a Jesuit was Thomas King. For reasons of health he went to England in the spring of 1565. During the few months that remained of his life he worked vigorously among the Catholics. Between his death and the arrival of Campion, Parsons, and Ralph Emerson in 1580 the only Jesuits in England were secular priests or laymen who received permission to pronounce vows in the Society during their imprisonment (e.g. Thomas Pound e) or before their execution (e.g. Thomas Woodhouse).28 Meanwhile the number of English Jesuits continued to grow. Henry More, the province's first historian, claimed that more than sixty-nine Englishmen entered the Society between 1556 and 1580. Thomas Clancy has counted one hundred and forty English and Welsh in the Society between 1555 and 1585. 29 By 1580 Englishmen had worked or were at work in the following provinces: Rome, Germany Superior, Rhine, Austria, Sicily, and Aquitaine. William Allen, leader of the English Catholic community in exile, sought Jesuit assistance in the kingdom in 1575 and 1576. Both times his request was denied by Mercurian. The Society's involvement with England began with the English Hospice in Rome. From its beginning as a hospice for pilgrims in 1362, it had become a spiritual centre for the English in the city. After Henry VIII's break with Rome it became a sanctuary for religious exiles. Allen and other exiles decided to convert the hospice into a college to educate priests for work in England. The first students arrived from Douai in late 1576. The college was troubled from its inception and, in the midst of the struggles, the Society's aid was sought. Two Italian Jesuits, Giovanni Paolo Novarola and Ferdinando Capecci, were sent as spiritual father and prefect of studies. Their presence led not to a permanent reconciliation but to a request for greater Jesuit involvement. On 19 March 1579 Cardinal Morone, in the name of the pope, commanded Mercurian to assume charge of the college. 3o To assist in a solution of the disputes, Allen travelled to Rome in the spring of 1579. There he met Mercurian to renew his request for Jesuit presence in England. Allen had carefully prepared his argument and had drafted it along the lines established in the Society's Constitutions for the choice of apostolates. The general remained opposed. The dangers that Jesuits would encounter in England were too great. Granted that the work there


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was necessary and important, Mercurian did not think that he could send his men while the possibility of martyrdom was so high. Would the good gained by their labours outweigh their loss? In a subsequent consultation two of the general's advisers, Claudio Acquaviva, Roman provincial and future general, and Oliver Mannaerts, German assistant, argued in favor of the mission. Their views swayed the general, who finally gave his approbation but only after he had arranged the party and carefully delineated in his instructions the course that the Jesuits must pursue to avoid the dangers he feared : the inclusion of Thomas Goldwell, bishop of St. Asaph, allayed his concern about proper ecclesiastical governance and possible clerical discontent; the prohibition against any involvement in politics denied the government any basis for construing the mission as a political-military expedition (this was especially important because of consistent English fears of a papally sponsored expedition to overthrow Elizabeth, who was excommunicated in 1570 by Pope Pius V); a stress on various religious practices to strengthen the spiritual life of the missioners.31 Robert Parsons was designated superior of the mission and, accompanied by Edmund Campion and Ralph Emerson, he left Rome in April of 1580. Parsons arrived in England on 11 June, Campion and Emerson on the 24th. Difficulties within England quickly tempered the optimism of the Jesuits. Travelling clandestinely between Catholic households and administering the sacraments secretly, Jesuits were hunted by the government. Spies were everywhere and few persons could be trusted. Granted permission by Rome to establish a printing press, Parsons produced a number of books that addressed current issues: attacks on the Catholic Church by apostates, explanations of Catholic refusal to attend Protestant services, and defenses of a prematurely released plea for a public disputation. The Jesuits realistically faced the possibility of eventual capture. To prevent the government from releasing fraudulent confessions in their names, Parsons and Campion drafted their statements, to be made public only after their capture. Campion's, the socalled 'Brag,' is the more famous. His challenge for a public debate especially aroused the government. After his capture on 17 July 1581, the government responded to his challenge with a carefully staged debate at which Campion, weakened by torture, was obliged to assume the defensive position without notification, without preparation, and without books. Tried and judged guilty of treason, Campion was executed on 1 December 1581. For various reasons, Parsons had returned to the


INTRODUCTION

11

continent to investigate other approaches since the policy of debate had failed. 32 Because of the persecution the mission's growth was slow. More Englishmen entered the Society throughout the 1580s but few were sent back to their native country. The persecution became so intense that at times the general, now Claudio Acquaviva, seriously considered suspending the mission or cancelling it. Only the combined entreaties of Allen and Parsons prevented this drastic decision. As the few Jesuits in England either eluded capture, suffered miserably in prison or underwent excruciating execution, Allen and Parsons became more involved in various political schemes with Scotland, Spain, and the Guise family in France to liberate Mary Queen of Scots, held prisoner in England since 1569. In this context the Belgian Jesuit Henri Samerie visited Mary. Throughout the 1580s plots and conspiracies, sometimes real and often fabricated, but always credible because of the coalition that supported the Queen of Scots, resulted in intensified persecution. 33 After the execution of Mary on 8 February 1587 and the failure of the Spanish Armada in the summer of 1588, King Philip II of Spain, although not ready to abandon the military option totally, decided to aid English Catholics through endowment of two seminaries in Spain. Both were placed under control of the Society. The first students arrived at the new college in Valladolid in 1589. On 25 April 1592 Pope Clement VIII confirmed the seminary.34 A second seminary was opened at Seville on 25 November 1592. It received papal approval on 15 May 1594. 35 Spanish generosity provided endowment for a third college at St. Omers in the Spanish Netherlands in 1593. Unlike the first two, this was erected not as a seminary but as a college for English boys.36 The establishment of the colleges and seminaries quickly revealed problems of governance. Because of either royal decrees or the insistence of local Jesuits, the rectors of the seminaries were members of the provinces in which the institutions were situated. Although Parsons retained overall supervision of the English mission, the precise extent of his authority over rectors not of his choosing, and over seminaries under the jurisdiction of a provincial, remained unclear. Major problems were avoided because of the authority granted by Pope Gregory XIV on 18 September 1591 to Allen as prefect of the English mission. 37 Allen's death on 16 October 1594 revealed divisions among the exiles that only his personality and authority could conceal. The death of Mary Stuart removed the one candidate for the English throne around whom the exiles could unanimously rally. The increasing


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1555-1650

support that the AllenlParsons party provided for a Spanish candidatenot Philip himself but his daughter safely married to an Austrian Habsburg-alienated those who were not ready to abandon all hope for conversion of Mary's son, the Scottish King James VI. The antagonism within the Society between those who supported the Scottish claim, e.g. William Creighton, and Parsons became at times acrimonious. Within England disputes arose at Wisbech, a prison where important Catholics were held. The Jesuit William Weston was transferred there in January of 1588. An apparently innocent request that the prisoners adapt a modified rhythm and style of a religious life resulted in a dispute over authority and precedence. The disturbances became public in February of 1595. After a temporary reconciliation, hostilities erupted again. The malcontents at Wisbech joined forces with those in Flanders and at the English College in Rome to decry the Jesuit domination of the mission and to plead for appointment of a bishop. With the hope of resolving the disturbances that plagued the mission and of regulating more effectively the relations between the Jesuit mission and the colleges on the continent, Parsons travelled from Spain to Rome in 1597. His original plan to establish two bishops for England, the first to reside within the kingdom and the second in Flanders was rejected by the pope. An alternative plan, establishment of an archpriest for England, was accepted. On 7 March 1598 the secular priest George Blackwell was named archpriest with jurisdiction over the English secular clergy. Because the archpriest was instructed to consult the superior of the Jesuits over any major decision, the appointment did not settle the matter but intensified the dispute. 38 Two months after the establishment of the archpriest, Acquaviva sought to regularize the Jesuit situation through creation of a hierarchical structure that was as novel as the appointment of the archpriest. The Officium et Regulae Praefecti missionum in Seminariis quae in Hispanis et Belgio Societatis regimini subsunt created an independent mission directly under the authority of the general. 39 According to this decree the English mission would henceforth be governed as a province. Because of the dispersal of its men, administration by one man would be difficult. Consequently the mission's prefect, who would reside in Rome, would delegate authority to two vice-prefects, one in Spain and the other in Flanders, and to a superior for the men within England. One of the prefect's main responsibilities would be maintenance of harmony between the English Jesuits and their host countries. Nonetheless, despite continued good will, tensions remained. English Jesuits complained that


INTRODUCTION

13

their foreign rectors did not understand the English situation for which they were training men. The Spanish blamed the problems on English refusal to obey rules. Individual personalities such as Joseph Creswell aggravated the tension. Periodically regulations were revised but the consequent peace was never long. During the final years of Elizabeth's reign, the English Jesuits were under increased attack. The archpriest in England, considered a puppet of the Society by many, did not satisfy all the secular priests. They considered his creation a thinly disguised manoeuvre for the Society's retaining control of the mission. Liberation of England from the clutches of the Society and restoration of proper ecclesiastical government would be possible only with expulsion of the Jesuits. A number of secular clergy, the Appellant party, worked for that expulsion. In the attempt they established cordial relations with the Elizabethan government and with Henri IV, the French king, whom they hoped to win to their cause. The Appellants sought to exchange the Society for religious tolerance. 4o On the continent, the conflict was within the Society. Yet despite the problems Acquaviva did not abandon the prefectural structure as the Spanish demanded. STUART ENGLAND The question of succession remained vital. In a letter of 10 August 1602 to James, Parsons sought to explain his opposition to the candidacy of the Scottish king: the only impediment to James's succession was his religion. If he would but change his religion 'for which we daily pray with all instance to Almighty God no man living would be more ready to spend his blood for your Majesty and his service than myself.' The uncontested accession of James to the English throne as James I in 1603 left the Spanish party somewhat embarrassed. A year later, on 18 October 1603, Parsons's tone was different: 'In this great fortune, and prosperous entrance of your Majesty's reign, when all the world doth applaud, and mighty Princes also do everywhere congratulate, I poor worm of the earth do the same, and join my weak, and ingrate voice with so strong and pleasant sounds of others.' He besought James to recall all that he had done for him when he was most in danger 'as I may say without just imputation of vaunt, that no one man perhaps of either nation, is known to have laboured so much, nor to have made more wearisome journeys, nor passed greater perils in that behalf, than myself.' Afraid now of the


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1555-1650

stories that had reached Rome that James intended to continue the persecution of the Catholics, Parsons begged him to grant some tolerance. 41 Despite Catholic reminders of the support that they had provided his mother and despite the king's intimations to expect a limited tolerance, the freedom for which the Catholics had hoped did not materialize. The laws remained on the books and the threat of persecution continued. Any hope of toleration vanished with the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot on 5 November 1605. More than any of the plots and conspiracies that were hatched during the reign of Elizabeth, the Gunpowder Plot remains a mystery. Was it a real plot concocted by Catholics discontented by James's refusal to alleviate their burden? Was it, in the interpretation of John Bossy, 'the last fling of the Elizabethan tradition of a politically engaged Catholicism'?42 Or was it a successful gambit by the Cecils to retain their power and further discredit the Catholics? Answers to these questions are beyond the scope of this introduction. 43 It is sufficient to say that the anti-Jesuit propaganda that surrounded the plot successfully cemented the popular identification of the Society of Jesus with treachery and intrigue. The Society's enemies within and outside the Catholic Church used the event as a justification for their continued insistence that the Society be excluded from the kingdom. As long as there were Jesuits within England, there was no hope of any acceptance. Interestingly the plot did not occasion introduction of even stricter laws against the Catholics.44 The introduction of an oath of allegiance that recognized James as the lawful monarch and explicitly condemned papal power to depose a king exacerbated the divisions among English Catholics and generated a controversy in which many noted seventeenth-century theologians participated. 45 Despite the plot, the number of Jesuits in England continued to increase. There were only eighteen Jesuits in England in 1598 when the mission was reorganized. Of these four were in prison. By the time of the execution of Henry Garnet for alleged complicity in the plot on 3 May 1606, the number had increased to forty.46 Vocations to the Society were flourishing, as can be seen in the distribution of English Jesuits throughout the Society. By 1606 English Jesuits were found not only in the German countries but in France, Spain, Poland, Lithuania, Goa, and Brazil. A number of secular priests working in England sought to enter the Society. Aware that their transfer- albeit temporary- to the continent for novitiate would disrupt the mission, Acquaviva permitted these candidates to make their novices hip within the kingdom. Other Englishmen entered the novitiates of other provinces, those in Rome and


INTRODUCTION

15

Belgium being especially important. Although these provinces allotted a set number of places for English candidates, they were not sufficient. 47 Something had to be done to meet the increased number of English vocations. In December of 1604 Dona Luisa de Carvajal, a Spanish noblewoman who had assisted Catholics in England, bequeathed 12,000 ducats as a foundation for the mission 's novitiate. She wanted the house to be not only a house of formation for the younger men but a place of refuge and retirement for the older. Acquaviva suggested that the novitiate be established in Louvain. In 1606 Parsons obtained a house that had once belonged to the Knights of Malta and the novitiate opened in February of 1607 with thirteen novices: six priests, two scholastics, and five brothers. After the addition of Jesuit scholastics who attended lectures in philosophy and theology at the university in 1614, tentative plans were made for transfer of the novitiate. Plans to transfer it to Watten were frustrated by Archduke Albert, who, because of pressure from the English government, withheld his consent. Liege was the next site considered. Thomas Owen, Parsons's successor as prefect, did not know whether he should move the scholasticate or the novitiate. He left the decision to the general, who selected the novitiate. Sir William Stanley, a controversial figure among the Catholic exiles, and William Brown, the third son of Sir Anthony Brown and a future laybrother, provided the money for the purchase of the buildings in Liege. By 3 October 1614 the required permissions had been obtained and the houses had been secured in the name of Sir William. The move began.48 With the departure of the novitiate, the scholasticate was without sufficient endowment, but it soon found a generous benefactor in Thomas Sackville, a son of the Earl of Dorset. In addition to an immediate grant of ÂŁ200, he provided a capital fund of nearly ÂŁ9000. 49 Despite signs of health in the number of vocations and in the number of institutions, the English mission continued to be troubled. To placate all parties, Acquaviva continued to revise the Officium et Regulae but nonetheless the problems were not solved. Permanent peace remained elusive. The Spanish provincials severely criticized the structure and demanded that it be altered. From their perspective the prefects and viceprefects had too much authority and thus prevented the rector from governing. Creswell came under personal attack not only for his administrative interference but also, according to the provincials, for his political involvement. To pacify the Spanish provincials, Creswell was transferred


16

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1555-1650

from Spain to Flanders. Nicholas Almazan, assistant for Spain, summoned Creswell to Rome to answer charges. Whether the structure itself would be changed was sub iudice when Acquaviva died in January of 1615. Although the vicar-general, Ferdinand Alber, exonerated Creswell, the most serious controversy to threaten the English mission was just beginning. 50 Acquaviva was not popular among the Spanish Jesuits.51 His imposition of an alien administrative structure did not aid his standing. In all the difficulties between the English and the Spanish Jesuits, Acquaviva consistently sided with the English. With his death, the English lost their protector. Prompted by a postulatum from the province of Castille, the general congregation, convened to elect Acquaviva's successor, discussed at length independent missions. The congregation's objections to the current composition of the missions were phrased not in terms of institutional irregularity but in terms of nationalist preferences. The Society of Jesus, although composed of many nationalities, is one body, and nothing should be permitted within the Society that would inflame nationalist feelings and threaten spiritual unity. The recent innovations that permitted individual nationalities to operate their own novitiates and to insist on their rectors being men of their own nation were incompatible with the nature of the company and were to be changed. Although it was clear to a number of Jesuits at the congregation that, although no nations were specifically named, the decree was directed against the English, there was no English representative to speak in defense of the mission. Nonetheless unnamed Jesuits did spring to the mission's aid and argued against the attack. 52 As rumours about the mission's fate slowly spread, different English Jesuits sprang to defend the prefecture. But they had to tread carefully. Their position was precarious. Thomas Owen instructed all English superiors to respect the rights and prerogatives of the local rectors and provincials but not be so slavish that their own power and authority be diminished. Each new incident brought a demand that the decree be implemented. The newly elected general Mutius Vitelleschi, once rector of the English College in Rome, was in a dilemma. He had been instructed by the congregation that elected him to implement a decree that he knew would have disastrous repercussions on the mission. The general had confided to Owen that the mission could survive only if it remained free of the control of other provincials. In the years that followed the congregation, Vitelleschi consistently confirmed various aspects of the


INTRODUCTION

17

prefecture. But the more he ratified the current system, the more he risked the wrath of the procurators, especially those from the Spanish provinces, who would meet in November of 1619. Vitelleschi resolved his dilemma by elevating the English mission to vice-provincial status. The alteration in England's status within the Society was not welcomed by all. Charles Scribani, Flandro-Belgian provincial, strongly objected because it did not resolve the administrative problems created by the prefecture. Ever since institutions had been freed from the authority of the local provincial and placed under the jurisdiction of a superior residing elsewhere, there had been friction. Scribani delineated various arguments against the decision to make England a vice-province and concluded with .a request: if the general persisted with his proposal, the provincial asked that the only remaining English house within the boundaries of his province, i.e. the English college in Louvain, be transferred. To this the general agreed. 53 The joy of the English Jesuits at the creation of the vice-province in July of 1619 was shared by their benefactors in England. Indeed the hopes of the English Catholics had recently been aroused by the prospect of a marriage between Charles Prince of Wales and the Spanish Infanta. The pursuit of these negotiations softened the king's approach to the Catholics, who believed that the alliance, once signed, would finally bring their long-sought tolerance. But this joy in England should not disguise the loss that resulted in the transition from mission to viceprovince. The new vice-province included only the Jesuits residing in England and in the communities in Flanders. Although an English procurator would continue to reside in Spain to oversee the financial concerns of the vice-province, this procurator did not have the authority that the vice-prefect possessed. For all practical purposes the English vice-province had no jurisdiction over the Spanish seminaries. If certain customs or practices introduced by the Spanish rectors disturbed the English, their only recourse was a petition to the general. The English vice-province numbered slightly more than two hundred men in the year of its elevation. There were one hundred Jesuits working in England and Wales. Although there still were Englishmen scattered throughout the rest of the Jesuit world, their number was diminishing as the older men died without replacement. The younger Jesuits sought affiliation with their countrymen. The new vice-province was also solvent. Although its financial records were confused and it would take some time to untangle the books, the vice-province was healthy financiall y. 54


18

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Within two years of the erection of the vice-province the English sought provincial status. About early 1621 Henry Silisdon (vere Bedingfeld) was sent to Rome as procurator of the vice-province. He carried two memorials: from vice-provincial Richard Blount and the four Jesuits officially designated as his consultors; and from the vice-provincial himself. 55 Because the vice-province was divided into two almost equal halves, the consultors wondered if some permanent structure should be established whereby the vice-provincial delegated authority to a Jesuit in each half of the vice-province in the event of an emergency. In case of imprisonment or execution, these vicars could assume authority temporarily. To assist them, it was suggested that there be two sets of consultors, one in each half of the province. The final request was for full provincial status. 56 On 24 April 1621 the general replied. He could not grant the request for provincial status because he did not think that the viceprovince had attained sufficient stability. Although there were sufficiently endowed houses of formation in Flanders, there was no stable Jesuit community within England. A province needed stronger foundations than the Jesuits then had in England. Vitelleschi doubted that the English Jesuits would be able to convene the required provincial congregations because of dangers of persecution and detection. Regarding the other requests, the general authorized the vice-provincial to designate someone in England as his vicar-the rector of the English College in Louvain would be vicar for Flanders-and to appoint two sets of consultors.57 After the general's refusal the vice-province continued its growth and opened still more houses on the continent. The Archduke's opposition to establishment of an English Jesuit house at Watten was finally withdrawn, perhaps as a result of prolonged negotiations for the marriagealliance. In 1617 a residence was opened at Watten; in 1623 or 1624 the novitiate was moved to it from Liege. About 1624, in compliance with Scribani's request of 1619, the scholasticate was moved from Louvain to Liege. A new residence in Ghent was opened in 1621. The viceprovincial intended this to be a tertianship. In April of 1621 the general approved the plans and instructed the vice-provincial to seek an endowment for the house. Anne Countess of Arundel, widow of St. Philip Howard, provided a capital sum that generated ÂŁ375 annually. In 1621 the magistrates in St. Omers lifted their restriction that the rector of the English College there be a Belgian. William Baldwin was appointed the first English rector. 58 The vice-province's growth augured well for the


INTRODUCTION

19

future . Negotiations between Spain and England were nearly completed. James I finally granted Spain's demand that English Catholics be given toleration through suspension of the penallaws.59 As the Spanish negotiations proceeded, important changes were taking place within the English Catholic Church. The persistent demand of English Catholics for a bishop was finally granted by Pope Gregory XV, who named William Bishop as Bishop of Cha1cedon in February of 1623. 60 While Rome was making this appointment, the English Jesuits sought a site for their first vice-provincial congregation. Contrary to the expectations of General Vitelleschi, the vice-province was able to convene its congregation at the residence of the French ambassador in Blackfriars in London from 14 to 18 May 1622. Henry Silisdon (vere Bedingfeld) was elected procurator. After a discussion regarding the necessity of a general congregation, the assembled fathers voted that they saw no reason for convening one and instructed their elected procurator to convey this vote to Rome. With that work finished, they turned to their more pressing concern: provincial status.61 Believing that the viceprovince had been denied provincial status because the general was not very familiar with their work within England, the fathers sought to explain fully why the general's fears were without foundation. Currently there were one hundred and thirty Jesuits in England. They were divided into twelve districts, each of which had an immediate superior. 62 Within the districts, called 'missions,' there were residences and houses. In some the Jesuits were involved with the education of children. Within each mission there was one house in which the Jesuits could make their annual retreats, renew their vows, and hold meetings. Although none of these communities had an endowment, that was the result not of lack of benefactors but of inability to make proper arrangements for their acceptance and protection. Once these problems were solved, endowments would be plentiful. After the congregation these problems were resolved and documents were forwarded to Rome that explained how, through use of trusts, endowments of colleges within England could be protected. These documents described the establishment of three Jesuit communities within the kingdom: the House of Probation of St. Ignatius in London; the College of St. Francis Xavier at Cwm in Herefordshire; and the College of Blessed Aloysius Gonzaga in Staffordshire. As a result of this information-and presumably of happy prospects for Catholics in England-the general approved the congregation's requests and named


20

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1555-1650

Richard Blount the first provincial on 21 January 1623.63 The new foundations in England gave institutional and financial stability to the province despite financial difficulties that clouded many English works on the continent: the finances of the English colleges at St. Omers and Louvain were shaky; the provincial assets in Rome were threatened with confiscation; and the confusion in the records of the English College in Rome seemed unresolvable. Yet hopes were high.64 The new English province anticipated few problems with the government. Once the penal laws had been totally revoked, Jesuits would be able to operate publicly. But the fiasco of the return of Prince Charles and the Duke of Buckingham from their romantic expedition to Spain in 1623 tilted the balance of power in favour of an anti-Spanish coalition. The Spanish treaty was repudiated in 1624. Catholic hopes, however, were not totally shattered because negotiations were immediately opened with the French for a marriage between the Prince of Wales and Princess Henrietta Maria. Despite assurances from James and Charles that they would grant their Catholic subjects complete freedom, the penal laws were back in force by 1626. With James's death on 27 March 1625, Charles ascended the throne. Although the freedom for which the Society had prayed was not forthcoming, the English province continued to prosper. Congregations were convened in London from 7 to 11 February 1625 and 3 to 6 February 1628. Among concerns discussed at the meetings were the recently imposed missionary oath that forbade any priest from entering a religious order or congregation within three years of his return to England, the oath of allegiance, attendance at Protestant services, and the dispute between regulars and the Bishop of Cha1cedon. Of communities in England, the colleges in Herefordshire and Staffordshire remained secure and the House of Probation in London frequently changed location from Blackfriars to Edmonton to Camberwell to Clerkenwell. The discovery of the house there on 12 March 1628 ended the experiment of a novitiate in London.65 Financially the province became more secure. In 1625 the institutions of the province had a combined net income of 28,252 scudi (ÂŁ7063). It was estimated that the sum could support 380 men, eight fewer than the actual number in the province. By 1628 the combined net income had risen by more than 5000 scudi. The total could maintain 440 men, twenty-four more than there were in the province. This increase resulted primarily from the re-endowment of the English College in Liege by


INTRODUCTION

21

Elector Maximilian Duke of Bavaria and his wife Elizabeth. He had set aside a capital sum of 6000 scudi with an annual return of 2813 (ÂŁ703), which he promised to give to the college in perpetuity.66 The English Jesuits were reaping benefits from Catholic advances in the Thirty Years' War. In 1629 King Charles's dissatisfaction with increasing demands of Parliament resulted in its dissolution on 10 March 1629. 67 Shortly thereafter England made peace with France and Spain. In so doing Charles abandoned any hope of using force to assist his brother-in-law Frederick regain the Palatinate and his electoral rights. Frederick's prospects were bl~ak but those of the English Jesuits continued to flourish . The next provincial congregation convened in London from 8 to 11 November 1630. Although the fathers did not explicitly draft any postulata for their elected procurator to carry to Rome, they did ask the general, in the name of the whole Society, to thank the Holy Roman Emperor for the seminary that he proposed to endow at Osnabrock for the English province. 68 At the height of Catholic ascendancy during the Thirty Years' War, the Emperor Ferdinand II issued the Edict of Restitution. The Edict, promulgated in 1629, ordered the restoration of all ecclesiastical property appropriated by the Protestants since 1552. Even before the edict was promulgated, Catholics began to bicker over disposal of the land. The old orders to whom the land originally belonged insisted on its return. The new orders, especially the Jesuits, thought that some if not all should be used to endow colleges and seminaries. Father Lamormaini, the emperor's Jesuit confessor, worked for an extensive transfer of property to the Society for establishment of Jesuit colleges that he considered essential for the reconversion of Germany.69 It was probably through Lamormaini's influence that the English college became the beneficiary of the former monastery at Osnabruck. The province was in the midst of arranging for acceptance of the endowment and assigning a rector and a staff when the intervention of Swedish forces reversed the fortunes of the Catholic powers. Although the acta for the provincial congregation have been lost-and thus we do not know where it was held-we know from the general's reply that the major concern was a new provincial. Richard Blount asked to be relieved of the burden of office and recommended that Edward Knott (vere Matthew Wilson) be named as his successor. The general was hesitant to approve because he did not think that Knott, who had worked


22

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

almost his entire Jesuit life on the continent, was well enough known to the Society's benefactors in England. He suggested that Blount and his consultors reconsider the matter. Meanwhile he agreed that, as a result of the current peaceful situation in England, there was no need for the provincial to have a vicar in Flanders. A year later Henry More was named provincial. 70 The province's finances were so strong that it was able to assist less fortunate Jesuits. In late 1631 thirteen German Jesuits, refugees from the war, sought shelter in the communities in Belgium. Until conditions permitted them to return to their provinces English houses supported them. By 1633 the gross and net incomes ofthe province had risen. There was now enough annual income for support of 543 men, twenty-three more than there were in the province,71 The major reason for this increase was the establishment of two new colleges in England: the College of the Immaculate Conception and the College of the Holy Apostles. The first, endowed by Charles Shireburne, was situated somewhere in Derbyshire. The general accepted the endowment on 15 June 1632,72 The second was accepted on 1 September 1633. The benefactor was William Lord Petre and the college was established at Chelmsford. 73 The finances of the English province continued to improve. By 1636 the provincial income could support an extra fifty-three men,74 Nonetheless, when the provincial congregation met in London from 15 to 18 May 1636, money was the issue. The new provincial worried about expenses of the provincial and of the curia. Since provinces qua provinces were denied a regular source of income by the Society's Institute, the provincial was obliged to rely on alms and contributions from institutions within the province. Often expenses were greater than receipts and the provincial always looked for new sources to balance his budget. One customary way was use of the money and possessions renounced by novices and other members of the Society. But before the provincial could apply these goods to needs of the province he needed permission of the general because only he had full authority over their disposal. Father General Vitelleschi granted More permission to accept any goods renounced by aspirants or by members of the Society, and to dispose of them in such a way as to relieve needs of the province. 7s After Charles dissolved Parliament in March of 1629 he governed England without convening another for the next decade. During this period of 'personal rule' without persistent demands of a hostile parliament for swift and effective implementation of penal laws, Catholicism


INTRODUCTION

23

flourished . Catholics and crypto-Catholics were popular at court. Papal envoys, ostensibly to Queen Henrietta Maria-Gregorio Panzani in 1634, George Con from 1636 to 1639, and Count Carlo Rossetti in 1639- visited the Court of St. James for the first time since the reign of Mary Tudor. In 1638 Marie de Medici, royal mother-in-law, arrived in London with her Jesuit confessor, Jean Suffren, and a lay brother,?6 But this tranquillity was not destined to last. Attempts to impose a Laudian Anglicanism upon the vigorously Presbyterian Scots led to establishment of the National Covenant of February of 1638 and to the outbreak of the First Bishops' War in 1639. In June of 1639 the Treaty of Berwick temporarily ended hostilities. The king's plans to subdue the Scots demanded money imd that required convocation of Parliament. The Parliament known to history as the Short Parliament met on 13 April 1640. Ignoring the royal demands for money, its members insisted on rehearsing grievances that had plagued the nation since Charles's accession. Unwilling to discuss their demands, Charles dissolved Parliament on 5 May-a decision that left the king in a weaker position because it was now clear to the Scots that England itself was divided. The Second Bishops' War that followed left the Scots in control of two northern counties and recipients of ÂŁ850 a day until a permanent peace was ratified. 77 As storm clouds were forming over Scotland, English Jesuits met in London from 18 to 22 January 1639. The date of the provincial congregation had been moved forward because of recent events in Scotland. But these events played no role in discussions among the Jesuits. Their major concern, indeed, a continual thorn in their side, was the seminaries in Spain. The majority of the postulata delivered to the general dealt with problems there. Regardless of difficulties, the general reminded the provincial, no Englishman could be appointed rector in any Spanish seminary because of opposition of the king. Consequently the province had to live with the difficulties,?8 Although there is DO record of any discussion of the province's finances, the catalogus tertius rerum (a triennial financial statement), compiled for the congregation boded ill. Although the province could still afford to support more men than it held, the net income had fallen and there was a large increase in the institutions' debts. The invasion of the Scots deprived the residence of St. John in Durham of all its alms. With the exceptions of the Colleges of the Holy Apostles in East Anglia and of St. Francis Xavier in Wales, the colleges and residences within the kingdom reported similar declines,?9


24

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Perhaps the Society's usual patrons contributed so much to the king in his attempt to survive without parliamentary funds that they were unable to donate their regular amounts to the Society. Edward Knott (vere Matthew Wilson), a competent theologian and an able controversialist, succeeded Henry More as provincial on 3 June 1639. 80 Knott was out of the country when his appointment was announced. Because of his outspoken role as a controversialist against supporters of the Bishop of Chalcedon and against the Anglicans, his choice was not universally popular. In fact the king was so irate that he threatened to enforce strictly the penal laws if Knott attempted to return to England. The reaction caught Vitelleschi off guard. He had known that Knott's earlier works, especially his attack on William Chillingworth in A Directive to be Observed by N. N. in 1636, had infuriated both the king and Archbishop Laud, but, as three years had expired since the book's publication, he assumed that the storm had passed. Indeed, Vitelleschi had even concluded that Knott had won the king's favor because of his support for the collection taken among Catholics to alleviate the king's expenses in the First Bishops' War. Knott was advised to remain in Flanders (he did not cross to England until June 1643) and to allow More to act as vice-provincial. Meanwhile the general asked Jean Suffren to use his influence with Marie de Medici and her daughter to intercede with the king in Knott's favor. 81 But the king had more to worry about than one troublesome Jesuit. Between the final years of James I and the advent of the civil war, English Catholics enjoyed considerable freedom from persecution. Between 1625 and 1640 only three Catholics were executed and, thanks to protection of the queen and the presence of a Roman agent, few others suffered for their religion. Indeed, many agreed that Catholics had not fared so well since the reign of Mary Tudor. Throughout this period the English province was dynamic and active. The Society was consistently able to gather forty Jesuits in London for provincial congregations with impunity, even though Jesuits stationed in Flanders were ordinarily excused because of distance. So confident was the provincial that he could travel to Flanders annually that the position of vice-provincial for Belgium was abolished in 1634. Between the creation of the province in 1623 and the provincial congregation of 1639 the province had grown by more than one hundred men, from 242 to 350, and the number of Jesuits working in England had increased from 138 to a remarkable 193. This was a time of optimism and expansion as the province sought new


INTRODUCTION

25

opportunities. Just as the prospect of a new seminary was being crushed under the marching boots of the Swedes, new vistas opened in the west when the mission to Maryland was approved in December of 1633. But there were problems. The Spanish seminaries were a cause of worry. The oath of allegiance and the claims of the Bishop of Chalcedon continued to divide English Catholics. English Jesuits considered the new missionary oath, required at the pontifical seminaries, insulting and unwarranted. These issues could be resolved. More serious problems were forming. Hints of popish plots and Catholic intrigues aroused the populace and Charles's mounting problems with Scotland would eventually affect more than the date of the provincial congregation. Charles was forceCi to call another Parliament to deal with the Scottish rebellion. The 'Long Parliament' convened on 3 November 1640 and succeeded in pushing through a number of reforms to restrict royal authority. The situation remained volatile especially as rumours circulated that the king was plotting to import Irish rebels to fight on his behalf. 82 Charles's tactics became more extreme, e.g. the invasion of Parliament on 4 January 1642 to arrest five members of the Lower House. This catastrophic failure intensified Parliamentary attacks. In March Charles abandoned London and established his headquarters in York. War broke out the following summer.83 The tension in London forced the Jesuits to convene their congregation scheduled for the summer of 1642 in Ghent. When the congregation opened on 31 July, only the acting provincial Henry More and a few other priests were able to leave England to attend it. Surprisingly the Jesuits discussed neither the political problems in England nor their own financial ones. 84 Between 1639 and 1642, although the province's income increased slightly, inflation apparently reduced its real value: despite an increase of 87 scudi, the province estimated that it could support 76 fewer men. 85 A year before the congregation, in August 1641, Father General Vitelleschi warned the English provincial of impending financial problems and urged him to implement strict economic measures throughout the province, e.g. the reduction of novices, to prevent a complete collapse. Until the emergency had passed, the general instructed the provincial to defer candidates for the Society or to send them to the seminaries. 86 Shortly after the conclusion of the congregation on 6 August Edward Knott announced that he was going to visit the Jesuits in England. It was his duty, he argued, to visit his men regardless of the dangers involved.


26

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Because the general was reluctant to grant permission until the provincial had discussed the matter with his consultors, the trip was not made until June 1643. Using London as a base, Knott visited Jesuit houses throughout the country for the next fifteen months. Before Knott's departure Henry More wrote to Queen Henrietta Maria that the provincial was going to enter the country despite the king's prohibition. 87 Even though the Royalist forces had been everywhere successful during the first year ofthe Civil War, one doubts that the king would have been too concerned about a solitary Jesuit wandering throughout the kingdom. By the time of Knott's return to the continent, the king's fortunes had deteriorated: Parliament had concluded a treaty with Scotland and a Scottish army was again in the north of England. Father General Mutius Vitelleschi died on 9 February 1645. A provincial congregation was called for 6 July at Ghent in order to elect delegates for the general congregation. At this congregation finances were a concern. 1645 was not a good year financially for the province. Its income had fallen; its debts had increased.88 The war in England made it impossible for the Society's benefactors to contribute. 89 The province's predicament was treated in one of the postulata. The fathers pointed out that many areas needed financial assistance. In the interest of greater unity within the Society, it asked the general congregation to consider how the wealthier provinces could henceforth support and employ a select number of men from the poorer provinces so that 'the Institute may be preserved and the Society's estimate among externs increased.'90 Other provinces made similar proposals so the general congregation passed a number of decrees to ease the financial burdens that were plaguing the Society.91 Besides new decrees the general sought practical solutions. Edward Knott hoped to place some 80 men in other provinces until English finances improved. The general, however, doubted that he would be able to find places for so many: Germany was too hard pressed to take men from other provinces but Spain, France, and Portugal were willing to take a few. The general also hoped to persuade Italy and the Irish mission to take a few. By the end of 1645 the general had been able to find 38 positions for English Jesuits: 13 in France, 13 in Italy, 8 in Spain, 2 in Portugal, and 2 in Belgium. The province's finances also prevented it from accepting any novices. Candidates should apply to other provinces but, and this the general emphasized, if the candidates were accepted by other provinces, they became members of that province and would not


INTRODUCTION

27

automatically be transferred to the English province when its situation improved.92 During the general congregation, Pope Innocent X issued the bull Prospero felicique statui, which restricted the ordinary government of the Society. Henceforth the Society was required to convene general congregations every nine years and to restrict the terms of all superiors, with the exception of the general and the masters of novices, to three years. Furthermore eighteen months must have expired before a man could be re-appointed to another position as superior. 93 Because of the bull the majority of the province's rectors had to be replaced. Henry Silisdon (vere Bedingfeld) was the general's first choice as Knott's replacement' but he feared that the Countess of Arundel would not relinquish him as her chaplain. If she would not, his second choice was George Duckett (vere Holtby). We do not know what the reaction of the Countess was. We do know, however, that Silisdon, informed of the general's selection, took advantage of his constitutional right to represent to the general reasons against the appointment. While these negotiations were taking place, Duckett was appointed vice-provincial in August 1646. He was to remain in that office until a definite decision had been made about Silisdon. The general was undecided: he did not know whether he should insist on Silisdon or accept his plea and appoint Duckett. In September 1646 Father General Vincenzo Carafa sent letters patent for both men and asked Knott to decide between them; Silisdon became provincial in October. 94 By the date of Silisdon's appointment, the first phase of the Civil War had ended. Beginning with the victory of the New Model Army at Naseby on 14 June 1645, the armies of Parliament and those of their Scottish allies consistently defeated the Royalists. One by one royal strongholds fell . In early May 1646 Charles gave himself over to the Scots. The political future of England was unclear. The victorious Parliament was now divided on how to proceed against the king and on the nature of the religious and political settlement. In their opposition to a Presbyterian settlement, the Independents sought allies and initiated clandestine negotiations with a few Catholics, including the Jesuit Henry More, to reach a modus" vivendi. The subsequent agreement, the 'Three Propositions' regarding papal power, was condemned by the papacy.95 Silisdon arrived in England in the autumn of 1647 shortly after this agreement had exploded into a controversy. The affair only accentuated Silisdon's reluctance to be provincial and he wished to resign the office.


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ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

He suggested to the general that he remain as provincial for six more months and then resign in favor of Edward Knott, who had returned to England as Silisdon's advisor on the theological controversy. By that time, Silisdon reminded the general, Knott would have been out of office for the required eighteen months. Carafa rejected the suggestion and informed Silisdon that he must serve a complete term. 96 Ironically Silisdon served longer than he should have. Father General Carafa died on 8 June 1649. Immediately thereafter the vicar-general requested and received a papal indult that allowed provincials and rectors to remain in office beyond their three-year term until the election of a new genera1. 97 The English political world had changed considerably when the Jesuits convened their next provincial congregation. The outbreak of a second Civil War convinced the more radical victorious Independents that peace would only be permanent with the execution of the king. Charles was executed on 30 January 1649. Instead of a king, a House of Lords, and a House of Commons, England was now a Commonwealth governed by a Rump Parliament. 98 The old order had passed away. When the English Jesuits met at Watten from 9 to 15 September 1649, many feared that they too were passing away. The restriction on the number of novices had had its effect. Over the past seven years, the men reminded the general, nearly seventy members of the English province had died. Yet during that same period, they were only allowed to accept fewer than twenty candidates. As a result the province was shrinking: England was deprived of the missionaries that the country so badly needed and the continental colleges were unable to provide the services that their founders intended. But, because of the restrictions imposed by the general, the province could not remedy the problem. The congregation asked that the restrictions be lifted so that the provincial and his consultors could accept any candidate that they deemed worthy. In his reply, the general, the recently elected Francesco Piccolomini, suggested a compromise: the provincial and his consultors could decide on the number to be accepted each year but the general, having considered the province's finances, must approve. 99 The triennial catalogue of 1649 noted a slight improvement in the province's finances so the economic measures must have had some effect. Yet when Francis Forster became provincial in 1650, his was not a healthy province. Recovery from the financial woes inflicted by the Thirty Years ' War on the continent and the Civil War at home would be hard. In fact the province never fully recovered. Never again, at least


INTRODUCTION

29

before the Suppression of the Society, would there be as many Jesuits in England as there were in the 1630s and 1640s. Rarely would the preSuppression Society be as strong financially as it was before 1640. Just as it seemed that the province had turned the corner and begun to climb out of its depression, the Popish Plot (1678) and the Glorious Revolution (1688) dealt it two severe blows. Notes

1. This introduction is both an adaptation of my doctoral thesis, 'The Society of Jesus in England 1623-1688: An Institutional Study' (Ph. D., University of Warwick, 1984) and a summary of the history of the English Jesuits that I am currently writing. 2. Candido de Dalmases, S.J., Ignatius of Loyola (St. Louis, 1985) pp. 109-10. 3. Joseph N. Tylenda, S.J., ed., A Pilgrim's Journey: The Autobiography of Ignatius of Loyola (Wilmington, 1985) p. 87. 4. See Willem Peters, 'Richard Whitford and St. Ignatius's Visit to England,' AHSI25 (1956) 328-50; Philip Caraman, S.J., Ignatius Loyola: A Biography of the Founder of the Jesuits (London/San Francisco, 1990) pp. 82-83. 5. On this expedition, see William V. Bangert, S.J. , Claude Jay and Alfonso Salmeron (Chicago, 1985) pp. 167- 71. 6. Epp. Ign., V, 304-05 translated in William J. Young, S.J., Letters of St. Ignatius Loyola (Chicago, 1959) pp. 304-05. For the letters to the whole Society regarding the prayers and Masses, see Epp. Ign., V, 220-22 translated in Young, p. 301. For other letters regarding prayers for England, see Epp. Ign. , V, 164, 283 288. 7. James Brodrick, S.J., Saint Ignatius Loyola, the Pilgrim Years (New York, 1956) p. 313. 8. Epp. Ign., VI, 651. 9. Epp. Ign., VI, 675, 713; VII, 104, 142-43. 10. Epp. Ign., VII, 472, 576. 11. Epp. Ign., VIII, 308-10 translated in Young, pp. 361-62. 12. Epp. Ign., VIII, 311. 13. Epp. Ign., VIII, 574; X, 132, 247, 259; XI, 195. 14. Epp. Ign., IX, 275 . 15. Epp. Ign., IX, 284, 289. 16. Epp. Ign. , XI, 551. 17 . Epp. Ign., X, 38, 39. 18. Ribadeneira, I, 308-10, 310-14, 318-20, 320-23. 19. J. H. Pollen, S.J., ed., 'The Memoirs of Father Robert Parsons' in Miscellanea II (London, 1906) CRS 2, p. 189. 20. Heresy and Obedience in Tridentine Italy: Cardinal Pole and the Counter Reformation (Cambridge, 1972) p. 257. 21. The Reign of Mary Tudor (London, 1979) p. 347. 22. The Tudor Age and Beyond (Malabar, Florida, 1987) p. 154.


30

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23. 'Saint Ignatius and Cardinal Pole,' AHSI 25 (1956) 87, 91-93. Crehan attributed Pole's reluctance to accept Jesuits to his disapproval of the treatment of Bobadilla in the constitutional crisis within the Society that followed the death of Ignatius. This, however, does not explain Pole's rejection of the Society during Ignatius's lifetime. 24. Tudor England (Oxford, 1988) p. 227. Recently, Christopher Haigh claimed 'it is unfair and untrue to accuse the Marian Church of having failed to discover the Counter-Reformation.' He thought that Pole's refusal may have been wise because 'controversial preaching by a rigorist order with foreign experience and leadership might have been disruptive' (English Reformations: Religion, Politics, and Society under the Tudors [Oxford, 1993] p. 224). 25. Lainez, III, 539. 26. Lainez, V, 482. 27 . Pol. Compl., I, 526. 28. See Thomas H. Clancy, S.J., 'The First Generation of English Jesuits,' AHSI57 (1988) 137-62. 29. Francis Edwards, S.J., ed., The Elizabethan Jesuits: Historia Missionis Anglicanae Societatis Jesu (1660) of Henry More (London, 1981) p. 38; Clancy, 'The First Generation of English Jesuits,' 138. 30. For the history of the college, see Michael E. Williams, The Venerable English College Rome (London, 1979). 31 . See Thomas M. McCoog, S.J., 'The Establishment of the English Province of the Society of Jesus,' Recusant History 17 (1984) 121-39, for a fuller account. The instructions can be found in Leo Hicks, S.J. (ed.), Letters and Memorials of Father Robert Persons, S.J. (London, 1942) CRS 39, pp. 316-19. 32. See Thomas M. McCoog, S.J., 'Campion's Plea for a Disputation,' The Month 2nd n.s. 14 (1981) 414-17. 33. For the activities of the AllenlParsons party, see Thomas H. Clancy, S.J. Papist Pamphleteers (Chicago, 1964) and Peter Holmes, Resistance and Compromise (Cambridge, 1982). 34. Michael E. Williams, St. Alban s College Valladolid (London, 1986). 35. On the Spanish seminaries, see Leo Hicks, S.J., 'Father Parsons, S.J. and the Seminaries in Spain,' The Month 157 (1931) 193-204,410-17,497-506; 158 (1931) 26-35, 143-52. 36. Leo Hicks, S.J., 'The Foundation of the College of St. Omers,' AHSI 19 (1950) 146-80; Hubert Chadwick, SJ., St. Omers to Stonyhurst (London, 1962). 37. This bull is printed in Thomas Francis Knox, ed., The Letters and Memorials of William Cardinal Allen (London, 1882) pp. 335- 36. 38. The controversy occasioned by the 'Wisbech Stirs' is long and complicated. For a more detailed exposition, see T. G. Law, A Historical Sketch of the Conflicts between Jesuit and Secular in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth (London, 1889); T. G. Law, ed., The Archpriest Controversy, 2 vols. (London, 1896, 1898) The Camden Society n. s. 56, 58; Adrian Morey, The Catholic Subjects of Elizabeth I (London, 1979); Arnold Pritchard, Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England (London, 1979); P. Renold, The Wisbech Stirs (1595-1598) (London, 1958) CRS 51. 39. Copies of this document, with different subsequent emendations, are common. Cf. ARSI, Angl. 3IIl, ff. 141, 143; Rom. 156, ff. 159r-160v, 161r-163r,


INTRODUCTION

31

191r-197r, 198r-199v, 200r-206r. For a fuller exposition, see McCoog, 'Establishment of the English Province.' 40. See John Bossy, 'Henri IV, the Appellants and the Jesuits,' Recusant History 8 (1965-66) 80-122. 41. SC, Anglia III, 20, 36. In this context, see also a list of reasons advanced to James for favoring the Society of Jesus (SC, Anglia III, 41). 42. 'The English Catholic Community 1603-1625,' in The Reign of James VI and I, edited by Alan G. R. Smith (London, 1973) p. 95. 43. For the most recent account of the plot, see Mark Nicholls, Investigating Gunpowder Plot (Manchester, 1991) and for a critique and a different interpretation, see Francis Edwards, S.1., 'Still Investigating Gunpowder Plot,' Recusant History 21 (1993) 305-46. 44. On James and the question of toleration, see John 1. La Rocca, "Who Can't Pray With Me,' Can't Love Me": Toleration and the Early Jacobean Recusancy Policy,' Journal of British Studies 23 (1984) 22-36. 45 . The best survey of this battle is Johann Peter Sommerville, 'Jacobean Political Thought and the Controversy over the Oath of Allegiance,' (D. Phil thesis, Cambridge University, 1981). Until Sommerville's thesis is published, see his Politics and Ideology in England 1603-1640 (London, 1986) for many of the ideas. 46. ARSI, Angl. 31/1, f. 122; Fondo Gesuitico 6511624. 47. In 1599 the English were allowed to send one novice a year to Belgium. See Philip Caraman, S.1., Henry Gamet (1565-1606) and the Gunpowder Plot (London, 1964) pp. 165, 172-73. 48. ARSI, Angl. 311II, ff. 296r-297v; Fondo Gesuitico 651/624; Hist. Soc. 134, f. 50v; SC, Anglia IV, 9, 14, 22, 24; Caraman, Henry Gamet and the Gunpowder Plot, pp. 318-19; Foley, Records, VIllI , xlvi- xlvii; Albert 1. Loomie, S.1., The Spanish Elizabethans (New York, 1963) pp. 129-81; A. F. Allison, 'The Later Life and Writings of Joseph Creswell, S.1. (1556-1623), ' Recusant History 15 (1979) 84-89. 49. SC, Anglia IV, 22; Allison, 'Later Life and Writings of Creswell, ' 84-89; McCoog, 'The Society of Jesus in England,' 78-79. 50. McCoog, 'The Establishment of the English Province,' 128; McCoog, 'The Society of Jesus in England,' 81-82; Allison, 'Later Life and Writings of Creswell,' 80-84. 51. On the controversy that followed the death of Acquaviva see McCoog, 'Establishment of the English Province.' 52. ARSI, Angl. 321II, ff. 1-2. 53. McCoog, 'Establishment of the English Province,' 132-33. 54. See Thomas M. McCoog, S.1., "The Slightest Suspicion of Avarice": The Finances of the English Jesuit Mission,' Recusant History 19 (1988) 103-23. 55. The vice-provincial's memorial requested Edward Knott (vere Matthew Wilson) as his socius and suggested that a new consultor replace Joseph Creswell, who resided too far away to be of much assistance (ARSI, Angl. 321II, f. 133). 56. ARSI, Angl. 32/II, ff. 129r-130v. 57. ARSI, Angl. 32/I, ff. 127r-128v. Regarding the personal requests, Vitelleschi would not allow the appointment of Knott because he was needed in


32

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WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Rome. As for Creswell, if he was unable to participate because of distance, someone else should be named as a consultor (ARSI, Angl. 32/1, f. 135). 58. ARSI, Angl. 1, ff. 135r, 136v, 143r, 147v, 148v, 150r, 152v; Hist. Soc. 134, f. 91r; McCoog, 'The Society of Jesus in England,' 103-05. 59. On these negotiations and the role that the Spanish match played in contemporary politics, see Thomas Cogswell, The Blessed Revolution: English Politics and the Coming of War, 1621-1624 (Cambridge, 1989). 60. Bishop died within a year of his appointment and he was succeeded by Richard Smith. On the appointment and subsequent controversy- in which the Society played a significant role-see Philip Hughes, Rome and the CounterReformation (London, 1942) pp. 271-430; A. F. Allison, 'Richard Smith, Richelieu, and the French Marriage. The Political Aspect of Smith's Appointment as Bishop for England in 1624,' Recusant History 7 (1964) 148-211; Maurus Lunn, 'Benedictine Opposition to Bishop Richard Smith (1625-1629),' Recusant History 11 (1971) 1-20; A. F. Allison, 'A Question of Jurisdiction. Richard Smith, Bishop of Chalcedon, and the Catholic Laity, 1625-1631,' Recusant History 16 (1982) 111-45; 19 (1989) 234-85; 20 (1990) 164-206. 61 . On the congregation and subsequent creation of the province, see McCoog, 'The Establishment of the English Province' and Thomas M. McCoog, S.1., 'The Creation of the First Jesuit Communities in England,' The Heythrop 10urnal28 (1987) 40-56. 62. The twelve original districts were London, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Wales, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Hampshire, Lincolnshire, Suffolk, Worcestershire, Staffordshire, and Devon. The districts consisted of more than the county designated in the title. In 1625 all the districts had names: London had become the House of Probation of St. Ignatius; Wales, the College of St. Francis Xavier; Staffordshire and Lancashire, the College of Blessed Aloysius Gonzaga; Yorkshire, the Residence of St. Michael; Leicestershire, the Residence of St. Anne (and, later the College of the Immaculate Conception); Northamptonshire, the Residence of St. Mary; Hampshire, the Residence of St. Thomas of Canterbury; Lincolnshire, the Residence of St. Dominic; Suffolk, the Residence of Blessed Francis Borgia (and, later the College of the Holy Apostles); Worcestershire, the Residence of St. George; and Devon, the Residence of Blessed Stanislaus Kostka. Durham was added as the Residence of St. John the Evangelist. 63. ARSI, Angl. 1, ff. 167v-168r. 64. See McCoog, "'The Slightest Suspicion of Avarice,''' 119-20. 65. ARSI, Congr. 59, ff. 111r-121 v; Congr. 60, ff. 274r-280v; John G. Nichols, "The Discovery of the Jesuits" College at Clerkenwell in March 1627128' in The Camden Miscellany II (London, 1853): The Camden Society (o.s.) 55 ; 'A Supplementary Note to "'The Discovery of the Jesuits' College at Clerkenwell'" in The Camden Miscellany IV (London, 1858): The Camden Society (o.s.) 73; McCoog, 'The Society of Jesus in England,' 116-119,264-77. 66. ARSI, Angl. 10, ff. 56r-59v; 86r-89v; Hist. Soc. l34, f. 103v; Congr. 60, ff. 279r-28 Or. 67. On events leading up to the dissolution, see Richard Cust, The Forced Loan and English Politics 1626-1628 (Cambridge, 1987).


INTRODUCTION

33

68. ARSI, Congr. 62, ff. 238r-243v. 69. For a more thorough exposition of the Edict and the battle for the restored land, see Robert Bireley, SJ. Religion and Politics in the Age of the CounterReformation. Emperor Ferdinand II, William Lamormaini, S.J., and the Formation of Imperial Policy (Chapel Hill, 1981) pp. l33-50. 70. ARSI, Congr. 62, ff. 244r-245v; Angl. 1, ff. 387r, 392r, 412v, 413r. 7l. ARSI, Angl. 10, ff. 168r-174r. 72. ARSI, Angl. 1, ff. 339v, 351r, 356r, 374v. 73. ARSI, Hist. Soc. l34, f. 125r; SC, Anglia IV 95,98 (translated in Foley, Records, II, 396-98, 398-99. 74. ARSI, Angl. l3, ff. 176r-182r. 75 . ARSI, Congr. 65, f. 493r. 76. On the 'personal rule' see Esther S. Cope, Politics Without Parliaments (London, 1987), L. 1. Reeve, Charles I and the Road to Personal Rule (Cambridge, 1989), and Kevin Sharpe, The Personal Rule of Charles I (New Haven, 1992); on Catholicism during this period see Caroline Hibbard, Charles I and the Popish Plot (Chapel Hill, 1983); on anti-Catholicism also see Robin Clifton, 'Fear of Popery' in The Origins of the English Civil War (London, 1973) pp. 144-67; on the theological changes within the Established Church, see Nicholas Tyacke, Anti-Calvinists: The Rise of English Arminianism c.1590-1640 (Oxford, 1987). Recently in The Caroline Captivity of the Church: Charles I and the Remoulding of Anglicanism (Oxford, 1992), Julian Davies has attacked Tyacke's thesis. 77. On events leading to the English Civil War, see Anthony Fletcher, The Outbreak of the English Civil War (London, 1981); Michael G. Finlayson, Historians, Puritanism, and the English Revolution: the Religious Factor in English Politics before and after the Interregnum (Toronto, 1983); Conrad Russell, The Causes of the English Civil War (Oxford, 1990), and The Fall of the British Monarchies 1637-1642 (Oxford, 1991). 78. ARSI, Congr. 66, ff. 225 r-247 v, 289r-290r; Ang!. 1, ff. 484v, 487v. 79. ARSI, Angl. l3, ff. 176r-182r. 80. ARSI, Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v. 8l. ARSI, Angl. 1, ff. 497r, SOIl', 501 v, 503r, 507r. 82. On this, see Hibbard, Charles I and the Popish Plot, pp. 168-226. 83. In this short account, I am following the historical narrative of Robert Ashton (Reformation and Revolution 1558-1660 [London, 1984] pp. 296-311). 84. ARSI, Congr. 69, ff. 315r-328v. 85. ARSI, Angl. 14, ff. 67r-73r; Angl. 13, ff. 255r-260r. 86. ARSI, Ang!. 1, f. 523r. 87. ARSI, Angl. 2, ff. 9r, 14r, 21r, 21 v, 27v, 36r, 41r, 50r. 88. ARSI, Angl. 14, ff. 153r-158r. 89. Although many Catholics assisted the king, others sought to remain neutral in the struggle. On the issue of Catholic royalists, see Joyce Lee Malcolm, Caesar's Due: Loyalty and King Charles 1642-1646 (London, 1983) pp. 50-52. 90. ARSI, Congr. 70, ff. 124r, 127r. 91. See Thomas M. McCoog, SJ., 'The Finances of the English Province of the Society of Jesus in the Seventeenth Century: Introduction,' Recusant History 18 (1986) 2l.


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92. ARSI, Angl. 2, ft. 44v, 46v, 54r, 58r, 59r, 60r, 61r, 62v, 68r. 93 . See John W. Padberg, S.1., 'The General Congregations of the Society of Jesus: A Brief Survey of Their History,' Studies in the Spirituality of Jesuits 6 (1974) 23. 94. ARSI, Angl. 2, ft. 74v, 77v, 78r, 81r. 95. On this see Thomas H. Clancy, S.1., 'The Jesuits and the Independents, 1647,' AHSI40 (1971) 67-90; and Francis Edwards, S.1., 'Henry More, S.1. : Administrator and Historian, 1586-1661,' AHSI 41 (1972) 233-81 . 96. ARSI, Angl. 2, f. 97r. 97. ARSI, Angl. 2, ft. 123v, 124r, 125r, 125v. 98. On the establishment of the Rump Parliament and the early days of the Commonwealth, see Blair Worden, The Rump Parliament (Cambridge, 1974); David Underdown, Pride's Purge: Politics in the Puritan Revolution (London, 1971); and Ronald Hutton, The British Republic 1649-1660 (London, 1990). 99. ARSI, Congr. 72, ft. 356r-364v. For the finances, see Angl. 14, ft. 207r-211r.


35

INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS Rome Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu Angl. III-II. Angl. 2/I-II. Angl. 3. Angl. 7. Angl. 8. Angl. 9/I-II. Angl. 10. Angl. 11. Angl. 13. Angl. 14. Angl. 15. Angl. 16. Angl. 30/I- II. Angl. 3111- 11. Angl. 32/I-II. Angl. 33/I-II. Angl. 36/1-11. Angl. 37. Angl. 38/I-II. Angl. 39.

Epistolae Generalium a 1605 ad 1641.-527 ft.; I, 290 x 235 mm. ; comp.; II, 280 x 235 mm. ; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1642 ad 1698.-577 ft.; I, 280 x 245 mm.; comp.; II, 295 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium 1698-1744 Soli 1681-1769.-399 ft.; 285 x 240 mm.; compo Necrologia provoAngliae 1578-1732.-252 ff.; 330 x 265 mm.; compo Necrologia II provo Angliae 1573-1651 .304a ft.; 225 x 195 mm.; compo Missionis Hiberniae Catalogi antiqui 1609-1717.-101 ff.; I, 420 x 342 mm; II, 290 x 235 mm. ; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Angliae 1622-1639.-216 ff.; 308 x 245 rnm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Angliae 1632-1683- 256 ft.; 305 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provoAngliae 1621-1649.-335 ff.; 320 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Angliae 1639-1649.215 ff.; 288 x 220 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Angliae 1651-1658.-1 82 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provoAngliae 1665-1675.-202 ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; co'mp. Anglia Historia I 1550-1589.-599 ff.; I, 315 x 270 mm.; comp.; II, 300 x 270 mm.; compo Anglia Historia II 1590-1615.-731b ff.; I, 295 x 240 mm.; comp; II, 320 x 245 mm.; compo Anglia Historia III 1616-1627.-495 ff .. 1,295 x 250 mm.; comp.; II, 330 x 260 mm.; compo Anglia Historia IV 1628-1644.-928 pp.; J, 295 x 250 mm.; comp.; II, 330 x 255 mm.; compo Anglia Historia VII 1587-1697.-499a ff.; 340 x 265 mm.; compo Anglia Historia VIII 1579-1624.-147a ff.; 290 x 240 mm.; compo Anglia Historia IX 1568-1664.-1,500 ff; II, 212b ff.; 293 x 240 mm.; compo Anglia Fundationes Collegiorum.-230 ff.; 345 x 270 mm.; compo


36 Angl. 40. Angl. 4l. Angl. 42.

Aquit. lII-II. Aquit. 61l-II. Aquit. 9II-II-III.

Arag. l. Arag. 2. Arag. 3. Arag. 4. Arag. 5. Arag. 61l-II. Arag.71l-II. Arag. 81l-II. Arag. lOll-II. Arag.20. Arag.211l-II. Arag. 36. Austr. 1a. Austr. 2/I-II. Austr. 4/I-II.

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Historia Domus Watenensis.-78a ff.; 315 x 195 rnm.; compo Hibernia Historia 1566, 1591-1692.-289a ff.; 335 x 265 mm.; compo Scotia Historia: 1566-1634.-290a ff.; 345 x 265 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1571 ad 1612.-523 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Aquitaniae 1590-1669.-457b ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Aquitaniae et catalogi informationum (triennales) 1556-1649.-592 ff.; 330 x 250 mm.; comp; III-75 ff.; 210 x l70 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1576.-59 ff.; 285 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1576 ad 1580.-38k ff.; 350 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1580 ad 1583.-78 ff.; 285 x 225 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1583 ad 1588.-80 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1586 ad 1594.-54 ff.; 230 x 155 mm.; loose. Epistolae Generalium a 1588 ad 161l.-505 ff; I, 300 x 250 mm.; II, 295 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1612 ad 1625.-416 ff.; 275 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1625 ad 1647.-499 ff.; I, 280 x 230 mm.; II, 275 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1587-1649.-634 ff.; 330 x 260 mm.; compo Necrologia provinciae Aragoniae 1579-l719.195 ff.; 225 x 170 mm.; compo Necrologia provinciae Aragoniae 1557-1680.520 ff. I, 325 x 255 mm.; II, 330 x 255 mm.; compo Libro de Adrnitidos en la Provincia de Aragon 1554-1606.-61 pp.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Registro di lettere del Rev. G. E. Mercurian a P. P. della Provincia d' Austria a 1576 ad 1581 (transcript).-319 pp.; 275 x 210 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1601 ad 1620.-1106 pp.; 1,290 x 220 mm.; II, 280 x 210 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1628 ad 1635 .-1092 pp.; 1,275 x 215 mm.; II, 270 x 220 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Austr.24. Austr. 25/I-II.

Austr.26. Austr.27 . Austr. 28. Austr.29. Austr. 122. Austr. 123. Austr. 124. Austr. 125/I-II. Baet. 1a. Baet. 1. Baet. 2. Baet. 3/1- II. Baet. 4/I-II. Baet. 5/1-II. Baet. 6/1-II. Baet. 8. Baet. 9/1-II.

37

Catalogi primi, secundi, et tertii (triennales) provo Austriae 1584, 1587, 1590, 1593, 1599.-262 ft.; 228 x 157 mm.; compo Catalogi primi, secundi et tertii (triennales) provo Austriae 1587, 1590, 1593, 1597, 1600, 1603, 1606, 1611, 1615, 1619.--450 ft.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1622-1636.--457 ft.; 290 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1639- 1642.- 374 ft.; 290 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1645- 1649.-304 ft.; 290 x 235 mm., compo Catalogi triennales l65l.- 311 ft.; 290 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum, officiorum et informationum provoAustriae 1562-1590.--45 ft.; 335 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi annui personarum et officiorum provo Austriae 1590-162l.-380 ft.; 320 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi annui personarum et officiorum provo Austriae 1622-1639.-239 ft.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1642- 1679.-684b ft.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1576.--48 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1580 ad 1584.-69 ft.; 280 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1584 ad 159l.- 145 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1591 ad 1609.-1214 pp.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1610 ad 1620.-1, 256 ft; II, 239 ft.; 1, 290 x 235 mm.; comp.; II, 280 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1620 ad 1631.-1,317 ft.; II, 210 ft.; 1, 280 x 235 mm.; comp.; II, 270 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1631 ad 1640.- 1, 341 ft.; II, 238 ft.; 1, 275 x 240 mm.; comp.; II, 280 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Baeticae 1583-1622.-355 ft.; 330 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Baeticae 1625-165l.--441 ft: 295 x 235 mm.; compo


38 Baet. 14/I-II. Baet. 25. Baet. 26. Baet. 28. Boh. 2/I-II. Boh. 11.

Bah. 12.

Boh. 13. Boh. 14. Boh. 89. Boh. 90/1-II. Boh. 195/1. Bras. llA.

Bras.2/A. Bras. 5/I-11.

Camp. 10. Camp. 18. Cast. 5. Cast. 6.

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AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Baeticae 1621- 1699.-495 ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Necrologia provo Baeticae 1570-1648.-160 ff.; 225 x 170 mm.; compo Necrologia provoBaeticae 1584-1729.-262 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; compo Difuntos dela Provincia de Andalucia 1556-1640.- 75 pp.; 225 x 150 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1637 ad 1657.-978 pp.; 1,280 x 235 mm.; II, 285 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Boherniae 1623-1634; et catalogi informationum (triennales) 16251633.-295 ff.; 295 x 215 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Bohemiae 1636- 1638; et catalogi informationum (triennales) 1636-1639.-323 ff.; 290 x 215 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1642-1645.-318 ff.; 290 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1649-1651.-338 ff.; 290 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum et informationum provo Bohemiae 1559-1572.36 ff.; 335 x 233 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1640-1689.-676a ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Necrologia provo Boherniae 1604-1679.371 pp.; 330 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1550 ad 1660.-318 ff.; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1661 ad 1685.-363a ff.; 340 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Brasiliae 1556-1698.-1, 249a ff.; 345 x 260 mm.; comp.; II, 239a ff.; 340 x 260 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Campaniae 1619-1649.-365 ff., 290 x 215 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Campaniae 1617- 1659.-375 ff., 300 x 225 mm., compo Epistolae Generalium a 1585 ad 1588.-106 ff.; 345 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1588 ad 1603.-472 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Cast. 711-11. Cast. 8. Cast. 9. Cast. 10. Cast. 11. Cast. 12. Cast. 1411-11. Cast. 1511-11. Cast. 16/1-11. Cast. 27. Cast. 27a. Cast. 37. Cast. 38. Chile 2. Congr.59. Congr. 60. Congr. 62. Congr.65. Congr.66. Congr. 69. Congr. 70.

39

Epistolae Generalium a 1603 ad 1612.-485 ff.; I, 290 x 240 mm.; II, 295 x 240 rnm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1613 ad 1622.-366 ff.; 285 x 240 rnm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1622 ad 1630.-392 ff.; 280 x 240 rnm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1630 ad 1637.-288a ff.; 275 x 230 rnm. compo Epistolae Generalium Soli a 1678 ad 1773.71 ff.; 280 x 210 rnm.; compo Epistolae Generalium Soli a 1602 ad 1626.98 ff.; 270 x 230 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Castellanae 1584-1600.-436 ff.; 330 x 230 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Castellanae 1603-1628.-631 ff.; I, 330 x 235 mrn. et 11,325 x 225 nun.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Castellanae 1633-1639.-453a ff.; I, 330 x 240 mrn.; II, 335 x 240 mrn.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Castellanae 1595, 1596, 1597/8.-44 ff.; 234 x 101 rnm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Castellanae 1604, 1616, 1617.-27 ff.; 310 x 220 mrn.; compo Necrologia provoCastellanae 1557-1699.238 ff.; 320 x 240 mrn.; compo Necrologia provo Castellanae.-290 ff.; 230 x 190 mrn.; compo Catalogi triennales 1640-1726.-369 ff.; 330 x 255 rnm.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1625.230 ff.; 320 x 240 mrn.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1626-1628.-311 ff.; 320 x 260 rnm.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1630-1634.-268 ff.; 300 x 250 mrn.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1636-1638.-287-516 ff.; 310 x 250 mrn.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1632-1643.-373 ff.; 335 x 250 rnm.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1642.418 ff.; 315 x 245 mrn.; compo Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1645-1646.-206 ff.; 295 x 245 mrn.; compo


40 Congr. 72. Epp. NN. 1. Epp. NN. 2. Epp. NN. 2a. Epp. NN. 3. Epp. NN. 4. Epp. NN. 38. Epp. NN. 81. Epp. NN. 90. Fl. Belg. 111-11. Fl. Belg. 2. Fl. Belg. 3. Fl. Belg. 4/1-II. Fl. Belg. 9. Fl. Belg. 10.

Fl. Belg. 11. Fl. Belg. 12. Fl. Belg. 13.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Acta Congregationum Provincialium 1647-1650.-364 ff.; 325 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium ad diversas provincias 1573-1590 (personales et secretae).-214 ff.; 300 x 240 mm; loose. Epistolae Generalium ad diversos (nostros et externos) 1584-1629.-350 ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Index litterarum generalium ad diversos 1584-1629.-n. f. ; 210 x 170 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium Litterae Italicae extra Italiam ab 7 april. 1629 ad 31 dec. 1633.-97 ff.; 280 x 215 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium Litterae Italicae extra Italiam ab 14 ian. 1634 ad 28 dec. 1641.-222 ff; 270 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium ab 19 dec. 1592 ad 11 ian. 1597.-115 ff.; 220 x 115 mm. ; compo Epistolae Generalium ab 1596 ad 1612.118a ff. ; 305 x 235 mm.; compo Sancti et Beati Societatis Iesu Epistolae, Testimonia, Acta.-197 ff. ; 350 x 280 mm. ; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1576; a 1583 ad 1610.-1189 pp.; 295 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1576 ad 1582.-95 pp.; 355 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1611 ad 1620.-643 pp.; 290 x 250 mm. ; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1620 ad 1630.-1260 pp.; 280 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Belgicae 1584-1603.-361 ff.; 300 x 255 mm. ; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Germaniae Inferioris seu Belgicae 1606-1611 et provo Gallo-Belgicae 1615-1619.-479 ff. ; 285 x 210 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Flandro-Belgicae 1622-1628.-156 ff.; 330 x 260 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Flandro-Belgicae 1633-1636.-203 ff. ; 285 x 200 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Flandro-Belgicae 1633.-024 ff. + 77 ff.; 283 x 200 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

FI. Belg. 14. FI. Belg. 15.

FI. Belg. 16. FI. Belg. 17. FI. Belg. 18. FI. Belg. 43. FI. Belg. 44. FI. Belg. 45. FI. Belg. 70/1-11. FI. Belg. 80.

Franc. lII-II. Franc. 4. Franc. 51I-I1. Franc. lO. Franc. 11. Franc. 12. Franc. 22.

41

Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Flandro-Belgicae 1639.-lO2 ff.; 290 x 215 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) et catalogus personarum et officiorum (brevis) anna 1638 provo Flandro-Belgicae 1639-1642.-224 ff.; 285 x 220 mrn.; camp. Catalogi triennales 1646.-33 pp; 94 ff.; 285 x 2lO mrn.; compo Catalogi triennales 1649.-130 ff.; 285 x 210 mrn.; compo Catalogi triennales 165l.-99a ff.; 285 x 210 mrn.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Belgicae 1577-1615.-373 ff.; 295 x 220 mrn.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Flandro-Belgicae 1616-1633.-305 ff.; 305 x 235 mrn.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) prnv. Flandro-Belgicae 1633-1668.-394 ff.; 295 x 220 mrn.; compo Necrologium Provo Flandro-Belgicae 1547-1676.-lO68 pp.; I, 522 pp; II, 523 ff.; I, 305 x 240 mm,; comp; II, 300 x 240 mrn.; compo Admissi in Societatem Belgicam ab anna 1542 ad annum 1612 et admissi in Flandro-Belgicam ab anna 1612 ad annum 1772 (Photocopies) Bibliotheque du College SJ., MS. Cote 350. 1. 7. ; 284 pp.; 200 x 160 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1604.-505 ff.; 285 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1619 ad 1628.-271 ff.; 270 x 220 mrn.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1628 ad 1638.-586 ff.; I, 280 x 230 mrn.; II, 260 x 210 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Franciae 1584-161l.-304 ff.; 322 x 233 mm.; compo Catalogi infOlmationum (triennales) provo Franciae 1615-1633.-361 ff.; 295 x 207 mm.; camp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Franciae 1636-1649.-392a ff.; 295 x 207 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Franciae 1566-1567 et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Franciae 1568-1640.361c ff.; 315 x 235 mrn.; compo


42 Franc. 23. Franc. 45/I-II. Gall. 1. Gall. 2. Gall. 3. Gall. 4. Gall. 5. Gall. 6/I-II. Gall. 7. Gall . 8. Gall. 9. Gall. 10. Gall. 25. Gall. 26. Gall. 27. Gall. 28 . Gall. 29. Gall. 30. Gall. 31. Gall. 32. Gall. 33. Gall. 44. Gall. 92.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Franciae 1640-1681.--468 ff.; 305 x 235 mm.; compo Necrologia provo Franciae 1591-l798.- 560b ff.; 320 x 245 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass . Galliae 1608-1614.135 ff.; 300 x 215 mm.; compo Professi 3. votorum ass. Galliae 1608-1626.98 ff.; 290 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1615- 1618.123 ff.; 285 x 210 mm .; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1619- 1629.470 ff.; 295 x 215 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1630- 1634.279 ff.; 300 x 215 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1635- 1646.700 ff.; 285 x 215 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1647-1651.302 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1652- 1655.359 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1656-1661.313 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Galliae 1662- 1669.409 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Galliae 1608-1619.118 ff.; 300 x 215 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Galliae 1619-1634.295 ff.; 300 x 215 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Galliae 1633-1652.150 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Galliae 1656-l705.250 ff.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass . Galliae 1600--1618.136 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Galliae 1619-1629.218 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Galliae 1629-1640.174 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Galliae 1637-1652.175 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Galliae 1652-1664.224 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Registrum secretum epistolarum generalium a 1583 ad 1602.-85c ff.; 225 x 180 mm.; compo Epistolae Galliae a 1585 ad 1587.-369 ff.; 340 x 270 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Gal1.--B-eIg. lII- II. Gall. Belg. 7. Gall. Belg. 8. Gall. Belg. 24. Gall . Belg. 251I. Gall. Belg. 27. Germ. 1. Germ. 2. Germ. 3. Germ. 4. Germ. 5. Germ. 6. Germ. 7. Germ. 8. Germ. 9. Germ. 10. Germ. 11. Germ. 12. Germ. 13. Germ. 14. Germ. 15 . Germ. 16. Germ . 17.

43

Epistolae Generalium a 1612 ad 1625.- 1007 pp.; 1,295 x 235 mm.; II, 280 x 240 rnm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Gallo-Belgicae 1622-1649.-559 ff.; 280 x 215 nun.; compo Catalogi triennales 1642-1649.-1- 80 pp.; 81-264 ff.; 285 x 215 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo GaUo-Belgicae 1613-1639.- 254 ff.; 285 x 210 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1641-1719.-508 ff.; 295 x 235 rnm. compo Necrologia provo Gallo-Belgicae 1608-1665.886 pp.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Gradus ass. Germaniae 1551-1589.-382 ff.; 330 x 225 rnm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1581-1599.430 ff.; 315 x 210 mm.; compo Professi 3 vot. ass. Germaniae 1584-1638.335 ff.; 285 x 210 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1600-1609.557 ff.; 400 x 210 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1610-1618.472 ff.; 295 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1618- 1622.262 ff.; 295 x 210 mm; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1623-1628.525 ff.; 285 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1629-1633.404 ff.; 290 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1634-1636.367 ff.; 290 x 210 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1637-1639.344 ff.; 280 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1640-1642.445 ff.; 290 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1643-1645.493 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1646-1648.453 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1649-1652.454 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1653-1656.440 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1657-1662.550 ff.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Germaniae 1662-1665.444 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo


44 Germ. 59. Germ. 60. Germ. 6l. Germ. 62. Germ. 63. Germ. 64. Germ. 65. Germ. 66. Germ. 67. Germ. 68. Germ. 69. Germ. 77. Germ. 78. Germ. 79. Germ. 80. Germ. 81. Germ. 82. Germ. 83. Germ. 84. Germ. 85 . Germ. 86. Germ. 87. Germ. 113/1-II.

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650 Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1587-1599.-458 ff.; 310 x 210 mm. comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1600-1613.-773 ff.; 310 x 230 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1615-1618.-371 ff.; 295 x 205 rnm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1615-1624.- 772 ff.; 305 x 220 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1625-1634.-952 ff.; 300 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1633-1640.689 ff.; 295 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1640-1644.-391 ff.; 290 x 205 mm. ; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1646-165l.-697 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae ]652-1659.-510 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1660-1667.-580 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Germaniae 1668-1673.-493 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1581-1599.-373 ff.; 305 x 210 mm.; comp. Coadiutores tempora]es ass. Germaniae 1600-1614.-465 ff.; 300 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1615-1618.-183 ff.; 280 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1618-1625.-527 ff.; 295 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1626-1630.-416 ff.; 295 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1627-1642.-657 ff.; 300 x 205 mm. comp. Coadiutores temporaJes ass. Germaniae 1631-1636.-470 ff.; 300 x 205 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporaJes ass. Germaniae 1643-1649.- 566 ff.; 310 x 225 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1646-1652.-300 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1638-1664.-617 ff.; 310 x 230 mm.; comp. Coadiutores temporales ass. Germaniae 1661-1669.-662 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; comp. Ass. Germ. : Epistolae Generalium ad Externos a 1619 ad 1644.-958a ff.; I, 280 x 245 mm. ; II, 285 x 240 mm. ; comp.


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Germ. 131. Germ. 133/I-II. Germ. 134/I-II. Germ. 135/I-II. Germ. 136/I- II. Germ. 137/I- II. Germ. 138/I-II. Germ. 142. Germ. 143. Germ. 144. Germ . 145. Germ. 146. Germ. 152. Germ. 153. Germ. 154. Germ. 155. Germ. 156. Germ. 157. Germ. 158. Germ. 159. Germ. 160. Germ. 161. Germ. 162.

45

Catalogi personarum, officiorum et informationum ass. Germaniae 1548-1576.-386 ff., 340 x 235 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 157l.-51 0 ff.; 350 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1572.-582 ff.; 350 x 242 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1574.-556 ff.; 350 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1575.-522 ff.; 345 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1576.-436 ff.; 345 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1577.-450 ff.; 350 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1556- 156l.-311 ff.; 338 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1561.-244 ff.; 340 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1562-1563.-247 ff.; 340 x 235 mm.; compo Epistolae ass . Germ. 1564-284 ff.; 340 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1565.-172 ff.; 337 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1571-1573.-345 ff.; 360 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1573.-378 ff.; 345 x 242 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1574.-311 ff.; 355 x 242 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1575-1576.-322 ff.; 360 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1576-1578.-340 ff.; 354 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ . 1578- 1579.-318 ff.; 340 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1580.-333 ff.; 345 x 265 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1581-1582.-307 ff.; 350 x 260 rnm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1582.-316 ff.; 340 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1583.- 383 ff.; 340 x 225 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1584.-298 ff.; 338 x 230 mm.; compo


46 Germ. 164. Germ. 165. Germ. 166. Germ. 167. Germ. 170. Germ. 171'. Germ. 172. Germ. 173. Germ. 175. Germ. Sup. l. Germ. Sup. 1a. Germ. Sup. 2. Germ. Sup. 3. Germ. Sup. 5. Germ. Sup. 6. Germ. Sup. 19. Qerm. Sup. 20. Germ. Sup. 2l. Germ. Sup. 22. Germ. Sup. 23. Germ. Sup. 44. Germ. Sup. 44a.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555- 1650

Epistolae ass. Germ. 1585.-336 ff.; 340 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1585- 1586.-380 ff.; 340 x 225 mm.; compo Episto1ae ass. Germ. 1586.- 376 ff.; 340 x 233 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1587.- 372 ff.; 340 x 225 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1592.-360 ff.; 340 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1593.- 327 ff.; 340 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1594.-327 ff.; 340 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1594.-301 ff.; 340 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Germ. 1595.-321 ff.; 340 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1579 et a 1581 ad 1587.-197 ff.; 290 x 235 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1587 ad 1580.-49 ff.; 380 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1587 ad 1600.-216 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1600 ad 1610.- 283 ff.; 290 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1621 ad 1627.-498 ff.; 280 x 230 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1627 ad 1633.-614 pp.; 280 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Germ. Sup. 1584-1590.- 117 ff.; 217 x 145 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Germ. Sup. 1587-161l.- 649 pp.; 285 x 205 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provoGerm. Sup. 1614-1633.-01-10 ff., 67 pp., 68-441 ff.; 285 x 205 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Germ. Sup. 1636-1645.-73 pp., 74-219 ff.; 285 x 205 mrn., compo Catalogi triennales 1649- 1655.- 1- 144 pp; 145-388 ff.; 01-014 ff; 290 x 210 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum, officiorum et informationum provo Germ. Sup. 1561-1599.-150 ff., 330 x 230 mm.; compo Elenchi Patris Hoffaei 1567-1580 (photographs of originals in Provincial Archives, Munich).- 9 ff.; 310 x 210 mm.; loose.


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Germ. Sup. 44b.

Germ. Sup. 45. Germ. Sup. 46. Germ. Sup. 47. Germ. Sup. 63. Germ. Sup. 117. Germ. Sup. 119. Goa. 24/I-II. Goa. 25 . Hisp. l. Hisp. 2/I-II. Hisp. 3/I-II-IIl. Hisp.4. Hisp. 5. Hisp. 6/1-11. Hi p. 7. Hisp.8. Hisp. 9. Hisp. lOll-II.

47

Ingressi ad Provinciam Germaniae Superioris 1563-1605 (photographs of originals in Provincial Archives, Munich).-i6 ff.; 295 x 205 mm.; loose. Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Germ. Sup. 1600-1625.-384 ff.; 325 x 220 rnm. compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Germ. Sup. 1625-1639.-337 ff. , 285 x 205 rnm.; compo Catalogi breves 1641-1678.-570 ff.; 290 x 210 mm.; compo Necrologia provo Germaniae Superioris, 1619-1690; 734 pp.; 300 x 210 mm., compo Ordinationes sacerdotes in Provincia Germaniae Superioris, 1592-1771 (photocopies) codicis Bayer. Hauptstaatsarchiv, Miinchen, lesuitica 92. Dimissi e provoGermaniae Superioris, 1564-1773 (photocopies) codicis Arch. Provo Germ. Sup. (Miinchen), Mscr. V 61; 42 pp. Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) et catalogi officiorum (triennales) provo Goanae 1555-1608.-479 ff.; 320 x 245 rnm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Goanae 1614-1699.-375 ff.; 320 x 255 mm. ; compo Professi 4. votorum, coadiutores spirituales et temporales ass. Hispaniae 1549-1580.-415 ff.; 310 x 235 rnm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1581-1599.874 ff.; 305 x 230 rnm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1600-1614.955 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1615-1620.488 ff.; 293 x 225 rnm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1621-1625.496 ff.; 290 x 225 rnm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1626-1631.667 ff.; I, 300 x 230 rnm.; II, 295 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1632-1635.456 ff.; 300 x 225 rnm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1636-1637.248 ff.; 295 x 225 rnm. ; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1638-1640.457 ff.; 300 x 225 rnm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1641-1645.570 ff.; I, 310 x 230 rnm.; II, 315 x 230 rnm.; compo


48 Hisp. 11. Hisp. l21l-II. Hisp. 131l-IT. Hisp. 14. Hisp.36. Hisp.37. Hisp.38. Hisp. 39. Hisp.40. Hisp.41. Hisp.42. Hisp.43 . Hisp. 47/J-II. Hisp. 481l-II. Hisp.49. Hisp. 5Oil-II. Hisp.51. Hisp.52. Hisp. 53. Hisp.54. Hisp.70. Hisp. 135. Hisp. 137.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESU]TS 1555-1650

Professi 4. votorum ass . Hispaniae 1646-1650.519 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1651-1659.751 ff.; 310 x 225 rom.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1660-1664.653 ff.; 310 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1665-1669.372 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 3. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1585-1599.102 ff.; 285 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 3. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1600-1638.207 ff.; 295 x 215 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Hispaniae 1623-1651.-95 ff.; 295 x 220 rom.; compo Professi 3. votorum ass. Hispaniae 1683-1765.275 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Hispaniae 1581-1599.-259 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Hispaniae 1600- 1615.-133 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Hispaniae 1615-1639.-245 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. spiritual. ass. Hispaniae 1651-1699.~16 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1581-1599.-798 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1600- 1614.-594 ff.; 298 x 222 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1615-1618.-96 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1617-1627.-603 ff.; I, 295 x 220 mm.; II, 295 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1627-1632.-363 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1633-1640.-385 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1628-1652.-500 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. temporal. ass. Hispaniae 1650-1664 . ~78 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Epistolae extraordinariae generalium a 1594 ad 1640 . ~23 ff.; 280 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Hisp. 1593.-394 ff.; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Hisp. 1594.-368 ff.; 330 x 255 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Hisp. 138. Hisp. 139. Hist. Soc. 6.

Hist. Soc. 31. Hist. Soc. 32. Hist. Soc. 33. Hist. Soc. 35 . Hist. Soc. 36. Hist. Soc. 37 . Hist. Soc. 38. Hist. Soc. 39. Hist. Soc. 40. Hist. Soc. 41. Hist. Soc. 42. Hist. Soc. 43 . Hist. Soc. 43a. Hist. Soc. 44. Hist. Soc. 45. Hist. Soc. 46. Hist. Soc. 47.

49

Epistolae ass. Hisp. 1594-1595.-365 ff.; 330 x 255 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Hisp. 1595-1596.-364 ff.; 330 x 240 mm.; compo Creswell, Pars quaedam suae defensionis contra patres Hispanos in causa fundationis Serninarii Anglicani Madriti 1613-1615.-148a ff.; 230 x 170 mm.; compo Professi 4 votorum a 1541 ad 1657.-137 ff.; 275 x 210 mm.; compo Vota professorum et coadiutorum ab 1541 ad 1572.- 83 ff.; 294 x 240 mm.; compo Professi ab 1573 ad 1604.-50 ff.; 290 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4 votorum et coadiutorum spiritua1um Italiae et Germaniae 1600-1639.-39b ff.; 270 x 210 mm.; compo Professi assistentiae Hispaniae ab anno 1651 ad 1659 et assistentiae Lusitaniae ab anno 1655 ad 1659.-38a ff.; 272 x 205 mm.; compo Professi assistentiae Germaniae ab 1658 ad 1672 et assistentiae Galliae ab 1657 ad 1672.-39a ff.; 280 x 205 mm.; compo Professi 4 votorum ab 1651 ad 1668.- 120 ff.; 265 x 10 mm; compo Vota coadiutorum temporalium Italiae et Hispaniae 1600-1640.-118 ff.; 270 x 210 mm. compo Missionarii Societatis Iesu in anno 1653.-35 ff.; 282 x 220 mm.; compo Status et numerus S. I. a 1574 (Collectio catalogorum ex omnibus S. I. provinciis).281 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1557-1623.-165 ff.; 300 x 153 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1595-1642.-259 ff.; 290 x 165 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1604-1621.-55 ff.; 282 x 210 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1620-1643.-87 ff.; 275 x 152 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1629-1640.-77 ff.; 280 x 210 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1635-1643.-57 ff.; 320 x 125 mm.; compo Cata10gus defunctorum S. I. 1640-1649.-77 ff.; 280 x 210 mm.; compo


50

ENGLISH

Hist. Soc. 48. Hist. Soc. 49. Hist. Soc. 50. Hist. Soc. 54. Hist. Soc. 60. Hist. Soc. 61. Hist. Soc. 62. Hist. Soc. 134. Hist. Soc. 139/1-II. Hist. Soc. 140/l-II. Hist. Soc. 141/1-II. Hist. Soc. 142. Hist. Soc. 147. Hist. Soc. 175. Instit. 117/1- II. Instit. 120. Instit. 121. Instit. 122. Instit. 150. Instit. 151fI-II. Instit. 152fI-II. Instit. 153/1-II.

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1650-1669.-138 ff.; 280 x 220 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1670- 1700.-272 ff.; 285 x 215 mm.; compo Catalogus defunctorum S. I. 1678-1734.-138 ff.; 290 x 210 mrn.; compo Catalogus dimissorum Societatis Iesu 1573-1640.-34 ff.; 287 x 226 mm., compo Litterae patentes 1545-1647.-180 ff.; 313 x 232 mm. ; compo Litterae patentes 1573-160l.-138 ff.; 290 x 225 mrn.; compo Litterae patentes 1599-1640.-86 ff.; 325 x 235 mrn.; compo Patentes Acceptationum Collegiorum et A1iarum Donationum.-199 ff.; 345 x 270 mm. ; compo InfOlmationum: De Dirnissis e Societate.683a ff. ; 300 x 250 mrn. ; compo Informationum: De Inquisitionibus.-723 ff.; 295 x 230 mm. ; compo Informationum: De Inquisitionibus.-776 ff.; 305 x 240 mrn. ; compo Informationum: De Dirnissis et Inquisitionibus.675 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 votorum 1541-1705.-224 ff.; 430 x 300 mm.; compo Catalogi antiquissimi personarum, officiorum et informationum Italiae.- 176 ff.; 325 x 240 mm.; compo Ordinationes et Instructiones R. P. Generalium ab 1565 ad 1647.- 588a ff.; I, 315 x 250 mrn.; comp.; II, 325 x 255 mrn.; compo Epistolae Praepositorum Generalium ab 1547 ad 1583.-120 ff.; 320 x 215 mrn.; compo Epistolae aliquae pastorales Praepositorum Generalium ab 1556 ad 1660.-352b ff.; 305 x 255 mm.; compo Epistolae communes ad 1547 ad 1722.-106 ff.; 280 x 215 mm. compo Licentiae et Facu1tates P. Generalium ab 1601 ad 1606.-424d ff.; 300 x 255 mrn.; compo Licentiae et Facultates P. Generalium ab 1607 ad 1617.-496b ff.; 285 x 235 mm.; camp. Licentiae et Facultates P. Generalium ab 1618 ad 1627.-459 ff.; I, 280 x 240 mrn.; comp.; II, 290 x 240 mm.; compo Licentiae et Facultates P. Generalium ab 1628 ad 1694.-392 ff.; 285 x 235 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Instit. 187. Instit. 188. Ital. 1. Ital. 2. Ital. 3. Ital. 4. Ital. 5. Ital. 6. Ital. 7. Ital. 8. Ital. 9. Ital. 10. Ital. 11. Ital. 12. Ital. 13. Ital. 14. Ital. 15. Ital. 34. Ital. 35. Ital. 36. Ital. 37. Ital. 38. Ital. 39. Ital. 40.

51

Instructiones 1546-1582.-365 ff.; 340 x 260 mm.; compo Instructiones 1536-1596.-318a ff.; 350 x 280 rnm.; compo Vota simplicia I 1543-1584.-336 ff.; 228 x 155 rnm.; compo Vota simplicia II 1543-1584.-337-650 ff.; 230 x 150 nun.; compo Professi 4 et 3 vot., coadiutores formati Italiae 1542-1582.-568 ff.; 295 x 220 rnm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1581-1599.-368a ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1600-161O.-326a ff.; 290 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1611-1618.-377 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1618-1624.-392 ff.; 290 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1625-1631.-329 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1632-1639.--455 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1640-1643.-265 ff.; 285 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1644-1648.-368 ff.; 310 x 225 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1649-1653.-330 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1654-1657.-298 ff.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1658-1664.--436 ff.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 4 vot. ass. Italiae 1665-1670.-329 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; compo Professi 3 vot. ass. Italiae 1582-1647.-360 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; compo Coadiutores spirituales ass. Italiae 1582-1599.478 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Coadiutores spirituales ass. Italiae 1600-1618.276 ff.; 297 x 225 mm.; compo Coadiutores spirituales ass. Italiae 1619-1638.236 ff.; 297 x 225 mm.; comp. Coadiutores spirituales ass. Italiae 1639-1680.261 ff.; 295 x 220 mm. compo Coadiutores spirituales ass. Italiae 1681-1773.280 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Coadiutores temporales ass. Italiae 1582-1599.635 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo


52 Ital. 41. Ital. 42. Ital. 43. Ital. 44. Ita!. 45 . Ital. 46. Ital. 47. Ita!. 48. Ital. 57. Ital. 58. Ital. 59. Ital. 60. Ital. 62. Ital. 65. Ital. 105/I-II. Ital. 117. Ita!' 139. Ital. 142. Ital. 144. Ital. 148. Ital. 149. Ital. 150. Ital. 151. Ital. 155. Jap. Sin. 25.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Coadiutores tempora1es ass. Italiae 1600-1614.291 ff.; 298 x 225 mm.; compo == Hist. Soc. 39. Coadiutores temporales ass. Italiae 1615-1623.283 ff.; 295 x 220 mm. compo Coadiutores tempora1es ass. Italiae 1624-1632.260 ff.; 290 x 220 mm. compo Coadiutores temporales ass. Italiae 1633-1640.220 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Coadiutores temporales ass. Italiae 1641-1652.363 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Coadiutores tempora1es ass. Italiae 1653-1664.216 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Coadiutores temporales ass. Italiae 1665-1672.255 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; compo Vota simplicia I 1542-1606.-508 ff.; 315 x 215 mm.; compo Vota simplicia II 1548-1560.-395 ff.; 305 x 225 mm.; compo Vota simplicia III 1548-1568.~81 ff.; 305 x 215 mm.; compo Vota 1550-1598.-370 ff.; 310 x 225 mm.; compo Epistolae P. Gen. pro ass. Italiae 1559-1560.378 ff.; 298 x 238 mm.; compo Epistolae P. Gen. pro ass. Italiae 1564-1565.384 ff.; 285 x 218 mm.; compo Regesta epistolarun S. P. Ignatii 1554-1556.476 ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1561.-366 ff.; 332 x 228 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1570.-286 ff.; 332 x 223 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1571.-1-289 ff.; 390-501 ff.; 325 x 255 mm.; compo Episto1ae ass. Italiae 1574.-386 ff.; 330 x 255 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1575.-372 ff.; 330 x 255 mm. ; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1575.-1-239 ff.; 340-458 ff.; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1576.~18 ff.; 330 x 255 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1576.~11 ff;. 335 x 255 mm.; compo Epistolae ass. Italiae 1577.~18 ff.; 330 x 255 mm.; compo Cata10gi personarum et officiorum (breves) et catalogi informationum (trienna1es) proVo Japoniae 1582-1753.-293 ff.; 365 x 290 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Lith. 6.

Lith. 7. Lith. 811-II. Lith. 9. Lith. 10. Lith. 56/I-II. Lith. 61. Lugdun. 1. Lugdun.2. Lugdun. 12. Lugdun. 13. Lugdun. 14. Lugdun. 1511-II. Lugdun. 1811-II. Lugdun. 19. Lugdun.39. Lus. 1. Lus.2. Lus.3.

53

Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Lithuanjae 1604-1638 et catalogi informationum (triennales) 1611-1628.- 390 ff.; 340 x 240 rum.; compo Tres Catalogi Provinciae Lithuamae Anm 1628 Pro. R. P. Assistente (triennale).-132 pp.; 310 x 210 rum.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Lithuamae 1633- 1642.-371 ff.; 275 x 222 rum.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Lithuamae 1639-1651.-272 ff.; 280 x 210 rum.; compo Catalogi triennales 1645-1649.-213 ff.; 290 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1641-1694.-529 ff.; 295 x 260 rum.; compo Necrologia provo Lithuamae 1620-1690.932 pp.; 300 x 230 rum.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1583 ad 1599.-294 ff.; 290 x 250 rum.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1600 ad 1610.-312 ff.; 290 x 255 rum.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Lugdunensis 1584-1597.-176 ff.; 225 x 160 rum.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Lugdunensis 1587-1599.-36 ff.; 280 x 230 rum.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Lugdunensis 1600-1649.-451b ff.; 310 x 260 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1650-1699.-582 ff.; 295 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Lugdunensis 1584-1628.-448 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Lugdunensis 1633-1649.-449 ff. ; 300 x 240 rum.; compo Necrologia provo Lugdunensis 1620-1760.258 pp.; 290 x 220 rum.; compo Professi et Coadiutores ass. Lusitanjae 1553-1581.-177 ff.; 310 x 225 rum., compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitamae 1582-1599.197 ff.; 310 XX 225 mrn.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitamae 1600-1614.299 ff.; 320 x 255 rum.; compo


54 Lus.4. Lus.5. Lus. 6. Lus. 7. Lus.8. Lus.9. Lus. 18. Lus. 19. Lus.20. Lus.21. Lus . 22. Lus.23 . Lus. 25. Lus. 26. Lus.27. Lus.28. Lus.29. Lus.32. Lus.34. Lus. 37/1-II. Lus.39. Lus.42. Lus. 43/I-II.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555- 1650

Professi 4. votorurn ass. Lusitaniae 1615-1626.277 ff.; 290 x 225 mm .; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitaniae 1627-1639.252 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitaniae 1640- 1649.274 ff.; 300 x 230 mm .; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitaniae 1650-1659.309 ff.; 310 x 235 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitaniae 1660-1669.343 ff.; 300 x 235 mm.; compo Professi 4. votorum ass. Lusitaniae 1670-1679.304 ff.; 305 x 230 mm.; compo Professi 3. votorum ass. Lusitaniae 1581-1623.76 ff.; 310 x 222 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Spiritual. ass. Lusitaniae 1581-1599.-132 ff.; 310 x 222 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Spiritual. ass. Lusitaniae 1600-1618.-88 ff.; 315 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Spiritual. ass. Lusitaniae 1615-1639.- 53 ff.; 320 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Spiritual. ass. Lusitaniae 1631-165l.-58 ff.; 315 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Spiritual. ass. Lusitaniae 1644-l705.-221 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Temporal. ass. Lusitaniae 1582-1599.-132 ff.; 315 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Temporal. ass. Lusitaniae 1600-1618.-146 ff.; 320 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Temporal. ass. Lusitaniae 1617-1636.-1l7 ff.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo Vota Coadi. Temporal. ass. Lusitaniae 1626-165l.-130 ff.; 320 x 220 mm.; compo Necrologia ass. Lusitaniae 1580-1746.-227a ff.; 230 x 185 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium ad Provinciam Lusitaniae a 1588 ad 162l.-85 ff.; 220 x 160 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1644 ad 1663.-39 ff.; 275 x 210 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1601 ad 1674 Soli.422 ff.; I, 270 x 225 mm.; II, 275 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi officiorum et personarum (breves) provo Lusitaniae 1579-1687.-145 ff.; 345 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1577.--42 ff.; 220 x 150 mm.; compo Catalogi 1540-1549.-544 ff.; 340 x 290 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Lus. 44/I-II. Lus.45. Lus. 58/I-II. Lus.71. Lus . 72. Lus. 73. Lus.74. Med.l . Med.2. Med.20. Med. 21/I-II. Med.23. Med. 24/I-II. Med. 47. Med.48. Med.49. Med.50. Med. 51. Mex.4.

Mex. 8.

55

Catalogi officiorum (triennales) provo Lusitaniae 1587-1645.- 655a ft.; 330 x 240 mm .; comp. Catalogi triennales 1649-1676.-487 ft.; 340 x 255 mm.; comp. Necrologia ass. Lusitaniae 1548-1741.-597 ft.; 330 x 250 mm.; comp. Epistolae ass. Lusitaniae 1591-1592.-341 ft.; 330 x 225 mm.; comp. Epistolae ass. Lusitaniae 1593-1594.- 233 ft.; 330 x 240 mm.; comp. Epistolae ass. Lusitaniae 1595-1596.-204 ft.; 330 x 245 mm.; comp. Epistolae ass. Lusitaniae 1599-1655.-337 ft.; 330 x 240 mm.; comp. Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Medio1anensis 1615-1638.-242 ft.; 280 x 215 mm.; comp. Cata10gi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Mediolanensis 1639-1663.-361a ft.; 235 x 195 mm.; comp. Epistolae Generalium a 1586 ad 1598.01-025 ft.; 145 ft.; 220 x 115 mm.; comp. Epistolae Generalium a 1583 ad 1595.-490a ft.; 305 x 250 mrn.; comp. Epistolae Generalium a 1606 ad 1617.-599 ft.; 295 x 250 mm.; comp. Epistolae Generalium a 1618 ad 1620.-655a ft.; 280 x 235 mrn.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Mediolanensis 1589-1614.- 255 ft.; 315 x 235 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Mediolanensis 1611-1622.-274 ft.; 300 x 225 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Mediolanensis 1625-l633.-253a ft.; 296 x 240 mm.; comp. Cata10gi informationum (triennales) provo Mediolanensis 1636-1642.- 271a ft.; 285 x 222 mm.; comp. Catalogi triennales 1645-1649.-219 ft.; 290 x 240 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationes (triennales) et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Mexicanae 1580-1653.-515a ft.; 340 x 290 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Mexicanae 1751-1764 et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) 15831753.-384b ft.; 325 x 230 mm.; comp.


56 Neap. 1. Neap. 2. Neap. 3. Neap. 80.

Neap. 8l. Neap. 82. Neap. 83. Neap. 102. Neap. 103. Neap. 104. Neap. 105. Neap. 174. Neap. 175. Neap. 176. Neap. 178. N. R. et Quit. 3. Opp. NN. 339. Paraq. 4fI-II.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1576.-81 ff.; 290 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium 1576-1583.-21Oa ff.; 355 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1583 ad 1588.-323 ff.; 300 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Neapolitanae 1587-160l.-186a ff.; 285 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Neapolitanae 1603-1625.-404 ff.; 290 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Neapolitanae 1628-1639.-342a ff.; 290 x 245 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1642-165l.-269 ff.; 295 x 240 mm; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) proVo Neapolitanae 1612-1624.-204 ff.; 205 x 175 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Neapolitanae 1625-1640.-303 ff.; 290 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1641-1650.-342a ff.; 220 x 175 mm; compo Catalogi breves 1651-1662.-159 ff.; 220 x 170 mm; compo Catalogi breves provinciarum Neapolitanarum et Romanarum 1646, 1647.-113 pp.; 123 x 90 mm.; compo Necrologia I (Elogia Defunctorum) provo Neapolitanae 1587-1759.-216a ff.; 320 x 250 mm.; compo Necrologia II (Vitae Defunctorum) provo Neapolitanae 1577-1643.-363a ff.; 231 x 185 mm.; compo Ingressus Novitiorum proVo Neapolitanae 1587-1678.-382h ff.; 270 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Novi Regni Granatensis 1610-1688.-419b ff.; 335 x 255 mm.; compo Epistolae L. Norvegi, Joa. Harlernii.-179 ff.; 330 x 245 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) proVo Paraquariae 161O-1700.-511a ff.; I, 320 x 245; II, 320 x 245 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Paraq.7. Paraq. 15. Paraq.23. Peru. 4/I-II. Philipp. 2/I-II. Philipp. 4. Philipp. 6/I-II. Pol. 6. Pol. 7/I-II. Pol. 8. Pol. 9. Pol. 10. Pol. 11. Pol. 12. Pol. 43 . Pol. 44. Pol. 68/I.

Rh. Inf. 1.

57

Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Paraquariae 1617-1753 .-78 ff.; 325 x 230 mm.; comp. Necrologia provo Paraquariae 1598-1702.352 ff.; 225 x 170 mm.; comp. Gonzalez Diego, Catalogo de Paraguay 1767-1780 [phot., vari elenchi].-1l2 ff.; 195 x 135 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Peruanae 1568-1654.-504b ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Philippinarum 1595-1696.-512 ff.; I, 340 x 265; II, 320 x 250 mm.; comp. Catalogi breves 1618-1755.-240 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; comp. Annuae 1612-1631.-628 ff.; 245 x 180 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Poloniae 1584-1587.-143 ff.; 226 x 158 mm.; comp. Catalogi personarum, officiorum et informationum provo Poloniae 1564-1603.-359 ff.; I, 320 x 220 mm.; II, 295 x 230 mm. ; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Poloniae 1606-1622.-267 ff.; 320 x 220 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Poloniae 1625- 1633.-231 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; comp. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Poloniae 1636-1 639.-237 ff.; 295 x 225 mm.; comp. Catalogi triennales 1642-1649.-317a ff.; 295 x 235 mm.; comp. Catalogi triennales 1649-1651.-313 ff.; 280 x 245 mm.; comp. Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Poloniae 1590-1636.-300 ff.; 350 x 225 mm.; comp. Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Poloniae 1638-1683.-371 ff.; 300 x 230 mm.; comp. Necrologia proVo Poloniae 1598-1639.-352 pp.; 300 x 235 mm.; comp. Epistolae Generalium a 1576 ad 1581.-48 ff.; 340 x 260 rnm.; comp.


58 Rh . Inf. 2. Rh. Inf. 3. Rh. Inf. 16. Rh . lnf. 17. Rh. lnf. 18. Rh. Info 37. Rh. lnf. 37a. Rh . Inf. 38. Rh. Inf. 39/1- 11. Rh. Inf. 46. Rh. Inf. 74. Rh . lnf. 79. Rh. Sup. 6. Rh. Sup. 25. Rh. Sup. 26/1-11. Rh. Sup. 44/1-11. ROID. 11. Rom. 13/1-11. Rom. 14/1-II. Rom. 52. Rom. 53/1-II.

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Epistolae Generalium a 1573 ad 1590.-203 ff.; 290 x 260 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1590 ad 1600.-l79 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Rhen. Inf. 1587-1 622.-413 ff.; 300 x 225 rnm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Rhen. Inf. 1639-1649.-397 ff.; 290 x 215 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1649.-38 ff.; 275 x 205 mm.; comp o Catalogi informationum (triennales) et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provoRhen . lnf. 1560-1639.-463 ff.; 325 x 225 mm,; compo lngressi in Provincia Rheni 1569-1599.- 15 photographs; 310 x 210 mm.; loose. Catalogi informationum (triennales) et catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Rhen . Inf. 1584-1621.-282 ff.; 225 x 165 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1642-1690.-571b ff.; 300 x 250 mm.; compo Necrologia proVo Rhenanae 1620-l700.-278 ff.; 200 x 225 rnm.; compo Varia Documenta 1555-l728.-321 ff.; 360 x 270 mm.; compo Sacris Initiati 1580-1772.-329-429 ff (photographs); 360 x 270 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Rhen. Sup. 1628-1649.-184 ff.; 290 x 220 rnm,; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Rhen. Sup. 1626-1639.-99 ff.; 305 x 225 mm.; comp o Catalogi breves 1641-1740.-756 ff.; 295 x 240 mm.; comp o Necrologia provo Rhenanae Superioris 1620-l722. -9l7 pp.; I, 325 x 240 mm.; comp.; 11,292 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium ad Provincialem Romanum ab 1552 ad 1665.-65 ff.; 300 x 215 rnm .; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1580 ad 1591.-401 ff.; 295 x 240 rnm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1591 ad 1599.-515 ff.; I, 295 x 250 mm.; II, 290 x 235 mm.; compo Visitationes 1582-1665.-306b ff.; 300 x 255 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum, officiorum (breves) et informationum (triennales) provo Romanae 1571-1597. -367 ff.; 292 x 220 mm.; comp o


INDEX OF MANUSCRI PTS

Rom. 54. Rom. 55. Rom . 56. Rom. 57. Rom. 58. Rom. 59. Rom. 78/1. Rom. 78/II1. Rom. 78b. Rom. 78c. Rom. 79. Rom. 81. Rom. 94. Rom. 110. Rom. 11 1. Rom. 112. Rom. 156/I- II. Rom. 169. Rom. 170.

59

Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Romanae 1600- 1611.-327 ft.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Romanae 1616-1 622.-349 ff.; 290 x 245 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Romanae 1625- 1633.-373 ff.; 285 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Romanae 1636-1 639.- 296 ft.; 275 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Romanae 1642-1645.- 344 ft.; 275 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1649-165l.-322 ft.; 270 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Romanae 1604-1606, 16l7, 1691.-88 ft.; 285 x 220 mm.; compo Catalogi Domus Professae Romanae 1646-1730.-97 ft.; 235 x 160 mm.; compo Catalogi antiquissimi Italiae 1546-1577.-241 ft.; 325 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi Domus Professae Romanae 1549-1730.-282 ft. (photocopies); 295 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Romanae 1598, 1599, 1602-1605, 1615.-276 ft.; 110 x 68 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1650-1656.-198 ft. ; 215 x 165 mm. compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Romanae 1690-1695.-249a ft.; 225 x 145 mm.; compo Catalogi CoUegii Romani 1601-1642.-281c ft.; 11 x 8 mm.; compo Catalogus Collegii Romani 1603/1604.-27 ft.; 10 x 7 mm.; compo Catalogus novitiorum S. Andreae 1565-1657.608 pp.; 105 x 90 mm.; compo Romana Historia Collegiorum Anglorum, Scotorum, et Hibemicorum 1579-l783.-562 ft.; 1,225 x 165 mm.; II, 300 x 250 mm.; compo Registrum novitiorum provo Romanae 1556-1 668.--44 ft.; 235 x 175 mm.; compo Liber novitiorum provoRomanae 1556-1569.107 ft.; 295 x 228 mm.; compo


60 Rom. 171. Rom. 17l1A. Rom. 171/C. Rom. 172. Rom. 173. Rom. 185. Rom. 188/1-11. Rom. 208. Sardo 2. Sardo 3. Sardo 4. Sic. 59. Sic. 60. Sic. 6l. Sic. 62. Sic. 63. Sic. 64. Sic. 65. Sic. 66. Sic. 155. Sic. 156.

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Vocationes 1636-1 644.-366e ff.; 295 x 245 mm. compo Liber novitiorum provo Romanae 1569-1594.149 ff.; 280 x 210 mm.; compo Novitii qui Romae tirocinium posuerunt 1565-1586 (photocopies). Liber novitiorum provo Romanae 1594-1630.270 ff.; 310 x 195 mm.; compo Liber novitiorum provo Romanae 1631-1675.184 ff.; 335 x 255 mm.; compo Necrologia I provo Romanae 1602-1656.289a ff.; 320 x 240 mm.; compo Necro10gia provoRomanae 1541-1736.-618 ff.; 225 x 155 mm.; comp o Notitiae de Sociis S. I. 1588-1591.-30 ff; 225 x 150 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Sardiniae 1600-1772.-439 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Sardiniae 1565-1636.-350 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; comp o Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Sardiniae 1639-1660.-330 ff.; 300 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi antiquissimi provo Neapolitanae et Siciliae 1553-1571.-223 ff.; 330 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Siciliae 1590-1606.-258 ff.; 325 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Siciliae 1611-1622.-430a ff.; 315 x 230 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Siciliae 1625-1628.-295a ff.; 320 x 240 mm .; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provoSiciliae 1633-1639.- 374a ff.; 295 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1639.-no continuous foliation (c. 35 ff.); 270 x 200 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1642-1645.-397 ff.; 295 x 245 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1649-165l.-353b ff.; 290 x 245 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Siciliae 1610-1637.-258 ff.; 310 x 245 mm.; comp o Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) provo Siciliae 1638-1649.-364a ff.; 225 x 190 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

Sic. 157. Sic. 189. Sic. 190. Sic. 19l. Tolet. 511- 11. Tolet. 6/1- 11. Tolet. 7/1-11. Tolet. 811- 11. Tolet. 9. Tolet. 10. Tolet. 11. Tolet. 12a/1-I1. Tolet. 13. Tolet. 14. Tolet. 15. Tolet. 2111- 11. Tolet. 22. Tolet. 23. Tolet. 24.

61

Catalogi breves provinciarum Siculae 1643.59 pp.; 215 x 155 mm.; compo Necrologia I (Vitae defunctorum) provo Siciliae 1540- 1695, l795.-346a ff.; 325 x 255 mm.; compo Necrologia II (Vitae defunctorum) provo Siciliae 1567-1635.-397 ff.; 220 x 170 mm. ; compo Necrologia III (Vitae defunctorum) provo Siciliae 1637-l784.-436 ff.; 225 x 175 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1588 ad 1600.-601 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1600 ad 1610.-854 pp.; 1,295 x 245 mm.; II, 290 x 245 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1611 ad 1621.-483 ff.; I, 290 x 245 mm.; II, 285 x 240 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1621 ad 1628.- 526 ff. ; I, 275 x 225 mm.; II, 280 x 235 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1628 ad 1634.-431 ff.; 280 x 235 mm.; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1634 ad 1638 et a 1611 ad 1633.-413a ff.; 295 x 255 mm. ; compo Epistolae Generalium a 1602-1626 Soli.-70 ff. ; 270 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi breves et triennales 1550-1599.194 ff.; I: 330 x 245 mm; comp.; II: 230 x 180 mrn.; compo Catalogos de Toledo 1587, l767 et de los defunctos.-32 pp.; 47 pp. ; 115 pp.; 230 x 160 mrn.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorurn (breves) provo Toletanae 1602-1620.- 154 ff.; 223 x 105 mm. ; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves provo Toletanae 1623-1678.-376a ff.; 310 x 230 mrn. ; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) proVo Toletanae 1584-1597.-406 ff.; 325 x 250 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Toletanae 1619- 1625.-273 ff.; 305 x 240 mm. , compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Toletanae 1628-1636.-214-487 ff.; 290 x 235 mrn.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Toletanae 1639- 1649.-280 ff.; 295 x 230 mm.; compo


62

ENGLISH

Tolet. 45. Tolos. 5. Tolos.9. Tolos. lOll-I. Tolos.26.

Ven.36. Ven.37. Ven.38 . Ven. 39/I-II. Ven.40. Ven.71. Ven. 72/I-II. Vitae 84. Vitae 85. Vitae 86. Vitae 101. Vitae 149. Vitae 155 (+ 156, + 157)

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Necrologia provo Toletanae 1557-1670.-351 ff.; 325 x 260 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiorum (breves) proVo Tolosanae 1609-1647.-530 pp.; 315 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Tolosanae 1587-1 642.-437b ff.; 315 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1645-1660.-557 ff.; 315 x 240 mm.; compo Liste des novices de Toulouse et Bordeaux 1571-l751 dressee par Ie P. L. M. Cros, SJ. d'apres Ie registre des admissions de Toulouse et Ie camer des premiers voeux de Bordeaux (copy) (original Arch. Provo Tolosanae Societatis Iesu) 94 ff; 290 x 240 mm. Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Longobardiae 1573.-67 ff.; 212 x 162 mID.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Venetiae 1590-1602.-298 ff.; 300 x 225 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Venetiae 1603-1619.-266 ff.; 295 x 220 mm.; compo Catalogi informationum (triennales) provo Venetiae 1622-1642.-481 ff.; 290 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi triennales 1645-1651.-237 ft.; 290 x 240 mm.; compo Catalogi personarum et officiomm (breves) provo Venetiae 1614-1645.-392 ff.; 300 x 235 mm.; compo Catalogi breves 1646-1659.-421 ff.; 235 x 180 mm; compo Vitae Sociomm ex annis 1556-1662.-l30 ff.; 200 x 165 mm.; compo Vitae Sociomm ex annis 1562-1687.-105 ff.; 225 x 180 mm.; compo Vitae Sociomm ex annis 1549-1684.-215 ff.; 230 x 190 mm.; compo Imago Tumuli Societatis Iesu.-l3lO pp.; 295 x 210 mm.; compo Elogia 1547-1642.-446a ff.; 295 x 240 mm.; compo Elogia patmm et fratmm.-305 ff.; 320 x 240 mm.; loose.


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

63

Fondo Gesuitico Fondo Gesuitico 634, Fondo Gesuitico 644. Fondo Gesuitico 648. Fondo Gesuitico 651 .

651 /593 651 /594 65 1/595 651 /596 65 1/597 65 1/598 651/599

651 /600 651/601 651/602 6511603 651/604 6511605 65 1/606 651/607 651/608 651/609 651/610 65116] 1 6511612 6511613

facs . C, doc. 1. Assistentiae Societatis Iesu (II) Assistentia Germanorum, Catalogus Anglia, 1629, Fasciculus (270 x 220 mm.) 6 ff.; loose. Epistolae Selectae 1: A-Bly. Fasciculi 169 (350 x 225 mm.) n. f; loose. Epistolae Selectae 5: G-Mal. Fasciculi 292-363 (350 x 225 rnm.) n. f; loose. Epistolae Selectae ex Anglia, Fasciculi 593-661 (350 x 225 mm.) n. f ; loose. Copy of a letter from a priest in prison (14 February 1579). Letters of William Allen, 1575-1586. Copies of letters from two English priests imprisoned for their faith (10 November 1578). Two letters from London: anonymous letter of 16 June 1581 and a letter of Christopher Hollywood of 6 September 1600. Anonymous letter of 23 January 1598. Copy of a supplication to the pope from unnamed Englishmen who request the excommunication of the queen . Copy of an undated petition for admission to the Society. Spanish translation of an anonymous letter of 20 November 1605. Copy of a letter written in London, 24 January 1607. Letter from Robert Anselmo (ve re Jones) in London, 25 February 1595, to general. Relazione delle ultime parole del Padre Luigi [David Lewis] a Hereford. Letter of William Baldwin (1595). Letters of Richard Barrett (1584-1585). Letter from John Bereblochi, an English priest, 4 October 158l. Letter from Ralph Bickley, London, to the general, 12 July 1592. Letters from George Blackwell to the general, 1598. Letter to Paolo Bombino, 14 April 1618. Letters from John Burnett in London to the general, 1603-1604. Letters from John Bushlock (vere Christopher Holywood) to the general, 1599-1606. Letters from Edmund Campion, 1580-158l. Letter from alumni of the English College in Rome to the general, 17 May 1597.


64

ENGLISH

651/614 6511615 6511616

651/617 651/618 651/619 6511620 651/621 651/622 651/623 651/624 651/625 651/626 651/627 651/628 651/629 651/630 651/631 651/632 6511633

651/634 6511635

651/636 651/637

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Letters from Richard Cowlins to the general, 1597-1600. Letter of Joseph Creswell to the general, 12 August 1589. Letter from William Crichton to the general 28 October 1589 and an anonymous letter regarding Parsons's negotiations for the general in Spain (c. 1592). De martyrio Georgii Gervasii (1608) missing. Copy of a letter from Bernardino de Mendoza to his sister, 4 December 1581, regarding the persecution. Relazione del Martitio 31 July 1581. Estratti da alcuni storici d'Inghilterra. Estratti di lettere (1584) Letter of Thomas Fortescue to general Acquaviva, 13 November n. d. Letter from Bernard Gardiner to the general, 20 August 1603. Letters from Henry Garnet from 1586 and miscellaneous contemporary documents regarding his death and 'the straw. ' Letters of Henry Silisdon to Paolo Bombino, 1608-1609. Letter from Edward Harvard to the general, 21 August 1595. Letter from Philip Harrison in London to the general, 11 July 1604. Letter from Henry Holland to Edmund Campion, 12 February 1579. Letters from Richard Holtby in England to the general, 1606-1609. Letters from William Holt to the general, 1589, 1599. Letter from Christopher Holywood in London to the general, 20 December 1599. Letter from Robert Jones in London to the general, May 1606. Letter from Thomas Langdale in Barcelona to the general, 2 October 1581. Letters of Thomas Lister to the general, 1596-1597. Letters from Alexander Macureus to the general, 1602-1603. Letters from Gregory Martin to Edmund Campion, 1575-1579. Letter from Gonzalo Mendez to the general, 19 October 1602.


INDEX OF MANUSCRLPTS

651/638 651/639

651/640 651/641 651/642 651/643 651/644 651/646 651/647

651/648 651/649 651/650 651/651 651/652

651/653 651/654 651/655. 651/656. 651/657. 651/658. 651/659. 651/660.

651/661. 651/662. Fondo Gesuitico 683. Fondo Gesuitico 684.

65

Letter from Giorgio Nigrinus in London to the general, 29 July 1603. Letters from John Ogilvy to the general, 1614-1615. Letters from Robert Parsons, 20 October 1580 to 1610, includes a few letters to him. Letter from John Pullen to the general, 1596. Letter from Thomas Pounde to general (15 November 1599). Letter from John Pullen to the general, n. d. Relazione dei martiri inglesi dell ' agosto 1588. Relazione delle cose successe nel collegio inglese di Valladolid anno 1595. Letter from John Radford to general (1 May 1593). Letters from Robert Southwell, 1585-1590. Letter from Robert Stafford to Paolo Bombino (15 October 1620). Copy of a letter from Thomas Stapleton to ??? (23 March ?). Letters from Thomas Stephenson to the general (24 July and 26 October 1604). Letter from Decio Scriverio to Paolo Bombino (4 July 1622). Notizie su Maria Stuart e suo figlio Giacomo. Letter of Oswald Tesimond in London to the general (18 October 1603). Copy of a letter from Thomas Tichburn in England to the Rector of the English College (10 November 1595). Letters from G. Tonerey (sp?) in Scotland (1588). Copies of letters from Anthony Tyrell in London, 1581, 1588. Letter of Manuel Vallada to the general, 20 October 1602. Letter of Michael Walpole to the general, kal. January 1604. Letter of Edward Walpole from London to the general, 4 September 1607. Letters from William Weston to the general, 1587, 1598. Copy of a letter from Samuel Wharton to ???, 15 March 1596. Miscellanea 8: De Sanctis et Martyribus Societatis Iesu. 8 theca; 35 fasciculi; n. f. 350 x 250 mm.; loose. Miscellanea 9: Menologia. 9 theca; 42 fasciculi; n. f.; 350 x 250 mm. ; loose.


66

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

Fondo Gesuitico 685 . Fondo Gesuitico 720. Fondo Gesuitico 720/A. Fondo Gesuitico 733. Fondo Gesuitico 737. Fondo Gesuitico 739. Fondo Gesuitico 860/ I-II-III. Fondo Gesuitico 1368, Fondo Gesuitico MS 2.

Fondo Gesuitico MS 25.

Fondo Gesuitico MS 80.

1555-1650

Miscellanea 10: De Desertoribus: 'Infelices exitus desertorum Societatis lesu.' 10 fasciculi; n. f 350 x 250 mm.; loose. De Missionibus pro fidelibus et infidelibus. 15 fasciculi; n. f; 350 x 250 mm.; loose. Missiones in Europa. 26 fasciculi; n. f 350 x 250 mm.; loose. Indipetae 2: Italia 1589-1606.-455 ff; 350 x 250 mm.; loose. Indipetae 6: Italia 1623-1626.-536 ff.; 350 x 250 mm.; loose. Indipetae 8: Italia 1630-1 633.- 320 ff.; 350 x 250 mm. ; loose. Viara circa l'agentie di Fiandra et d'lnghilterra.579 ff.; I, 355 x 250 mm.; II, 360 x 265 mm.; III, 360 x 250 mm.; compo fasc . 8, doc. 5. Dimissi a Societate ex assistentia Germaniae ab anno 1618 ad annum 1634, Fasciculus (270 x 210 mm.) 16 ff. Vocationes ad Societatem (Vocazioni meravigliosa dalla Compagnia racolte dal P Giovanni Antonio Valtrino 1575).-1, 109 ff; II, 354 ff; III, 223 ff.; 230 x 180 mm.; compo Suffragia precum indicta per Societatem pro fundatoribus et Benefactoribus ab anno 1615. hoc est ab initio Generalatus P. Mutii Vitelleschi.312 pp.; 200 x 140 mm.; compo Breviarum Spirituale P. Alfonsi Agazzari senensis cum quibusdam mediatationibus P. Roberti Southwellis martyris in Anglia.-n. f; 135 x 105 mm.; compo Vatican Library

Barberini Latin MS 8621.

Carteggi diplomatici Inghilterra, 'Catalogus sacerdotium Societatis Iesu Provinciae Anglicanae.'106 ff.; 340 x 230 mm.; compo London Public Record Office

SP 12/155. SP 12/156. SP 14/81. SP 15/34.

State Papers Domestic, Elizabeth 1582.-197 ff.; 340 x 260 mm; compo State Papers Domestic, Elizabeth 1582.-162 ff.; 330 x 260 mm.; compo State Papers Domestic, James I 1615.-209 ff.; 330 x 240 m.; compo State Papers Domestic, Addenda Elizabeth 1599-1602.-225 ff.; 350 x 250 mm.; compo


INDEX OF MANUSCRIPTS

SP 16/99. SP 16/250. SP 94/l. PRO 31/9/130.

67

State Papers Domestic, Charles I, Jesuits at Clerkenwell-198 ff.; 340 x 260 mrn.; compo State Papers Domestic, Charles I November, 1633.-234 ff.; 350 x 270 mm.; compo State Papers Foreign, Spain 1577-1582.-331 ff.; 360 x 275 mm.; compo Transcripts (made in the 19th century) from the Roman Archives, Barberini MSS., 'Catalogus Sacerdotium Societatis Iesu Provinciae Anglicanae.'-299 ff.; 330 x 250 mrn.; loose.

Jesuit Provincial Archives, Farm Street AASI46/1217 AASI46/23/8. AASI46/24/l.

Transcripts of the Letters of Father Robert Parsons; loose. Transcripts of Documents Relating to 16th and 17th Century Ireland and to Irish Jesuits; loose. Excerpta ex archivo publico Bruxellensi, a P. John Morris, S. 1.-860 pp.; 225 x 190 mm.; compo

Blackburn, Lancashire Stonyhurst College Anglia I. Anglia II. Anglia III. Anglia IV. Anglia V. Anglia VI.

A, IV, 3.

Collected Manuscripts, 1554-1594.-83 fasc.; 330 x 250 mrn.; compo Collected Manuscripts, 1595-1600.-67 fasc.; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Collected Manuscripts, 1600-1613.-130 fasc.; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Collected Manuscripts, 1613-164l.-111 fasc.; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Collected Manuscripts, 1641-1694.-120 fasc .; 330 x 250 mm.; compo Collected Manuscripts, 1136-1697.-131 fasc.; 330 x 250 mrn.; compo Catalogus primorum Patrum et Fratrum Societatis Iesu in Anglia collectus de variis libris et catalogis MS in Archivio Romano, praesertim vero de Libro Procuratoris Domus Profess. ab an no Domini 1556 et simili ProCUf. domus Probat. S. Andreae et ab anno 1566 inchoatis.-35 pp.; 300 x 220 mm.; compo


68

MANUSCRIPTS CONTAINED IN THE MONUMENTA ANGLIAE VOLUMES Occasionally there is more than one copy of a given catalogue. In such cases, both references are provided in the following list. On the differences between the two, consult the Monumenta volumes. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40

Rom. 78b, f. 116r. Rom. 78b, f. 136r. Rom. 78b, f. 14r. Rom. 78b, ff. 20r, 20v. Rom. 78b, f. 21r. Rom. 78b, f. 27r. Rom. 78b, ff. 28v, 29r, 29v. Germ. 131, f. 171r. Germ. 131, f. 178r. Germ. 131, f. 53r. Germ. 131, f. 320r. Bah. 89, f. 12r. Bah. 89, f. lOr. Rom. 78b, ff. 31r, 31 v, 32r, 32v. Germ. 131, f. 16]r. Rom. 78b, f. 34v. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 5v, 6v, 7r; Germ. Sup. 44, f. 12r. Germ. 131, f. 122r. Sic. 59, f. 15v. Rh. Inf. 37, ff. 14r, 14v. Germ. 131, f. 306r; Germ . 131, f. 214r. Germ. 131, f. 84r. Germ. 131, f. 97r. Rom. 78b, ff. 37r-37v, 38r. Rom. 78b, ff. 35r, 35v. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 23r, 23v. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 24v. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 27v. Aquit. 9, ff. 13v, 15r. Austr. 12, f. 9r. Austr. 122, f. 6r. Germ. 131, f. 314r. Germ. 131, ff. 3r, 3v. Pol. 7/I, f. 6r. Pol. 7/I, ff. 3r, 3v. Bah. 89, f. 14r. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 15v, 17r, l7v. Rom. 78b, ff. 48r, 48v, 49r, 50v. Rom. 78b, f. 53r. Rom. 78b, f. 67r.


MANUSCRIPTS CONTAINED IN THE MONUMENTA ANCLIAE VOLUMES

41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87

Rom. 78b, f. 39v; Rom. 78b, ff. 43r, 43v. Rom. 78b, f. 54r. Germ. 131, ff. 6r, 7r, 18v. Germ. 131, f. 153r. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 38r. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 47r, 47v, 48r. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 56r, 56v. Germ Sup. 44, f. 61 v. Pol. 7/1, f. 9v. Boh. 89, f. 16r. Rom. 78b, f. 61 v. Rom. 78b, ff. 63r, 64r; Rom. 78b, f. 66r. Rom. 78b, f. 56v. Germ. 131, f. 22 . Germ. Sup. 44, f. 49r. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 54r. Pol. 7/1, f. 19r. Boh. 89, f. 18r. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 65v. Rom. 78b, ff. 65r, 65v. Germ. 131 , ff. 27v, 29r. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 53r. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 32r. Rom. 78b, f. 69r. Germ. 131, f. 195v. Boh. 89, f. 32r. Pol. 71I, ff. 23r, 24r. Boh. 89, f. 20r. Austr. 122, f. 27v. Rom. 78b, ff. 57r, 57v, 58r. Rom. 78b, ff. 60r, 60v. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 59r. Germ. Sup. 44, f. 67r. Germ. 131, ff. 3Or, 30v, 35r. Pol. 71I, f. 27r. Boh. 89, f. 24r. Pol. 71I, f. 42r. Austr. 122, ff. 29r, 29v. Germ. 131, ff. 194r, 194v. Germ. 44, f. 73r. Boh. 89, f. 34r. Pol. 7/1, f. 31r. Pol. 71I, f. 40r. Rom. 78b, ff. 98r, 99r. Germ. 133, f. 114v. Germ. 131, ff. 186r, 186v. Hist. Soc. 41, ff. 81v, 91r, 93v, 95v, 105r, 163r, 168v.

69


70 88

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Hist. Soc. 41, ff. 148r, 154r, 170v, 171v, 173r, 186v, 187r, 187v, 190r, 190v. 89 Germ. 131, ff. 148r, 148v, 149r. 90 Rom. 78b, ff. 110v, 111 v. 91 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 175v, 176r. 92 Goa. 241l, f. 123r. 93 Fl. Belg. 9, ff. 5r, 6r, lOr, 13r. 94 Austr. 24, f. 31r. 95 Bras. 51l, f. 21 r. 96 Goa. 24/1, ff. 139r, 155r. 97 Lugd. 12, f. 37r. 98 Lugd. 12, ff. 27v, 28r. 99 Rh. Inf. 38, f. 9r. 100 Germ. Sup. 19, ff. 34v, 35r-35v. 101 Pol. 6, f. 3v. 102 Pol. 6, f. 16r. 103 Pol. 6, f. 26r. 104 Bras. 51l, f. 28v. 105 Rom. 53, ff. 106r, 106v, 109r, 11Or. 106 Rh. Inf. 37, f. 22a v. 107 Austr. 24, f. 68v; Austr. 25/1, f. 2r. 108 Austr. 24, ff. 78r, 78v; Austr. 25/1, ff. 7r, 8v. 109 Pol. 6, f. 142v; Pol. 71lI, f. 80r. 110 Austr. 24, f. 10 1v; Austr. 25/1, ff. 9r, 10v. III Goa. 241l, f. 160r. 112 Lugd. 13, ff. 1r, 1v. 113 Lugd. 12, f. 76v. 114 Rh. Inf. 38, ff. 73r, 76v, 77r, 79r. 115 Germ. Sup. 19, f. 46r. 116 Germ. Sup. 19, f. 79r. 117 Pol. 7III , ff. 49r-49v; Pol. 6, f. 112r. 118 Pol. 71II, ff. 54v, 55v; Pol. 6, ff. 102v, 104rl04v. 119 Pol. 7III , f. 61v; Pol. 6, ff. 118v-119r. 120 Austr. 122, ff. 41r, 41 v, 42r, 42v, 43r. 121 Goa. 241l, f. 176v. 122 Lugd. 13, ff. 3r, 4r. 123 Bras. 51l, f. 32v. 124 Lugd. 13, f. 5r. 125 Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 76r, 77r. 126 Med. 47, f. 4r. 127 Cast. 141l, f. 171r. 128 Fl. Belg. 9, ff. 139v, 144v, 145v, 150v, 188r, 188v. 129 Austr. 123, ff. 3v, 5r, 6v, 7v. 130 Neap. 80, f. 20r. 131 Lugd. 13, f. 7r. 132 Lugd. 12, f. 107v. 133 Rh. Inf. 38, f. 122r.


MANUSCRIPTS CONTAINED IN THE MONUMENTA ANGLIAE VOLUMES

134 Rh. Inf. 38, f. 127r. 135 Germ. Sup. 19, f. 94v. 136 Germ. Sup. 19, f. 101 v. 137 Pol. 7/11, f. 95r. 138 Pol. 7111, f. 99r. 139 Pol. 7/11, ff. 104r-104v. 140 Austr. 123, ff. 15r, 16r, 16v. 141 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 01v, 03r, 03v, 04r, 06r, 06v. 142 Austr. 123, ff. 9r, 9v, lOr, 13v. 143 Neap. 80, f. 46r. 144 Pol. 43, ff. 6r, 7r, 7v. 145 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 1v, 2r, 2v, 3r, 4r, 6. 146 Neap. 80, f. 53r. 147 Lugd. 13, f. 9v. . 148 Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 79v, 81r, 81 v. 149 Angl. 3111, f. 121r. 150 Baet. 8, ff. 88r, 95r. 151 Fl. Be1g. 9, ff. 211r, 215r, 231 v, 234r, 234v. 152 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 7v, 9r, 9v, 11 v, 13 v, 14r. 153 Rom. 53, f. 175v. 154 Neap. 80, f. 87r. 155 Pol. 7/11, f. 158r. 157 Pol. 7/11, f. 1641'. 158 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 15r, 15v, 161', 16v, 171', 19v. 159 Austr. 123, ff. 211', 221', 22v, 24r. 160 Goa. 24/1, f. 220v. 161 Goa. 24/1, ff. 229v, 244v. 162 Pol. 43, ff. 8r, 8v. 163 Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 93r, 96v, 99r. 164 Cast. 27, ff. 3v, 4v. 165 Rom. 53, ff. 211r, 212v, 213v. 166 Franc. 22, f. lOr 167 Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 101r, 104v. 168 Angl. 3111, ff. 123r-124r. 169 Cast. 27, f. 20v. 170 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 25r, 26r, 27r, 27v, 29r, 31 v, 32r. 171 Austr. 123, ff. 27r, 27v, 28v. 172 Goa. 24/11, f. 267v. 173 Franc. 22, f. 12r. 174 Lugd. 13, f. 16v. 175 Med. 47, f. 77r. 176 Med. 47, ff. 84r, 88v. 177 Pol. 43, ff. 14r, 14v. 178 Germ. Sup. 44, ff. l11r, 115r, 115v. 179 Rom. 53, ff. 217v, 218r, 218v, 219v, 220r, 222v. 180 Cast. 27, f. 34v. 181 Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 21r, 23r, 24r.

71


72 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Austr. 123, ff. 32r, 32v. Goa. 241II, f. 273r. Rom. 53, ff. 223v, 224r, 224v, 226r, 226v. Med. 47, f. 91 v. Franc. 22, f. 14r. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 121r, 123r, 123v. Pol. 43, f. lOr. Pol. 43, f. 17r. Pol. 711, f. 205r. Pol. 7!II, f. 208r. Pol. 711, f. 211 v. Rom. 53, ff. 324v, 326r, 327r, 328v, 331v. Angl. 3111, f. 122r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 33r, 33v, 34v, 35v, 36r, 43r, 44v, 45r. Austr. 123, ff. 34r, 35r. Bras. 5/1, f. 41 v. Pol. 43, ff. 20r, 21r. Rom. 79, ff. 7r, 7v, 20v, 22r, 24r, 25r. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 130v, 131r. Cast. 14111, f. 409r. Baet. 8, ff. 134v, 136r, 140r, 140v, 141r. Fl. Belg. 9, ff. 291r, 300v, 319r, 319v, 321v-322v. Austr. 123, ff. 38r, 38v, 39r, 39v. Goa. 24/II, f. 288r. Camp. 10. f. 1r; Franc. 22, f. 16r. Rh. Inf. 38, ff. 145r, 145v. Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 138v, 139r; Germ. Sup. 44, ff. 144r, 146v, 147r. Pol. 43, ff. 23r, 24r. Pol. 7/1, f. 278r. Pol. 711, ff. 261r-261 v. Rom. 53, ff. 347v, 349r, 350v, 351r, 356r; Rom. 53, ff. 360r, 361v, 362v, 363r, 366r; Rom. 79, ff. 42v, 49r, 50r, 54v, 55r, 56v. Baet. 8, ff. 159r, 159v, 161r, 162r. Austr. 123, ff. 42r, 42v, 43r. Bras. 5/1, f. 47v; Bras. 5111, f. 162v. Goa. 24/II, f. 312r. Rom. 54, ff. 2r, 4v, 6r. Pol. 43, ff. 25r, 25v. Rh. Inf. 38, f. 156v. Pol. 711, f. 280v. Germ. Sup. 45, ff. 2v, 5r, 6r. Franc. 22, f. 18r. Bras. 5/1, f. 5Or. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 54, 55r, 59r, 59v. Austr. 123, ff. 53r, 54r. Franc. 10, f. 202r. Rh. Inf. 38, ff. 168r, 169r; Rh. Inf. 37, ff. 26v, 27r.


MANUSCRIPTS CONTAINED IN THE MONUMENTA ANCLIAE VOLUMES

228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271

73

Pol. 711, f. 310r. Rh. Inf. 37, ff. 37r, 37v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 71r, 72v, 73v, 74r, 81r. Austr. 123, ff. 60v, 62v. Goa. 24/II, f. 316r. Rom. 79, ff. 71r, 73r, 82r, 83r, 85v, 87v, 88r, 99r; Rom. 110, ff. 8v, llr; Rom. 79, ff. 107r, 119v, 120v, 121r, 124r, 125r, 127r, 138v. Franc. 10, f. 211r. Pol. 43, f. 32r. Pol. 711, f. 312v. Pol. 43, f. 34v. Cast. 15, f. 87v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 88r, 89r, 89v, 90r. Austr. 123, ff. 6':Jv, 69r; Austr. 251II, ff. 205v, 207r. Rom. 79, ff. 146v, 147r, 147v, 156r, 157v, 159r, 160v, 162r, 163v. Ven. 38, f. 71r. Franc. 22, f. 26r. Pol. 43, f. 47v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 14r. Iolet. 14, f. 15v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 128r, 132r, 133r, 133v, 134r, 134v; FI. Belg. 43, ff. 105r, 118r. Austr. 123, f. 75r. Rom. 79, ff. 182v, 184v, 185v, 198r, 199v; Rom. Ill, ff. 7r, 8v, 9r. Rom. 78/1, ff. 3r, 3v, 6v, 7r, 8v, 9r; Rom. 110, ff. 26r, 28v. Pol. 43, f. 38r. Lith. 6, ff. 1r, 1v. Iolet. 14, ff. 28r, 37r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 140v, 145v, 146r, 147r, 147v, 148r, 165r. Austr. 123, f. 84r. Goa. 241II, f. 366r. Rom. 79, ff. 214v, 215r, 215v, 216r, 223r, 224r, 225v, 231r; Rom. 781I, ff. 13 v, 14r, 14v, l7r, l7v, 19r, 20r. Pol. 43, f. 42v. Rh. Inf. 38, ff. 186v, 190v. Lith. 6, ff. 3r, 4r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 22r; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 29r. Cast. 15, ff. 79v, 83r. Iolet. 14, ff. 41r, 42r, 42v, 50v. Fl. Belg. 10, pp. 12,31,39-40,94, 120, 136-137, 138. Austr. 123, ff. 105 v, 107r. Goa. 241II, f. 390v. Rom. 78/1, ff. 30v, 31r, 33v, 34v. Pol. 8, f. 13v. Pol. 8, f. ] 7v. Rh. Inf. 38, ff. 193v, 197v; Rh. Inf. 37, ff. 44r, 48v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 34r.


74 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Cast. 15, f. 199r. Tolet. 14, ff. 54r, 55v, 56r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 179r, 186v, 187r, 187v, 188v, 196r. Austr. 123, ff. 116r, 113v. Austr. 123, f. 120r. Franc. 22, f. 43v; Fran. 22, f. 49r. Rh Inf. 37, f. 56v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 42r. Tolet. 14, ff. 68r, 69r, 69v, 70v. Lus. 39, f. 64r. Goa. 241II, f. 407r. Goa. 241II, f. 474r. Pol. 43, f. 44v. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 64v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 53r. Angl. 13, f. 001r. Tolet. 14, ff. 81r, 82r, 82v, 83v; Tolet. 14, ff. 94r, 95r, 95v, 96v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 211 v, 218v, 219r, 222r, 228v, 232r. Austr. 123, f. 139r; Austr. 123, f. 160r. Rom. 110, f. 43v. Pol. 43, f. 51 v. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 75r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 62v. Austr. 123, f. 127v; Austr. 123, f. 149v. Angl. 13, f. 05. Angl. 13, ff. 01r, 01 v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 236r, 236v, 237r, 237v, 247r, 248v, 254v. Austr. 123, f. 169v; Austr. 123, f. 177v. Pol. 43, f. 55r. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 85v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 69v. Angl. 13, f. 05b. Tolet. 14, ff. 108r, 108v, 111 v, 115r. Fl. Belg. 10, ff. 165v, 166r, 167v-168r, 199v- 200r, 230v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 263r, 263v-264r, 264v, 272v, 273v, 274r, 277r. Pol. 8, f. 71 v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 80r. Austr. 123, f. 188v; Austr. 123, f. 197v. Lus. 39, f. 69r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 280r, 291 v, 292r, 292v. Sic. 155, f. 24r. Neap. 102, ff. 2r, 4v, Sr. Franc. 22, f. 84r. Pol. 43, ff. 62v, 66v. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 109v; Rh. Inf. 37, f. 120v. Germ. Sup. 45, ff. 105r, ll1r. Germ. Sup. 45, ff. 86v, 92v.


MANUSCRIPTS CONTAINED IN THE MONUMENTA ANGLIAE VOLUMES

319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365

Angl. 13, f. 05d. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 300v, 301r, 301 v, 303r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. lv, 2r, 16v, 18r, 18v, 19r, 19v. Austr. 123, f. 204v; Austr. 123, f. 212r. Neap. 102, f. lOr. Franc. 22, f. 89v. Pol. 43, f. 74v; Pol. 43, f. 80v. Lus. 44111, f. 328r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 311v, 317r, 317v, 318r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 331 v, 332r, 345r, 346v, 347r, 347v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 21r, 21 v, 32r. Austr. 123, f. 225v; Austr. 123, f. 234v. Goa. 25, f. 4v. Franc. 22, ff. 98r, 101r. Pol. 43, f. 85v; Pol. 43, f. 87v. Pol. 8, f. 114r. Pol. 43, f. 90r. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 126r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 114v. Lus. 39, f. 85v. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 363r, 366r, 366v, 367r. Fl. Belg. 43, ff. 350v, 353v, 354r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 34r, 34v, 46v, 48r, 48v, 49r, 49v. Franc. 22, ff. 108v, 112v. Franc. 22, f. 118v. Pol. 43, ff. 98v, 102v. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 131v. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 125v; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 134v. Rom. 79, ff. 263r, 263v, 265r, 267r, 268r, 271r. Sic. 155, ff. 31 v, 32r. Pol. 43, ff. 109r, 113r. Pol. 43, f. 119r. Rh. Inf. 37, f. 96r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 143v. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 9r, 11 v, 12r; FI. Belg. 44, ff. 22v, 25v, 26r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 50r, 55v, 56r, 56v, 57r, 57v. Rom. 78/1, ff. 44v, 46r, 46v; Rom. 7811, ff. 58v, 60r, 60v, 63r. Sic. 155, f. 38r. Neap. 102, f. 19v; Neap. 102, f. 41 v. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 181v, 185v, 186r. FI. Belg. 44, ff. 34r, 36v, 37r, 37v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 59r, 63v, 64r, 64v. Rom. 80, ff. 5v, 6v, 7r. Sic. 155, f. 45v. Neap. 102, f. 62v. Med. 1, f. 35v. Pol. 43, ff. 123v, 125v.

75


76 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Tolet. 14, ff. 122r, 123r, 126r, 128v, 134r. Fl. Belg. 10, ff. 322r, 323v, 471r, 477r-477v, 477v-296r (sic), 296v, 297r, 298v-299r, 299r-299v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 71r, 77r. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 48v, 52v. Rom. 80, ff. 17r, 21r, 21 v, 22v, 23r; Rom. 110, ff. 80r-87v. Med. 1, ff. 37r, 44v. Pol. 43, f. 134r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 183v. Med. 1, f. 49r. Tolet. 14, ff. 138v, 139v. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 61 v, 62r, 66r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 81r, 89v. Rom. 110, f. 96r. Sic. 155, f. SIr. Neap. 102, f. 104v. Pol. 43, f. 146r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 156v; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 170v. Med. 1, f. 70r. Angl. 10, ff. 6r-7v. Beat. 14/I, f. 27r. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 74v, 79r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 922r-9211 v. Neap. 102, f. 124v. Pol. 43, f. 156v. Germ. Sup. 45 , f. 204v; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 220v. Germ. Sup. 45 , f. 233v; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 247v. Angl. 13, ff. 23r-31v. Franc. 22, f. 170r. Fl. Belg. 44, f. 90v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 93r, 98v. Franc. 22, f. 177r. Pol. 8, f. 227v. Pol. 43, f. 167v. Angl. 10, ff. 2r-3v; Angl. 10, ff. 4r-5v. Angl. 10, ff. 8r-13r. Angl. 10, ff. 16r-21 v; Angl. 10, ff. 25 r-3 Or. Angl. 10, ff. 22r-24v. Baet. 14/I, ff. 8r, 9v, lOr, 11 v, 12r. Baet. 14/I, ff. 2v, 4r, 5v, 6r. Tolet. 15, f. 2v. Lus. 39, f. 13 Or. FI. Belg. 44, ff. 103r, 105r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 1001r-1006v. Rom. 80, ff. 30r, 33v, 35r, 36r; Rom. 110, f. 103r. Rom. 80, ff. 57r, 59r, 60r, 64v. Sic. 153, ff. 82v, 87v.


MANUSCRIPTS CONTAINED LN THE MONUMENTA ANGLIAE VOLUMES

412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457

77

Sic. 155, f. 75r. Neap. 102, f. 165v. Franc. 22, f. 185r. Pol. 43, f. 172r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 290r; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 300r. Germ. Sup. 45, f. 273r; Germ. Sup. 45, f. 352v. Angl. 10, ff. 33r-38v. Angl. 10, ff. 39r-42v; Angl. 10, ff. 43r-46r. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 115r, 118r, 127r, 128r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 101r, 109r. Sic. 155, f. 91r. Franc. 22, f. 193r. PRO, SP 16/99/1 P.1 (f. 43r), Z (f. 77r). Angl. 10, ff. 471'-52r. Angl. 10, ff. 54r-55r; Angl. 13, ff. 60r-61r. Cast. 15, f. 499r. Baet. 14/1, ff. 15r, 17r, 19r, 20v. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 131 v, 135v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 111r, 117v. Rom. 80, ff. 78r, 79r, 86r. Franc. 22, ff. 203r, 203v. Angl. 10, ff. 60r-65r; Fonda Gesuitico 634C (1). Angl. 10, ff. 66r-71v; Angl. 10, ff. 72r-77r. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 146r, 149v, 157r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 119r, 125v. Rom. 80, ff. 97v, 98r, 99r, 100r, 101r, 110v. Neap. 103, f. 17v; Neap. 103, f. 42v. Franc. 22, ff. 212r, 212v. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 161 v, 166v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 127r, 133r. Tolet. 15, ff. lOr, 10v, 15v, 16r. Rom. 80, ff. 115r, 115v, 119v, 120v, 121r, 122r, 123r, 131r; Rom. 100, f. 153v. Neap. 103, f. 57v. Franc. 22, f. 220r. Germ. Sup. 46, f. 80r. Baet 14/I, ff. 36v, 38v, 43r, 44r. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 193v, 197r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 135r, 146r. Rom. 80, ff. 137r, 141r, 142r, 143r, 144r, 152r; Rom. 110, f. 164r. Neap. 103, f. 79r; Neap. 103, f. 96v. Germ. Sup. 46, f. 96; Germ. Sup. 46, f. 116v. Angl. 10, ff. 78r-85r. Angl. 10, ff. 90r-98v. Baet. 14/1, ff. 58r, 61 v. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 206v, 21Ov. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 153r, 159r.


78 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 48 1 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555- 1650

Franc. 22, ff. 240r, 240v. Germ. Sup. 46, f. 133v; Germ. Sup. 46, f. 153r. Angl. 10, ff. 98 a r- 102r; Angl. 10, ff. 112r-117r. Angl. 10, ff. 118r- 121v; Angl. 10, ff. 122r- 125v. Tolet. 15, f. 20r. Baet. 14/1, ff. 69v, 74r, 74v. Fl. Belg. 44, f. 229r. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 161r, 165v. Austr. 124, f. 81r; Austr. 124, f. 103r. Rom. 80, ff. 163v, 166v, 168r. Neap. 103, f. 120v. Neap. 103, f. 129v. Franc. 22, ff. 248r, 248v. Germ Sup. 46, f. 169r; Germ. Sup. 46, f. 189r. Angl. 10, ff. 128r-134r; Biblioteca Vaticana, Barb. Lat. 8621 , ff. 1r- 6v. Angl. 10, ff. 135r- 141v. Tolet. 15, ff. 39v, 40r, 40v; Tolet. 15, ff. 56r, 56v. Baet. 1411, ff. 83r, 83v, 84r, 85r. Fl. Belg. 44, f. 252v. Gall. Belg. 24, ff. l67r, l71r. Austr. 124, f. 122r; Germ. Sup. 46, f. 248v. Franc. 22, ff. 259r, 259v. Germ. Sup. 46, f. 209v; Germ. Sup. 46, f. 232v. Angl. 10, ff. 142r- 149v; Angl. 11, ff. 1r-8r. Angl. 10, ff. 150r-159r; Angl. 11 , ff. 9r-16r. Fl. Belg. 44, f. 274r. . Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 177r, 178v. Austr. 124, f. 138r; Austr. 124, f. 157v. Rom. 80, ff. 194r, 196r, 197r, 197v. Rom. 80, ff. 213r, 220r, 222r, 223v, 234r. Neap. 103, f. 144r. Franc. 22, f. 269r. Angl. 10, ff. 160r-167r; Angl. 11 , ff. l7r- 24r. Angl. 13, ff. 123r-129r; Angl. 13, ff. 130r-135v. Baet. 14/1, ff. 95r, 95v, 96r, 100r, 101r. Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 295v, 296r; Fl. Belg. 45 , f. 6r. Gall. Belg. 24, f. 183r. Austr. 124, f. 176r. To1et. 15, ff. 71r, 74r. Rom. 80, ff. 241r, 247v, 249r, 250v, 257v, 261 v; Rom. 110, f. 214r; Rom. 110, f. 231r. 498 Neap. 103, f. 175r. 499 Sic. 155, ff. 195r, 199r. 500 Franc. 22, ff. 277r, 277v. 501 Germ. Sup. 46, f. 268v. 502 Angl. 11 , ff. 25r-31 v. 503 Ang1. 10, ff. l75r-181v.


MANUSCRIPTS CONTArNED [N THE MONUMENTA ANGLIAE VOLUMES

504 Tolet. 15, ff. 84r, 84v, 85r, 87v. 505 Baet. 141I, ff. 112r, 112v, 116r. 506 Fl. Belg. 45, ff. 20v, 21r. 507 Gall. Belg. 24, f. 184er. 508 Neap. 103, f. 179r. 509 Franc. 22, ff. 288r, 288v. 510 Germ. Sup. 46, f. 286r. 511 Angl. 10, ff. 182r-189v. 512 Austr. 124, f. 18716v. 513 Rom. 80, ff. 273r, 274v, 275v, 288r. 514 Neap. 103, f. 195v. 515 Franc. 22, f. 298v. 516 Angl. 10, ff. 198r-205v. 517 Angl. 10, ff. 206r-207r; Angl. 13, ff. 174r-175r. 518 Gall. Belg. 24, f. 188v. 519 FI. Belg. 45, ff. 37v, 38r, 49r, 49v. 520 Neap. 103, f. 213r. 521 Franc. 22, ff. 309r, 309v. 522 Baet. 141I, ff. 162r, 162v, 168r. 523 Baet. 14/1, ff. 146v, 147r, 152v. 524 Neap. 103, f. 248r. 525 Franc. 22, f. 322v. 526 Germ. Sup. 46, f. 319v. 527 Angi. 10, ff. 190r-197r. 528 Angi. 10, ff. 208r-209v. 529 FI. Belg. 15, ff. 15r, 15v. 530 Gall. Belg. 24, ff. 195r. 531 Franc. 22, f. 337v. 532 Boh. 12, ff. 125v, 139r. 533 Baet. 141I, ff. 178v, 182r, 182v, 188r. 534 Baet. 141I, ff. 201 v, 202r, 208r, 215r. 535 Franc. 22, f. 350v. 536 Ven. 71 , f. 316v. 537 Baet. 141I, ff. 222v, 223r, 229r, 235v.

79


80

BIBLIOGRAPHY Allison, A. F. & Rogers, D. M. A Catalogue of Catholic Books in English Printed Abroad or Secretly in England 1558-1640. Bognor, 1956. l The Contemporary Printed Literature of the English Counter-Reformation between 1558 and 1640. Volume 1: Works in Languages other than English. London, 1989. Allison, A. F. 'Richard Smith, Richelieu, and the French Marriage. The Political Aspect of Smith's Appointment as Bishop for England in 1624,' Recusant History 7 (1964) 148-211 . 'The Later Life and Writings of Joseph Creswell, SJ. (1556-1623),' Recusant History 15 (1979) 79-144. 'A Question of Jurisdiction. Richard Smith, Bishop of Chalcedon, and the Catholic Laity, 1625-1631,' Recusant History 16 (1982) 111-45; 19 (1989) 234-85; 20 (1990) 164-206. Anstruther, Godfrey. The Seminary Priests. 3 vols. Durham-Great Wakering, 1968-1976. Ashton, Robert. Reformation and Revolution 1558-1660. London, 1984. The Paladin History of England. Astrain, Antonio, S.J. Historia de La Compania de Jesus en La asistencia de Espana. 7 vols. Madrid, 1902-1925. Aveling, Hugh. The Handle and the Axe. London, 1976. Bangert, William V., S.J. A History of the Society of Jesus. St. Louis, 1972. Claude Jay and Alfonso Salmeron. Chicago, 1985. Basset, Bernard. The English Jesuits. London, 1967. Bellenger, Dominic, (ed.). English and Welsh Priests 1558-1800. Bath, 1984. Bireley, Robert, S.J. Religion and Politics in the Age of the Counter-Reformation. Emperor Ferdinand II, William Lamormaini, S.J., and the Formation of Imperial Policy. Chapel Hill, 1981.


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Borja de Medina, Francisco de, S.J. 'Jesuitas en la Armada contra Inglaterra (1588),' AHSI 58 (1989) 3-42. Bossy, John. The English Catholic Community 1570-1850. London, 1976.

'Henri IV, the Appellants and the Jesuits, ' Recusant History 8 (1965-66) 80-122. 'The English Catholic Community 1603-1625,' in The Reign oj James VI and I, pp. 91-105, edited by Alan G. R. Smith. London, 1973. Braunsberger, Otto, S.J. Beati Petri Canisii S.I. epistulae et acta. 7 vols. Freiburg 1m Breisgau, 1896-1922. Brodrick, James, S.J. Saint Peter Canisius, S.J. 1521-1597. London, 1935.

The Origin oj the Jesuits. London, 1945. The Progress oj the Jesuits . London, 1946. Saint Ignatius Loyola, the Pilgrim Years. New York, 1956. Burton, Edwin H. (ed.) The Douay College Diaries: Third, Fourth and Fifth (1598-1654). 2 vols. London, 1911. CRS 10, 11. Busch, Franz Otto, S.J. 'Brasilienfahrer aus der Gesellschaft Jesu 1549-1756' in AuJsiitze zur portugiesischen KuLturgeschichte 11 (1974) 215-95. Caraman, Philip, S.J. Henry Garnet (1565-1606) and the Gunpowder Plot. (London, 1964).

Ignatius LoyoLa: A Biography oj the Founder oj the Jesuits. London/San Francisco, 1990. Chadwick, Hubert, S.J. St. Omers to Stonyhurst: A History oj Two Centuries. London, 1962. Clancy, Thomas H., S.J. Papist PamphLeteers. Chicago, 1964.

English Catholic Books 1641-1700: A Bibliography. Chicago, 1974. An Introduction to Jesuit Life: The Constitutions and History through 435 Years. St. Louis, 1976. 'The Jesuits and the Independents, 1647,' AHSI40 (1971) 67-90. 'The First Generation of English Jesuits,' AHSI57 (1988) 137-62.


82

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

'Priestly Perseverance in the Old Society of Jesus, ' Recusant History 19 (1989) 286-312.

Clifton, Robin. 'Fear of Popery' in Conrad Russell, ed . The Origins of the English Civil War, pp. 144--67. London, 1973. Coemans, Augustus, S.J. Breves notitiae de instituto, historia, bibliographia Societatis. Bruxellis, 1937. Cogswell, Thomas. The Blessed Revolution: English Politics and the Coming of War, 1621-1624. Cambridge, 1989. Cope, Esther S. Politics without Parliaments. London, 1987. Crehan, Joseph, S.J. 'Saint Ignatius and Cardinal Pole,' AHSI 25 (1956) 72-98. Cust, Richard. The Forced Loan and English Politics 1626-1628. Oxford, 1987. Davies, Julian. The Caroline Captivity of the Church: Charles I and the Remoulding of Anglicanism. Oxford, 1992. de Dalmases, Candido, S.J. Ignatius of Loyola: Founder of the Jesuits. St. Louis, 1985. Demoustier, Adrian, S.J. 'Les catalogues du personnel de la province de Lyon en 1587, 1606 et 1636,' AHS/42 (1973) 3-105; 43 (1974) 3-84. Duffy, Eamon. The Stripping of the Altars; Traditional Religion in England 1400-1580. New Haven, 1992. Duhr, Bernhard, S.J. Geschichte der Jesuiten in den Landern deutscher Zunge. 4 vols. FreiburgMtinchen-Regensburg, 1907-1928. Edwards, Francis, S.J. The Elizabethan Jesuits: Historia Missionis Anglicanae Societatis Jesu (1660) of Henry More. London, 1981. The Jesuits in Englandfrom 1580 to the present day. London, 1985. 'Henry More, SJ.: Administrator and Historian, 1586-1661,' AHS/41 (1972) 233-81 .


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'Still Investigating Gunpowder Plot,' Recusant History 21 (1993) 305-46. Epistolae et Commentaria P Joannis Alphonsi de Polanco e Societate lesu. 2 vols. Madrid, 1916-1917. MHSI 52,54. Epistolae et Monumenta P Hieronymi Nadal. 5 vols. Madrid-Roma, 1898-1962. MHSI 13, 15, 21, 27, 90.

Fejer, Josephus, S.J. Defuncti Primi Saeculi Societatis Jesu. 2 vols. Roma, 1982. Defuncti Secundi Saeculi Societatis Jesu . 4 vo1s. Roma, 1985-1990.

Fenlon, Dermot. Heresy and Obedience in Tridentine Italy: Cardinal PoLe and the Counter Reformation. Cambridge, 1972. Finlayson, Michael G. Historians, Puritanism, and the EngLish Revolution: The Religious Factor in EngLish Politics before and after the Interregnum. Toronto, 1983. Fletcher, Anthony. The Outbreak of the EngLish Civil War. London, 1981. Foley, Henry, S.J. Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus. 7 vols. in 8. RoehamptonLondon, 1875-1883. Fouqueray, Henry, S.J. Histoire de La Compagnie de Jesus en France. 4 vols. Paris, 1910-1925. Futrell, John Carroll, S.J. Making an Apostolic Community of Love. St. Louis, 1970. Ganss, George E., S.J. The Constitutions of the Society of Jesus , translated with an introduction and commentary. St. Louis, 1970. Guy, John. Tudor EngLand. Oxford, 1988. Haigh, Christopher. 'From Monopoly to Minority: Catholicism in Early Modern England,' Transactions of the RoyaL HistoricaL Society 5th series 31 (1981) 129-47. 'The Continuity of Catholicism, in the English Reformation,' Past and Present 93 (1981) 37-69. 'Revisionism, the Reformation and the History of English Catholicism,' Journal of Ecclesiastical History 36 (1985) 394-405.


84

ENGUSH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555- 1650

English Reformations: Religion, Politics, and Society under the Tudors. Oxford, 1993.

Hamy, Alfred, S.J. Documents pour servir a l'histoire des domiciles de La Compagnie de Jesus dans le monde entier de 1540 a 1773. Paris, n. d. Henson, Canon Edwin (ed.). Registers of the English College at ValladoLid: 1589-1862. London, 1930 CRS 30.

Hibbard, Caroline. Charles I and the Popish Plot. Chapel Hill, 1983. 'Early Stuart Catholicism: Revisions and re-Revisions,' Journal of Modern History 52 (1980) 1-34. Hicks, Leo, S.J. Letters and Memorials of Father Robert Persons, S.J. London, 1942. CRS 39. 'Father Parsons, SJ., and the Seminaries in Spain,' The Month 157 (1931) 193-204,410-17,497-506; 158 (1931) 26-35,143-52.

'Cardinal Allen and the Society,' The Month 160 (1932) 342-53, 432-43, 528-36.

'The Foundation of St. Omers,' AHS/19 (1950) 146-80.

Holmes, Peter. Resistance and Compromise. Cambridge, 1982. Holt, Geoffrey, S.J. St. Omers and Bruges Colleges, 1593-1773: A Biographical Dictionary. London, 1979. CRS 69. The English Jesuits 1650-1829: A Biographical Dictionary. London, 1984. CRS 70.

Hughes, Philip. Rome and the Counter-Reformation. London, 1942. Hulme, Martin A. S. (ed.) Calendar of Letters and State Papers Relating to English Affairs Preserved Principally in the Archives of Simancas, Vol. Ill, Elizabeth 1580-1586. London, 1896.

Hutton, Ronald. The British Republic 1649-1660 (London, 1990). Institutum Societatis Iesu. 3 vols. Florence, 1892-1893.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

85

Kelly, Wilfrid (ed.). Liber Ruber Venerabilis Collegii Anglorum de Urbe. 2 vols. London, 1940, 1943. CRS 37,40. Kenny, Anthony (ed.). The Responsa Scholarum of the English College, Rome. 2 vols. London, 1962-1963. CRS 54, 55. Knox, Thomas Francis (ed.). The First and Second Diaries of the English College, Douay. London, 1878. The Letters and Memorials of William Cardinal Allen. London, 1882.

LaRocca, John J., S.J. 'English Cathohcs and the Recusancy Laws 1558-1625: A Study in Religion and Pohtics,' unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Rutgers University, 1977. '''Who Can't Pray With Me, Can't Love Me:" Toleration and the Early Jacobean Recusancy Policy,' Journal of British Studies 23 (1984) 22-36. Lainii Monumenta. Epistolae et acta Patris Jacobi Lainii secundi praepositi generalis Societatis Jesu. 8 vols. Madrid, 1912-1917. MHSI 44, 45, 47, 49, 50, 51,53,55.

Law,T.G. A Historical Sketch of the Conflicts between Jesuit and Secular in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. London, 1889. The Archpriest Controversy. 2 vols. London, 1896, 1898. The Camden Society n.s. 56,58.

Leite, Serafim, S.J. Hist6ria da Companhia de Jesus no Brasil. 10 vols. Lisboa/Rio de Janiero, 1938-1950. Loades, D. M. The Reign of Mary Tudor. London, 1979. Loomie, Albert J., S.J. The Spanish Elizabethans. New York, 1963. Lukacs, Ladislaus, S.J. Catalogi Personarum et Officiorum Provinciae Austriae S.I. 2 vols. Rome, 1978, 1982. MHSJ 117, 125. 'Le catalogue-modele du Pere La{nez (1545), ' AHS126 (1957) 57-66. 'De graduum diversitate inter sacerdotes in Societate Iesu,' AHSI 37 (1968) 237-316.


86

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

Lunn, David. The English Benedictines 1540-1688. London, 1980). 'Benedictine Opposition to Bishop Richard Smith (1625-1629),' Recusant History 11 (1971) 1-20.

McCoog, Thomas M., S.J. 'The Society of Jesus in England, 1623-1688: An Institutional Study,' unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Warwick, 1984. 'Campion's Plea for a Disputation,' The Month 2nd n.s. 14 (1981) 414-17. 'The Establishment of the English Province of the Society of Jesus,' Recusant History 17 (1984) 121-39. 'The Creation of the First Jesuit Communities in England,' The Heythrop Journal 28 (1987) 40-56. "'Laid Up Treasure": The Finances of the English Jesuits in the Seventeenth Century,' in The Church and Wealth, edited by W. 1. Sheils and Diana Wood, pp. 257-66. Oxford, 1987. Studies in Church History 24. '''The Slightest Suspicion of Avarice": The Finances of the English Jesuit Mission,' Recusant History 19 (1988) 103-23. 'Richard Langhorne and the Popish Plot,' Recusant History 19 (1989) 499-508.

McGrath, Patrick. Papists and Puritans under Elizabeth I. London, 1967. 'Elizabethan Catholicism: A Reconsideration,' Journal of Ecclesiastical History 35 (1984) 414-28. 'A Reply to Dr. Haigh,' Journal of Ecclesiastical History 36 (1985) 405-06.

Malcolm, Joyce Lee. Caesar's Due: Loyalty and King Charles 1642-1646 (London, 1983). Martin, A. Lynn. Henry III and the Jesuit Politicians. Geneva, 1973. The Jesuit Mind. Ithaca, N. Y., 1989.

Maruca, Dominic, S.J. 'The Deliberations of Our First Fathers,' Woodstock Letters 95 (1966) 325-33.

Merkle, Sebastian. Die Matrikel der Universitat Wiirzburg. 2 Vols. MiinchenlLeipzig, 1922. Meyer, Arnold Oskar. England and the Catholic Church under Queen ELizabeth. London, 1916.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

87

Milward, Peter, S.J. Religious Controversies of the Elizabethan Age: A Survey of Printed Sources. London, 1977. Religious Controversies of the Jacobean Age: A Survey of Printed Sources. London, 1978.

Morey, Adrian. The Catholic Subjects of Elizabeth I. London, 1979. Monumenta Ignatiana. Constitutiones Societatis lesu. 3 vols. Roma, 1934-1938. MHSI 63, 64, 65 . Monumenta Ignatiana. Sancti Ignatii de Loyola epistolae et instructiones. 12 vols. Madrid, 1903-19'11 . MHSI 22, 26, 28, 29, 31, 33, 34, 36, 37, 39, 40, 42.

More, Henry, S.J. Historia Missionis Anglicanae Societatis lesu. St. Omers, 1660. cf. Edwards, Francis. Murphy, Martin. St Gregory 's CoLLege, Seville, 1592-1767. London, 1992. CRS 73. Nichols, John G. 'The Discovery of the Jesuits' College at Clerkenwell in March 1627/28' in The Camden Miscellany II. London, 1853. The Camden Society (o.s.) 55. 'A Supplementary Note to 'The Discovery of the Jesuits' College at Clerkenwell' in The Camden MisceLLany IV. London, 1858. The Camden Society (o.s.) 73.

Nicholls, Mark. Investigating Gunpowder Plot. Manchester, 1991. O'Donoghue, Fergus, S.J. 'The Jesuit Mission in Ireland 1598-1651,' unpublished Ph.D. thesis, The Catholic University of America, 1981. Oliver, George. Collections towards IlLustrating the Biography of the Scotch, English, and Irish Missions of the Society of Jesus. London, 1845. Osuna, Javier, S.J. Friends in the Lord, translated by Nicholas King, SJ. London, 1974. The Way Series 3. Pad berg, John. W., S.J. 'The General Congregations of the Society of Jesus: A Brief Survey of Their History,' Studies in the Spirituality of Jesuits 6 (1974) 1-127.


88

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITS

1555-1650

Patris Petri de Ribadeneira Societatis Jesu sacerdotis Confessiones, epistoiae aliaque scripta inedita. 2 vols. Madrid, 1920-1923. MHSI 58,60. Peters, Willem, S.J.

'Richard Whitford and St. Ignatius's Visit to England,' AHSl25 (1956) 328-50. Polgar, Laszlo, S.J.

Bibliographie sur I'Histoire de La Compagnie de Jesus . 3 vols. in 6. Roma, 1981-1990. Pollen, John Hungerford, S.J.

The English Catholics in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. London, 1920. 'The Memoirs of Father Robert Parsons' in Miscellanea II. London, 1906, CRS 2. Poncelet, Alred, S.J.

Necrologe des Jesuites de La province Gallo-Belge. Louvain, 1908. Necrologe des Jesuites de La province Flandro-Belge. Wetteren, 1931. Pritchard, Arnold.

Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England. London, 1979. Reeve,1. J.

Charles I and the Road to Personal Rule. Cambridge, 1989. Renold, P. (ed.).

The Wisbech Stirs (1595-1598). London, 1958. CRS 51. Rodrigues, Francisco, S.J.

Hist6ria da Companhia de Jesus na assistencia de Portugal. 4 vols. Porto, 1931-1950. de Roeck, Jozef, S.J.

'Du sens de la Congregation general dans la Compagnie de Jesus d'apres les Constitutions,' AHSl35 (1966) 212-31. Russell, Conrad, ed.

The Origins of the English Civil War. London, 1973. The Causes of the English Civil War. Oxford, 1990. The Fall of the British Monarchies 1637-1642. Oxford, 1991. Ryan, Patrick, S.J.

'Some Correspondence of Cardinal Allen, 1579-85; From the Jesuit Archives' in Miscellanea VII. London, 1911. CRS 9. Scaduto, Mario, S.J.

Catalogo dei gesuiti d'ltalia 1540-1565. Roma, 1968. Subsidia ad historiam S.1. 7.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

89

Schmidt, Peter. Das Collegium Germanicum in Rom and die Germaniker. Ttibingen, 1984. Schmitt, Ludovicus, S.J. Synopsis historiae Societatis Jesu. Louvain, 1950. Schurhammer, Georg, S.J. Francis Xavier His Life, His Times translated by M. Joseph Costelloe, SJ. 4 vols. Rome, 1973-1982. Sharpe, Kevin. The Personal Rule of Charles I (New Haven, 1992). Slavin, Arthur J. The Tudor Age and Beyond. Malabar, Florida, 1987. Sommerville, Johann Peter. 'Jacobean Political Thought and the Controversy over the Oath of Allegiance,' (D. Phil thesis, Cambridge University, 1981). Politics and Ideology in England 1603-1640. London, 1986. Southern, A. C. Elizabethan Recusant Prose 1559-1582. London, n.d. [1950]. Storni, Hugo, S.J. Catdlogo de los jesuitas de La antigua Provincia del Paraguay (cuenca del Plata) 1585-1768. Roma, 1980. Subsidia ad historiam S.l. 9. Swanson, R. N. Church and State in Late Medieval England. Oxford, 1989. Tyacke, Nicholas. Anti-Calvinists: The Rise of English Arminianism c.1590-1640. Oxford, 1987. Tylenda, Joseph N., S.J. (ed.). A Pilgrim's Journey: The Autobiography of Ignatius of Loyola. Wilmington, 1985. Underdown, David. Pride's Purge: Politics in the Puritan Revolution (London, 1971). Villoslada, Riccardo, S.J. Storia del Collegio Romano dal suo inizio (1551) alta suppressione della Compagnia di Gesu (1773). Roma, 1954. Wicki, Joseph, S.J. (ed.) Documenta Indica. 18 vols. Roma, 1948-1988. MHSI 70, 72, 74, 78,83,86, 89, 91,98, 103, 105, 113, 118, 123, 127, 132, 133.


90

ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUlTS

1555-1650

'Liste den Jesuiten Indienfahrer 1541-1758' in Aufsiitze zur portugiesischen Kulturgeschichte 7 (1967) 252-450.

Williams, Michael E. The Venerable English College Rome. London, 1979. St. Alban s College Valladolid. London, 1986.

Worden, Blair. The Rump Parliament (Cambridge, 1974). Young, William J., S.J. (ed.). Letters of St. Ignatius Loyola. Chicago, 1959. Notes 1. For the compilation of this edition, Mr. Allison has graciously allowed me to use a photocopy of a revised edition of this invaluable work that will be appearing shortly. Because the pagination is yet undetermined, all references to this catalogue are to the entry numbers within the catalogue.


91

ENGLISH JESUIT RECTORS AND SUPERIORS ENGLISH COLLEGE, ROME (from Williams, The Venerable English College, Rome)

Alfonso Agazzari William Rolt Robert Parsons Joseph Creswell Mutius Vitelleschi Girolamo Fioravanti Alfonso Agazzari Robert Parsons Mutius Vitelleschi Robert Parsons Thomas Owen Thomas Fitzherbert Thomas Courtney Robert Stafford Joseph Simon Thomas Babthorpe

1579 (l September 1581 [Rist. Soc. 61 , f. 20v])-1586 1586-1588 1588-1589 1589-1592 16 April 1592-27 May 1594 (Angl. 37, f. 142v) 27 May 1594-17 May 1596 (Angl. 37, f. 142v) 17 May 1596-25 May 1597 (Angl. 37, f. 142v) 25 May-29 June 1597 (Angl. 37, f. 142v) 29 June 1597-13 December 1597 (Angl. 37, f. 142v) 13 December 1597 (Angl. 37, f. 142v) 23 April 1610 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 3v)- 6 December 1618 6 December 1618 (Rist. Soc. 62, f.3v)-17 August 1640 24 August 1640 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 5r) 1644 c. January 1647 (Angl. 2, f. 78r) 3 March 1650 (Rom. 81, f. 15v)

ENGLISH COLLEGE, VALLADOLID (from Williams, St. Alban s College, Valladolid)

[Juan Lopez de Manzano Bartolome de Sicilia Pedro de Guzman Juan Lopez de Manzano Roderigo de Cabredo Gonzalo del Rio Alonso Rodriguez de Toro Antonio Vasquez Pedro Ruiz de Vallejo Diego de Gamboa Pedro Ruiz de Vallejo Juan de Parraces Cristobal Suarez William Weston

1 August-25 October 1589?] 25 October-26 November 1589 26 November 1589-24 June 1590 24 June 1590-1 September 1591 1 September 1591-31 December 1594 1 January 1595-September 1596 September 1596-24 October 1600 14 October 1600 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 48r)-1 September 1602 1 April 1603 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 48r) 20 February 1604-0ctober 1606 October 1606-16 October 1607 16 October 1607 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 48v)-26 March 1612 26 March 1612 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 49r)-? October 1614 (Tolet. 7, f. 182)-9 April 1615


ENGLISH

92

AND

Anthony Hoskins John Blackfan Juan Francisco de Benevides Francisco Gonzalez Francisco de Aquilar Pedro de Ceniceros Juan de Oribe Sancho de Leguizamo Hernando Cortes Diego Marin Juan Diez de Isla Francisco Juarez Diego de Pangua [William Sankey Jose de Ayala

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

April 1615- 10 September 1615 ?-September 1617 (Cast. 8, f. 157r) September 1617-February 1621 October 1621-0ctober 1624 October 1624-0ctober 1630 October 1630-December 1632 16 February 1633 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 50r)-October 1633 October 1633-December 1633 December 1633-September 1637 September 1637-February 1641 February 1641-September 1646 September 1646-February 1647 February 1647-August 1649 vice-rector August-November 1649] November 1649-0ctober 1652

ENGLISH COLLEGE, SEVILLE (from Murphy, St. Gregory s College, Seville)

Francisco de Peralta Alfonso Diaz Francisco de Peralta Franciscus de los Cameros Luis Ramirez Martinus de Vega Didacus de Ribera Juan de Armenta Ferdinandus de Valencia Ximenes de Bertendona Pablo Federiqui Francisco Sotelo Pablo Federfqui

1592 (proclaimed rector 13 March 1595 [Baet. 3,p. 202]) 16 October 1607 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 52v) 31 December 1612 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 52v) June 1621 (Baet. 51l, f. 45v) June 1627 (Baet. 51l, f. 245v) March 1628 (Baet. 51l, f. 277v) August 1631 (Baet. 61l, ff. 7v) January 1635 (Baet. 61II, f. 89v) November 1637 (Baet. 61lI, f. 200v) June 1640 (Baet. 61l, f. 339r) 1644-1648 1648-1649 1649-1651

PREFECTS

Robert Parsons

Thomas Owen Thomas Fitzherbert

superior of all sent to England and of the English chaplains in the Spanish army, 5 November 1588 (Hist. Soc. 61, f. 28)-prefect (16 April 1598)-15/25 April 1610 27 January 1612 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r; Rom. 156, f. 218r)-6 December 1618 l7 April 1619 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r)


ENGLISH JESUIT RECTORS AND SUPERIORS

93

VICE-PREFECTS Belgium

William Holt William Baldwin Anthony Hoskins John Blackfan Joseph Creswell Thomas Fitzherbert

1598-May 1598 (called to Rome by the general in May, he was sent to Spain in November [Fl. Belg. 1, p. 678; Hist. Soc. 62, f. 34v]) 1598-1610 (imprisoned in England) 1610-26 January 1613 (Angl. 1, f. 31v) 1613-7 November 1615 [327] (Angl. 1, f. 55v) 1615-1617 [339] 1617 [353]-1618 (transfer to Rome) Procurators

Alexander Fairclough . John Norton Francis Kensington John Gardiner John Maynard Thomas Port William Stillington Henry Briant Edward Courtney Charles Darcy

1619 1620 1624 1625 1627 1629 1636 1638 1641 1645

[369] [376] [418] [425] [440] [453] [516] [527]

Spain

Joseph Creswell Anthony Hoskins John Blackfan

1598-1613 sent to Flanders because of opposition of Spanish Jesuits (Tolet. 7, ff. 91 v-92r, 102, 105, 111, 113v, 133, 136)' 26 January 1613 (Angl. 1, f. 31v)-20 September 1615 7 November 1615 (Angl. 1, f. 55v) Procurators

Francis Forcer John Norton William Stillington Francis Felton Thomas Babthorpe Edward Risley

1618 (Tolet. 11 , f. 54v)-November, 1626 (Tolet. 8, f. 418v) 1627 [442]-24 March 1631 1631 [474]- 1635 (To let. 10, f. 101) 1636 (Tolet. 10, f. 166v) 1637 (Tolet. 10, f. 218) 1644 SUPERIORS

Robert Parsons Jaspar Heywood William Weston

1580 (Instit. 188, ff. 293-94) 1581 1584 (until his transfer to Wisbech)


94

ENGLISH

Henry Garnet Richard Holtby Robert Jones Michael Walpole Richard Blount

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

1587 (designated Weston's successor, 24 March 1586 [Instit. 188, f. 259]) 8 July 1606 (Angl. 1, ff. 3v-4r) 28 March 1609 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r; Angl. 1, f. 9v)2 17 August 1613 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r) but did not fully assume the position until the death of Jones in August, 1615 (Angl. 1, f. 56r) 17 April 1619 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r)3 VICE-PROVINCIAL

Richard Blount

6 July 1619 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r) 11 June 1621 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30r) PROVINCIALS

Richard Blount Henry More Edward Knott

Henry Silisdon Francis Forster

19 January 1623 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 11 August 1635 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 3 June 1639 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) (with Henry More as vice-provincial in England throughout this period, and George Duckett on the continent from 21 July to 19 October 1646) 19 October 1646 (Angl. 11, f. 96r) vice-provincial, 8 October to 25 November 1649; provincial 11 May 1650 (Angl. 11, f. 110r) RECTORS Louvain

Thomas Talbot Henry Silisdon William Baldwin Owen Shelley

10 September 1612 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 28r) 23 November 1613 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 26v)4 22 January 1621 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 28r) 19 March 1622 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 28r) Liege

John Gerard Henry Silisdon Owen Shelley Edward Knott Robert Stafford Francis Wallis George Duckett Richard Barton Thomas Babthorpe

23 November 1613 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 26v) 28 August 1621 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 26v) 1624 [418] (he became rector with the merger of the communities) 18 December 1627 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 27r) 15 July 1628 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 23 October 1632 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 27r) 12 April 1636 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 27r) 8 September 1640 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) c. June 1646 (Angl. 2, f. 74v)


ENGLISH JESUIT RECTORS AND SUPERIORS

James Mumford

95

31 August 1648 (Angl. 11, f. 100r)

St.Omers Jean Foucart Giles Schoondonck Philip Dentiers William Baldwin Thomas Worsley Thomas Port Edward Courtney Henry More

1594 [158] June 1601 [306] 1617 [354] 12 November 1622 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 26v) 6 March 1632 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 27r) 15 March 1636 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 27r) 27 July 1646 (Angl. 11 , f. 99v) 27 July 1649 (Angl. 11, f. 106v)

Ghent William Anderson John Norton William Flack Michael Freeman Thomas Southwell Edward Alacampi Christopher Warner Robert Freville George Duckett John Clare

1622123 [399] 1624 [418] 21 July 1629 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 28v) 27 August 1632 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 10 July 1636 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 28v) 13 December 1636 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 28v) 1640 c. February 1644 (Angl. 2, f. 36r) 1 September 1647 (Angl. 11 , f. 109v) 7 September 1650 (Angl. 11, f. 107r)

Watten Michael Freeman Joseph Creswell Edward Knott Thomas Colford Henry Silisdon Robert Stafford Edward Knott Francis Forster Henry Stafford

1619 [367] 1621 [384] 1622123 [399] 1623 [401] 1624 [418] 23 October 1632 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 8 August 1637 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 27r) 10 July 1638 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 27v) vice-rector c. July 1645 (Angl. 2, f. 66v); rector 1647

House of Probation of St. Ignatius Richard Banks Peter Benson Edward Knott Henry Silisdon Henry More Thomas Neville

4 February 1623 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 6 April 1630 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 20 April 1635 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 10 February 1639 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) c. October 1644 (Angl. 2, f. 51r) (with Thomas Babthorpe as vice-rector from 1644-45) 23 October 1648 (Angl. 11 , f. 96r)


ENGLISH

96

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

College of St. Francis Xavier John Salisbury John Clare Charles Brown Francis Neville Humphrey Browne Francis Essex

4 February 1623 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 30 October 1626 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 29 December 1628 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) vice-rector 1646 2 February 1647 (Angl. 11, f. 96v) 12 March 1650 (Angl. 11, f. lllr)

College of Blessed Aloysius John Worthington James Parker Francis Parker

4 February 1623 (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) 28 September 1646 (Angl. 11, f. 104r); rector 28 September 1647 (Angl. 11, f. 97r) c. January 1650 (Angl. 2, f. 128r)

College of the Holy Apostles William More John Parker Francis Sankey Henry Briant

3 December 1633 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) vice-rector c. November 1645 (Angl. 2, f. 71r); rector 1647 28 May 1648 (Angl. 11, f. 97v) c. November 1648 (Angl. 2, f. 114r)

College of the Immaculate Conception Michael Alford Martin Allott Michael Alford

3 December 1633 (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 30v) vice-rector 22 August 1646 (Angl. 11 , f. 97r) vice-rector c. March 1649 (Angl. 2, f. 120r)

Notes 1. For Creswell's defense, see ARSI, Angl. 3111, ff. 543r-582v; Angl. 31/11, f. 513r; Rist. Soc. 6. At least one Englishman approved of the decision: John Blackfan. He thought it valiant of Owen to remove Creswell from the position and only hoped that he would not find some way to return as he did the last time (Angl. 37, f. 132v). 2. Jones was never happy in the office. He resisted the appointment and did not want to stay in London. By 1611, he was asking to be relieved of the burden and he resigned on 24 November 1613 (Angl. 37, ff. 109v, l11r, 132v, 135v). 3. Blount was designated Walpole's successor in November 1615 (Angl. 1, f. 56v) and must have served at least a year before his full appointment in 1619, because Walpole was in Valladolid by the summer of 1618 (Cast. 8, f. 188r). 4. Talbot remained rector of the novitiate but after it was transferred to Liege he was replaced by John Gerard. Silisdon took office in the following March (Angl. 37, ff. 133v-134r).


97

BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY OF ALL ENGLISH AND WELSH JESUITSl AND OF ALL FOREIGN JESUITS WHO EITHER VISITED ENGLAND OR WHO WORKED IN ENGLISH COLLEGES ON THE CONTINENT (1555-1640) In the compilation of the following summaries, I have relied as much as I could on archival material. The summaries have two distinct sections. In the first, the dates and places of birth, entrance into the Society, VOWS,2 ordination, and death are given. The sources of that information are also provided, e.g. Angl. 13, f. 5v. Whenever there is a number without a manuscript reference, it refers to an entry in the Monumenta volumes. Precise birth dates were rarely given: the years are often approximations . drawn from information in the catalogue. Regarding birthplace, the catalogues often made no distinction between county and diocese. Regarding dates of admission, I have noted variants, especially in the case of the Roman novitiate. If there is a date and place for admission without a reference, the source of the information is one of the catalogues contained in the Monumenta volumes. The precise dates for ordination were especially difficult to ascertain, and I have sought to approximate them from the information provided in the catalogues. Often men simply disappear, and it is impossible to know whether they died, left the Society, or assumed a new identity. In those cases, I have provided no dates for death. All variations in the date of death have also been given. Because of the confusion over aliases, I have tried to cross-reference all names used by the man. The biographical information, however, will be found under the name most commonly employed in the catalogues, which need not be his true name, e.g. John Gerard will be found under John Thompson, the alias under which he most often appears . In the case of the English and Welsh, I strove to find whatever biographical information I could about them. I did not make comparable efforts in the cases of the foreigners . If, in my ordinary labors, I came across biographical information about them, I have included it in the summary. The second part of the summary, based on the catalogues, is a year-by-year account of each Jesuit's life. Again the numbers refer to documents in the Monumenta. If any information has been included in the survey that cannot be found in those volumes, the source is noted. Finally, as an aid to further study, I have included extensive bibliographical references.

Notes l. Because Scotland was both an independent kingdom and a distinct Jesuit mission, its members who appeared in England will be considered as foreigners. 2. On the various grades of profession within the Society, see Ladislaus Lukacs, SJ., 'De graduum diversitate inter sacerdotes in Societate Iesu,' AHSl37 (1968) 237-314.


98

ENGLISH

AND

WELSH JESUITS 1555- 1650

ABBOT, John'! (alias ASHTON, Rivers). Priest. b. 1588 London (Angl. 13, f. 5v); e. 3 August 1612 Louvain (Seminary Priests, II, 1; Douay Diaries, pp. 20, 34; Valladolid, p. 105); o. 14 June 1612 Douai (ibid.); dis. c. 1622; d. c. 1650 London. 1614 theologian, 1615 theologian, Louvain [327, 340]; 1621 London [384]. ABERCROMBIE, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1567 Scotland (Angl. 13, f. 5r); e. 19/20 December 1593 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 20v; 171/A, f. 145v); o. c. 1602 Rome (233); p. four vows 1 May 1609 (o.s.) London (Germ. 4, ff. 503r, 504r); d. 4/13 January 1644 Suffolk (Angl. 7, f. 144r; Angl. 11 , f. 68v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 73r). 1593 novice, 1595 novice, 1596 student, 1597 student, 1598 student, 1599 student, 1600 student, 1602 student, Rome [153, 165, 179, 184, 193, 199, 212, 217,233]; 1604 tertian, Sezza [249]; 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1613 England; 1621, 1621/22, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 67v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (London, England) [287,296,297,319, 384, 392, 401, 418, 424, 425, 433, 453, 460 471, 481]; 1633, 1634 confessor, admonitor, spiritual prefect, 1636 confessor, admonitor, spiritual prefect, 1638, confessor, admonitor, spiritual prefect [490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 190v)], [1641 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1642 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1643 confessor, spiritual prefect (Angl. 11, ff. 32v, 42v, 50v)] College of the Holy Apostles (England) . ABERNETHY, Thomas. 2 Priest. b. 11 April 1603 Aberdeen (Lugd. 18/II, f. 413v); e. 2 February 1624 (Lugd. 18/ II, f. 413v); o. c. 1633 Dole?; dis. c. 1638 (Foley, Records, VII/I, 3) but he seems to have abandoned his faith in 1635 (Roberts, 'Thomas Abernethy,' 152). 1633 after his ordination, he was sent to England (Lugd. 14, f. 247r). ABINGTON, John. See DRURY, John.

ACLAND, Antony. Brother. b. c. 1586 Yorkshire (400); e. 18 March 1617 Liege (354); p. 25 March 1626 Rome (Ital. 44, f. 83); d. 30/31 October 1626 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 8r; Hist. Soc. 44, f. 1v; 437). 1617 novice, Louvain [354]; 1621 , 1621122,1622/23 Liege [384, 392, 399,400]; 1623, 1625 socius to procurator, English College Rome [410,43 1]. ADAMS, Michael. See HIGGINS, Adam .

AGAZZARI, Alphonsus. Priest. d. 30 March 1602 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 3v). 1596 rector, 1597 rector, English College, Rome [179, 184]. AINSCOMBE, Francis Xavier. Priest. b. 27 November 1620 Antwerp (Fl. Be1g. 15, f. 107v); e. 25 September 1638 Mechlin (Fl. Belg. 15, f. 107v); o. 25 March 1651 (Fl. Belg. 19, p. 38); p. four


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

99

vows l7 October 1655 Ghent (Germ. 15, ff. 336r, 337r); d. 8 December 1660 Antwerp (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 45r). [1639 novice, Mechlin (FI. Belg. 15, f. 107v)]; [1642 completing his studies, Kortrijk (FI. Belg. 45, f. 74r)]; [1643 catechist, student of mathematics, 1644 mathematician, Ghent (FI. Belg. 45, ff. 92r, 107r)]; [1646 regent, Ipres (FI. Belg. 45, f. 136r)]; [1647 sent to Gallo-Belgian province (FI. Belg. 45, f. 151r)]; [1647 theologian, 1648 theologian, Douai (Gall. Belg. 25/1, ff. SIr, 62r)]; [September 1649 returned to province (FI. Belg. 45, f. l74r)]; [1649 theologian, Louvain (FI. Belg. 45, f. 170v)].

AINSCOMBE, LIewellin. Priest. b. 4 December 1626 Antwerp (Rom. 60, f. 28r); e. 1 October 1643 (Rom. 60, f. 28r); o. between 1651 find 1655; d. 8 June 1658 on way to India (Hist. Soc. 48, ff. 93v, 94r). [1643 novice, 1644 novice, Mechlin (Fl. Belg. 45, ff. 96r, III v)]; [1645 philosopher, 1646 philosopher, Louvain (FI. Belg. 45 , f. 124v, 137v; FI. Belg. 16, f. 69v)]; [1647 mathematician, Antwerp (FI. Belg. 45, f. 141 v)]; [1648 regent, 1649 regent, Ghent (FI. Belg. 45, ff. 157v, 169r; FI. Belg. l7, p. 39)]. AINSCOMBE, Thomas. Priest. b. 1 July 1611 Antwerp (FI. Belg. 15, f. 82v); e. 30 September 1628 Mechlin (FI. Belg. 15, f. 82v); o. 17 November 1640 (Fl. Belg. 15, f. 206v); p. four vows 2 February 1645 Antwerp (Germ. 12, ff. 426r, 427r); d. 7 May 1669 Bruges (Poncelet, NFB, p. 92). [1628 novice, 1629 novice, Mechlin (Fl. Belg. 44, ff. 201r, 216v)]; [1630 philosopher, 1631 philosopher, Louvain (FI. Belg. 44, ff. 235v, 259r)]; [1632 completing his studies, Kortrijk (FI. Belg. 44, f. 276v)]; [1633 regent, 1634 regent, Brussels (FI. Belg. 44, f. 295v; FI. Belg. 45, ff. 6v, 21r)]; [1636 regent, 1639 Ipres (FI. Belg. 45, f. 42r; FI. Belg. 15, f. 82v)]; [1641 theologian, 1642 priest theologian Louvain (FI. Belg. 45, ff. 61 v, 78r)]; [1643 tertian, Lier (FI. Belg. 45, f. 94r)]; [1644 prefect of music, confessor, Antwerp (FI. Belg. 45, f. 101 v)]; [1645 confessor, catechist, Brussels (FI. Belg. 45, f. 118v)]; [1646 preacher, 1647 consultor, 1648 preacher, Antwerp (FI. Belg. 45, ff. 129v, 140v, 152v¡ FI. Belg. 16, f. 15v; FI. Belg. 17, p. 6)]; [April 1649 sent to Italy (FI. Belg. 45, f. 174r)]. ALA CAMPI, Edward (vere ATSLOW). Priest. b.late 1584 London (AngI. 13, f. 8r; Liber Ruber, 1,141; Responsa, 1,156-57); e. 6 November 1608 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 26v; 172, f. 119r); o. before 1614; p. four vows 3 May 1622 London (Germ. 6, ff. 212r, 213r); d. 6 February 1646 Ghent (Angi. 11, f. 86r; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 54r). [1611 theologian, Palermo (Sic. 61, f. 18r)]; 1612 theologian, Palermo [31 2]; [30 May 1614 sent to Flanders (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 75v)]; 1614 theologian, 1615 minister, 1617 assistant confessor, writer, and admonitor; 1618 spiritual father, admonitor, 1621 spiritual prefect, Louvain [327, 340, 353, 358, 359, 384];


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1621122 socius, consultor and admonitor to provincial, 1623 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1624 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1625 socius, consultor and admonitor to provincial, 1626 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 66r)], 1629 socius, consultor and admonitor to provincial, 1630 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1631 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1632 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1633 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1634 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1636 socius, consultor and admonitor to provincial [392, 40l. 418, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472, 481, 490,502, 516]; [24 February 1637, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 83v)]; 1638 rector, [1639 rector (Angl. 13, f. 214r)] Ghent [527]; [1641 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1642 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1643 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial, 1644 socius, consultor, and admonitor to provincial (Angl. 11, ft. 32r, 42r, 50r, 60r)]; [1645 vice-provincial, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 74r)].

ALALEO, Hieronymus. Priest. d. 11 April 1632 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. lOr). 1596 minister, consultor, 1597 minister, English College, Rome [179, 184]. ALCOCK, John. See GAGE, John.

ALDRINGTON, Thomas (alias WAEMAN). Priest. b. 1579 Worcester (402); e. 4 June 1621 London (402); o. 26 February 1611 Tournai (402; Douay Diaries, pp. 20, 34); p. spiritual coadiutor 5 July 1632 Worcester (Germ. 63, f. 837r); d. 29 April 1649 England (Angl. 11, f. 109r; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 74r). 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401,402]; 1624, 1625, 1626 Residence of St. George (Worcester, England) [418,425,433]; [1628 Residence of Blessed Francis Borgia (England) (Angl. 13, f. 79r)]; 1629, 1630, 1631 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) [453,460,472]; 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 200r)] Residence of St. George (England) [481, 490, 502, 516, 527]; [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646 College of the Immaculate Conception (England) (Angl. 11, ft. 34v, 44r, 52r, 62r, 71v, 81r)]. ALFONSUS, Andreas. Brother. [1642, 1645, 1649 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 16/11, ff. 281 v, 414r, 415r)]. ALFORD, Michael (vere GRIFFITH),3 Priest. b. c. 1585 London (Angl. 13, f. 8v); e. 5 February 1607 Brussels (305) but he began his noviceship on 28 February in Louvain (SC, Anglia 111,98); v. 1 March 1609 Louvain (305); o. c. 1612; p. four vows 21 November 1619 Rome (I al. 7, ft. 17, 18); d. 11 August 1652 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 191r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 98r). 1610 theologian, 1611 Louvain [298, 305, 306]; [19 May 1613 sent to Naples (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 75v)]; 1616 penitentiary, 1617 penitentiary, consultor, 1618


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

101

penitentiary, 1619 penitentiary, St. Peter's Rome [347, 355, 361, 370]; [25 March 1620, sent to England (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 77v)]; 1621 socius to novice master, Liege [384]; 1621122 tertian, Ghent [392]; 1623, 1624 Leicester (England); 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 75r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 Residence of St. Anne (England) 1633, 1634 rector, 1636 rector, 1638 rector [401, 418, 425, 433, 453, 454,460,472,481,490,502, 516, 527], [12 December 1639, sent to England (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 84v)], [1639 rector (Angl. 13, f. 190v)], [1641 rector, 1642 rector, 1643 rector, 1644 rector, 1645 rector, 1646 consultor, admonitor, 1647 consultor, admonitor, 1648 consultor, admonitor, 1649 consultor, admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 34r, 43v, 52r, 62r, 71v, 81r, 89r, 97r, 104v)] College of the Immaculate Conception (England) .

ALFORD, Robert (vere GRIFFITH). Priest. b. c. 1582 London (AI'lgl. 13, f. 7v; Responsa, I, 118) or Kent (511) or Surrey (Liber Ruber, I, 127); e. 1613 Louvain; o. 8 July 1607 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 127); p. four vows 12 March 1625 (Angl. 13, f. 71v); d. 8 July 1640 London (Angl. 7, f. 140v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r). 1613 novice, Louvain [320]; 1621 , 1621122 Stafford (England) [384, 392]; 1623, 1624,1625,1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 71v)], 1629, 1630, 1631 , 1632, 1633, 1634 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [401,418,425,433,453,460,472,481, 490, 502]; 1635, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 190v)] College of the Holy Apostles (England) [511, 516, 527]. ALLEN, John (vere MANN?). Brother. b. c. 1603 Staffordshire (434); e. 1625 Watten (ibid.); dis. 1630 (461). 1626 novice, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 86v)], 1629 Watten [433,453]. ALLEN, Ralph. Priest. b. 1547 London (Seminary Priests, I, 3-4); e. March, 157617 Lyons (Angl. 14, f. 79v); o. 1574 Douai (Seminary Priests, 1,3-4; Douay Diaries, p. 6); d. before 20 January 1588 (122). 1584 Billom [97] ; 1587 confessor, lecturer in theology and cases of conscience, Avignon [112].4 ALLEN, William. Scholastic. b. 1594 England (Vitae 149, f. 333r); e. c. 1617 Spain? (ibid.); d. 26 June 1621 Oropesa (ibid.). ALLOTT, Martin (vere HEWETT). Priest. b. c. 1606 Derby (453); e. 162617 Watten (ibid.); o. c. 1633 Liege?; p. spiritual coadiutor 8 October 1641 Leicester (Germ. 65, f. 48r); d. 25 September 1661 France (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 102r). [1628 novice, Watten (Angl. 13, f. 86r)]; 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, 1632 theologian, Liege [453, 460, 472, 481]; 1633 socius to procurator, Brussels [490,493]; 1634 tertian, Ghent [502, 503]; 1635,1636, 1638


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[511,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 196r)], [1641,1642,1643,1644,1645,1646 rector declared 22 August 1646, 1647 rector, 1648 rector, 1649 (Angl. 11, ft. 34r, 43v, 52r, 62r, 71 v, 81r, 89r, 97r, 104v)] College of the Immaculate Conception (England).

ALMEIDA, Balthasar De. Brother. b. 1546 Lisbon (Borja de Medina, 'Jesuitas en la Armada,' 36); e. 28 April 1561 (ibid.); p. December 1586 (ibid.); d. 17 June 1588 in a ship on the way to England (AASI 46/24/1, p. 814; Hist. Soc. 42, f. 20r). ALONSO, Gaspar. Priest. 1595 spiritual prefect, confessor, consultor, lecturer in cases of conscience, 1596 spiritual prefect, confessor, consultor, lecturer in cases of conscience, admonitor, 1597 confessor, English College, Valladolid [164, 169, 180]. ALUCCIUS, Caesar. Priest. d. 15 September 1634 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 10v). 1595 tutor in metaphysics, English College, Rome [165]. ALVARES, GASPAR. Priest. b. 1570 CabeÂĽo de Vide (Leite, Hist6ria da Compahnia de Jesus no Brasil, VIII, 11); e. 1586 Evora (ibid.); d. September 1604? Lisbon (Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 19r). One of the Portuguese Jesuits imprisoned in England. See Cardim, Fernao. ALVAREZ, Georgius. Brother. 1637 procurator, 1639 procurator, 1640 procurator, English College, Seville [523 , 533, 534, 537]. ANDEN, Laurentius. Priest. e. 9 August 1617 Liege. 1617 novice, Liege [354]. ANDERSON, Patrick.s Priest. b. 1575 Scotland (Foley, Records, VillI, 9); e. 1597 Rome (ibid.); d. 24 September 1624 London (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159r) (418). 1624 deceased [418]. ANDERSON, William (vere FORSTER). Priest. b. c. 1588 Essex, near Haverhill but raised at Old Buckenham, Norfolk (Liber Ruber, I, 142; Responsa, I, 162-63); e. 22 October 1609 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 26v; 172, f. 136v); o. 1615 (367); p. four vows 12 October 1623 Ghent (Germ. 7, ft. 82r, 83r); d. 9 June 1657 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 197r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 53v). [1611 novice (Sic. 61, f. 46v)], 1612 theologian, [1614 theologian (Sic. 61, f. 80v)], 1616 minister, Palermo [312, 348]; [10 November 1616 sent to Liege


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

103

(Hist. Soc. 62, f. 76v)]; 1617 socius to novice master, Liege [354]; 1619, 1621, 1621122 prefect of studies, consultor, English College, St. Omers [367, 384, 392]; 1622123 superior, 1623 superior, Ghent [399, 400, 401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 76r)] Residence of St. George (Worcester, England) [418, 419,425, 433]; 1629 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [453,454]; 1630, 1631 Residence of St. Mary (England) [460, 472]; 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 187v)] House of Probation ofSt. Ignatius (England) [481,490, 502, 516, 527]; [1641 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1642 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1643 confessor, spiritual prefect, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11 , ff. 39v, 48r, 57v)]; [1644 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1645 confessor, spiritual prefect, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 67r, 74r)]; [1646 confessor, 1647 confessor, 1648 confessor, 1649 confessor, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, ff. 85v, 93v, 99v, 106v)].

ANDERTON, Christopher. Priest. b. 1 September 1613 Lancashire (Rom. 60, f. 28r); e. 7 September 1635 Watten (Rom. 60, f. 28r); o. 15 April 1645 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 76r); p. four vows 8 September 1652 Ascoli (Ital. 12, ff. 200, 201); d. 22 December 1694 Rome (Rom. 94, f. 248v; Rist. Soc. 49, f. 48v). 1635 novice, 1636 novice, Watten [511, 516]; 1638 theologian [527] , [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 21Or)], [1641 theologian, 1642 theologian, 1643 theologian, 1644 theologian (Angl. 11, ff. 37r, 46r, 54v, 65r)] Liege; [1645 sent to Rome (Angl. 11, f. 76v; Rom. 80, f. 362v)]; [1645 tertian, Rome (Rom. 80, ff. 348v, 377r)]; [1647 lecturer in physics, 1650 confessor, consultor, Ascoli (Neap. 174, p. 102; Rom. 81, f. 16v). ANDERTON, Hugo (alias COURTNEY, Henry). Novice. b. c. 1579 Clayton, Lancashire (Liber Ruber, I, 122-23; Responsa, I, 99); e. 29 September 16037 Ro;ne (Liber Ruber, I, 123); d. 29 September 1603 Rome (ibid.). ANDERTON, Lawrence. 6 Priest. b. c. 1576 Lancashire (Angl. 13, f. 6r); e. 1604 England (287); o. 1603 Spain (Allison, 'Brereley,' 23); p. four vows 7 February 1618 (o.s.) London (Germ. 6, ff. 4r, 9r); d. 17 April 1643 England (Angl. 7, f. 143v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 45r). 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621 superior, 1621122 superior, 1623 superior, 1624 superior, 1625 superior of Lancashire mission, College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [384, 392, 401, 418, 425]; 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 68r)], 1629 consultor to house and province, 1630 consultor to house and province, 1631 consultor to province, 1632, 1633 consultor to province, 1634 consultor to province, 1636, 1638 consultor to province, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 188r)] [433,453,460,472,481,490,502,516,527], [1641 consultor to province (Angl. 11, f. 31r)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England); [1642 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 43v)]. ANDERTON, Thomas. See BARTON, Thomas.


104

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ANDREWS, Ignatius. See PRICE, Ignatius.

ANGLUS, Didacus. Brother. e.1570 Rome (70). 1570 novice, Rome [70]. ANGLUS, John. Priest. On 23 July 1575 the general authorized a Father John English to travel from Naples to Rome (ARSI, Neap. 1, f. 43r). John English may have been John Archer, John Barge, John Blundell, John Castell, John Columb, John Hennings, or John Wright. ANGLUS, John. Brother. d. OctoberlNovember 1596 El Ferrol (Borja de Medina, 'Jesuitas en la Armada,' 40). ANGLUS, Lawrence. Novice Brother. 1567 left the Rhineland province [44]. ANGLUS, Robert. Novice Brother. 1567 left the Rhineland province [44]. ANGLUS, Simon. Brother. b. c. 1536 (29); e. 17 January 1563 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 5r; l70, f. 60v). 1564 Rome [7); 1566 sent to Aquitaine [25); 1566 Aquitaine [29]. ANGLUS, Simon. ScholasticlBrother? A Simon Anglus was sent from Rome to Trier in the spring of 1572. Because he was referred to as a young man, he could not be the same Simon that was mentioned above. See ARSI, Germ. 134, ff. 249-50, 469. ANGLUS, Thomas. Priest. d. 27 September 1583 Paris (More, The Elizabethan Jesuits, p. 38). ANNE, George. Priest. b. c. 1595 Yorkshire (Liber Ruber, I, l75); e. 162112 England (Angl. 13, f. 15v); o. 25 March 1620 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 176); p. spiritual coadiutor 6 December 1632 Durham (Germ. 63, f. 764r); d. 24 June 1660 Yorkshire (Angl. 7, f. 200v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 54v). 1623 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401); 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 73r)], 1629 superior, 1630 superior, 1631 superior, 1632 superior, 1633 superior, 1634 superior, 1636 superior, 1638 superior [418, 425, 433,453,460,472,481,490,502,516,527], [1639 superior (Angl. 13, f. 196v)], [1641 superior, 1642 superior, 1643 superior, 1644 superior, 1645 superior, 1646,


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

105

1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ft. 34v, 44r, 52v, 62v, 71 v, 81r, 92v, 98v, 104v)] Residence of St. Michael (York, England). ANTONII, Antony. See SHELLEY, Owen.

APELIUS, Peter. Priest. b. c. 1612 Ashaftenburg (490); e. c. 1630 (ibid.); d. 19 March 1665 Ashaftenburg (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 117v). 1633 theologian, 1634 theologian, Liege [490, 502]. APPLEBY, William. Priest. b. c. 1591 Yorkshire (Angl. 13, f. 97v); e. 1629 Watten; o. before 1629 Seville (Seminary Priests, II, J); p. four vows 3 November 1641 London (Germ. 11, ft. 164r, 171r); d. 14 July 1671 England (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 91v). 1629, 1630 novice, Watten [453 , 454,460]; 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [472,473,481 , 490, 502, 516, 527] , [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 188v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ft. 32v, 42r, 50r, 60r, 70r, 79r, 88r, 96r, 103r)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) . APPLETON, Thomas. See NEVILLE, Thomas.

APRIS, David (or PRICE). Scholastic. e. 1 January 1561 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 4r; Rom. 170, f. 43v); v. 9 March 1561 Rome (Ita!. 60, f. 282r). 1561 sent to Tuscany [4]; [c. 1566 Ferrara (Hist. Soc. 175, f. 3r)]. ARAOZ, Antonio De. Priest. d. 30 August 1669 Seville (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 16v). 1629 presides over conferences in philosophy, 1630 presides over conferences in philosophy, 1631 presides over conferences in philosophy, consultor, confessor, 1633 presides over repetitions in philosophy, 1634 presides over repetitions, curate, 1637 presides over repetitions in metaphysics, consultor, 1639 presides over conferences in philosophy, consultor, confessor, 1640 presides over conferences in philosophy, consultor, confessor [455, 463, 475, 492, 505, 522, 523, 533, 534,537], [1643 consultor, presides over disputations, 1644 consultor, confessor, presides over disputations, 1645 consultor, confessor, preacher, 1648 admonitor, spiritual prefect [Baet. 141I, f. 127v; Baet. 141II, ft. 264v, 290v, 300r, 319r]) English College, Seville. ARCHER, John. Priest. d. 1580 Ingolstadt (AASI, 46/24/1, p. 813). ARCHER, Richard. Priest. e. 24 July 1615 Liege (341).


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WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

1615 novice, Liege [341].

ARDEN, Robert.? Priest. b. c. 1548 Chichester, Sussex (26, 83); e. 7 March 1564 Louvain or 7 April 1565 (26, 83, Angl. 14, f. 76v); v. 25 December 1564 or 1565 (26, 83); o. Holy Saturday 1577 Eichstatt (Germ. Sup. 44a, f. 5r); dis. 13 November 1593 (Hist. Soc. 54, ff. 12v, 13r).8 1566 humanities, Ingolstadt [26]; 1568 lecturer, Innsbruck [58]; 1570 tutor, 1572 lecturer in rhetoric, Munich [72, 85, 89]; 1574 theologian, Dillingen [88]; 1584 procurator, Friburg [100]; 1586 confessor, Loreto [105]; [1587 Loreto (Rom. 53, f. 92r); [1590 penitentiary, St. Peter's, Rome (Rom. 53, f. 153r)]; [26 June 1591, permission to go to Switzerland (Rist. Soc. 61, f. 47v)]; 1592 confessor, presided over conferences in cases of conscience, involved in negotiations with the bishop, Lucerne [148]; [12 July 1592, permission to go to Venice (Rist. Soc. 61, f. 48v)]; [14 December 1592, permission to go to Loreto (ibid.)]; [1593 confessor, Loreto (Rist. Soc. 175, f. 42r)] [7 May 1593, permission to go to Milan (Hist. Soc. 61 , f. 48v)]. ARDEN, Robert (vere GROSVENOR). Priest. b. 1 May 1582 Carlton near Wakefield, Yorkshire (Liber Ruber, 1,173; Responsa, 1,277-80); e. 1620 Liege; o. 27 December 1616 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 173); p. spiritual coadiutor 23 February 1630 Leicester (Germ. 63, f. 618r); d. 5 February 1668 England (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 124r). 1621 novice, 1621122 novice, Liege [384, 392]; 1623, 1624 military chaplain, Ghent [401, 418]; 1625, 1626 Residence of St. John (England) [425, 433]; [1628 Residence of St. Michael (England) (Angl. 13, f. 73r)]; 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 Residence of St. Anne (England) [453,460,472,481]; 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 195r)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [490,491,502, 516,527]; [1641 , 1642 consultor, procurator, 1643 consultor, procurator, 1644 consultor, procurator, 1645 consultor, procurator, 1646 minister, consultor, 1647, 1648 minister, 1649 minister, College of the Immaculate Conception (England) (Angl. 11 , ff. 34v, 43v, 52r, 62r, 71 v, 81r, 89v, 97r, 104v)]. ARECHEVALA, Dominic. Brother. [1645 English CoUege, Seville (Baet. 14/1, f. 128r)]. ARLINGTON, Lawrence. Scholastic? e. 1582/83 Belgium (Clancy, 'First Generation,' 158; Foley, Records, VIU2, 951); d. 1584? (ibid.) ARMSTRONG, John (or Thomas). Priest. b. c. 1588 Northumberland (Angl. 13, f. 6r); e. 1620 England (ibid.); o. 27 December 1616 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 168); p. four vows 6 May 1632 York (Germ. 8, ff. 324r, 325r); d. 30 December 1660 England (Angl. 7, f. 201r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 79v).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

107

1621 York (England) [384]; 1621/22 Staffordshire (England) [392]; 1623 York (England) [401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 73v)] , 1629,1630,1631, 1632, 1633, 1634 superior, 1636 superior, 1638 [418, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472, 481,490,502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 198r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 35r, 44r, 52v, 62v, 72r, 81 v, 91r, 99r, 105r)] Residence of St. John (Durham, England).

ARNOLD, Adam. Priest. b. c. 1565 (287); e. 1601 England (ibid.). 1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]. ARNOLD. Brother. 1597 English College"St. Omers [181]. ARROWSMITH, Edmund. See BRADSHAW, Edmund. ARTHUR, Gregory. See HOARE, Gregory. ARTHUR, Lawrence. See FAUNT, Lawrence Arthur.

ASCHUS (ASKE?), John. Priest. e. 1571 Munich (Germ. Sup. 44b, f. 3); o. 2 March 1580 Eichstatt (Germ. Sup. 44a, f. 5r); d. 4 November 1580 Ingolstadt (Germ. Sup. 44a, f. 4r). [1 January 1571 sent from Flanders to the province of Germany Superior (Germ. Sup. 44a, f. 3v)]; [1574 Munich (Hist. Soc. 41, f. 174r)]. ASHBY, Richard (vere TlllMELBY).9 Priest. b. c. 1613 Lincoln (472); e. 1631 Watten; o. c. 1640 Belgium; p. four vows 21 November 1646 Liege (Germ. 13, ff. 131, 132); d. 7 January 1680 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 245v). 1631 novice, 1632 novice, Watten [472, 481]; 1633 philosopher, 1634 philosopher, 1636 theologian, 1638 theologian, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 207r)] Liege [490, 491, 502, 516, 527]; [1641 minister, consultor, 1642 minister, consultor, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, ff. 39v, 48r)]; [1643 preparing to teach philosophy, 1644 professor of logic, 1645 professor of physics, 1646 professor of metaphysics, 1647 prefect of the church, assistant, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 54v, 65r, 73v, 83v, 92r)]; [1648, 1649 Residence of St. Dominic (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 99r, 105r)]. ASHLEY, Ralph. Brother. e. circa 1598?; 10 d. 7 April 1606 Worcester (Foley, Records, VIII1, 20); ASHTON, John (or Augustine). See ABBOT, John.

ATHERTON, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1613 Lancashire (511); e. 1635 Watten; o. 4 April 1643 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 58v); dis. 20 August 1646 (Angl. 11 , f. 86r).


108

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1635 novice, 1636 novice, Watten [511, 516]; 1638 philosopher [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 21Or)], [1641 casuist, 1642 casuist (Angl. 11, ff. 37v, 46r)] Liege; [1643 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 57r)]; [1644 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 66v)]; [1645 residing with a nobleman, Quimper (Franc. 23, f. 41r)] .

ATKINS, William. Brother. b. c. 1574 Huntingdon (400, Angl. 13, f. 9v); e. 21 December 1618 Liege (400); d. 10 June 1631 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. l11r; Rist. Soc. 43, f. 196r; 473). 1621, 1621/22 Liege [384, 392]; 1622/23, 1623, 1624 Watten [399, 400, 401, 418,419]; 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 89r)], 1629, 1630 St. Omers [425 ,433, 453,460]. ATKINS, William. Priest. b. c. 1601 Cambridge (454, Angl. 13, f. 102r); e. 1629 Watten; o. before January 1628 (Seminary Priests, II, 10); p. spiritual coadiutor 14 July 1641 Lancashire (Germ. 65, f. 72r); d. 26 February/7 March 1681 Stafford (Angl. 11, f. 247r; Rist. Soc. 49, f. 96r). 1629, 1630 novice, Watten [453,454,460]; 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [472, 473, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 194v)], [1641, 1642, 1643,1644, 1645, 1646 minister, 1647 minister, 1648 consultor, procurator, 1649 procurator, consultor (Angl. 11, ff. 34r, 43v, 51v, 61v, 71r, 80v, 89r, 97r, 104r)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England). ATSLOW, Edward. See ALACAMPI, Edward.

AUGUSTINE, Joseph. Priest. d. 29 May 1643 Palermo (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 39v). 1602 prefect of studies, English College, Rome [233]. AVILA, Bartholomeus De. Brother. d. 26 December 1670 Montilla (Rist. Soc. 49, f. 26r). 1637, 1638 English College, Seville [522, 523]. AXONENTA, Joannes De. Priest. 1637 rector, English College, Seville [522]. AYLWORTH, William (alias HARCOURT).ll Priest. b. 21 March 1623 Wales (Tolos. lOll, f. 7r; Angl. 14, f. 115r); e. 7 September 1641 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 40v; Tolos. lOll, f. 7r); o. c. 1650 Alcala?; p. four vows 2 March 1659 (Angl. 16, f. 9v); d. 10 September 1679 Harlem (Angl. 11, f. 230r). [1641 novice, 1642 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 38v, 47r)]; [1643 philosopher, 1644 philosopher, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 55v, 66r)]; [1645 sent to Toulouse (Angl. 11, f. 76v)]; [1646 philosopher, Toulouse (Tolos. 5, p. 497; Tolos. lOll, f. 7r); [1647 philosopher, Billom (Tolos. 5, p. 517)]; [1648/49 theologian, Alcala (To let. 15, f. 173r; Tolet. 24, f. 222r)].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

109

BABTHORPE, Ralph (alias SMITH).12 Priest. b. c. 1594 Babthorpe, Yorkshire (Liber Ruber, I, 163; Responsa, I, 245-46); e. 7 January 1615 Spain (Liber Ruber, I, 163); o. before 1621; d. 5 October 1627 England (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159v). [1619 student, English College, Rome (Rom. 55, f. 126r)]; [9 September 1619, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 77v)]; 1621 Louvain [384]; 1621122 Northampton (England) [392]; 1622123, tertian, Ghent [399, 400]; 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626 Residence of St. Michael (Yorkshire England) [401 ,418,425,433]. BABTHORPE, Thomas (alias SMITH). Priest. b. c. 1598 Yorkshire (Liber Ruber, I, 177; Responsa, I, 288-89); e. 11 November 1618 Liege (400); o. c. 1624 Belgium; p. four vows 7 March 1634 Liege (Germ. 9, ff. 3r, 12r); d. 20 October 1656 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. 195r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 132r). 1618 novice, Liege [360] ; 1621 theologian, 1621122 theologian, 1622123 theologian, 1623 theologian, Louvain [384, 392, 399,400,401]; 1624 tertian, Ghent [418,419]; 1625 preparing to teach philosophy, visitor, 1626 professor of logic, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 80r)] Liege [425, 426, 433]; 1629, 1630 Residence of St. Michael (England) [453,454,460]; 1631 Residence of St. Anne (England) [472, 473]; 1632 professor of logic, consultor, 1633 professor of moral theology, 1634 professor of cases of conscience, Liege [481 , 482,490,502]; [1639 procurator, Madrid (Angl. 13, f. 217r)]; 13 [1643 preacher, consultor, assistant, 1644 preacher, consultor, assistant, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 57r, 67r)]; [1645 vice-rector, viceprovincial, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 70r)]; [1646 rector, 1647 rector, Liege (Angl. 11 , ff. 83r, 91 v)]; [1648, 1649 military chaplain, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 100r, 107r)]; [1650 rector declared 3 March 1650, English College, Rome (Rom. 81, f. 15v)]. BABTHORPE, Thomas. See TUNSTALL, Thomas. BACON, John. See SOUTHWELL, John. BACON, Nathaniel. See SOUTHWELL, Nathaniel. BACON, Thomas. See SOUTHWELL, Thomas. BADDULEY, Francis. See LEE, Francis. BADDULEY, William. See LEE, William. BADDULEY, Ignatius. See STAFFORD, Ignatius.

BAINES, Charles (vere CALVERT). Priest. b. 16 June 1620 Lancashire (Rom. 60, f. 28r); e. 17 May 1647 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 36v); 0.19 June 1644 Rome (Seminary Priests, II, 42); d. 27 January 1657 Rome (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 25v). [1649 novice, Rome (Rom. 59, f. 27v)]; [1650 confessor, Loreto (Rom. 80. f. 19v)].


110

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BAINES, Edward. See MICO, Edward.

BAKER, Alexander. Priest. b. 25 March 1582 Norfolk (367; Ang!. 13, f. 48r); e. 23 Aprill612 Louvain (367); v. 23 April 1613 (Cast. 15, f. 404r); o. 1608 Malaga (367); p. four vows 23 May 1627 London (Germ. 7, ff. 412r, 419r); d. 24 August 1638 London (Ang!. 7, f. 120r; Rist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1613 novice, St. John's, Louvain [320]; 1614, 1615, 1617 socius to prefect, Brussels [327, 339, 340, 353]; 1617, 1618 Douai [354, 360]; 1619 procurator, consultor, English College, St. Omers [367]; [1622 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, f. 404r)]; 1624, 1625, 1626 superior, Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (Devon, England) [418, 425, 433]; [1628 Rouse of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Ang!. 13, f. 68v)]; 1629 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) [453]; 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633 Rouse of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [460, 461 , 472, 481, 490]; 1634 Maryland mission [502]; 1635, 1636 Rouse of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [511,516]. BAKER, Charles (vere David Lewis),14 Priest. b. c. 1616 Wales (Ang!. 15, f. 128r); e. 14119 April 1645 Rome (Rom. 173, f. 70r; Rom. 169, f. 36r); 0. 20 July 1642 Rome (Seminary Priests, 11,190); p. four vows 20 May 1655 London (Germ. 15, ff. 290r, 291r); d. 27 August 1679 (o.s.) Usk (Ang!. 7, ff. 216r-217r). [1648, 1649 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) (Angl. 11, ff. 96v, 104r)]. BALDUCCI, Baltassar. Priest. d. 28 September 1624 Syracuse (Rist. Soc. 43, f. 16v). 1605, 1606 tutor in physics, English College, Rome [257, 267] . BALDWIN, William. Priest. b. 10 November 1562 Cornwall (203); e. 2 February 1590 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 19v; 17l1A,f.124r);0.16April1588Rome(LiberRuber,I,42);p.fourvow s 10 February 1602 Antwerp (Germ. 4, ff. 62r, 63r); d. 18128 September 1632 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 111v; Angl. 8, ff. 147r-148v; Rist. Soc. 43, ff. 135v, 196r; Rist. Soc. 45, f. 43r; 481). 1593 Rome [149]; [12 January 1593, permission to go to Flanders (Rist. Soc. 61, f. 48v)]; 1593 Brussels [151]; 1594 professor of theology, Louvain [159]; 1597 minister, English College, Rome [193]; [17 April 1598, permission to go to Flanders (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 34v)]; 1598 military chaplain, 1599, 1601, 1602, [1603 (FI. Belg. 9, f. 359r)], 1605 consultor, 1606 procurator of mission, 1607 consultor, 1609 consultor, Brussels [195,203,224,230,254,264,274,289]; 1610 England [297]; [16 February 1619 sent to Spain (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 77r)]; 1621 rector, English College, Louvain [384]; 1621122 rector, consultor to vice-provincial, 1622/23 rector, consultor to vice-provincial, 1623 rector, consultor to provincial, 1624 rector, 1625 rector, 1626 rector, [1628 rector (Ang!. 13, f. 88r)], 1629 rector, 1630 rector, 1631 rector, English College, St. Omers [392, 399, 400, 401, 418, 425, 433,453,460,472].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

111

BAMFIELD, George (or John). Priest. b. c. 1593 Wiltshire (Cast. 15, ft. 268r, 314r) or Somerset (367) or Warwickshire (Angl. 13, f. 8v); e. 10 June 1612 Louvain (367); o. 1610 (367); p. four vows 7 March 1634 Liege (Germ. 9, ft. 17r, 28r); d. 1657 England (Angl. 7, f. 197v). 1611 novice, 1613 novice, Louvain [306, 320]; [1614 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, ff. 268r, 314r)]; 1614 theologian, 1615 theologian, 1617 theologian, 1618 theologian, Louvain [327, 339, 340, 353, 358, 359]; 1618, 1619 Watten [360, 367]; 1621 Liege [384]; 1621122 Suftolk (England) [392]; 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401]; 1624, 1625, 1626 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [418, 419, 425, 433]; [1628 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (Angl. 13, f. 78v)]; 1629, 1630 Residence of St. Thomas (England) [453,460]; 1631 minister, consultor, prefect of health, 1632 prefect of the church, consultor, Ghent [472, 473, 481]; 1633 curate, 1634 procurator, 1636 consultor, procurator, Liege [490,491,502,516]; 1638 [527] , [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 193v)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646 confessor, 1647 confessor, 1648 confessor, 1649 confessor (Angl. 11, ft. 33r, 43r, SIr, 61r, 7lr, 80r, 88v, 96v, 104r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales). BANKS, Richard. Priest. b. c. 1569 London (Angl. 13, f. 5r; Liber Ruber, I, 64); e. 1597/8 England (194); o. 8 November 1592 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 64); p. four vows 14 May 1609 (o.s.) London (Germ. 4, ff. 519r, 520r); d. 14 March 1643 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. 143r; Angl. 11, f. 58v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62r). 1598 novice, 1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [194, 287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621 superior, 1621122 superior, 1623 rector, provincial consultor, 1624 rector, 1625 rector, provincial consultor, 1626 rector, provincial consultor, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 66v)], 1629 rector, provincial consultor, 1630 provincial consultor, 1631 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, provincial consultor, 1632 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, provincial consultor, 1633 provincial consultor, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [384, 392,401,418,424,425,433, 453,460,471,481,490]; 1634 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, College of the Immaculate Conception (England) [502, 503]; 1635, 1636, 1638 confessor, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 188r)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [511,516, 527]; [1641, 1642 Ghent (Angl. 11 , ft. 39r, 47v)]. BAQUERTO, Gabriel. Brother. 1637 English College, Seville [523]. BARA, Juan De. Brother. [1642, 1645 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 16/11, ff. 281 v, 414r)]. BARDWELL, James. See DENNY, Francis.

BARGE, John. Priest. d. 1594 Tournai (Foley, Records, VIII1, 32; Clancy, 'First Generation' 158).


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BARIDANN, John. Scholastic. 1615 professor of poetry, St. Omers [341] . BARKER, Thomas. See FARMER, Thomas.

BARNES, Thomas (alias TURNER). Novice. b. c. 1580 London (Liber Ruber, I, 110); e. 31 August 1599 Rome (ibid.); d. 31 August 1599 Rome (ibid.) . BARON, John. See BURTON, John. BARROW, William. See WARING, William.

BARTELOT (or BERTELOT), John. Brother. b. c. 1615 Artois (Angl. 11, f. 48v); e. 29 January 1642 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 48v); p. 8 December 1652 (Angl. 7, f. 211 v); d. 6 March 1677 Watten (Angl. 7, f. 211 v). [1642 novice, 1643 novice, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 47r, 56v, 67r, 74v, 85r, 93v, 101 v, 106v)]. BARTLETT, George. Brother. b. c. 1572 Oxford (400); e. 30 July 1613 Louvain (ibid.); p. 8 December 1629 Watten (Germ. 81, f. 222r); d. 12 September 1645 Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 75v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 30v). 1613 novice, 1614 novice, 1615, 1617 Louvain [320, 327,339,340,353]; 16l7, 1618, 1621, 1621122, 1622123, 1623 Liege [354, 360, 384, 392, 399, 400, 401]; 1624, 1625, 1626 Watten [418,425,433]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 89r)], 1629 English College, St. Omers [453]; 1630,1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [460,461, 472,481,490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 214v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644 (Angl. 11, ff. 39v, 47v, 57r, 67v)] Ghent. BARTLETT, Richard. Priest. b. c. 1580 Warwick (Angl. 13, f. 6v) or Gloucester (Angl. 13, ff. 17r, 47v, 79r, 101 v, 152v, 199r, 228v); e. 1616 (454); o. 6 April 1612 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 155); p. four vows 1 October 1637 Lincoln (Germ. 10, ff. 31r, 40r); d. 22 February 1645 Rennes (Angl. 7, f. 145r; Angl. 11, f. 75v). 1618 tertian, Liege [360]; 1621, 1621122 Leicester (England) [384,392]; 1623, 1624, 1625 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (Devon, England) [401,418,425]; 1626 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [433]; [1628 Residence of Blessed Francis Borgia (England) (Angl. 13, f. 79r)]; 1629, 1630 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [453,454,460]; 1631 Residence of St. George (Worcester) [472]; 1632 teacher of grammar, 1633 teacher of grammar, College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [481, 482, 490]; 1634 Ghent [502]; 1635, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 199r)] Residence of St. Dominic (England) [511,516, 526]; [1641 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) (Angl. 11, f. 33v)]; [1642 sent to France (Angl. 11, f. 49r)].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

113

BARTON, James. PriestINovice. b. c. 1612 England (Rom. l73, f. 50r); e. 3 September 1640 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 35r; l73, f. 50r); 15 o. 1640? Seville? (Seminary Priests, II, 18); dis. l7 April 1641 Rome (Rom. 80, f. 314r). BARTON, John (or James). Scholastic. b. c. 1559 Lancashire (Rom. 53, f. 63r; Liber Ruber, I, 11); e. 3 February 1580 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 15v; l7l1A, f. 67v); dis. 29 October 1586 (Hist. Soc. 54, f. 8r). [1584 theologian, Rome (Rom. 53, f. 63r)]. BARTON, Peter (alias WHITAKER; vere BRADSHAIGH). Priest. b. c. 1610 Lancashire (Angl. 13, f.11 7v); e. 1631 Watten; 0.30 March 1641 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 41r); p. four vows 25 November 1646 St. Omers (Germ. 13, ff. 133r, 134r); d. l7 April 1676 Lancashire (Angl. 7, f. 209v; Rist. Soc. 49, f. 208v). 1631 novice, 1632 novice, Watten [472, 473, 481]; 1633 philosopher, 1634 philosopher, Liege [490, 491, 502] ; 1636 student, Ghent [516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 207v)] theologian, Liege [527]; [1641 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 39r)]; [1642 consultor, procurator, 1643 consultor, procurator, 1644 minister, procurator, consultor, 1645 minister, procurator, consultor, 1646 procurator, consultor, 1647 procurator, confessor, 1648 minister, procurator, consultor, 1649 minister, consultor, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, ff. 48r, 57v, 67v, 74v, 85r, 94r, 99v, lO6v)]. BARTON, Richard (vere BRADSHAIGH). Priest. b. c. 1601 Lancashire (Liber Ruber, I, 202); e. 28 August 1625 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 30v; l72, f. 236r); o. 19 August 1632 Liege (Franc. 13, f. lOr); p. four vows 22 July 1640 Ghent (Germ. 11 , ff. 61r, 72r); d. 12 February 1669 St. Omers (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 124r). [1625 novice (Rom. 56, f. 27v)], 1626 novice, 1627 philosopher, Rome [437, 443]; 1628 sent to Flanders [450]; [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f. 81 v)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, Liege [453 , 460, 472]; 1632 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [481 , 482]; 1633 tertian, Ghent [490, 491]; 1634 procurator, consultor, 1636 minister, consultor English College, St. Omers [502, 503, 516]; 1638 [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 195v)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [527]; [1641 rector, 1642 rector, 1643 rector, 1644 rector, 1645 rector, 1646 assistant, consultor, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 36v, 45v, 54v, 64v, 73r, 83r)]; [1648 confessor, 1649 confessor, Paris (Franc. 12, f. 279v; Franc. 23, ff. 46r, 73r)]. BARTON, Robert (vere BRADSHAIGH, alias BARTRAMS). Priest. b. c. 1588 Lancashire (Valladolid, pp. 86-87); e. 1613 Louvain (ibid.); o. 1613 Seville (ibid.); d. April 1617 Liege (Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 47v). 1613 novice, 1614, novice, 1614 theologian, 1615 theologian, 1617 theologian, Louvain [320, 327, 339, 340, 353] .


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WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

BARTON, Thomas (vere BRADSHAIGH). Priest. b. 17 August 1606 Lancashire (Rom. 57, f. 35r; Liber Ruber, I, 211; Responsa, II, 389); e. 7 September 1631 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 32r; 173, f. 5v); o. 4 May 1631 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 211); p. four vows 15 August 1642 Rome (Ital. 10, ff. 148r, 153r); d. 7 October 1663 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 133r). 1632 novice, 1633 novice, Rome [486,487,497]; 1635 tutor in logic [513], [1636 (Rom. 57, f. 35r)], [1639 (Rom. 57, f. 173r)], [1641 minister, consultor, procurator, 1642, 1644 minister, consultor, procurator, 1645 procurator, consultor, prefect of the sick, 1647 procurator (Rom. 58, ff. 33r, 229r; Rom. 80, ff. 302v, 326v, 352v, 381r; Neap. 174, p. 100)] English College, Rome. BARTON, Thomas (vere ANDERTON).'6 Priest. b.c. 1612Lancashire(461);e.1631 Watten;0.30March 1641Liege(Angl.ll , f. 41r); p. four vows 16 August 1652 Lisbon (Germ. 14, ff. 367r, 368r); dis. 9 January 1666 (Angl. 2, f. 283r). 1631 novice, 1632 novice, Watten [460, 461 , 481]; 1633 theologian, 1634 theologian, Liege [490,491, 502]; 1636 theologian, Ghent [516]; 1638 [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 207v)] theologian, Liege [527]; [1641 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11 , f. 39r); [1642, 1643, 1644 Liege (Angl. 11 , ff. 45v, 54v, 65r)]; [1645 sent to Portugal (Angl. 11, f. 77r)]; [1649 Lisbon (Lus. 45, f. 18v)]. BARTRAMS, Robert. See BARTON, Robert.

BASTARD, Thomas (or Robert). Priest. b. c. 1570 Norfolk (SC, Anglia III/98); e. 27 February 1607 Louvain (ibid.); v. 1 March 1609 Louvain (ibid.); o. 24 March 1602 Arras (Seminary Priests, I, 26); p. spiritual coadiutor 13 December 1618 London (Germ. 62, f. 77r); d. 21 November 1632 (Angl. 7, f. III v; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r). 1609110, 1610, 1611 , 1613 England [296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621, 1621/22 Hampshire (England) [384, 392]; 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 78r)], 1629, 1630 Residence of St. Stanislaus (Devon, England) [401 ,418,425, 433, 453, 460]; 1631, 1632 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [472, 473, 481]. BATH, Christopher. Priest. b. c.l624 Ireland (Angl. 11, f. 58v); e. 30 September 1643 Watten (Angl. 11 , f. 58v); o. between 1649 and 1651 Liege?; d. December 1653 Guadaloupe (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 24v). [1643 novice, 1644 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 56v, 66r)]; [1644 philosopher, 1645 philosopher, 1646 philosopher, 1647 theologian, 1648 theologian, 1649 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 66r, 74r, 84r, 92r, 100v, 107v)]. BATSON, Richard. Novice. e. 17 July 1580 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 16r; 1711A, f. 71 v); o. before 1586 Rome; dis. 15 May 1590 (Hist. Soc. 54, f. lOv).17


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

115

[7 September 1585, permission to go to Belgium (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 44r)]; [10 May 1588, permission to go first to Flanders and then to Tivoli (Hist. Soc. 61, f. 45v)].

BAUBREL, Sebastian. Brother. d. 9 March 1634 Douai (Poncelet, NCB, p. 45). 1617, 1618 Watten [354, 360]. BEADLE, William. Brother. b. c. 1595 Warwick (Angl. 13, f. 118v); e. 1632 Watten; d. 23 September 1638 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 120v; Rist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1632 novice, 1633 novice, 1634 Watten [481 , 490, 502]; 1636 English College, St. Omers [516]. BEAUMONT, Henry. See HARCOURT, Henry. BEAUMONT, Philip. See TESIMOND, Oswald.

BECKET, Joseph. Brother. b. c. 1598 Hampshire (Baet. 9/1, f. 67r); e. c. 1623 (ibid.); p. 2 March 1636 Seville (Risp. 52, f. 191r). 1623 novice, 1625 novice, 1628, 1629, 1630, 1631, 1633, 1634, [1636 (Baet. 91I, f. 165r)]; 1637, 1639 English College, Seville [404,428,447,455,463,475,492, 505, 522, 523, 533]. BECKET, Thomas (alias RIVERS). Brother. b. c. 1573 Kent (Cast. 15, ff. 182r, 225r, 268r, 314r); e. 1607 Spain but began noviceship in Louvain on 19 November (SC, Anglia III, 98). [1611, 1614 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, ff. 182r, 225r, 268r, 314r)]; [1616 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 14r)]. BEDFORD, Robert (vere DRURY; alias SANGER).18 Priest. b. c. 1588 Middlesex but raised in London (Liber Ruber, I, 139; Responsa, I, 152); e. 16 October 1608 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 26r; l72, f. 118v); o. 1614 (367); p. four vows 8 September 1622 Louvain (Germ. 6, ff. 22lr, 222r); d. October or November 1623 (Hist. Soc. 42, ff. 14r, 108r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 258r). 1610 novice, Louvain [298]; [1611 student, German College, Rome (Rom. 54, f. 268r)]; 19 1611 prefect, St. Omers [306];20 1613 English College, Louvain [320]; 1617 prefect of students, 1618 prefect of students, consultor, 1619 confessor, 1621 St. Omers [354, 360, 367, 384]; 1621122 professor of moral theology and cases of conscience, confessor, 1622123 presides over cases of conscience, consultor, Louvain [392, 399, 400]; 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401]. BEDINGFIELD, Edward. See SILISDON, Edward.


116

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WELSH JESUITS 1555-1650

BEDINGFIELD, Henry. See SILISDON, Henry. BEDINGFIELD, Thomas. See MENDOZA, Thomas De. BEESLEY, John. See NELSON, John.

BELFIELD, Henry (alias MORE). Priest. b. c. 1576 Winchester, Hampshire (Liber Ruber, I, 146; Responsa, 1,174-75); e. 1613 England (ibid.); o. 4 October 1608 Rome (Liber Ruber, 1,146); p. four vows 24 May 1623 London (Germ. 7, ff. 79r, 86r); d. 9 March 1632 London (Angl. 7, f. 111 v; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r; 481). 1621, 1621/22, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 67r)], 1629, 1630, 1631 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (London, England) [384,392,401,418, 424,425,433,453, 46~ 472]. BELL, Henry. Priest. b. c. 1563 York (Tolet. 2111, f. 177r; Liber Ruber, I, 58); e. 4 March 1596 Villarejo de Fuentes (Tolet. 21/1, f. 177r); o. 3 December 1589 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 58); d. c. 1601 Spain (St. Gregory's College, Seville, p. 108). [1597 novice, Villarejo de Fuentes (Tolet. 21/1, f. 177r)]. BELLESTAR, Alexander (vere BOLBRET). Priest. b. c. 1546 Oxford (Nadal, II, 530); e. 8 January 1566 Mainz (ibid.) or 3 January (33); v. 2 June 1566 (33); dis. 1567 (41). 1566 novice, Mainz [20, 33]. BELOST, Simon. Priest. b. 1507 Lincoln (Nadal, II, 583); e. 24 June 1560 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 3v; Rom. 170, f. 40r); o. 1533 Lincoln (Nadal, II, 583); v. 10 August 1560 Rome (ltal. 1, f. 317r). 1567 sent from Rome to either Mainz or Trier [41, 44]; 1567, 1568, 1569, 1570 Trier [43, 54, 61, 74].21 BENLOS, Andrew. See WILSON, Andrew. BENLOS, Peter. See BENSON, Peter. BENLOW, Peter. See BENSON, Peter.

BENNET, John. Priest. b. c. 1553 St. Asaph (Angl. 14, f. 85r; Franc. 10, f. 134r); e. 6 September 1586 Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 84r); o. 29 March 1578 Cambrai (Seminary Priests, 1,31); p. spiritual coadiutor 8 September 1603 near London (Germ. 60, f. 255r); d. 8 September 1625 London (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159r). [1587 Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 84r)]; [1590 Paris (Franc. 10, f. 134r)]; 1593 Verdun [149]; 1598, 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [194, 287, 296, 297, 303,


B[OGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

117

319]; 1621 , 1621122, 1623, 1624 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales)[384, 392, 401,418].

BENNET, Robert. Priest. b. c. 1560 Wales (Franc. 10, f. 84v; Liber Ruber, I, 11); e. 1 June 1587 Verdun (ibid.);22 o. before June 1587; d. March 1590 in a shipwreck off Alicante, Spain (AASI, 46/2411 , p. 814; Angl. 14, f. 85v). [1587 Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 84v)]. BENSON, Christopher. See CANSFIELD, Brian.

BENSON, George. Scholastic. b. c. 1598 Yorkshire (!=ast. 15, f. 391 v); e. c. 1618 (ibid.); v. 18 October 1620 (ibid.). [1622 philosopher, Salamanca (Cast. 15, f. 391 v)]. BENSON, Peter (vere or alias BENLOS, BENLOW, BENTLEY; alias SIMSON). Priest. b. c. 1569 Westmoreland (Liber Ruber, I, 162); e. 1613 Louvain; o. before 1613; p. four vows 27 September 1623 London (Germ. 7, ff. 81r, 84r); d. 15 December 1634 London (Angl. 7, f. 114v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r; 511) or 15 November 1634 (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v). 1613 novice, 1614 novice, 1615 writer, 1617 assistant spiritual prefect, Louvain [320,327,340,353]; 1621 , 1621122, 1623 superior, 1624 superior, 1625 superior, Residence of St. Francis Borgia (Suffolk, England) [384, 382, 401, 418, 424, 425]; 1626 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [433, 434]; [1628 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 13, f. 77v)]; 1629, 1630 rector, 1631 rector, 1632 rector, 1633 rector, 1634 rector, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [453,460,472, 481, 490, 502]. BENTLEY, Edward (alias WALKER). Priest. b. c. 1588 London (Liber Ruber, 1,146; Responsa, I, 176-77); e. 22 October 1609 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 26v; 172, f. 137r); o. before 1615; p. four vows 23 May 1627 London (Germ. 7, ff. 448r, 457r); d. 19/25 May 1656 England (Angl. 7, f. 195r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 109r). [1611 student, Roman College (Rom. 54, f. 258r)]; [May 1614, English College, Rome (Rom. 55, f. 27r)]; [1615 (Rom. 55, f. 33v)], 1616, 1617 Montepu1ciano [347,355]; [1619 Sezza (Rom. 55, f. 131 v)]; 1619 tutor oflogic, English College, Rome [370]; [1622 penitentiary (Rom. 55, f. 249r)], 1623 penitentiary, St. Peter's, Rome [409]; [24 April 1623, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 79r)]; 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401]; 1624 Northampton (England) [418]; 1625 Residence of St. Mary (England) [425]; 1626 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (433, 434]; [1628 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) (Angl. 13, f. 78v)]; 1629, 1630 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [453,460]; 1631, 1632 Residence of St. Thomas (England) [472,473,


118

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481]; 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [490, 491, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 203r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646,1647,1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r, 64r, 73r, 83r, 91 v, 99r, 106r)] Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England).

BENTLEY, Henry (alias POLLARD, WALKER). Priest. b. c. 1583 Derby (Liber Ruber, I, 109); e. 21 November 1610 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 27r; 172, f. 148v); 0.18 April 1609 Rome (Liber Ruber, 1,109); d. 25 March 1626 England (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159r). [1611 novice, Rome (Rom. 54, f. 274v)]; [5 December 1612 sent to Naples (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 75r)]; 1613 Naples [323]; [26 April 1613 sent to Spain (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 75r)]; [1615 Granada (Baet. 8, f. 272r)]; 1621, 1621122 teacher of syntax, English College, St. Omers [384, 392]; 1622/23 tertian, Ghent [399, 400]; 1623, 1624, 1625 Residence of St. Thomas (Hampshire, England) [401,418,425].

BENTLEY, John (alias WALKER). Priest. b. c. 1590 Lincoln but raised in Northampton (Liber Ruber, I, 152; Responsa, I, 200-01 ); e. 26 November 1611 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 27v; 172, f. 157v); o. c. 1617 Belgium; p. four vows 19 November 1627 London (Germ. 7, ff. 440r, 445r); d. 27 March 1664 London (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 83r). [1611 novice, Rome (Rom. 54, f. 277r)]; [15 October 1614 sent to Louvain (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 75v)]; 1615 theologian, 1617 theologian, Louvain [340, 353]; 1617 tertian, Liege [354]; 1621, 1621122, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 71v)] College of Blessed Aloysius (Lancashire, England) [384,392,401 ,418, 425, 433]; 1629 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) [453]; 1630 Residence of St. Michael (England) [460,461]; 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634 Residence of St. Mary (England) [472, 473, 481, 490, 502]; 1635, 1636 Residence of St. Dominic (England) [51l , 516]; 1638 sent to Bohemia [528]; 1638 Prague [532]; [1639 Prague (Boh. 12, f. 156v)]24; [1641, 1642 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 1l, ff. 32r, 42r)]; [1643 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 11, f. 53v)]; [1644 Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 67r)]; [1645, 1646, 1647 librarian, 1648, 1649 Liege (Angl. 1l, ff. 73v, 83v, 92r, 100v, 107v)]. BENTLEY, Peter. See BENSON, Peter.

BENTNEY, William (alias MARTIN). Priest. b. c. 1609 Cheshire (Angl. 13, f. 114r); e. 1630 Watten; o. c. 1635 Belgium; p. spiritual coadiutor 10 October 1641 England (Angl. 11, f. 41 v); d. 30 October 1692 Leicester (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 102r). 1630 novice, 1631 novice, Watten [460,472]; 1632 philosopher, 1633 philosopher, 1634 theologian, Liege [481, 482, 490, 502]; 1636 assistant to the agricultural inspector, 1638 confessor, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 211 v)] Watten [516, 527]; [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Residence of St. Thomas (England) (Angl. 1l, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r, 64r, 73r, 82v, 90v, 98v, 106r)].

BERGH, Christian Van Den. Brother. b. c. 1620 Flanders (Foley, Records, VWl, 53); e. 1639 Watten? (Foley, Records, VWl, 53; p. 19 September 1650 (Angl. 15, f. 137r); d. 21 November 1680 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. 249r).


BIOGRAPHlCAL SUMMARY

119

[1641 English College, St. Omers (Ang!. 11, f. 40r)]; [1642, 1643 Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 47r, 56v)]; [1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Ghent (Ang!. 11, ff. 67v, 74v, 84v, 93r, 10 Or, 107r)]. BERINTON, Thomas (or Robert; vere SEWARD). Priest. b. July, 1583 Hereford (Liber Ruber, I, 140; Responsa, I, 155-56); e. 16 October 1608 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 26r; 172, f. 119r); o. before 1616; d. October 1617 Messina (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 14v; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 52v). [1611 (Neap. 81, f. 104r)], 1612 Naples [313]; 1616 confessor, 1617 confessor, Messina [348, 356]. BERRIE, Francis. Priest. d. 1618 England (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 157v). BERRY, Francis (vere CORKER). Priest. b. c. 1598 Laughton, Lincoln (Liber Ruber, I, 188; Responsa, I, 316-18); e. 7 January 1622 Liege (400); o. c. 1629 Belgium; p. spiritual coadiutor 5 March 1634 Leicester (Germ. 64, f. 45r); d. 1 April 1656 Lincoln (Ang!. 7, f. 195r) or 22 May 1656 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 42r). 1621122 novice, 1622123 novice, Liege [392, 399, 400]; 1623 teacher of rudiments, 1624 teacher of grammar, 1625 teacher of grammar, English College, St. Omers [401,402,418,425]; 1626 theologian, [1628 theologian (Ang!. 13, f. 81 v)], 1629 theologian and prefect of boarders, Liege [433, 434, 453,]; 1630 minister, consultor, Watten [460,461]; 1631 tertian, Ghent [470]; 1632 Residence of St. John (England) [481, 482]; 1633, 1634 superior, 1636 superior, 1638 superior [490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 superior (Angl. 13, f. 198v)], [1641 superior, 1642 superior, 1643 superior, 1644 superior, 1645 superior, 1646, 1647, 1648 consultor, admonitor, 1649 consultor, admonitor (Ang!. 11, ff. 35r, 44v, 53r, 63r, 72r, 81 v, 91r, 99r, 105r)] Residence of St. Dominic (England). BERTENDONA, Ximenes De. Priest. 1633 minister, curate, 1634 minister, confessor, 1637 minister, 1640 rector, curate [492, 505, 522, 537], [1642 rector, 1643 (Baet. 14/Ii, ff. 243r, 264v)] English College, Seville. BESWICK, Edward. Brother. e. 1613 Louvain. 1613 novice, 1614 novice, Louvain [320, 327]; 1615, 1616, 1618 Liege [341, 354,360]. BESWICK, Edward (alias SANDERS). Priest. b. c. 1618 London (Neap. 83,f. 71r); e. 20 July 1639 Watten? (Neap. 83, f. 71r); o. c. 1647 Naples?; p. three vows 5 June 1655 Wooton Waven (Germ. 15, f. 286r); d. 1680 England (Ang!. 11, f. 241 v). [1641 philosopher, 1642 philosopher, 1643 philosopher, 1644 theologian, Liege (Ang!. 11 , ff. 37v, 46r, 55v)]; [1645 sentto Naples (Ang!. 11, f. 76v; Neap. 104,f.


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158r)[; [1646 theologian, 1647 theologian, 1648 theologian, Naples (Neap. 104, ff. 142r, 166r, 195v, 230v; Neap. 174, p. 10; Neap. 83, f. 71)]; [1649 tertian, Massa (Neap. 104, f. 265r)]; [1650 Atri (Neap. 104, f. 297r)]; [1650 sent to England (Neap. 104, f. 320r)].

BETTAM, James (alias GOODWIN). Priest. b. c. 1604 Stafford (434); e. 1624 (434); o. c. 1630 Belgium; p. four vows 4 May 1640 London (Germ. 11 , ff. 60r, 73r); d. 27 October 1669 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 90v). 1624 novice, 1625 novice, Watten [418, 419, 425]; 1626 theologian, [1628 theologian (Angl. 13, f. 81 v)], 1629 theologian, Liege [433, 434, 453]; 1630 socius to procurator, Brussels [464]; 1631 tertian, Ghent [472]; 1632 consultor, catechist, 1633 consultor, spiritual director, prefect of the church, Watten [481, 482,490]; 1634, 1636 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [502, 503, 516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 201r)] Residence of St. Mary (England) [527]; [1641 superior of the military chaplains, 1642 consultor, assistant, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 39r, 47v)]; [1643, 1644, 1645 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 53v, 63v, 72v)]; [1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 79r, 88r, 96r, 103r)]. BEVAN (or BEVEN), John. Brother. b. 11 February 1612 Hereford (Rom. 60, f. 28v; Angl. 13, f. 168r); e. 11 January 1636 Watten (Rom. 60, f. 28v); p. 5 February 1649 Rome (Ital. 46, f. 25); dis. 30 July 1660 (Angl. 11, f. 175v).25 1636 novice, Watten [516]; 1638 [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 216v)] English College, St. Omers [527]; [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644 Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 38r, 46v, 56r, 66v)]; [1645 sent to Naples (Angl. 11, f. 76v; Neap. 104, f. 158v)]; [10 May 1647 sent from Naples to Rome (Neap. 104, f. 221r)]; [1647, 1650 English College, Rome (Neap. 174, p. 100; Rom. 81, f. 15v)]. BEVERIDGE, John. Priest. b. c. 1615 Derby (Angl. 13, f. 21Ov); e. 1635 Watten; o. 15 April 1645 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 76r). 1635 novice, 1636 novice, Watten [511,516,517]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 21Ov)] philosopher, [1641 theologian, 1642 theologian, 1643 theologian, 1644 theologian, 1645 (Angl. 11, ft. 37r, 46r, 55r, 65v, 73v)] Liege; [1646 sent to Andalusia (Angl. 11, f. 87r)]. BEVERIDGE, Thomas. See ROBINSON, Thomas.

BICKLEY, Ralph. Priest. b. c. 1557 Hampshire (Seminary Priests, I, 34-35; Liber Ruber, I, 13); e. 15 August 1597 England (Foley, Records, VIllI , 57);26 o. 28 October 1580 Rome (Seminary Priests, I, 35); p. four vows 24 June 1609 near London (Germ. 4, ft. 524r, 525r); d. 18 February 1619 St. Omel's (Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 48r).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

121

1598 in jail in England [194]; 1604 returned to England [247]; 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]. BIDDULPH, Francis. See FITTON, Francis.

BILINGTON, John. Brother. b. c. 1584 Leicester (Baet. 8, ft. 302r, 347r); e. c. 1613 Louvain (ibid.); p. 23 June 1630 Seville (Hisp. 51, f. 166r); d. 18 June 1649 Seville (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 71r). 1613, 1614, 1617 Louvain [320,327,354]; [1619 (Baet. 8, f 302r)], 1621, [1622 (Baet. 8, f 347r)], 1623, 1625, 1628, 1629, 1630, 1631, 1633, 1634, [1636 (Baet. 9n,f. 165r)], 1637, 1639, 1640[385,403,404,428,447,455,463,475,492,505, 522, 523, 533, 534, 537], [1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1648, 1649 (Baet. 9ill, ft. 259v, 309v, 350v; Baet. 1411 , f 127v; Baet. 14nI, ft. 243v, 264v, 290v, 319v) English College, Seville. BIRKEM, William. Brother. 1574 St. Omers [88]. BISHOP, Edward. See WESTON, Edward.

BLACKFAN, John. Priest. b. c. 1561 Horsham, Sussex (201); e. 8 March 1594 Spain (Valladolid, p. 6); o. before 1595 Spain; p. four vows 22 September 1602 Medina del Campo (Hist. Soc. 31, f 70v); d. 15/24 January 1641 Lincoln (Angl. 7, f141r; Angl.11 , f 41r; Hist. Soc. 46, f 47r; Hist. Soc. 47, f 36v). [1595 confessor, Santiago (Cast. 22, f 13r)]; 1597 minister, 1599, 1603 English College, Valladolid [180, 201, 238];27 [1606 English College, Rome (Rom. 54, f 212r)];28 1611 England [303]; 1614 vice-prefect of the English mission, 1615 Brussels [327, 339]; [1616 rector, English College, Valladolid )Cast. 27a, f 14r);29 1619 Madrid [366]; 1621122 Northampton (England) [392]; 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f 74v)] , 1629, 1630, 1631 , 1632 Residence of St. Dominic (Lincoln, England) [418,419,425,433,453,460,472,481]; 1633 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1634 College of the Holy Apostles (England) [490,502]; 1636 Residence of St. Mary (England) [516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f 199r)] Residence of St. Dominic (England) [527]. BLACKFAN, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1601 Sussex (Angl. 13, f 54r); e. 1624 Watten; o. c. 1633 Belgium; p. four vows 10 August 1640 London (Germ. 11, ft. 37r, 42r); d. 10 December 1663 Ghent (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 133r). 1625 novice, Watten [425]; 1626 philosopher, [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f 82v)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, 1632 theologian, Liege [433, 434, 453, 460, 472, 481]; 1633 tertian, Ghent [490, 491]; 1634 Residence of St. Thomas (England) [502, 503]; 1636 Residence of Blessed


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Stanislaus (England) [516]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 202r)], [1641, 1642, 1643 (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r)] Residence of St. Thomas (England); [1644, 1645 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 64r, 73r)]; [1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Residence of St. Thomas (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 82v, 90v, 98v, 106r)].

BLACKSTON, Edward. Scholastic. b. c. 1614 Middlesex (Angl. 13, f. 209r) or Essex (Angl. 13, f. 116r); e. 1634 Watten; d. 24 March 1640 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. 139v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r). 1634 novice, Watten [502, 503]; 1636 philosopher, 1638 [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 209r)] philosopher, Liege [516, 527].

BLACKSTON, Francis. Priest. b. c. 1618 Durham (Angl. 13, f. 212v); e. 1638 Ghent; o. 31 March 1646 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 86v); d. 1693 England (Foley, Records, VIII1 , 62). 1638 novice, Ghent [527]; [1639 novice, Watten (Angl. 13, f. 212v)]; [1641 philosopher, 1642 theologian, 1643 theologian, 1644 theologian, 1645 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 37v, 46r, 55r, 65v, 73v)]; [1646 sent to Aragon province (Angl. 11 , f. 87r)]. BLACKNOLL, Antony. See FLETCHER, Antony.

BLACKWELL, William. Priest. b. c. 1614 Hampshire (Angl. 11, f. 40v); e. 17 December 1640 (Angl. 11, f. 40v); o. c. 1646 Liege?; p. spiritual coadiutor 22 May 1653 (Angl. 15, f. 132v); d. 13 March 1699 St Omers (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 235r). [1641 novice, Watten (Angl. 11 , f. 38v)]; [1642 philosoper, 1643 philosopher, 1644 philosopher, 1645 casuist, 1646 casuist, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 46v, 55v, 66r, 73v, 83v)]; [1647 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 93r)]; [1648, 1648 Residence of St. Dominic (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 99r, 105r)]. BLOFIELD, Thomas. See IPS LEY, Thomas.

BLOUNT, Richard.3o Priest. b. 1565 Leicester (Angl. 13, ff. 5r, 66r, 96r, 140r) or Sussex (Angl. 13, f. 13r); Lincoln diocese (Liber Ruber, I, 48); e. c. 1596 England (194);31 o. 1 April 1589 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 49); p. four vows 1 May 1609 London (Germ. 4, ff. 506r, 509r); d. 13 May 1638 London (Angl. 7, f. 119v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1598,1609,1609110,1610, 1611, 1613 England [194, 287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621 vice-provincial, 1621122 vice-provincial [384,392]; 1623 provincial, 1624 provincial, 1625 provincial, 1626 provincial, [1628 provincial (Angl. 13, f. 66r)] , 1629 provincial, 1630 provincial, 1631 provincial, 1632 provincial, 1633 provincial, 1634 provincial (England) [401, 418, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472, 481, 490, 502]; 1636 consultor to provincial, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [516].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

123

BLUET, John (vere or alias COLLINS). Priest. b. c. 1602 Staffordshire (454); e. 1628 London; o. 1628 Valladolid? (Valladolid, p. 139); p. four vows 8 December 1638 (Cast. 16/1, f. 232r); d. 12 March 1678 England (Angl. 7, f. 237r). [1628 novice (Angl. 13, f. 85r)], 1629 novice, 1630, 1631 House ofPlOr."tion of St. Ignatius (England) [453, 454, 460, 472]; 1632 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [481, 482]; 1633 College of the Immaculate Conception (England) [490, 491]; 1634 sent to Valladolid [502]; [1636 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 1611, f. 146v)]32; [1641 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 38r)]; [Castile province (Cast. 16111, f. 282v)]; [1642 military chaplain, 1643 superior of military chaplains, 1644 superior of military chaplains, 1645 superior of military chaplains, 1646 military chaplain, 1647 military chaplain, 1648 military chaplain, 1649 military chaplain, Ghent (Angl. ,II, ff. 47v, 57r, 67r, 74v, 84v, 93v, 100r, 107r)]. BLUNDELL, James. Priest. b. 1578 Lancashire (SC, Anglia 111,98); e. 1 February 1607 Louvain (ibid.); v. 2 February 1609 Louvain (ibid.); o. before 1607 (Angl. 37, f. 118r); d. 1609 Spain (Foley, Records, VIII1, 66). BLUNDELL, John. Priest. d. 1585 from the plague Pont-a-Mousson (AASI, 46/2411, p. 814). BOLBET, Roger. Priest. b. Staffordshire (Angl. 14, f. 76r); e. 1562 or 1563 (ibid.); v. 19 August 1565 Louvain (Ital. 1, f. 209r); d. 15 September 1572 Douai (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 121 v). BOLBRET, Alexander. See BELLESTAR, Alexander.

BOOTMANS, Martin. Brother. b. 1583 Cambrai (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 294r); e. March 1605 Brussels (ibid.); v. March 1607 Kortrijk (ibid.) . 1615 English College, St. Omers [341]; 1617 Watten [354]. BOSGRAVE, James.3 3 Priest. b. c. 1548 Godmanstone, Dorset (Rom. 78b, f. 164v); e. 17 November 1564 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 6v; 170, f. 77v); o. 30 November 1573 Krems (88); p. three vows 25 April 1604 Kalisz (Germ. 3, ff. 98r, 99r); d. 27 October 1623 Kalisz (Rist. Soc. 42, f. 114v; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 209r; Pol. 6811, f. 101). [1565 novice (Rom. 78b, f. 164v)], 1567 philosopher, 1568 philosopher, 1569 theologian, 1570 theologian, Rome [38, 39,42,52,60, 70]; 1570, 1572 teacher of Greek and rhetoric, 1574 teacher of Greek and rhetoric, Olomouc [61, 81, 88];34 [1580-1585 England];35 1587 Braniewo [118]; 1590, 1591, 1593, 1594 confessor, 1596 teacher of mathematics, 1597 confessor, 1598 professor of Hebrew, confessor, 1599 professor of Hebrew, confessor, Poznan [139,144,149,157,162, 177, 188, 189, 192, 198,209,211]; 1602 infirm, 1603 infirm, 1604, 1605 curate,


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1606, 1608 infirm, 1609 infirm, confessor, 1610 infirm, 1611, 1612 infirm, 1613 infirm, confessor, 1614 infirm, 1615 infirm, 1616 infirm, 1618 infirm, 1619 infirm, 1620 infirm, 1621 infirm, 1622 infirm, 1623 Kalisz [236, 237, 244, 251, 258,268,284,292,300,307,315,325,333,334,335, 344, 349,350, 365, 372, 381,389,397,398,415].

BOVILLE, Anthony (alias TERRILL).36 Priest. b. 20 February 1623 (Ven. 41 , f. 31 v) or 2 March 1623 (Ven. 41 , ff. 108r, 197r); e. 20 June 1647 Rome (Ven. 41, ft. 108r, 197r; Rom. 59, f. 27v; Rom. 169, f. 36v); o. 16 March 1647 Rome (Seminary Priests, II, 33); p. four vows 25 March 1658 Parma (Ital. 14, ft. 1, 2, 7, 8); d. 11 October 1676 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 211r). [1647 novice, 1649 novice, Rome (Rom. 59, f. 27v; Neap. 174, p. 97)]. BOWES, Thomas. Brother. b. c. 1595 Warwickshire (Ang!. 13, f. 9v); e. 28 September 1615 Liege (341); p. 8 December 1629 Watten (Germ. 81, f. 259r); d. 29 November 1639 Rome (Hist. Soc. 46, f. 2v). 1615 novice, 1617, 1618, 1621 Liege [341, 354, 360, 384]; 1621122 Ghent [392]; 1622123 , 1623,1624,1625,1626 English College, St. Omers [399, 400,401 , 418, 425,433]; [1628 Ghent (Angl. 13, f. 87v)]; 1629, 1630, 1632, 1633, 1634 English College, St. Omers [453, 460, 470, 481, 490, 502]; 1636 Liege [516]; [1639 English College, Rome (Rom. 57, f. 173r)]. BOYE, Andreas. Scholastic. 1602 prefect of boarders, auditor of cases of conscience, 1603 prefect of boarders, English College, St. Omers [230, 239]. BRADFORD, John. See GARDINER, John.

BRADFORD, Thomas. Brother. b. c. 1612 Cambridge (491, 528); e. 1632/3 Watten; dis. 1636?; e. 1638 Ghent; p. 21 November 1649 (Ang!. 16, f. 8v); d. 1 November 1668 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 134r). 1633 novice, 1634 novice, Watten [490, 491, 502]; [1636 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 161I, f. 147r)]; 1638 novice, Ghent [527, 528]; [1639 novice, Watten (Angl. 13, f. 213v)]; [1641 , 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Ghent (Angl. 11, ft. 39v, 57v, 67v, 74v, 84v, 93r, 100r, 107r)]. BRADLEY, Richard. Priest. b. 1605 Lancashire (400); e. 30 August 1622 Liege (400); o. c. 1631 Belgium; p. four vows 3 August 1640 Lancashire (Germ. 11 , ft. 48r, 53r); d. 20 January/l February 1645 Manchester (Ang!. 7, f. 144v; Angl. 11 , f. 75v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62r). 1622123 novice, 1623 novice, 1624 philosopher, 1625 philosopher, 1626 philosopher, [1628 theologian (Angl. 13, f. 82r)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian,


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

125

Liege [399,400,401,418,425,433, 453,460]; 1631 tertian, Ghent [472]; 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 procurator, consultor [481 , 482, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Ang!. 13, f. 194r)], [1641 procurator, consultor, 1642 procurator, consultor, 1643 procurator, consultor, 1644 procurator, consultor (Ang!. 1, ff. 33v, 43r, 51 v, 61 v)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England). BRADSHAIGH, Peter. See BARTON, Peter. BRADSHAIGH, Richard. See BARTON, Richard. BRADSHAIGH, Robert. See BARTON, Robert. BRADSHAIGH, Thomas. See BARTON, Thomas.

BRADSHAW, Edmund (vere ARROWSMITH))7 Priest. b. c. 1585 Lancashire (402); e. 21 July 1623 London (ibid.); o. 9 December 1612 (Seminary Priests, II, 9); d. 28 AugustJ7 September 1628 Lancaster (AngI. 7, f. 110r; Rist. Soc. 43, f. 159v). 1623 novice, 1624 novice, 1625 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401,402,418,424,425]; 1626, [1628 (Ang!. 13, f. 72r)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [433, 434]. BRAEWELL, Thomas. See COLLINS, Thomas.

BRAKENBURY, William. Priest. b. 1560 Peterborough (Ang!. 14, f. 83r); e. 13/14 January 1584 Rome (Rom. 169, f. l7r; 1711A, f. 92v; 108); v. 15 May 1586 (l08); o. February/March 1589 (Germ. 168, f. 156);38 d. 27 March 1589 Graz (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 106r). [1584 novice, Rome (Rom. 53, f. 88r)]; [7 September 1585, permission to go to Austria (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 44r)]; [10 September 1586, permission to go to Austria (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 44v)]; 1587 to Germany [105]; 1587 theologian, 1589 theologian, Graz [108, 120]. BRAN, Thomas. Brother. b. c. 1597 Barnstable (Lus. 441II, f. 427r); e. c. 1615 Portugal? (ibid.); dis. April? 1633 (To let. 9, f. 305v). [1621 Evora (Lus. 39, f. 120r)] ; [1622 Santarem (Lus. 44fI, f. 391r; Lus. 39, f. 127r)]; [1623 Braganc;a (Lus. 441I, f. 460v)]; [1623, 1625 Funchal (Lus. 39, f. 136r; Lus. 441I, f. 427r)]; [1633 Castile (Cast. 161I, f. 40v)]. BRAYE, Francis. 39 Priest. b. 4 October 1584 Clonmel (Hambye, 'Le Franc;ois Bray,' 144); e. 18 July 1614 Rome (ibid., 145); o. 10 April 1611 Salamanca (ibid.); d. 16 October 1624 as a naval chaplain (420, Poncelet, NFB, p. 34).40 [1621 confessor, 1622 confessor, Antwerp (FI. Belg. 44, ff. 70r, 87r,)]; 1623 confessor, spiritual director to the English, Antwerp [407].


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BRAZIER, Matthew. See GRIME, Matthew.

BRIANT, Alexander. Priest. b. 1556 Somerset or Dorset (Seminary Priests, I, 50); e. 1581 London (ibid.); o. 29 March 1578 Cambrai (ibid.); d. 1 December 1581 London (ibid.). BRIANT, Henry. Priest. b. c. 1599 Middlesex (473); e. 1631 Watten (473); o. c. 1635 Belgium; p. four vows 14 February 1643 London (Germ. 12, ff. 41r, 42r); d. 4/14 October 1658 (Angl. 7, f. 198r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 59v). 1631 novice, Watten [472, 473]; 1632 theologian, 1633 theologian, 1634 theologian, Liege [481,482,490,502]; 1635 tertian, Ghent [511]; 1636 procurator, consultor, confessor, English College, St. Omers [516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 217r)] procurator, Brussels [527]; [1641, 1642, 1643 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 32v, 42r, 50r)]; [1644 superior, 1645 superior, 1646 superior, Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 64r, 73r, 82v)]; [1647, 1648 minister, consultor, 1649 rector, College of the Holy Apostles (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 89v, 97v, 103r)]. BRIANT, Robert (vere PARSONS). Priest. b. c. 1588 Walpole near Bridgwater, Somerset (Liber Ruber, I, 172; Responsa, I, 275-76); e.1625 Watten (425); o. before 1619 Spain (Liber Ruber, I, 173); p. spiritual coadiutor 16 March 1636 Devon (Germ. 64, f. 333r); d. 29 March 1658 (Angl. 7, f. 198r). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, Watten [425, 426, 433]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 76v)], 1629, 1630 Residence of St. George (England) [453, 460]; 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634,1636,1638 [472,473 ,481,490,502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 203v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r, 64v, 73r, 83r, 91 v, 99r, 106r)] Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England). BRODOCKING, Henry. Scholastic. e. 1566 or 1567 or 1569 Munich (Germ. Sup. 44b, f. 2); dis. 1572 Dillingen (Germ. Sup. 119, pp. 2, 29-30; Germ. Sup. 44a, f. 4v; 79).41 [1569 sent to province of Germany Superior (Germ. Sup. 44a, f. 3v)]; 1570 theologian, Dillingen [73]. BROET, Paschase.42 Priest. b. c. 1500 Bertrancourt (Colpo, 'Broet,' 239); e. one of the first followers of Ignatius Loyola, Paris; o. 12 March 1524 (ibid.); p. 22 April 1541 Rome (ibid., 243); d. 14 November 1562 Paris (ibid., 256). He, Alfonso Salmer6n, and the future Jesuit brother Francisco Zapata were obliged to seek shelter in unspecified English ports on their way from the continent to Ireland via Scotland in December, 1541. BROMFIELD, Lawrence. Brother. b. c. 1583 Essex or Chester or Sussex (427; Cast. 15, ff. 359r, 404r, 584r; Cast. 16/ I, ff. 44r, 147r); e. 1613 Louvain; p. 4 November 1623 Valladolid (427).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

127

1613 novice, 1614 novice, Louvain [320, 327]; 1615 Liege [341]; 1617 English College, St. Omers [354]; [1619 (Cast. 15, f. 359r)], [1622 (Cast. 15, f. 404r)] , 1625, [1628 (Cast. 15, f. 584r)], [1633 (Cast. 1611, f. 44r)], [1636 (Cast. 1611, f. 147r)] English College, Valladolid [427].43

BROOKE, Adam.44 Priest. b. c. 1542 London (101); e. 13/14 March 1565 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 6v; 170, f. 79v; 49); v. 13 May 1565 Rome (49); v. 6 November 1568 Braniewo (Ital. 57, f. 380r); o. c. 1570 Braniewo?; p. three vows 22 October 1570 Braniewo (Germ. 1, f. 341r, 342r) and four vows 24 August 1578 Vilnius (Germ. 1, f. 147r); d. 7 July 1605 Vilnius (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 206r; Hist. Soc.43a, f. lr). 1566 philosopher, 1567 philosopher, Rome [24, 38, 39]; 1567 sent from Rome to Poland [41 ]; 1568 lect,urer in dialectics, 1569, 1570, 1571 vice-rector, prefect, 1572 vice-rector, prefect, 1573 vice-rector, prefect, lecturer in controversies, catechetics, cases of conscience, and dialectics, Braniewo [49, 57, 67, 75, 82, 87] ;45 1584, 1587, 1590, 1591 professor of cases, spiritual prefect, consultor to provincial, 1593 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, consultor to provincial, 1594 lecturer in cases, spiritual prefect, admonitor, consultor to provincial, 1596 lecturer in cases, spiritual prefect, admonitor, consultor to provincial, 1597 lecturer in cases, spiritual prefect, admonitor, consultor to provincial, 1598 lecturer in cases, consultor to rector, consultor to provincial, 1599 spiritual prefect, admonitor, lecturer in cases, consultor to provincial, 1600 spiritual prefect, lecturer in cases, admonitor, consultor to provincial, 1601 admonitor, lecturer in cases, confessor, consultor to provincial, 1602 rector, consultor to provincial, vice-chancellor, 1604 rector, consultor to provincial, Vilnius [101, 117, 138, 144, 149, 156, 162, 177, 188, 189, 191, 198,209,210,218,228,235, 252]. BROOKESBY, William. See MORE, William.

BROOKESBY, William. Novice. b. c. 1559 Hampshire (Angl. 14, f. 82v; Liber Ruber, I, 24); e.lO October 1583 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 17r; 17l1A, f. 90r); d. 7 August 1585 Rome (Angl. 8, f. 144r; Ang!. 14, f. 82v) or 13 September 1585 (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 8r). BROOKS, Augustine. See MORGAN, John. BROOKS, Francis. See MORGAN, John. BROOKS, Henry. See HAWKINS, Henry.

BROOKS, John (alias PALMER, Ferdinand; vere Ferdinand POULTON). Priest. b. c. 1602 Burton, Buckinghamshire (Liber Ruber, I, 191; Responsa, I, 326-27); e. 7 December 1622 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 29v; 172, f. 211 v); o. c. 1629 Belgium; p. four vows 8 December 1635 St. Omers (Germ. 9, ff. 119r, 122r); d. 5/11 June


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1641 (o.s.) Maryland (Angl. 7, f. 142r; Angl. 11, f. 48v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47v) or 26 December 1641 (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 37v). 1624 theologian, 1625 theologian, 1626 theologian, [1628 theologian (Angl. 13, f. 81 v) Liege [418,419,425,433]; 1629 tertian, Ghent [453, 454]; 1630 prefect of the choir, 1631 prefect of health, 1632 prefect of dormitories, English College, St. Omers [460, 461, 472, 481]; 1633 minister, consultor, prefect of health, 1634 minister, consultor, prefect of health, prefect of the church, Watten [490, 491, 502]; 1636 prefect of music, English College, St. Omers [516]; 1638 superior, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 204r)], [527], [1641 superior (Angl. 11, f. 36r)] Maryland mission. BROOKS, Thomas. See POULTON, Thomas. BROONE, John. See DUCKETT, George.

BROWN, Charles (alias BUCKLEY; vere GWYNNE). Priest. b. c. 1583 Wales (Angl. 13, f. 21r); e. 17 October 1620 (400); o. 21 December 1613 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 160); p. four vows 7 November 1630 London (Germ. 8, ff. 136r, 137r); d. 15 April 1647 Wales (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 15v). 1621 novice, 1621122 novice, Liege [384, 392]; 1622/3 procurator, consultor, English College, St. Omers [399,400]; 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 69v)], 1629 rector, 1630 rector, 1631 rector, 1632 rector, 1633 rector, 1634 rector, 1636 rector, 1638 rector [401, 418, 419, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472, 481, 490, 502,516,527], [1639 rector (Angl. 13, f. 192r)], [1641 rector, 1642 rector, 1643 rector, 1644 rector, 1645 rector, 1646 consultor, admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 33r, 43r, SIr, 61r, 70v, 80r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales). BROWN, Edward. Brother. b. September 1579 York (Angl. 13, f. lOr) or Durham (Angl. 13, ff. 19r, 54v) or Staffordshire (SC, Anglia III, 98); e. 20 March 1608/9 Louvain (367) or 7 July 1607 (SC, Anglia III, 98); dis. 26 July 1625 (426). 1609 novice, 1610 novice, 1611,1613 English College, St. Omers [289,298,306, 321]; 1614, 1615 Louvain [328, 339, 340, 341]; 1618 Liege [360]; 1619, 1621 English College, St. Omers [367, 384]; 1621122, 1622123, 1623 Liege [392, 399, 400,401]; 1625 socius to procurator, Paris [432]. BROWN, Francis. See MORLEY, Francis.

BROWN, George. Brother. b. 1619 Devon (Angl. 14, f. 176r); e. 1640 Watten? (Angl. 14, f. 176r); p. 19 September 1650 (Angl. 15, f. 145v); d. 10 January 1670 Watten (Foley, Records, VIllI, 92) [1641,1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Ghent (Angl. 11 , ff. 39v, 47v, 57v, 67v, 74v, 84v, 93r, 100r, 107r)]. BROWN, Humphrey (vere EVANS). Priest. b. c. 1598 Carnarvon, Wales (Liber Ruber, I, 189); e. c. 1625 (Angl. 13, f. 70v); o. 1 April 1623 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 189); p. four vows 6 August 1637 Wales (Germ. 10, ff. 46r, 53r); d. January 1679 England (Angl. 7, f. 239v).


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129

[1628 (Angl. 13, f. 70v)], 1629, 1630, 1631 , 1632 minister, 1633 minister, procurator, consultor, College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [453,460,472,481, 490]; 1634 tertian, Ghent [502, 503]; 1636, 1638 [516,527] , [1639 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) (Angl. 13, f. 192v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 1646, 1647 rector declared 2 February 1647, 1648 rector, 1649 rector (Angl. 11 , ff. 33v, 43r, 51r, 61r, lr, 80r, 88v, 96v, 100v)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales).

BROWN, William. Brother. b. c. 1580 Buckingham (Angl. 13, ff. 9r, 19r, 51r, 83v) or Surrey (Angl. 13, ff. 115r, 164r); e. October 1612 (400); p. 24 September 1623 Liege (Germ. 80, f. 312r); d. 19 August 1637 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 118v). 1613 novice, 1614 novice, Louvain [320, 327]; 1615, 1617, 1618, 1621, 1621122, 1622/23, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 83v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632,1633, 1634, 1635 Liege [384,396,399,400,401 ,4 18,425,433,453,460, 472,481,490,502,516].

BROWN, William. Brother. b. c. 1606 Salop (Angl. 13, f. 211 v); e. c. 1637 (ibid.); d. 517 March 1653 St. Omers (ibid.; Angl. 7, f. 191 v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 51 v). 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 211 v)], [1641, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648 (Angl. 11, ff. 38r, 56r, 66v, 74r, 84r, 92v, 100v)] Liege; [1649 English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11 , f. 106v)].

BROWNING, John. Brother. b. c. 1590 Warwickshire (Angl. 13, f. lOv); e. 2 May 1610 Louvain (367); p. 22 October 1623 St. Omers (Germ. 80, f. 309r); d. 20 September 1636 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 116v; Hist. Soc. 43, ff. 136r, 198r; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r; 5l7). 1610 novice, 1611 novice, Louvain [298, 305]; 1612, 1613, 1614, 1615, 16l7, 1618,1619,1621122,1622/23,1623,1624 English College, St. Omers [311, 321, 328, 341, 354, 360, 367, 392, 399, 400, 410, 418]; [1625 socius to English procurator (Franc. 11, f. l70r)] , 1626 socius to procurator, Paris [439]; [1628 English College, St. Omers (Angl. 13, f. 89r)], 1629 socius to procurator, 1630 socius to procurator, 1631 socius to English procurator, Paris [458,470, 479]; 1632, 1633, 1634 English College, St. Omers [481,490, 502].

BROWNING, Lawrence. Brother. b. c. 1585 Liege (Angl. 13, ff. 8v, 18r) or Louvain (Angl. 13, ff. 116v, 167r, 213r, 248r); e. 15 May 1610 Louvain (400); p. 8 September 1622 Liege (Germ. 80, f. 241r); d. 17 Apri11655 Watten (Angl. 7, f. 192v). 1610 novice, 1611 novice, 1613, 1614, 1615, 16l7, 1618, 1621 , 1621122, 1622123, 1623 Louvain [298, 305, 320, 327, 339, 340, 353, 358, 359, 384, 392, 399,400,401]; 1624, 1625, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 86v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [418,419,425,433,453,460,472,481,490,502,516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 213r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 38v, 47r, 56v, 67r, 85r, 93v, 101 v, 108v)] Watten.


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BROY, Henry.46 Priest. b. 23 February 1550 Hereford (151); e. 4 September 1583 Douai (151); o. 9 April 1583 (151); d. 10 September 1598 (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 123v). 1584 novice, Tournai [93]; [1587 (Fl. Belg. 9, f. 70r)] , 1590, 1591, 1592, 1593 St. Omers [128, 141, 145, 149, 151]; 1593, 1594, 1596, 1597, 1598 English College, St. Omers [152, 158, 168, 170, 181, 195]. BRUNETT, John. Priest. A few letters from this priest from Scotland are preserved in the archives. Although I have not found his name in any list of Jesuits, to judge from the contents of the letters, he seems to have been a member of the Society. He was in London, at least from the summer of 1603 to the summer of 1604, in the entourage of a nobleman who had accompanied the king. By 7 September 1604 he was back in Scotland. See Fondo Gesuitico 651/610; ARSI, Angl. 44, ff. 1861', l89v. BRUNING, Francis (alias Simeon). Priest. b. c. 1621 Hampshire (Angl. 11, f. 40v); e. 7 September 1641 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 40v); o. 1653 (Angl. 11, f. 124r); p. four vows 8 December 1658 (Angl. 16, f. 16v); d. 26 June 1680 Suffolk (Angl. 7, f. 248r). [1641 novice, 1642 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 38v, 47r)]; [1643 philosopher, 1644 philosopher, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 55v, 66r)]; [1645 sent to Milan (Angl. 11, f. 76v; Med. 2, f. 76v)]; [1645 philosopher, 1647 philosopher, Cremona (Med. 2, ff. 66r, 81 v)]; [1648 teacher, Alexandria (Med. 2, f. 94v)]; [1649 teacher, Bastia (Med. 2, f. 111 v; Med. 51, f. 1321')]; [1649/50 teacher, Milan (Med. 2, f. 117r)]. BUCK, Robert (alias BUTLER). Priest. b. 19 March 1570 (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 248r) Suffolk (Angl. 13, f. 5v) or Gloucester (Angl. 13, ff. 39v, 981', 142v, 1891'); e. October 1610 Louvain (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 2481'); V. 1 November 1612 (ibid.); 0.1 April 1600 (ibid.); p. spiritual coadiutor 13 August 1626 (Angl. 13, f. 98r); d. 10 February 1648 London (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62v; Angl. 11, f. 102r). 1610 novice, 1611 novice, Louvain [298, 306]; 1613 minister, 1614 minister, 1615 minister, consultor, English College, St. Omers [321, 328, 341]; 1621, 1621122, 1623, 1624, 1626 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [384, 392, 401, 418, 424, 425, 433]; [1628 Residence of Blessed Francis Borgia (England) (Angl. 13, f. 79v)]; 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [453, 460, 470, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 189r)], [1641 confessor, 1642 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1643 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1644 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1645 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1646 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1647 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 321', 42r, 50r, 60r, 701', 79r, 88r)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (London, England). BUCKLEY, Hugo. See BROWN, Charles.


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131

BUCKLEY, Robert. Priest. b. 14 August 1619 Wales (Rom. 61, f. 188v) or 4 May 1619 (Rom. 62, f. 35r); e. 24 August 1640 (Aquit. 91lI, f. 544r); o. c. 1649 Bourdeaux?; p. four vows 25 April 1658 (Rom. 62, f. 35r) or 4 May 1658 (Rom. 63, f. 35v); d. 27 July 1680 Rome (Rist. Soc. 49, f. 228r). [1641 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, f. 38r)]; [1642 philosopher, 1643 philosopher, 1644 philosopher, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 46v, 55v, 66r)]; [1645 sent to Aquitaine (Angl. 11, f. 76r; Aquit. 6/II, f. 314v)]; [1646 theologian, Poitiers (Aquit. 6/II, f. 311 v)]; [1648 theologian, 1649 priest theologian, 1650 tertian, Bordeaux (Aquit. 61lI, ff. 316r, 325r, 332v)]. BUONA VOGLIA, John De (vere HODGES). Brother. b. c. 1583 Hampshire {Angl. 13, f. 37r); e. 1623 London (ibid.); p. 24 February 1635 (Angl. 13, f. 140r); d. 5 August 1653 London (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 68v; Angl. 7, f. 192r). 1624 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [418, 419]; 1625 assistant to provincial, 1626 assistant to provincial, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 66r)], 1629 assistant to provincial, 1630 assistant to provincial, 1631 assistant to provincial, 1632 assistant to provincial, 1633 assistant to provincial, 1634 assistant to provincial, 1636 assistant to provincial [425,433,453,460,470,481, 490,502,516]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 190r)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645,1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 32v, 42v, 50v, 60v, 70r, 79v, 88v, 96v, 103v)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England). BURDETT, Anthony. Priest. b. c. 1610 Yorkshire (AngI. 11, f. 48v)); e. 7 September 1642 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 48v); o. before entrance, Douai? (Seminary Priests, II, 38); p. four vows 1 July 1653 (Angl. 15, f. 101 v); d. 14 September 1657 England (AngI. 7, f. 197v). [1642 novice, 1643 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 47r, 56r)]; [1644, 1645 professor of moral theology, 1646 professor of theology, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 65r, 73r, 83r)]; [1647, 1648 consultor, 1649 Residence of St. Michael (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 91r, 98v, 104v)]. BURGOS, Juan De. Brother. d. 10 August 1598 Valladolid (Rist. Soc. 42, f. 44r). 1595, 1596, 1597 English College, Valladolid [164, 169, 180). BURTON, Edward (vere CATCHER).47 Priest. b. c. 1585 London (Uber Ruber, I, 144; Responsa, I, 168) or 14 February 1586 (FI. Belg. 10, f. 246v); e. 20 November 1610 Louvain (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 246v); o. 6 March 1610 (ibid.); d. 13 May 1623 London (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 258r) or 13 August 1623 London (Rist. Soc. 42, f. 14r). 1610 novice, 1611 novice, 1613 Louvain [298, 306, 320]; 1614, 1615 confessor for the English, Douai [329, 341]; 1617 procurator, 1618 procurator, prefect of


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the church, 1621 procurator, Liege [354, 360, 384]; 1621122 confessor, admonitor, consultor, prefect of health, Liege [392]. BURTON, John. See JUKES, John.

BURTON, John (vere BARON). Priest. b. c. 1605 Lancashire (Liber Ruber, I, 206; Responsa, II, 37778); e. 1633 Watten; o. 12 May 1630 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 207); d. 22 August 1638 Watten (Ang!. 7, f. 120r; Rist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1633 novice, 1634 novice, Watten [490,491,502]; 1635, 1636 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [511,516]. BURTON, John Baptist. Brother. b. c. 1587 (Tolet. 211II, f. 369v); e. 16 April 1609 Alcala (To let. 23, f. 336r); p. 6 March 1622 Cuenca (Hisp. 50, f. 291r). 1611 novice, [1614 (Tolet. 211II, f. 369v)] Alcala [304]; 1619 Madrid [366]; [1625 (Tolet. 22, f. 135r)], 1627 [1628 (Tolet. 23, f. 257v)], 1633, 1634 Cuenca [442,496,504]; [1636 Madrid (Tolet. 23, f. 411 v)]; [1639 Oropesa (Tolet. 24, f. 21jv)]; [1642, 1644, 1649 Oropesa (Tolet. 15, ff. 153r, 186r; Tolet. 24, f. 44v)]. BURTON, Sylvester. NovicelBrother. e. 1613 Louvain (320). 1613 novice, 1614 novice, St. John's, Louvain [320, 327]. BURTON, Thomas. NovicelBrother. e. 1632 (481). 1632 novice, Watten [481]. BUSBY, Richard. Priest. b. c. 1595 York (Ang!. 13, f. 52v); e. 16 May 1624 Watten (426); o. before 1624; p. four vows 1 May 1640 Durham (Germ. 11 , ff. 59r, 74r); d. 27 March 1648 England (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62v) or 29 March 1648 (Angl. 11, f. 102r). 1624 novice, Watten [418, 419]; 1625 theologian, 1626 theologian, [1628 theologian (Ang!. 13, f. 81r)] Liege [425, 426, 433]; 1629 tertian, Ghent [453, 454]; 1630 sent to England [460]; 1631, 1632 Residence of St. John (England) [472,473,481]; 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [490,502,516,527], [1639 (Ang!. 13, f. 197r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 (Angl. 11, ff. 34v, 44r, 52v, 62v, 71v)] Residence of St. Michael (England); [1646 Residence of St. John (England) (Angl. 11, f. 81 v)]; [1647 Residence of St. Michael (England) (Angl. 11, f. 91r)]. BUSBY, Thomas. 48 Brother. 1634 English College, St. Omers [502]. BUSERA, Hieronymus. Priest. 1604 prefect of students, consultor, 1605 prefect of students, 1606 prefect of students, English College, Rome [249, 257, 267].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

133

BUSTARD, John. Scholastic? b. 1549 Oxford (Angl. 14, f. 77v); e. 1568 Louvain (ibid.); v. 28 May 1570 Louvain (Ital. 1, f. 237r); d. 24 June 1575 or 1576 (Angl. 14, f. 77v).

BUTLER, Henry. See LANMAN, Henry. BUTLER, Joseph or Robert. See BUCK, Robert. CALASruS, Bernardus. Brother. 1604, 1605, 1606 English College, Rome [249, 250, 257, 267].

CALDWELL, William. See CANDEREL, William. CALVERT, Charles. S~e BAINES, Charles. CAMEN, Francis. Novice. e. 1640 Watten; dis. 22 July 1642 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 48v). [1641 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, f. 38v)]. CAMEROS, Franciscus De Los. Priest. 1623 rector, 1625 rector, English College, Seville [404, 428]. CAMPION, Charles (vere WILKINSON). Priest. b. 2 February 1622 London (Rom. 64, f. 30r); e. 7 September 1643 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 58r); o. 1653 (Angl. 11, f. 124r); p. 12 September 1660 (Rom . 64, f. 30r); d. 14 December 1686 Rome (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 44v). [1643 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, f. 56v)]; [1644 Philosopher, Liege (Angl. 11, f. 66r)]; [1645 sent to province of Milan (Angl. 11, f. 76v; Med. 2, f. 76v)]; [1645 philosopher, 1647 philosopher, Cremona (Med. 2, ff. 66r, 81 v)]; [1648 teacher, Mondovi (Med. 2, f. 100r)]; [1649 teacher, 1649/50 teacher, Como (Med. 2, ff. 107r, 119v)]. CAMPION, Edmund. 49 Priest. b. 25 January 1540 London; e. 26 August 1573 Bmo (Angl. 381I, p. 31); o. 1578 Prague; d. 1 December 1581 London. CAMPION, Edmund. Scholastic. b. c. 1590 (Cast. 15, ff. 272r, 318r); e. 1613 Villagarcia (ibid.); d. 9 March 1616 Valladolid (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 85r; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 14v; Cast. 27a, f. 13r). [1614 novice, Villagarcia (Cast. 15, ff. 272r, 318r)].

CAMPION, John. See STEPHENS, John. CAMPION, Richard (vere WIGMORE).5o Priest. b. c. 1595 Herefordshire (Liber Ruber, I, 172; Responsa, I, 274-75); e. 19 October 1617 Liege (354); o. c. 1622 Belgium; p. four vows 1 May 1632 London (Germ. 8, ff. 320r, 329r); d. 4 July 1667 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 123v).


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1617 novice, Liege [354]; 1618 theologian, 1621 theologian, 1621122 theologian, Louvain [359, 384, 392]; 1622/23 tertian, Ghent [399, 400]; 1623 minister, consultor, prefect of health, Louvain [401]; 1624 minister, consultor, 1625 minister, consultor, Liege [418,425]; 1626, [1628 (Angl. l3, f. 70v)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [433,434]; 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632,1633,1634,1636 superior, 1638 [453, 460, 472, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. l3, f. 203r)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 (Angl. 11 , ff. 36r, 45r, 54r, 64r, 73r)] Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England); [1646 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 83v)]; [1647, 1648, 1649 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 88r, 96r, 103r)].

CAMPION, Robert (vere WIGMORE). Novice. b. c. 1589 Kinsham, Herefordshire (Liber Ruber, I, 160; Responsa, I, 237-39); e. 1613 Louvain (320);51 d. April 1614 Louvain (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 157r; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 47v) or 7 May 1614 (Liber Ruber, I, 160). 1613 novice, Louvain [320]. CAMPION, William (vere WIGMORE).52 Priest. b. c. 1599 Herefordshire (426); e. 25 August 1624 Watten (ibid.); o. c. 1632 Belgium; p. four vows 20 August 1640 St. Omers (Germ. 11 , ff. 36r, 43r); d. 28 September 1665 Ghent (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 57r). 1624 novice, Watten [418, 419]; 1625 philosopher, 1626 philosopher, [1628 philosopher (Angl. l3, f. 82v)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, 1632, confessor, Liege [425,426,433,453,460,472,481]; 1633 tertian, Ghent [490, 491]; 1634 second prefect, 1636 socius to procurator, consultor, confessor, 1638 socius to procurator, consultor, confessor [502, 503, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. l3, f. 215v)], [1641 prefect of morals (Angl. 11, f. 39v)] English College, St. Omers; [1642 minister, procurator, consultor, 1643 minister, consultor, prefect of the church, prefect of the sick, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 47v, 57r)]; [1644 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 11, f. 63v)]; [1645 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 70r)]; [1646, 1647 College of the Holy Apostles (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 79v, 89v)]; [1648 consultor, 1649 consultor, College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) (Angl. 11, ff. 96v, 104r)]. CANDEREL, William (vere CALDWELL). Priest. b. c. 1580 Staffordshire (Cast. 15, ff. 268r, 314r); e. c. 1609 Spain (ibid.); o. 15 October 1606 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 128); d. 18120 April 1617 Valladolid (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 85r; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 21r). 1609 novice, Madrid [288]; 1611 lecturer, Oropesa [304];53 [1614 (Cast. 15, ff. 268r, 314r) English College, Valladolid]; [1616 spiritual prefect, confessor, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 14r)]. CANSFIELD, Brian (alias BENSON, Christopher). Priest. b. c. 1581 Robert Hall, Lancashire (Liber Ruber, I, 124; Responsa, I, 106-07); e. l3 November 1604 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 24v; Rom. 172, f. 84r); o. before 1608


BIOGRAPHlCAL SUMMARY

135

Rome?; p. four vows 7 February 1618 (o.s.) London (Germ. 6, ff. 3r, lOr); d. 14 August 1644 England (Hist. Soc. 47, f. lOv). 1604 novice, 1605 novice, 1606 novice, Rome [250, 257, 267]; [17 September 1608 sent to Flanders (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 73v)]; 1610 minister, consultor, Louvain [298]; [1615 Malaga (Baet. 8, f. 276v)]; 1621, 1621122, 1623 Lancashire (England) [384, 392, 401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 74v)] 1629, 1630, 1631 superior, 1632 superior, 1633 superior, Residence of St. Dominic (Lincoln, England) [418,419,425,433,453,460,472,481 ,490] ; 1634 superior, Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) [502]; 1635, 1636 Residence of St. John (England) [511, 516]; 1638 consultor [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 194r)], [1641 confessor, 1642, 1643 confessor, 1644 (Angl. 11, ff. 33v, 43r, 51v, 6lv)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England). CANTLETT, Antony. See LAMPTON, Antony.

CAPOBIANCUS, Joannes Antonius. Brother. d. 16 December 1606 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 4v). 1602, 1603, 1604 English College, Rome [233, 241, 249, 250]. CARCUELA, Petrus. Brother. 1630 English College, Seville [463]. CARDIM, Fernao. Priest. b. 1549 Viana do Alentejo (Leite, Hist6ria da Compahnia de Jesus no Brasil, VIII, 132); e. 9 February 1566 Evora (ibid.); p. four vows 1 January 1588 Bahia (Lus. 2, f. 51); d. 27 January 1625 Bahia (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 68). From late October in 1601 until January of 1603 Cardim and his Portuguese companions were imprisoned in London. See Leite, Hist6ria da Compahnia de Jesus no Brasil, VIII, 132-37; Polgar, lill, 459; W. H. Grattan Flood, 'Portuguese Jesuits In England in Penal Times,' The Month 143 (1924) 157-59; PRO, SP 12/l56/ff. 142-43. CARLETON, William (or Francis). Priest. b. c. 1576 Oxford (Angl. 13, f. 8r); e. 161617 (ibid.); o. before 1621; d. 2 February 1623 England (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 258r). 1621 Louvain [384]; 1621122 Leicester (England) [392]. CARREG, Griffin. See WHITE, Robert.

CARRERA, Georgius De La. Brother. d. 19 January 1696 Cadiz (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 233r). 1634 English College, Seville [505]. CARRINGTON, Henry. Scholastic. b. c. 1607 Leicester (454); e. 1629 Watten.


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1629 novice, 1630 novice, Watten [453, 454, 460]; 1631, 1632 Residence of St. Anne (England) [472,473,481].

CARVELL, Thomas (vere THOROLD). Priest. b. c. 1600 Lincoln (Liber Ruber, I, 222; Responsa, II, 416); e.7 September 1633 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 32v; 173, f. 14r); o. 2 February 1633 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 222); p. 13 December 1643 Liege (Germ. 12, ff. 272r, 273r); d. 1664 London (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 133r). 1633 novice, Rome [497]; 1635 sent from Rome to Flanders [513]; [18 and 19 October 1636, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 83r)]; 1636 prefect, English College, St. Omers [516]; 1638 preparing to teach philosophy [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 205v)], [1641 professor of metaphysics, 1642 professor of moral theology, 1643 professor of metaphysics, 1644 presides over cases of conscience (Angl. 11, ff. 36v, 45v, 54v, 64v)] Liege; [1646, 1647, 1648 Residence of St. Dominic (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 81 v, 91 v, 99r)]; [1649 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 103v)]. CARY, Francis. Priest. b. c. 1611 Devon (517); e. 1636? Watten and 1647 (Angl. 14, f. 181r); o. subdeacon 1642 (Murphy, St. Gregory's College, p. 58) and priesthood before entrance; p. four vows 26 January 1659 (Angl. 11, f. 168r); d. 19 June 1665 London (Angl. 48, f. 47v). 1636 novice, Watten [516, 517]; [1647 College of the Holy Apostles (Angl. 11,f. 89v)]; [1648 novice, 1649 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 101r, 108r)]. CARY, John. Priest. b. 24 September 1619 Suffolk (Rom. 61, f. 36r); e. 7 September 1639 Watten? (Neap. 83, f. 71r); o. c. 1647 Bologna?; p. four vows 29 October 1656 (Angl. 15, f. 135v); d. 30 January 1682 Ghent (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 130r). [1641 philosopher, 1642 philosopher, 1643 philosopher, 1644 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 37v, 46r, 55r, 65v)]; [1645 sent to Naples (Angl. 11, f. 76v; Neap. 104, f. 158r)]; [1645, 1646 theologian, Naples (Neap. 83, f. 71r; Neap. 104, f. 142r)]; [1647 sent to Venetian province from Rome (Ven. 72fI, f. 45r)]; [1647 theologian, Bologna (Ven. 72/1, ff. 18v, 61r)]; [1648 sent to England (Ven. 72fI, f. 100v)]; [1649 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 108r)]. CARY, Thomas. Priest. b. 22 July 1621 Suffolk (Franc. 12, f. 320v); e. 7 September 1639 Rome (Franc. 12, ff. 192v, 320v); o. c. 1648 Bourges?; p. four vows 29 October 1656 (Angl. 16, f. 5v); d. 10 June 1672 St Omers (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 25lr). [1641 philosopher, 1642 philosopher, 1643 philosopher, 1644 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 37v, 46r, 55v, 65v)]; [1645 sent to France (Angl. 11, f. 76r)]; [1645 theologian, 1648 theologian, Bourges (Franc. 12, f. 192v; Franc. 23, ff. 37v, 52v)]); [1649 tertian, Rouen (Franc. 23, f. 93v)]; [1649 preparing to teach, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, f. 106v).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

137

CASSINA, Hieronymus. Priest. d. 9 October 1661 Loreto (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 60v). 1617 tutor in philosophy, English College, Rome [355]. CASTEL, Nicolas. Brother. b. 1583 Armentieres (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 294r); e. 17 September 1606 Tournai (ibid.); v. September 1608 Antwerp (ibid.) ; d. 29 December 1643 Douai (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 52v). 1612, 1613, 1614, 1615 English College, St. Omers [311 ,321,328,341] . CASTELL, John. Priest. b. c. 1546 Cornwall (Angl. 14, f. 79r); e. 1574 Evora (ibid.); d. 1580 Coimbra (ibid.).

.

CATCHER, Edward. See BURTON, Edward.

CERENO, Christopher. Brother. [1645 English College, Seville (Baet. 14m, f. 300r)]. CERRONIO, Tommaso. Priest. b. 1569 Genoa (Med. 48, f. 76v); e. 1585 (ibid.); p. fo ur vows 1605 (ibid.); d. 22 January 1627 Genoa (Hist. Soc. 44, f. 41v). 1618 listed as going to England [364].54 CESPEDES, Joannes De. Priest. d. 8 July 1649 Seville (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 7lr). 1634 professor of controversies, confessor, 1637 professor of moral theology, consultor, confessor, 1639 professor of moral theology, consultor, confessor, English College, Seville [505, 522, 523, 533]. CESPEDES, Valentinus Antonius De. Priest. [1649 English College, Valladolid (Cast. IS/II, f. 415r)]. CHAMBERS, Sabine.55 Priest. b. c. 1559 Leicestershire (Angl. 14, f. 85v); e. 28 May 1588 (ibid.); o. between 1593 and 1595 Pont-a-Mousson?; p. four vows 6 December 1618 London (Germ. 6, ff. 5r, 8r); d. 10/16 March 1633 England (Angl. 7, f. 112r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r). [1590 (Franc. 1O,f. 138v)],56[1593(Franc. 1O,f. 163r)], 1595 prefect of students, Pont-a-Mousson [166]; [1597 Fulda (Rben. Inf. 16, f. 85v)]; [1599 Hamburg (Rben. Inf. 16, f. 118v)]; 1599 tertian, 1601 professor either of logic or of metaphysics, [1603 (Rhen. Inf. 16, f. 130r)], 1605 professor of physics, 1606 professor of metaphysics, Trier [207, 227, 229,259, 270]; 1607 prefect, professor


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of cases of conscience, confessor, Dole [277];57 1609 sent to England from St. Omers [289]; 1609110, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621, 1621122 Lincoln (England) [384, 392]; 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401,418,424,425,433]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 70v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [453,460, 472,481].

CHAMPION, George. Brother. b. c. 1581 Liege diocese (Cast. 161I, f. 44r); e. 1605 (ibid.); p. 8 September 1622 Valladolid (Hisp. 50, f. 169r). [1611 (Cast. 15, ff. 182r, 225r)], [1614 (Cast. 15, ff. 268r, 314r)], [1616 (Cast. 27a, f. 14r)], [1619 (Cast. 15, f. 359r)], [1622 (Cast. 15, f. 404r)], [1625 (Cast. 15, f. 499r)], [1628 (Cast. 15, f. 584r)], [1633 (Cast. 161I, f. 44r)] English College, Valladolid. CHAPMAN, Andrew. Priest. b. c. 1578 Rouen but of Lincolnshire parents (Valladolid, pp. 29-30); e. November 1601 Valladolid (ibid.); o. Easter 1604 (Fl. Belg. 10, p. 124); d. 16 September 1606 as a military chaplain at Grolla, Holland (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 156v). [1602 novice, Valladolid (Cast. 15, f. lOr)]; [1606 military chaplain, Brussels (Fl. Belg. 10, p. 124). CHAPMAN, Stephen. Priest. b. c. 1583 Rouen but of Lincolnshire parents (AASI 46/24/1, p. 107; Valladolid, p. 76); e. 18 October 1606 Tournai (ibid.); o. c. 1611 Belgium; d. 14 November 1622 Seville (Baet. 9/1, f. 32v). 1609 student, 1610 student, 1611 prefect, English College, St. Omers [289,298, 306]; [1615 (Baet. 8, f. 288v)]; [1619 (Baet. 8, f. 319r)]; 1621 confessor, prefect of the church; [1622 (Baet. 8, f. 347r)] English College, Seville [385]. CHICHESTER, Louis. See WEST, Peter.

CHRISTIE, William. Priest. b. 25 March 1589 Scotland (Gall. Belg. 9, ff. 52r-v); e. 18 October 1616 Brno (Franc. 12, f. 281 v); o. c. 1624 Graz?; p. four vows 11 April 1641 (Germ. 11, ff. 280,289); d. 12 October 1665 Douai (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 57r). Christie came to London in late 1632/early 1633 and remained until the summer of 1633. See ARSI, Angl. 1, ff. 365v, 371. CITTADELLA, Nicolas. Priest. d. 9 February 1642 Rome (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 52r). 1604 tutor in metaphysics, English College, Rome [250]. CLARE, John. 58 Priest. b. c. 1579 Salisbury (Angl. 13, f. 7v); e. June 1605 Madrid (Valladolid, p. 56); o. Holy Week 1603 Valladolid (ibid.); p. four vows 30 September 1618 Rome (Ital. 6, ff. 329r, 330r); d. 4 June 1628 W~les (Angl. 7, f. 11Or; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159v).


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139

1605 novice, 1606 novice, Madrid [253,263]; [1611 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, ff. 182r, 225r)]; [May 1614 (Rom. 55, f. 27r)], 1616, 1617 prefect of studies, 1618, [1619 (Rom. 55, f. 126r)] English College, Rome [347, 355, 361]; 1621 prefect of studies, 1621122 prefect of studies, confessor, professor of Sacred Scripture, Louvain [384, 392]; 1623 Leicester (England) [401]; 1624 socius to novice master, consultor, admonitor, 1625 novice master, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [418,419,424,425]; 1626 vicerector, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 69r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [433].

CLARKE, Francis. Priest. b. 5 February 1620 Salisbury (Lugd. 19, f. 320r); e. 7 September 1643 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 58r); o. c. 1650 Lyons?; d. 28 October 1657 St Omers (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 43v). [1643 novice, Watten tAngl. 11, f. 56v)]; [1644 philosopher, Liege (AngI. 11, f. 66r)]; [1645 sent to Lyons province (AngI. 11, f. 76r; Lugd. 14, f. 427r)]; [1645, 1646 philosopher, 1648 theologian, 1649 theologian, Lyons (Lugd, 14, ff. 429v, 441 v; Lugd. 151I, f. 2v; Lugd. 19, ff. 320r, 357v). CLARKE, John. Priest. b. c. 1604 Essex (482); e. 1632 Watten; o. 1630 Seville? (Seminary Priests, II, 59); p. four vows 8 December 1641 (Angl. 13, f. 326v); d. 6 October 1672 Rome (Foley, Records, VIUl, 133). 1632 novice, 1633 novice, Watten [481, 482, 490]; 1634, 1636 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [502,503 ,516]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 191 v)], [1641 (Angl. 11, f. 33r)] College of Holy Apostles (England); [1642 procurator, 1645 procurator, Paris (Franc. 23, ff. 28v, 37r; Franc. 12, ff. 118r, 179r)]; [1649 socius to the novice master, confessor, spiritual prefect, Watten (AngI. 11, f. 108r)]. CLAXTON, Henry (v ere MORSE).59 Priest. b. c. 1595 Broome, Suffolk (Liber Ruber, I, 189); e. 1625 London; o. c. 1624 (Liber Ruber, I, 190); p. three vows 23 April 1637 London (Germ. 3, ff. 327r, 332r); d. 22 January 1645 (o.s.) London (AngI. 7, f. 144v; AngI. 11, f. 75v). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [424, 425,433,434]; [1628 (AngI. 13, f. 74r)], 1629 Residence of St. John (England) [453]; 1630, 1631, 1632 prefect of health, consultor, Watten [460, 461, 472, 481]; 1633 minister, consultor, Liege [490, 491]; 1634, 1635, 1636 minister, procurator, consultor, 1638 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [502,503,511,516, 527]; [1639 Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England) (AngI. 13, f. 203v)]; [1641 military chaplain, 1642 Ghent (AngI. 11 , ff. 39r, 47v)]; [1643, 1644 Residence of St. John (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 53r, 62v)]. CLAYTON, John. Priest. b. 18 October 1610 Lancashire (FI. Belg. 17, p. 3); e. 8 September 1629 Watten (FI. Belg. 17, p. 3); o. 20 March 1638 Liege (527); p. four vows 21 June 1645 Liege (Germ. 12, ff. 470r, 471r); d. 26 April 1663 Liege (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 82v).


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1629 novice, 1630 novice, Watten [453, 454, 460]; 1631 philosopher, 1632 philosopher, 1633 philosopher, 1634 theologian, 1636 theologian, 1638 theologian [472, 473, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angi. 13, f. 205v)], [1641 professor of logic, 1642 professor of physics, 1643 minister, 1644 minister, prefect of the church, 1645 minister, prefect of the church, consultor, (Angi. 11, ff. 36v, 45v, 54v, 64v, 73r)] Liege; [1646 sent to Flandro-Belgian province (Angi. 11, f. 87r)]; [1647 confessor, 1648 confessor, 1649 confessor, Antwerp (FI. Belg. 45, ff. 140r, 152r, 163v; FI. Belg. 17, p. 3; Angi. 11, f. 101 v).

CLEMENTE, Ignatius A St. Brother. b. c. 1598 Essex (400); e. 1 May 1614 (400); p. 8 December 1630 (Angi. 13, f. 217r); d. 10 October 1664 Watten (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 84r). [16 Febmary 1619 sent to Spain (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 77r)]; 1621 socius at the curia, 1621/22 socius at the curia [384, 392]; 1622123 Ghent [399, 400]; 1623, 1624, 1625,1626, [1628 (Angi. 13, f. 86v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 Watten [401,418, 425,433,453,460,472,481]; 1633, 1634 Liege [490, 502]; 1636 Watten [516]; 1638 socius to the procurator, [527,529], [1639 (Angi. 13, f. 217r)], [1641 socius to the procurator, 1642 socius to the procurator, 1643 socius to the procurator, 1644 socius to the procurator (Angl. 11, ff. 40r, 48r, 58r, 68r; FI. Belg. 15, f. 181 v; FI. Belg. 45, ff. 57r, 73r, 89v, 104v)] Bmssels; [1645 sent to Flandro-Belgian province (Angi. 11, f. 77r)]; [1645, 1646 Antwerp (PI. Belg. 16, f. 28v; FI. Belg. 45, ff. 114v, 129v)]; [1648 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 96v)]. CLIFFORD, Thomas. Priest. b. May 1615 Lancashire (Lugd. 19, f. 377r); e. 8 September 1634 (Lugd. 19, f. 377r); o. 4 April 1643 Liege (Angi. 11, f. 58v); p. four vows 17 September 1651 St. Omers (Germ. 14, ff. 361r, 362r); d. 7 July 1692 Rome (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 254v). 1634 novice, Watten [502, 503]; 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angi. 13, f. 209r)] theologian [516, 527], [1641 theologian, 1642 theologian (Angi. 11, ff. 37r, 45v)] Liege; [1643 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 57r)]; [1644 Liege (Angi. 11, f. 65r)]; [1645 sent to province of Lyons (Angi. 11, f. 76r)] ; [1645 professor of logic, 1646 professor of metaphysics, 1648 professor of mathematics, consultor, prefect of sodality, 1649 Roanne (Lugd. 14, ff. 423v, 435r, 447r; Lugd. 19, ff. 335r, 377r)]. CLIFTON, Cuthbert. See NORRIS, Cuthbert.

COCCIUS, Conrad. Priest. b. c. 1597 Osnabruck (Angi. 13, f. 119v); e. c. 1609 (ibid.). 1633 tertian, Ghent [490]. COCQUE, John Le. Brother. b. c. 1588 Rouen (528); e. c. 1615 (528) . 1638 socius to Father Suffren, [1639 (Angi. 13, f. 198v) House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [527, 528].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

141

COFFIN, Edward (or John).6o Priest. b. c. 1570 Exeter (Seminary Priests, 1,81; Liber Ruber, I, 67); e. 13 January 1598 England (Liber Ruber, I, 67); o. 13 March 1593 Rome (ibid.); p. four vows 1 January 1615 Rome (Ital. 6, ff. 153r, 154r); d. 17 April 1626 St. Omers (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 160v; 434). [1603 English College, St. Omers (Fl. Belg. 9, f. 361r)]; 1604 consultor and tertian, 1605 consultor, 1606 consultor, [1611 (Rom. 54, f. 269r)], [May 1614 (Rom. 55, f. 27r)], 1616, 1617 confessor, 1618, 1619 confessor, [1622 (Rom. 55, f. 252r)], 1623 confessor, consultor, admonitor, prefect of church, prefect of library, 1625 confessor, admonitor, prefect of church, English College, Rome [249,250,257,267, 347, 355, 361, 370,409,410,431]; [26 April and 1 May 1625, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 79v)].

COFFIN, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1595 London (400); e. 26 October 1617 Liege (354); o. c. 1623 Belgium; dis. 12 September 1626 (434). 1617 novice, 1618 novice, Liege [354, 360]; 1621, 1621122, 1622/23 Louvain [384, 392, 399,400]; 1624 procurator, Watten [418,419]. COLFORD, Gabriel. Novice. b. c. 1602 Belgium (419); e. 1624 Watten; d. 3 May 1625 Watten (Angl. 7, f. 96r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 160r). 1624 novice, Watten [418, 419]. COLFORD, Thomas. See COOKE, Thomas. COLLINS, John. See BLUET, John.

COLLINS, John. Brother. b. c. 1573 London (Rom. 56, f. 171r); e. 14 February 1592 Montilla (ibid.); p. 25 August 1602 Rome (Ital. 41, f. 95r). 1593 novice, Montilla [150]; 1596 socius to Father Parsons, English College, Valladolid [169]; [1597 December, English College Rome (Rom. 53, f. 241 v)]; [1 May 1598, permission to go to Naples (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 34v)]; 1599 socius to rector, 1600 subminister, English College, Rome [212, 217]; [4 July 1603 sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 70r)]; 1604, 1605, 1606, [1611 (Rom. 54, f. 269r)], [May 1614 (Rom. 55, f. 27r)], 1616, 1617, 1618,1619, [1622 (Rom. 55, f. 252v)], 1623,1625,1626,1627,1628,1630,1632,1633, 1635 [250,257,267,347,355, 361,370,409,410,431,437,443,450,467,486,487,497,513], [1636 (Rom. 57, f. 35r)], [1639 (Rom. 57, f. 173r)], [1641, 1642, 1644, 1645, 1647 (Rom. 58, ft. 33r, 229r; Rom. 80, ft. 302v, 326v, 352v, 381r; Neap. 174, p. 100)] English College, Rome. COLLINS, Richard. Priest. e. 1594 England (194).


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1598 England [194].

COLLINS, Richard. Priest. b. December, 1562 York (AASI, 46/24/1, p. 97; Liber Ruber,I, 31); e. l7 April 1588 Tournai (ibid.); o. 23 August 1587 Rome (ibid.); p. spiritual coadiutor 21 October 1603 near London (Germ. 60, f. 256r); d. 1618 England (Rist. Soc. 43 , f. 157v; Rist. Soc. 43a, f. 47v). [1 March 1588, letter of admission to Society and permission to travel to Tournai for first probation (Rist. Soc. 61 , f. 27r)]; 1590 novice, Tournai [128]; 1591 subminster, preceptor of cases, Kortrijk [141]; 1592 minister, 1593 minister, Lille [145, 151]; 1593 spiritual prefect, Bruges [152]; [1593 English penitentiary, (Rom. 53, f. 183v)], 1595 English penitentiary, St. Peter's, Rome [165]; 1596 confessor, consultor, English College, Rome [179]; [14 September 1596, permission to travel to Flanders (Rist. Soc. 61, f. 50v)];6 1 1598, 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [194, 287, 296, 297, 303, 319]. COLLINS, Thomas (alias BRAEWELL). Novice. b. 1584 (Angl. 7, f. 94r); e. August 1624 on deathbed in England (ibid.); d. 11 August 1624 England (ibid.; 418). COLUMB, John. Priest. b. c. 1544 Oxford or Devon (Fl. Belg. 80, f. 22; Angl. 14, f. 79r; Angl. 37, f. 40r); e. 5 March 1573 Louvain (ibid.); o. before 1573; d. 15 November 1582 Douai (AASI, 46/24/1 , p. 813 ; Angl. 14, f. 79r). COMBERFORD, Henry (alias TAYLOR). Novice. b. c. 1589 Wednesbury, Stafford (Liber Ruber, I, 147; Responsa, I, l78- 79); e. 1613 on deathbed (Liber Ruber, I, 147); d. 1613 (ibid.). COMBERFORD, Thomas. Scholastic. b. c. 1614 Staffordshire (491); e. 1633 Watten; d. 23 August 1638 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 120r; Rist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1633 novice, 1634 novice, Watten [490, 491, 502]; 1635 philosopher, 1636 philosopher, Liege [511, 516]. CONFALONERIUS, Conrad. Priest. [1647 prefect of students, English College, Rome (Neap. l74, p. 100)]. COMO, Fabritius. Brother. b. c. 1546 (Cast. 14, f. l71r); e. c. 1570 (ibid.); p. 21 December 1579 Milan (Rist. Soc. 33, f. 8v); d. 22 November 1629 (Baet. 9/1, f. 108r). [3 November 1588, permission to go to Spain (Rist. Soc. 61 , f. 45v)]; [1590 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 14, f. l71r)]; [1593 (Baet. 8, f. 95r)] , [1597 (Baet. 8, f. 122v)], [1599 (Baet. 8, f. 136r)], 1600, [1603 (Baet. 8, f. 184v)], [1606


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

143

(Baet. 8, f. 216r)], [1611 (Baet. 8, f. 241 v)], [1615 (Baet. 8, f. 288v)], [1619 (Baet. 8, f. 318v)], 1621, [1622 (Baet. 8, f. 347r)], 1623 procurator, 1625, 1628 procurator, English College, Seville [213, 385,403,404, 428, 447].

COMPARETO, Maurice, Brother. b. 1599 (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 297r); e. May 1611 Louvain (ibid.); v. 12 June 1614 St. Omers (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 294r). 1613, 1614, 1615, 1617, 1618 English College, St. Omers [321 , 328, 341, 354, 360]; 1619 English College, Rome [370]. COMPTON, Antony. See LAMPTON, Antony.

COMPTON, Philip. Priest. b. c. 1606 Cambridge (434); e. 1624 Watten; o. c. 1633 Belgium; p. four vows 10 August 1640 Londoll'(Germ. 11, ff. 38r, 41r); d. 25 November 1658 (Angl. 7, f. 198v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 114v). 1624 novice, 1625 novice, Watten [418, 419, 425]; 1626 philosopher, [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f. 82v)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, 1632 theologian, Liege [433, 434, 453, 460, 472, 481]; 1633 tertian, Ghent [490, 491]; 1634 teacher of rudiments, 1636 teacher of grammar, 1638 minister, consultor, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 215r)] English College, St. Omers [502, 503,516,527]; [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648 consultor, 1649 consultor, College of the Holy Apostles (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 33r, 42v, 50v, 60v, 70v, 79v, 89v, 97v, 103v)]. COMPTON, Thomas. 62 Priest. b. c. 1592 Cambridge (354, 400); e. 3/4 September 1617 Liege (ibid.); o. before 1617; p. four vows 21 May 1628 Liege (Germ. 7, ff. 477r, 480r); d. 24 March 1666 Liege (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 133v). 1617 novice, 1619 novice, Liege [354, 360]; [1622 returned to province from France (Franc. 11, f. 119v)]; 1621122 teacher of rudiments, 1622123 teacher of grammar, 1623 teacher of syntax, 1624 professor of poetry, 1625 professor of rhetoric, 1626 professor of rhetoric, English College, St. Omers [392, 399, 400, 418, 425, 433]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 80v)], 1629 professor of philosophy, consultor, 1630 professor of philosophy, consultor, Liege [453, 460]; 1631 prefect of studies, consultor, confessor, English College, St. Omers [472, 473]; 1632 professor of theology, consultor, 1633 professor of theology, 1634 professor of theology, 1636 professor of scholastic theology, consultor, 1638 prefect of studies, consultor [481, 482, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 204v)], [1641 consultor, prefect of studies, 1642 consultor, prefect of studies 1643 consultor, prefect of studies, professor of Sacred Scripture, 1644 consultor, prefect of students, 1645 consultor, prefect of students, 1646 consultor, 1647 prefect of studies, 1648 prefect of studies, consultor, 1649 prefect of studies, consultor (Angl. 11, ff. 36v, 45v, 54v, 64v, 73r, 83r, 91 v, 100r, 107r)] Liege. CONIERS, George. Priest. b. c. 1575 Yorkshire (Angl. 13, f. 5v' Liber Ruber, I, 104); e. late 1604 England (287); o. 28 October 1602 Rome (Liber Ruber, 1,104); p. four vows 12 May 1622


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London (Germ. 6, ft. 218r, 225r); d. October 1652 England (Angi. 7, f. 191 v) or 24 September 1652 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 5Ir). 1609, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 297, 303, 319]; 1621 York (England) [384]; 1621122 Staffordshire (England) [392]; 1623 York (England) [401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angi. 13, f. 73v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 superior, 1633 superior, Residence of St. John (Durham, England) [418,425,433,453,460,472, 481,490]; 1634, 1636, 1638 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [502, 503,516,527]; [1639 Residence of St. Thomas (England) (Angi. 13, f. 202v)]; [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angi. 11, ft. 35v, 45r, 53v, 63v, 72v)]; [1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Residence of St. Michael (England) (Angi. 11, ft. 81r, 91r, 98v, 104v)]. CONIERS, John. See POULTON, John.

CONIERS, Thomas. 63 Priest. b. c. 1561 York (93); e. 3 March 1584 Louvain (FI. Belg. 80, f. 30) or 12 March 1585 Tournai (151); 0.1590 (151); p. three vows 20 January 1602 Tournai (Germ. 3, f. 81r); d. 24 January 1639 (More, Elizabethan Jesuits, p. 25). 1584, [1587 (FI. Belg. 9, f. 80v)], 1590, 1591, 1592, 1593, 1594, 1596 prefect of studies [1597 (Fl. Belg. 9, f. 256v)] 1598 confessor, consultor, preacher, Douai [128, 141, 145, 149, 151, 152, 158, 168, 170, 195]; 1600 minister, English College, Rome [2l7]; 1602, 1603, 1604 Douai [230, 239, 247]; 1606, 1607 preacher, 1609 Valenciennes [264, 274, 289]; 1610 preacher, spiritual prefect, consultor, 1611 preacher, consultor, 1612 preacher, 1613 missionary, 1614 missionary, 1615 preacher, missionary, 1617 missionary, 1618 missionary, 1619 missionary, 1620 missionary, 1621 missionary, 1622 missionary, 1623 missionary, 1624 missionary, 1625 missionary, consultor, 1626 missionary, consultor, 1627 missionary, consultor, 1628 missionary, consultor, 1629 missionary, consultor, 1630 missionary, consultor, 1631 missionary, 1632 missionary, 1633 missionary, 1634 missionary, 1636, 1638 Dinant [298, 305, 306, 311, 321, 328, 329,341,354,360,367,377, 387, 395,408,421,430,436,441,449,457,465, 477,484,49~ 507,518,530]. CONIERS, William. See PALMES, William. CONSTABLE, Robert. See SALVIN, Robert. CONWAY, Thomas. See PENNANT, Thomas.

COOKE, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1581 (319); e. c. 1611 (ibid.); d. August? 1621 England (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 124r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 158v; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 53r). 1613 England [319]. COOKE, Thomas (alias COLFORD). Priest. b. 21 December 1589 London (Liber Ruber, I, 147; Responsa, I, 179-81); e. 14 August 1614 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 28r; l72, f. 171 v); o. 5 January 1614 Rome


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

145

(Liber Ruber, I, 148); p. four vows 5 August 1625 Watten (Germ. 7, ff. 236r, 243r); d. 18 August 1670 England (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 251r). 1616 novice, Rome [347]; 1619 English penitentiary, Loreto [370]; [6 October 1621, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 78v)]; 1621122 minister, consultor, prefect of health, 1622123 confessor, spiritual prefect, Louvain [392, 399, 400]; 1623 superior, 1624 socius to novice master, spiritual prefect, Watten [401 , 418]; 1626 minister, consultor, English College, Rome [437]; [11 September 1627, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 80v)]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 80r)], 1629 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1630, confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor 1631, 1632, 1633 consultor, 1634 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1636 confessor, spiritual prefect, ad monitor, 1638 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor [453, 460, 472, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 193v)], [1641 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1642 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1643 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1644 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1645 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1646 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1647 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1648 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1649 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 33r, 43r, 51r, 61r, 70v, 80r, 88v, 96v, 104r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales).

COOPER, John. Priest. b. c. 1610 Hampshire (482); e. 1630 Watten; o. c. 1638 Belgium; p. spiritual coadiutor 22 July 1641 Lincoln (Germ. 65, f. 74r); d. 1646 Maryland (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 44v). 1630 novice, 1631 novice, Watten [460, 461, 472]; 1632 theologian, 1633 theologian, Liege [481, 482, 490]; 1634 convalescing, English College, St. Omers [502]; 1636 Residence of St. Thomas (England) [516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 206r)] Liege [527]; [1641 Residence of St. Dominic (England) (Angl. 11, f. 35r)]; [1642 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 54r)]; [1643, 1644, 1645, 1646 Maryland mission (Angl. 11, ff. 54r, 64v, 73r, 83r)].

COPLEY, Peter. Priest. b. c. 1555 (Angl. 14, f. 85r); e. 15 February 1586 Trier (114); o. 23 December 1583 Soissons (Seminary Priests, I, 88); d. 30 September 1587 Trier (AASI, 46/2411 , p. 814). 1586 novice, 1587 novice, Trier [106, 114]. COPLEY, Thomas. See FISHER, Philip.

COPPINGER, Henry. Priest. b. c. 1580 Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk (Liber Ruber, I, 148; Responsa, I, 183-84); e. c. 1614 (Seminary Priests, II, 72); o. 28 March 1613 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 148); p. four vows 22 February 1628 London (Germ. 7, ff. 458r, 467r); d. 13 January 1652 (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 58v; Angl. 7, f. 191 v). 1621, 1621122, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 79r)] Residence of St. Francis Borgia (Suffolk, England) [384, 392, 401, 418, 424, 425, 433]; 1629,


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1630, 1631, 1632 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [453 ,460,472, 481]; 1633, 1634, 1636 consultor, 1638 consultor [490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. l3, f. 191r)], [1641 consultor, 1642 consultor, 1643 consultor, 1644 consultor, 1645 confessor, 1646 confessor, admonitor, 1647 confessor, admonitor, 1648 confessor, 1649 confessor, spiritual prefect (Angl. 11, ff. 32v, 42v, 50v, 60v, 70v, 79v, 89v, 97v, 103v)] College of the Holy Apostles (England). CORBINGTON, Ambrose (vere CORBY). Priest. b. 25 December 1605 Yorkshire (Liber Ruber, I, 199; Responsa, I, 347-48); e. September 1627 Watten (Liber Ruber, I, 199); o. c. 1632 Belgium; p. four vows 5 August 1641 St. Omers (Germ. 11, ff. 154r, 159r); d. 11 April 1649 Rome (Rist. Soc. 47, f. 9v). [1628 novice, Watten (Angl. l3, f. 86r)]; 1629 teacher of syntax, 1630 teacher of rhetoric, 1631 teacher of grammar, English College, St. Omers [453, 454, 460, 472]; 1632 Liege [481,482]; 1633 teacher of rhetoric, English College, St. Omers [490]; 1634 theologian, Liege [502]; 1636 professor of rhetoric, English College, St. Omers [516]; 1638 tertian, Ghent [527]; [1639 Watten (Angl. l3, f. 212r)]; [1641 professor of grammar, 1642 professor of classics, 1643 professor of rhetoric, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, ff. 39v, 48r, 57v)]; [1644 minister, consultor, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 67r)]; [1645 sent to Rome (Angl. 11, f. 76v; Rom. 80, f. 362v)]; [1647 confessor, admonitor, English College, Rome (Neap. 174, p. 100)]. CORBINGTON, Gerard (vere CORBY). Brother. b. c. 1561 Durham (Angl. 13, f. 87r); e. 1628 Watten; d. 18 September 1637 Watten (Angl. 7, f. 118v). [1628 novice (Angl. 13, f. 87r)], 1629 novice, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636 Watten [453,460,472,481,490,502,516]. CORBINGTON, Ralph (vere CORBY).64 Priest. b. c. 1599 Dublin (Angl. l3, f. 81r); e. 1625 Watten; o. before 1625 Valladolid (Seminary Priests, II, 72); p. spiritual coadiutor 1 May 1640 Durham (Germ. 65, f. 41r); d. 7 September 1644 (o.s.) London (Angl. 7, f. 144r; Angl. 11 , f. 68v). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, Watten [425, 433]; [1628 theologian (Angl. l3, f. 81r)], 1629 Liege [453]; 1630, 1631 tertian, Ghent [460, 461, 472]; 1632, 1633 Residence of St. Michael (England) [481,482,490]; 1634, 1636, 1638 [502,516, 527], [1639 (Angl. l3, f. 198v)], [1641 , 1642, 1643 (Angl. 11, ff. 35r, 44r, 52v)] Residence of St. John (England). CORBINGTON, Robert (vere CORBY).65 Priest. b. c. 1596 Dublin (46 1); e. September 1626 Watten? (Rom. 56, f. 289r); o. before 1629; d. l7 April 1637 England (Angl. 7, f. 118v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 471"). [1628 novice, Watten (Angl. l3, f. 85r)]; 1629 procurator, Liege [453,454]; 1630, 1631 Watten [460,461,472]; [1633 English College, Rome (Rom. 56, f. 289r)]; 1633 English penitentiary, Loreto [497]; [19 October 1635, sent to Belgium


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147

(Rist. Soc. 62, f. 83r)]; 1635 returned to Flanders [513]; [5 January 1636, sent to Belgium (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 83r)]; 1636 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [516]. CORBY, Ambrose. See CORBINGTON, Ambrose. CORBY, Gerard. See CORBINGTON, Gerard. CORBY, Ralph. See CORBINGTON, Ralph. CORBY, Robert. See CORBINGTON, Robert. CORKER, Francis. See BERRY, Francis.

CORNELIUS, John. 66 Priest. b. c. 1557 Bodrnin, Cornwall (Angl. 14, f. 87r; Liber Ruber, I, 19); e. July? 1594 England (Seminary Priests, I, 88); o. September 1583 (Angl. 14, f. 87r); d. 3/4 July 1594 Dorchester (Seminary Priests, I, 88). CORNELY, Edmund (alias ROBINSON; vere DOWNES). Priest. b. c. 1578 Norfolk (Liber Ruber, I, 195); e. 1625 Watten; o. 28 December 1621 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 195); p. spiritual coadjutor 8 July 1635 Watten (Germ. 64, f. 200r); d. 6 November 1637 Watten (Angl. 7, f. 119r; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 84v)] Watten [425, 433]; 1629 socius to procurator, 1630, 1631 socius to procurator, 1632 socius to procurator, consultor, 1633 socius to procurator, consultor, 1634 agricultural inspector, confessor, consultor, 1636 agricultural inspector, confessor, consultor, Watten [453 ,460,47~481,49~50~516].

CORNFORD, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1570 Durham (Angl. 13, ff. 16r, 75r, 149r, 196r, 231 v, 272v, 323v) or Northumberland (Angl. 13, f. 7v); diocese of Durham (Liber Ruber, I, 91); e. 1600 England (Angl. 13, f. 7v); o. 11 November 1597 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 91); p. four vows 11 April 1613 England (Germ. 5, f. 161r); d. 14 May 1649 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 184r) or 14 May 1650 (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 131r). 1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611 , 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621, 1621122 Worcester (England); 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 75r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1638 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor [401, 418, 425,433,453,460,472, 481,490,502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 196r)], [1641 confessor, admonitor, 1642 confessor, admonitor, 1643 confessor, admonitor, 1644 confessor, admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 34r, 43v, 52r, 62r)] College of the Immaculate Conception (formerly the Residence of St. Anne) (Leicester, England); [1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 73v, 83v, 92r, 100r, 107r)]. CORSUS, Franciscus. Priest. d. 18 August 1622 (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 13v).


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1617 tutor in metaphysics, English College, Rome [355]. COTTAM, John. See TREMAINE, John. COTTAM, Thomas.67 Priest. b. 1549 Lancashire (Seminary Priests, I, 90); e. 8 April 1579 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 15r; 171/A, f. 60r); dis. 1579/80?; o. 28 May 1580 Soissons (Seminary Priests, I, 90); d. 30 May 1582 London (re-admitted before execution?) (Seminary Priests, I, 91). COTTAM, Thomas. See GARTH, Thomas.

COTTINGTON, Edward. Novice. b. c. 1581 Somerset near Wells (Liber Ruber, I, 118; Responsa, I, 63-66); e.late 1602 St. Omers (Liber Ruber, I, 118); d. late 1602 St. Omers (ibid.) . COTTON, Francis. See NEVILLE, Francis.

COTTON, George. Pliest. b. 7 December 1633 (Rom. 60, f. 148r); e. 2 January 1649 Rome (Rom. 173, f. 81 v; Rom. 169, f. 37r); o. between 1661 and 1665 Rome?; p. four vows 2 February 1671 (Angl. 16, f. 107v); d. 23 May 1697 London (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 233v). COURTNEY, Edward (vere LEEDES).68 Priest. b. 27 September 1599 Sussex (Rom. 60, f. 28r; Liber Ruber, I, 188); e. 28129 August 1621 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 29v; 172, f. 203v); o. c. 1630 Belgium; p. four vows 30 August 1634 Liege (Germ. 9, ff. 4r, 11r); d. 3 October 1677 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 212r). [1622 novice (Rom. 55, f. 246v)], 1623 novice, Rome [409] and teacher of grammar, Sezza [410]; 1625 teacher of grammar, Ancona [431]; 1627 theologian, 1628 theologian, Rome [443, 450] ; [1 September 1629, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 81r)]; 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, Liege [453,454, 460]; 1631 tertian, Ghent [472]; 1632 preparing to teach philosophy, 1633 professor oflogic, consultor, 1634 consultor, prefect of reading at table, 1636 professor of physics, prefect of reading at table, 1638 lecturer, prefect of church, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 205r)] Liege [481,482,490,502,516, 527]; [1641 procurator, 1642 procurator, 1643 procurator, 1644 procurator, Brussels (Angl. 11, ff. 40r, 48r, 58r, 68r; Fl. Belg. 45, ff. 56v, 72r, 88v, 104r; Fl. Belg. 15, f. 178v; Fl. Belg. 16, f. 25v)]; [September 1645 sent to the English province from Belgium (Fl. Belg. 45, f. 128r)]; [1645 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1646 rector declared 27 July 1646, 1647 rector, 1648 rector, English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11 , ff. 74v, 85r, 93v, 99v)]; [1649 College of the Holy Apostles (England) (Angl. 11, f. 103v)]. COURTNEY, Henry. See ANDERTON, Hugo.

COURTNEY, Thomas (vere LEEDES). Priest. b. 2 January 1594 Wappingthorne, Sussex (Rom. 56, f. 171r; Rom. 58, f. 229r; Liber Ruber, I, 176; Responsa, I, 286-88); e. 11112 November 1618 Rome (Rom.


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

149

169, f. 28v; 172, f. 192r); o. 4 November 1618 Rome (Seminary Priests, II, 189); p. four vows 8 September 1630 Rome (Ital. 8, ff. 221r, 228r); d. 22 January 1668 Rome (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 134r). 1619 theologian, 1620 theologian, Rome [370, 378]; [1622 (Rom. 55, f. 252r)], 1623 theologian, prefect of studies, 1625 prefect of studies, consultor, 1626 prefect of studies, consultor, 1627 prefect of studies, consultor, 1628 prefect of studies, consultor, 1630 prefect of studies, consultor, 1632 prefect of studies, consultor, 1633 prefect of studies, consultor, 1635 prefect of studies, consultor [409,410,431,437,443,450,467,486,487,497,513] , [1636 (Rom. 57, f. 35r)], [1639 (Rom. 57, f. 173r)], [1641 rector (Rom. 80, f. 302v), 1642 rector (Rom. 58, f. 33r) English College, Rome]; [1645 penitentiary, 1647 penitentiary, 1650 penitentiary, Rome (Rom. 58, f. 225v; Rom. 80, ff. 351r, 379r; Rom. 81, f. 14r; Neap. 174, p. 98).

COX, John. Priest. b. 1538 Hampshire (Nadal, II, 561); e. 2 November 1562 Trent (ibid.); o. 1558 (ibid.); dis. 1564 (Germ. Sup. 119, p. 1). 1564 Innsbruck [8, 9]. Around 1561 a John Coxe, Lord Waldegrave's chaplain was arrested at Gravesend (Norman Jones, The Birth of the Elizabethan Age: England in the 1560s [Oxford, 1993] p. 36). Are they the same person? COX, Robert. Priest. b. c. 1585 Warwickshire (402); e. 17 May 1623 London (ibid.); o. before 1623; p. spiritual coadjutor 2 September 1633 Worcester (Germ. 64, f. 12r); d. 9 March 1648 England (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62v; Angl. 11, f. 102r). 1623 novice, 1624 novice, 1625 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401 ,402,418,424,425]; 1626 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [433,434]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 76v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [453,460,472,481,490,502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 200r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647 (Angl. 11, ff. 35v, 44v, 53r, 63r, 72r, 82r, 90r)] Residence of St. George (England). CRAFT, George. BrotherlNovice. e. 1617118 Louvain (358). 1618 novice, Louvain [358, 359]. CRATHORNE, John. Priest. b. c. 1591 Yorkshire (Angl. 13, f. 19v); e. c. 1611 (ibid.); o. between 1614 and 1616 Spain; p. four vows 1 January 1625 Liege (Germ. 7, ff. 234r, 245r); d. 1 March 1656 (Angl. 7, f. 194v) or 1 April 1656 (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 71 v). [1614 novice, Salamanca (Cast. 15, ff. 254v, 302v)]; [1616 prefect, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 14r)]; [1619 English College, Seville (Baet. 8, f. 318v)]; 1621122 confessor, admonitor, prefect of health, English College, St. Omers [392]; 1622123 tertian, Ghent [399, 400]; 1623 confessor, spiritual prefect,


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admonitor, professor of moral theology, prefect of cases, Louvain [401, 402]; 1624 professor of sacred theology, confessor, admonitor, 1625 professor of sacred theology, 1626 confessor, spiritual prefect, prefect of sodality, Liege [418, 425, 433]; 1628 confessor, consultor, spiritual prefect, tutor in philosophy, English College, Seville [447];69 1629 professor of theology, consultor, 1630 prefect of studies, consultor, 1631 professor of scholastic theology, consultor Liege [453,460. 472]; 1632, 1633, 1634, 163~ 1638 [481 ,48~49~ 50~ 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 201r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 35v, 44v, 53v, 63v, 72v, 82v, 90r, 98r, 105 v)] Residence of St. Mary (England).

CRESWELL, Joseph.7o Priest. b. c. 1557 London (Angl. 13,f. 9v) or York (Angl. 13, f. 19v). The tiber Ruber (I, 26) says that he was a London native but born in Yorkshire; e. 10 October 1583 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 17r; 17l1A, f. 90v); o. between 1583 and 1587 Rome; p. four vows 20 January 1599 Madrid (Hisp. 2, f. 768r); d. 19 February 1623 Ghent (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 165r). [1587 English College, Rome (Rom. 53, f. 121 v)]; [22 February 1588, permission to travel to Lower Germany and then to England (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 45v)]; [1590 English College, Rome (Rom.53, f. 156r)]; [29 April 1592, permission to travel to Castile (Hist. Soc. 61, f. 48r)]; 1593 English College, Seville [150]; [1599 Madrid (Tol. 211II, f. 205v)]; 1603 English College, Valladolid [238]; [1604 prefect of the mission, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 3r)]; [3 May 1606 sent to Spain (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 71 v)]; 1606, 1607 procurator, 1608 procurator, 1609 procurator, 1611 procurator, Madrid [263, 273, 280, 288, 304]; [17 March 1615 sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 76r)]; 1615 procurator, Brussels [339]; 1621 superior, 162111622 superior, consultor to viceprovincial, Watten [384, 392]; 1622/1623 tertian instructor, consultor to vice-provincial, Ghent [399, 400]. CRICHTON (or CREIGHTON), WiIliam,?1 Priest. b. c. 1534 Scotland (Rom. 78b, f. 27r); e. 5 December 1562 Rome (Rom. 170, f. 60r); v. 6 January 1563 Rome (Ital. 1, f. 291r); o. 1563 Rome (Rom. 78b, ff. 27r, 28v); p. four vows 29 August 1568 Lyons (Gall. 1, f. 52r); d. 9 June 1617 Lyons (Lugdun. 14, f. 95r). He was a prisoner in the Tower of London from September, 1584 to May, 1587. CRIPPS, John (vere HEATHCOTE; alias PAPLER). Priest. b. 19 April 1590 Kirkby, Derby (tiber Ruber, 1,151; Responsa, 1,199-200; 367); e. 15 July 1615 Liege (367); o. 22 June 1614 Rome (Liber Ruber, 1,151; 367); p. four vows 29 March 1629 Liege (Germ. 8, ff. 40r, 45r); d. 16 October 1657 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 197v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 75r). 1615 novice, Liege [341]; 1617 professor of grammar, 1618, 1619, 1621, 1621122 librarian, English College, St. Omers [354,360,367,384,392]; 1622/23 tertian, Ghent [399, 400]; 1623 Louvain [401, 402]; 1624 professor of mathematics, 1625 professor of mathematics, 1626 professor of mathematics, [1628 (Angl. 13, f.


BIOGRAPHlCAL SUMMARY

151

80v)], 1629 professor of mathematics, 1630 professor of mathematics, 1631 procurator, consultor, Liege [418, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472]; 1632 Residence of St. George (England) [481,482]; 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638[490,502,516,527] ,[1639 (Angl. 13, f. 191r)], [1641 minister, procurator, consultor (Angl. 11, f. 32v)] College of the Holy Apostles (England); [sent to Pisa (Angl. 11, f. 49r)]; [1644 arrived in Roman province (Rom. 80, f. 336r)]; [1644 confessor, admonitor, 1645 confessor, admonitor, 1647 procurator, 1650 procurator, consultor, English College, Rome (Rom. 58, f. 229r; Rom. 80, ff. 326v, 352v, 381r; Rom. 81, f. 15v; Neap. 174, p. 100)].

CRISP, George. Priest. d. 15 October 1577 Innsbruck (AASI, 46/24/1 , p. 813). CRUZ, Martin De La. Brother. [1648 English College, Seville (Baet. 14/11, f. 319v). CUDNER, Richard. Priest? e. 8/9 June 1577 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 12v; 17l1A, f. 49r); d. May 1585 Paris (Angl. 14, f. 79v; Rist. Soc. 42, f. 92v). [23 October 1582, sent to Sicily (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 92v)]. CUDNER, Thomas. Brother. b. 1548 London (Angl. 14, f. 78v); e. 22/23 October 1573 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 11 v; 1711A, f. 26v); d. 1575 on the way to India (AASI, 46/24/1, p. 813),72 1573 Rome [87]. CUFFAUD, Alexander. See DAY, Francis.

CUFFAUD, Edward. Priest. b. 21 May 1619 Sussex (Tolos. 10/1, f. 140v; Angl. 15, f. 25r) or c. 1621 Hampshire (Angl. 11,f. 40v); e. 17/18 April 1641 Watten (Angl. 11,f. 40v; Tolos. 10/1, f. 140v); o. c. 1649 Toumon?; p. four vows 18 August 1658 (Angl. 16, f. 15v); d. 23 December 1695 Lincoln (Foley, Records, VIU2, 187). [1641 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, f. 38v)]; [1642 philosopher, 1643 philosopher, 1644 philosopher, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 46v, 55v, 66r)]; [1645 sent to Toulouse (Angl. 11 , f. 76v)]; [1646 theologian, 1647 theologian, Toumon (Tolos. 5, pp. 499,515; Tolos. 10/1, f. 140v)]; [1649 Toulouse province (Tolos. 10/1, f. 140v)]; [1649 returned to English province (Angl. 11, f. 109r)]. CUFFAUD, Godfrey (alias LAMPTON, Ignatius). Priest. b. c. 1608 Sussex (Liber Ruber, I, 217; Responsa, 11,405); e. 1636 Watten; o. 2 February 1633 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 217); p. spiritual coadiutor 20 September 1648 (Angl. 11, f. 102r); d. 16 July 1676 London (Angl. 7, f. 21Or). 1636 novice, Watten [516, 517]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 202v)], [1641, 1642, 1643 (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r)] Residence of St. Thomas (England);


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[1644 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, f. 65r)]; [1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Residence of St. Thomas (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 73r, 82v, 90v, 98v, 106r)].

CUPFERSINUS, Joseph. Priest. 1623 tutor of metaphysics, English College, Rome [409]. CURRY, John. Priest. b. c. 1552 Bodmin, Cornwall (Franc. 10, f. 19v; Seminary Priests, I, 95-96); e. 1583 (Seminary Priests, I, 95); o. 23 March 1577 Cateau Cambresis (ibid.); d. 2 September 1596 England (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 123v). [1584 Pont-a-Mousson (Franc. 10, f. 19v)]; [1587 Pont-a-Mousson (Franc. 10, f. 77v)]; 1593 England [149, 194]. CURS IN , Roger. See LEE, Roger.

CURTIS, Edmund. Brother. b. c. 1582 Hampshire (400); e. 28 April 1612 Louvain (ibid.); p. 1 October 1623 Louvain (Germ. 80, f. 316r); d. 18 July 1661 Liege (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 37r). 1613 novice, 1614, 1615, 1617, 1618, 1621, 1621/22, 1622123 1623 Louvain [320,327,339,340,353,358,359, 384, 392, 399,400,401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 83v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [418, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 21Ov)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 37v, 46v, 55v, 66v, 74r, 84r, 92v, 100v, 107v)] Liege. CURTIS, Henry. Brother. b. c. 1592 Hampshire (400); e. 27 December 1616 Liege (400); p. 8 December 1629 Watten (Germ. 81 , f. 260r); d. 2 January 1657 Watten (Angl. 7, f. 195v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 59r). 1617 novice, 1618 novice, Liege [354, 360]; 1621, 1621122, 1622/23, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 89r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638[384,392,399,400,401,418,425,433,460,470,481,490,502,516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 216r)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 40r, 48r, 58r, 67v, 75r, 85v, 93r, 100r, 108v)] English College, St. Omers. CURTIS, John. Priest. b. c. 1575 Longparish, Hampshire (Liber Ruber, I, 158; Responsa, I, 221-22); e. 1611 Louvain; o. 4 June 1605 Douai (Seminary Priests, II, 78); p. four vows 5 February 1623 York (Germ. 7, ff. 61r, 62r); d. 17 September 1649 (Rist. Soc. 47, f. 71 v) or June 1651 (Angl. 7, f. 186v). 1611 novice, 1613 Louvain [306, 320]; 1615 procurator, confessor, 1617 procurator, consultor, 1618 procurator, consultor, English College, St. Omers [341, 354, 360]; 1621 Yorkshire (England) [384]; 1621122 Staffordshire (England) [392]; 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 73r)], 1629, 1630,


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

153

1631,1632,1633,1634, 1636, 1638[401,419,425,433,453,460,472,481 , 490, 502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 196v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 34v, 44r, 52v, 62v, 71 v, 81r, 91r, 98v, 104v)] Residence of St. Michael (Yorkshire, England).

CURTIS, Richard. Novice. b. c. 1591 England (Cast. 15, ff. 272r, 318r); e. c. 1613/4 (ibid.); d. 1616 Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 13r). [1614 novice, Villagarcia (Cast. 15, ff. 272r, 318r)] . CURTIS, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1578 Winchester, Hampshire (Angl. 13, f. 7r; Liber Ruber, I, 100); e. c. 1604 England (Angl. 13, f. 7r); o. 26 February 1600 Arras (Seminary Priests, I, 96); p. spiritual coadiutor 25 'January 1618 (o.s.) London (Germ. 62, f. 58r); d. 22 January 1657 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 195v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 132r). 1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621, 1621122, 1623, 1624, 1625 Residence of St. Thomas (Hampshire, England) [384, 392,401,418, 425]; 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 68v)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [433]; 1629 superior, 1630 superior, 1631 superior, 1632 superior, 1633 superior, 1634 superior, Residence of St. Thomas (England) [453 , 460,472, 481, 490, 502]; 1636 College of the Holy Apostles (England) [516]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 202v)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646 superior declared 22 August 1646, 1647 superior, 1648 superior, 1649 superior (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45r, 53v, 64r, 72v, 82v, 90v, 98r, 105v)] Residence of St. Thomas (England). CUTHBERT, John. See STONE, Andrew.

CUTHBERT, Thomas. Brother. 1626 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [433]. DAMPIER, Richard. Brother. b. c. 1584 Somerset (367); e. 21 November 1610 Louvain (367) ; p. 22 October 1623 St. Omers (Germ. 80, f. 297r); d. 30 January 1639 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 1211'; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1610 novice, 1611 novice, Louvain [298, 306]; 1612, 1613, 1614, 1615, 16l7, 1618, 1619, 1621, 1621122, 1622123, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 88v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636 English College, St. Omers [311 , 321,328, 341 , 354, 360,367, 384,392,399,400, 401 , 418, 425 , 433 , 490, 502, 516]. DAMPIER, William. Brother. b. c. 1587 Somerset (Angl. 13, f. 871'); e. 1627 (Angl. 13, f. 214v); p. 22 July 1640 Ghent (Germ. 82, f. 4051'); d. 18 March 1652 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 1911'). [1628 novice, Watten (Angl. 13, f. 87r)]; 1629, 1630, 1631 , 1632, 1633, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 214v)] Ghent [453, 460, 472, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527];


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[1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, ff. 40r, 48r, 58r, 68r, 75r, 85v, 94r, 99v, 106v)].

DANBY, Antony. Novice. b. c. 1615 Yorkshire (511); e. 1635 Watten (ibid.). 1635 Watten [511]. DANBY, Richard. See RILEY, John. DANIEL, John. See MILES ON, Richard.

DARBY, Francis (vere FITZHERBERT). Priest. b. c. 1613 Derby (503); e. 1634 Watten; o. 4 Apri11643 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 58v); p. spiritual coadiutor 15 September 1655 (Foley, Records, VIIIl, 257); d. 22 May 1687 St. Omers (Rist. Soc. 49, f. 81r). 1634 novice, Watten [502, 503]; 1636, 1638 [516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 209r)] theologian, [1641 theologian, 1642 theologian, (Angl. 11, ff. 37r, 45v)] Liege; [1643 tertian, 1644 military chaplain, 1645 military chaplain, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 57r, 67r, 74v)]; [1646 sent to Portugal (Angl. 11, f. 87r)]; [1649 confessor, Funchal (Lus. 45, f. 23v)]. DARBYSHIRE, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1520 Nottingham (Nadal, II, 585-87); e. 1 May 1563 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 5v; 170, f. 61 v), v. 13 May 1563 Rome (Nadal, II, 586); o. before 1563; p. four vows 1 May 1572 Paris? (Rist. Soc. 31, f. 125r); d. 6 April 1604 Pont-a-Mousson (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 129v; Angl. 14, f. 75v). 1563 theologian, 1564 theologian, Rome [6, 7]; 1564 sent from Rome to Germany [14]; 1564 confessor, 1565 preacher, confessor, Dillingen [15,17,18]; 1566 sent to France [28]; 1574 confessor, [1584 (Franc. 10, f. 9v)], [1587 (Franc. 10, f. 71r)], [1590 (Franc. 10, f. 133r)], [1593 (Franc. 10, f. 159r)] Paris [88]; 1595 professor of catechism, 1596 professor of catechism, 1597 professor of catechism, 1599, 1600, 1601, 1602, 1603 Pont-a-Mousson [149, 166, 173, 186, 206, 222, 226, 234, 243]. DARCY, Bartholomew (vere FORSTER). Priest. b. 1582 Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk (Liber Ruber, I, 165; Responsa, I, 252-54); e. 17 April 1616 Sicily (Liber Ruber, I, 166); 0. 10 Apri11616 Rome (ibid.); d. April 1617 Messina (Foley, Records, VillI, 273). DARCY, Charles. See THOMPSON, Charles.

DARCY, Robert (vere FORSTER; alias Wilson). Priest. b. 24 June 1588 Stanningfield, Suffolk (Liber Ruber, I, 147; Responsa, I, 177-78); e. 25 October 1609 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 26v; 172, f. 136v); o. 1615 Louvain (339, 367); p. four vows 24 August 1622 London (Rist. Soc. 31, f. 118r);


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155

d. 3/13 January 1641 London (Angl. 7, f. 14lr; Angl. 11, f. 41r; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62r). 1614 theologian,73 1615 theologian, Louvain [327, 339]; 1615 prefect of dormitories, 1617 professor of grammar, 1618 professor of grammar, 1619, 1621 English College, St. Omers [341, 354, 360, 367, 384]; 1621122, Northampton [392]; 1623 teacher of humanities, College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [401]; 1624 Worcester (England) [418]; 1625, 1626 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [425,433]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 76r)], 1629, 1630, 1631 Residence of St. George (England) [453,460,472]; 1632 teacher of grammar, 1633 teacher of grammar, consultor, 1634 teacher of grammar, 1636 teacher of grammar, College of the Immaculate Conception (formerly the Residence of St. Anne) (Leicester, England) [481, 482, 490, 516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 189v)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [527]. DARELL, Richard. See FOWLER, Richard.

DAVENPORT, Peter. Scholastic. b. c. 1580 Chester (Valladolid, p. 62); e. 10 November 1603 Valladolid (ibid.); d. November 1607 Valladolid (ibid.; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 831'). DAVIS, John.74 Novice. e. 19 July 1615 Liege (341). 1615 novice, Liege [341]. DAWSON, Edward. 75 Priest. b. c. 1579 London (Angl. 13, f. 7r); e. 11 November 1606 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 25v; 172, f. 105r); o. before 1603 Belgium?;76 d. 22 December 1622 Brussels (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 125r; Hist. Soc. 43, ff. 164v, 165r; Fi. Belg. 70, p. 163). [20 April 1608, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 72v)]; 1621 1621122 Lincoln (England) [384, 392]. DAY, Francis (vere CUFFAUD, Alexander). Priest. b. c. 1603 Sussex (419, 503) or Hampshire (434, 482); e. 1624 Watten; o. c. 1630 Belgium; p. spiritual coadiutor 11 May 1636 Wales (Germ. 64, f. 340r); d. 30 April 1674 England (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 3v). 1624 novice, 1625 novice, Watten [418, 419, 425]; 1626 theologian, [1628 theologian (Angl. 13, f. 82v)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, Liege [433, 434,453,460]; 1631 tertian, Ghent [472]; 1632, 1633 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [481,482,490]; 1634, 1636, 1638 [502,503,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 192v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 33r, 43r, SIr, 61r, 71r, 80r, 88v, 96v, 104r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (England). DAY, John. See MULSHO, John.

DE DOMINIS, Marcantonio. 77 PriestiBishop. b. 1560 Island of Rab, Croatia; e. 10 December 1579 Novellara, Italy; o. 1592 Padua; dis. 14 June 1597; cons. 1600 Senj, Croatia; d. 9 September 1624 Rome.


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Although De Dorninis was no longer a Jesuit during his controversial stay in England from 1616 to 1622, he had been a member of the Society for nearly twenty years.

DEMENELOUS, Mark. Novice? b. England; e. 28 January 1600 Tournai (Fl. Belg. 80, f. 25). DENNY, Francis (vere BARDWELL, James). Novice? b. c. 1584 Diss, Norfolk (Liber Ruber, I, 144; Responsa, I, 169); e. 161O? Spain (Liber Ruber, I, 144);. DENTIERS, Philip. Priest. b. 17 April 1580 Lille (FI. Belg. 10, f. 476v); e. 8 September 1598 Tournai (ibid.); d. 26 July 1636 Huy (Poncelet, NGB, p. 47). 1617 rector, 1618 rector, 1621 rector, English College, St. Omers [354, 360, 384]. DERODES, Alexander. Priest. 1617 tutor in logic, English College, Rome [355]. DESMARETZ, Iudocus. Scholastic. b. 11 March 1592 Antwerp (Fl. Belg. 10, f. 296v); e. 21 September 1612 Tournai (ibid.) . 1618 professor of poetry, English College, St. Omers [360]. DE WITTE, Francis (vere WIDTE?).78 Brother. b. 8 October 1584 Sandwich (FI. Belg. 11, ff. 91 v, 126r); e. 27 September 1613 Mechlin (FI. Belg. 11, ff. 91 v, 126r); p. 24 June 1624 (Fl. Belg. 11 , ff. 91 v, 126r). [1622 Ghent (FI. Belg. 11 , f. 19v)]; [1625 Maastricht (FI. Belg. 11 , f. 91 v); [1628 Antwerp (FI. Belg. 11, f. 126r)]. DIAS, Estevao. Priest? d. 29 March 1583 Lisbon (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 20r). One of five Portuguese Jesuits (Andre Gon~alves, Pedro Freire, and two unidentified others) expelled from the Jesuit college on the island of Terceira in the Azores when it was seized by Don Antonio, the bastard nephew of King Sebastian, is his struggle with Philip IT of Spain for the Portuguese crown. The ship carrying the Jesuits went off course and arrived in Southampton in November, 1582. The Spanish ambassador interceded for them and demanded passports so that they could return to Portugal. All died during their imprisonment with the exception of Dias who died shortly after his return to Portugal. See PRO, SP 12/155/94; SP 94111107; CSP Spanish (1580-1586) pp. 414-16, 418-20; Rodrigues, Hist6ria da Campanhia, 1112, 432-35. DIAZ, Andreas. Brother. 1607 English College, Valladolid [272].


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157

DIEZ, Juan De Isla. Priest. [1642 rector, 1645 rector, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 16m, ff. 281 v, 414r)]. DIMMOCK, Richard. Scholastic. b. 1601 Lincoln (454); e. 1629 Watten; d. 28 April 1632 Liege (Angl. 7, f. ll1v; Hist. Soc. 43, ff. 135v, 196r; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r; 481). 1629 novice, 1630 novice, Watten [453,454,460]; 1632 theologian, Liege [472, 473]. DINGLE, George. See MORGAN, George. DINGLE, John. See FA.LCONER, John.

DOCKING, (John) Baptist. 79 Brother. b. 23 August 1562 London (151); e. 23 October 1591 Louvain (ibid.); dis. 4 November 1600 (Hist.Soc. 54, f. 17r) or 25 October 1601 (224).80 1592 novice, Tournai [145]; 1593 novice, Brussels [152]; 1594 sent to Spain [158]; 1596 Brussels [168, 170]; 1600, 1602, 1603 Rome [217, 233, 241]. DOLMAN, John. Scholastic. b. c. 1561 York (Franc. 10, f. 26v); e. 10 November 1583 Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 26v). [1584 novice, Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 26v)]; [1587 student (Franc. 10, f. 79r)]; [1590 student (Franc. 10, f. 139r)] 1593 Pont-a-Mousson [149]. DOMINGUEZ, John. Brother. 1623, 1625, 1628, 1629, 1630 English College, Seville [403,428,447,455,463]. DONATUS, Livius. Priest. d. 4 September 1653 (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 92v). 1619 tutor in metaphysics, English College, Rome [370]. DORMER, John (vere HUDDESTON). Priest. b. c. 1597 London (454); e. 1625 London; 0.10 August 1621 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 181); p. spiritual coadiutor 18 February 1636 London (Germ. 64, f. 334r); d. 17 May 1661 England (Foley, Records, VIII1, 378). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [424, 425, 433]; [1628 novice, Watten (Angl. 13, f. 85r)]; 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [453, 454, 460, 472, 481]; 1633 College of the Holy Apostles (England) [490]; 1634, 1635, 1636, 1638 [502, 503, 511,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 202r)], [1641 , 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r, 64r, 72v, 82v, 90v, 98v, 106r)] Residence of St. Thomas (England).


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D'OTREM, Hubert. Brother. b. 1622 Liege (Angl. 14, f. 179r); e. 5 March 1642 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 48v); p. 29 April 1654 (Angl. 15, f. 137r); d. 23 September 1689 St. Omers (Foley, Records, VIUl,207). [1642 novice, 1643 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 47r, 56v)]; [1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 66v, 74r, 84r, 92v, 100v, 108r)]. DOWNES, Edmund. See CORNELY, Edmund. DOWNES, Thomas. See MUMFORD, Thomas. DRAKE, John. See FORD, Henry. DRAYCOTT, George. See PARKER, George.

DRAYCOTT, Peter. Brother. b. 1620 Staffordshire (Foley, Records, VIUl, 210); e. 16397; d. 5 July 1640 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 140r; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r). DRAYCOTT, Philip. Novice. b. c. 1573 Litchfield diocese (Liber Ruber, I, 100); e. 12 April 1598 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 22r; 172, f. 25r); d. 14 August 1598 Rome (Hist. Soc. 42, f. llr; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 2v). 1598 novice, Rome [193, 199]. DRAYCOTT, Thomas. Brother. b. c. 1621 Stafford (Angl. 11, f. 40v); e. 1 July 1641 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 40v); d. 15 October 1678 Madrid (Foley, Records, VIUl, 210). [1641 novice, 1642 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 38v, 47r)]; [1643 English College, St. Omers (Angl. 11, f. 58r)]; [1644 sent to Madrid (Angl. 11, f. 69r)]. DRURY, Henry. BrotherlNovice. e. 1592 (Germ. 171, f. 273v); d. 10 September 1593 Antwerp (ibid.). DRURY, John (alias or vere ABINGTON). Priest. b. c. 1605 London (434); e. 1626 Watten; o. c. 1631 Belgium; p. spiritual coadiutor 2 June 1640 Leicester (Germ. 65, f. 31r); d. 23 March 1663 London (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 82r). 1626 novice, [1628 novice (Angl. 13, f. 85v)] Watten [433, 434]; 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, 1631 Liege [453, 460, 472]; 1632 minister, procurator, 1633 tertian, Ghent [481, 482, 490]; 1634 Maryland mission [502]; 1635 returns from Maryland to the Residence of St. Michael [511]; 1636, 1638 [516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 197v)], [1641 (AngL 11, f. 34v)] Residence of St. Michael (England); [1642, 1643, 1644 teacher, 1645 teacher, 1646 teacher, 1647 teacher,


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159

1648, 1649 College of the Holy Apostles (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 42v, 51r, 60v, 70v, 79v, 89v, 97v, 103v)]. DRURY, Robert. See BEDFORD, Robert.

DRYLAND, Christopher. Priest. b. c. 1555 Canterbury diocese (Seminary Priests, I, 105); e. 25 December 1603 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 24v; 172, f. 75r); o. 31 March 1582 Chalons (Seminary Priests, I, 106); d. 12 September 1606 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 4r; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 9r). 1603 novice, 1604 novice, theologian, 1605 novice, theologian, 1606 theologian, Rome [241 , 250, 257, 267]. DRYLAND, Henry. Priest. b. 1579 Kent (367); e. 1 January 1614 Liege (ibid.); o. 1612 Rome (ibid.) . 1615 novice, 1617 novice, theologian, Louvain [340, 353]; 1617 tertian, Liege [354]; 1619 Watten [367] . DUARTE, John (vere JENKYNS). Brother. b. c. 1595 Penzance (Cast. 15, f. 584r); e. c. 1612 Seville (ibid.); dis. August 1633 (Cast. 10, ff. 125r, 139r).81 [1615 Guadix (Baet. 8, f. 284v)]; [1619 Baeza (Baet. 8, f. 317r)]; [1622 (Baet. 8, f. 340v)], 1623 Jerez [403]; 1625 Trigueros [428]; [1628 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, f. 584r)]; [1633 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 161I, f. 44r)]. DUCKETT, George (vere HOLTBY; alias BROONE). Priest. b. c. 1591 Scackleton, York (Uber Ruber, I, 166; Responsa, I, 254-56); e. 4 December 1617 Liege (354, 400); o. 27 December 1616 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 166); p. four vows 8 December 1630 Liege (Germ. 8, ff. 142r, 153r); d. 30 October 1669 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 17v). 1617 novice, 1618 novice, Liege [354, 360]; 1621 theologian, 1621122 theologian, Louvain [384,392]; 1622123 teacher of poetry, 1623 teacher of rhetoric, 1624 prefect of studies, consultor, confessor, 1625 prefect, teacher of poetry, consultor, 1626 prefect of studies, teacher of poetry, consultor, confessor, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 88v)] English College, St. Omers [399, 400, 401, 402, 418, 425, 433]; 1629 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, 1630 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, 1631 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, prefect of health, professor of Sacred Scripture, 1632 spiritual prefect, confessor, admonitor, professor of Sacred Scripture, prefect of the infirm, Liege [453, 454, 460, 472, 481]; 1633 tertian instructor, admonitor, consultor, 1634 tertian instructor, consultor, admonitor, Ghent [490, 502]; [18 and 19 October 1635, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 83r)]; 1636 rector, 1638 rector, [1639 rector (Angl. 13, f. 204v)] Liege [516, 527]; [1641 tertian master, consultor to provincial, 1642 tertian master, consultor to provincial, confessor, 1643 confessor, consultor to


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provincial, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 39r, 47v, 57r)]; [1644, 1645 College of the Holy Apostles (Angl. 11, ff. 60v, 70v)]; [1646 confessor, spiritual prefect, consultor to provincial, 1647 rector declared 1 September 1647, 1648 rector, 1649 rector, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 84v, 92v, 99v, 107r)].

DUCQ, Andreas Le. Brother. e. 24 December 1615 Liege (341). 1615 novice, 16l7, 1619 Liege [341, 354, 360]. DURAND, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1598 Rutland (400); e. 27 October 1621 Liege (ibid.); o. between 1626 and 1628 Belgium; d. 14 September 1633 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. 113r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r; 490). 1621122 novice, 1622123 novice, Liege [392, 399, 400]; 1623 theologian, Louvain [401, 402]; 1624 theologian, 1625 theologian, 1626 theologian, Liege [418, 425, 433]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 88v)], 1629 procurator, consultor, 1630 procurator, consultor, 1631 procurator, consultor, confessor, 1632 English College, St. Omers [453,460,472,481]. EATON, Reginald (alias NORTH, Francis). Priest. b. c. 1562 Warwick (Angl. 13, f. 6v) or York (Angl. 13, f. 14r) or Nottingham (Angl. 13, ff. 41 v, 69v, 101r, 145v); e. 1610 Louvain; o. 14 June 1587 Rheims (Seminary Priests, I, 108); p. spiritUal coadiutor 12 November 1622 (o.s.) Wales (Germ. 62, f. 501r); d. 23 March/2 April 1641 Wales (Angl. 7, f. 141 v; Angl. 11, f. 41r; Rist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; Rist. Soc. 47, f. 62r). 1610 novice, 1611 novice, Louvain [298, 306]; 1613 England [319]; 1621, 1621122, 1623 minister, procurator, consultor, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 69v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 193r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [384,392,401,418,425,433,453, 460,472,481,490,502,516,527]. EATON, William. Priest. b. December 1554 Derby (Angl. 14, f. 86r); e. 13 February 1588 Cologne (ibid.; Rhen.lnf. 16, f. 57v);82 0. 31 March 1582 Chยงlons (Seminary Priests, I, 108); p. four vows 18 December 1611 Molsheim (Germ. 5, f. 47r). 1590,83 [1593 (Rhen. Inf. 16, f. 57v)] Trier [133] ; [1597 Mainz (Rhen. Inf. 16, f. 82v)]; 1599 professor of physics, 1600 lecturer in metaphysics, Trier [207, 219]; 1601 professor of metaphysics, catechist, Cologne [227, 229]; [1603 Molsheim (Rhen. lnf. 16, f. 141 v)]; 1605 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, 1606 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, 1607 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, 1608 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, 1609 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, 1610 spiritual prefect, admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, Molsheim [259,270,278,285,293,301]; [1611 Fulda (Rhen. Inf. 16, f. 201 v)]; 1612 confessor, professor of cases, 1614 spiritual prefect,


BroGRAPHlCAL

SUMMARY

161

confessor, lecturer in cases, 1615 admonitor, confessor, professor of cases, 1616 spiritual prefect, confessor, professor of cases, Molsheim [316, 336, 345, 351].

ECCLES, Henry (vere LEACH, Humphrey).84 Priest. b. c. 157l Market Drayton, Shropshire (Liber Ruber, I, 155; Responsa, I, 210-16); e. 1618 Liege; o. 21 April 1612 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 155); p. spiritual coadiutor 25 February 1628 Lancashire (Germ. 63, f. 443r); d. 8/18 July 1629 Lancashire District (Angl. 7, f. 110v; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159v; 454) . 1618 novice, 1621 Liege [360, 384]; 1621122, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 72r)] College of Blessed Aloysius (Lancashire, England) [392, 401, 418,425,433] .

EDMUNDS, Edward. Brother. b. 1570 Devon (Tolet.' 23, f. 227r; Angl. 13, ff. 120r, 169v, 214v, 251r) or Ireland (Angl. 13,f. 79v); e. c. 1616 Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 14r); p. 2 June 1630 Ghent (Germ. 81, f. 365r); d. 20 September 1643 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. 143v; Angl. 11 , f. 58v; Rist. Soc. 47, f. 54r). [1616 novice, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 14r)]; 1619 socius to procurator, 1620 socius to procurator, [1621122 Tolet. 22, f. 61 v)], 1623 socius to procurator, 1627 socius to procurator, [1628 socius to procurator (Tolet. 23, f. 227r; Angl. 13, f. 79v)] Madrid [366, 375, 405,442]; 1629, 1630, 1631 , 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [453,460,472,481,490,502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 214v)], [1641, 1642 (Angl. 11, ff. 39r, 47v)] Ghent.

EDMUNDS, John De St. Brother. b. c. 1602 Norfolk (Angl. 13, f. 38v); e. 1625. London. 1625 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [424, 425]; 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 70v)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [433].

EDMUNDS, Thomas. Brother. b. c. 1573 Hampshire (264); e. 21 June 1604 Louvain (ibid.); d. 22 March 1616 Valladolid (Rist. Soc. 43, f. 85r; Hist. Soc. 43a, f. 52v). 1604 novice, 1605 novice, 1606 Louvain [247, 254, 264]; 1607 English College, St. Omers [274]; [1611 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, ff. 182r, 225r)]; [1614 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 15, ff. 268r, 314r)].

ELBERS, Julius. Brother. b. c. 1599 Dieppe (491); e. c. 1623 (491); d. 27 March 1657 Mainz (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 74r). 1632 English College, St. Omers [481]; 1633, 1634 Liege [490, 491,502].

ELLIS, William. Priest. b. c. 1588 Buckingham (402); e. 24 June 1623 London (ibid.) ; o. before 1623; p. spiritual coadiutor 2 December 1631 Durham (Germ. 63, f. 766r); d. 2 January 1639/40 Durham (Angl. 7, f. 139v; Rist. Soc. 46, f. 47r).


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1623 novice, 1624 novice, 1625 novice, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401,402,418,424]; 1626 Residence of St. Michael (England) [433, 434]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 74r)], 1629, 1630, 1631,1632,1633,1634,1636,1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 198r)] Residence of St. John (England) [453 ,460,472,481, 490, 502, 516, 527].

EMERSON, Ralph. Brother. b. 1553 (FI. Belg. 9, f. 361r); e. 1580 Rome (ibid.); v. 1582 Novel1ara (ibid.); d. 12 March 1604 St. Omers (Rist. Soc. 43, f. 156r). 1593, 1598 England [149, 194]; [1603 English College, St. Omers (FI. Belg. 9, f. 361r)]. EMERSON, Ralph. Priest. b. c. 1609 London (AngI. 13, f. 165v); e. 1635 Watten; o. before 1635 Seville? (Seminary Priests, II, 95); p. four vows 8 December 1645 Kilkenny (Germ. 12, ff. 400r, 401r); d. 16 December 1684 Yorkshire (Rist. Soc. 49, f. 228v). 1636 novice, Watten [516]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 189v)], [1641 (AngI. 11, f. 32v)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England); [1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 College of St. Francis Xavier (Angl. 11, ff. 43r, 51 v, 61r, 70v)]; [1646, 1647 military chaplain, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 84v, 93v)]; [1648, 1649 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 98r, 105v)]. ENGHAM, Richard. Scholastic. b. c. 1556 Canterbury diocese (Rom. 53, f. 72r; Liber Ruber, I, 14); e. April 1582 (Rom. 53, f. 72r); d. 1583 Eu (Liber Ruber, I, 14). [1584 [sic] English College, Rome (Rom. 53, f. 72r)]. ENGLEBERT, Leonard. Brother. e. 24 May 1617 Liege (354). 1617 novice, Liege [354]. ERBERMAN, Vitus. Priest. b. c. 1597 Bamberg (Angl. 13, f. 119v); e. c. 1610 (ibid.); d. 8 April 1675 Mainz (DDS, II, 84). 1633 tertian, Ghent [490]. EURE, Francis (alias EVERY). Priest. b. 1630 Yorkshire (Angl. 14, f. 181 v); e. 27 November 1647 Watten (Angl. 14, f. 181v); 0.31 March 1657 (Angl. 11, f.152v); p. four vows 2 February 1665 liege (Germ. 17, f. 360r, 361r); d. 12124 April 1698 Yorkshire (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 88r). [1648 novice, 1649 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 101 v, 108r)]. EUSTACE, Oliver. Priest. b. c. 1605 Ireland (454); e. c. 1626 (454) Rome;85 o. c. 1634 Belgium; p. four vows 31 May 1645 (Gall. 8, ff. 274r, 275r); d. 12 November 1671 Dublin (Rist. Soc. 49, f. 204r).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

163

1629 prulosopher, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, 1632 theologian, 1633 theologian, Liege [453 , 454, 460, 472, 481, 490]; 1634 sent to Ireland [502]. EVANS, Humphrey. See BROWN, Humphrey.

EVANS, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1558 Leicestershire (Liber Ruber, I, 25); e. c. 1586 Messina (Foley, Records, VIU1, 233); o. December 1585 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 26); d. 27 March 1587 Messina (AASI, 46/2411, p. 814). EVERARD, Thomas. 86 Priest. b. 8 February 1559/60 Suffolk (203); e. 3 June 1593 Tournai (ibid.); v. 15 July 1594 Arras (ibid.; AASI, 46/2411, p. 99); o. 15 September 1592 St. Omers (203); p. spiritual coadiutor r November 1602 St. Omers (Germ. 60, f. 181r); d. 16 May 1633 London (Angl. 7, f. 112r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r). 1594 novice, Tournai [158]; [l7 June 1595 sent to Lille (AASI, 46/2411, p. 99)]; 1596 audited cases of conscience, 1597 prefect of rooms, 1598 prefect of rooms, 1599 minister, 1601 minister, 1602 minister, English College, St. Omers [168, l70, 181, 195,203,224,230]; 1603 sent to England [239]; 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611 England [287, 296, 297, 303]; 1612, 1613 confessor, English College, St. Omers [311, 321]; 1614 minister, procurator, novitiate Louvain [327, 328]; 1615 minister, procurator, admonitor, consultor, Liege [341]; 1617 procurator, Watten [354]; 1621 London [384]; 1621122, 1622123 minister, procurator, Ghent [392, 399,400]; 1623 London [401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 79r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 Residence of Blessed Francis Borgia (Suffolk, England) [418, 424,425,433,453,460,472,481]. EVERARD, William. b. 1559 Louvain (Rom. 53, f. 35r); e. 29 December 1578 Louvain (ibid.; Rom. 53, f. 96r); d. 11/12 November 1590 Milan (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 79v; AASI, 46/2411, p. 814). [1584 Perugia (Rom. 53, f. 96r)]; 1586 theologian, Rome [105] ; [1587 German College, Rome (Rom. 53, f. 120v)]. EVERS, Thomas. See PAYTON, Thomas. EVERY, Francis. See EURE, Francis.

EVISON, John (or Alexander). Priest. b. c. 1578 London (Angl. 13, f. 5r); e. c. 1600 (ibid.); o. before 1604; p. four vows 12 May 1622 London (Germ. 6, ff. 227r, 240r); d. 4 June 1651 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 186v; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 65r). [1604 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 3r)]; 1606 Oviedo [262]; 1607 English College, Valladolid [272]; 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1621, 1621122, 1623, 1624 confessor, 1625, 1626,


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[1628 (Angl. 13, f. 67r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [384, 392, 401, 418, 424, 425, 433, 453, 46~ 472, 481, 490, 502, 51~ 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 188r)], [16411642 confessor, 1643 confessor, 1644 confessor, 1645 confessor (Angi. 11, ff. 32r, 42r, 50r, 60r, 70r)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England); [1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 Liege (Angi. 11, ff. 83v, 92r, 100r, 107r)]. EWENS, Maurice. See NEWPORT, Maurice.

EYRE, John (alias GREEN). Priest. b. 1581 Derby (FI. Belg. 11, f. 44v; Angi. 13, f. 20v); e. May 1606 Louvain (ibid.); o. 25 March 1606 (ibid.); p. four vows 19 April 1626 Brussels (Germ. 7, ff. 290r, 301r); dis. c. 1629.87 1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1615 English confessor, 1617 English confessor, 1618 English confessor, 1619 English confessor, 1620 English confessor, consultor, 1621 English confessor, prefect of cases, Mechlin [349, 353, 358, 359, 369, 376, 386]; 1622/3 confessor, catechist, 1623 Watten [399,400,401]; 1624 English confessor and preacher, 1625 English confessor and preacher, 1626 English confessor and preacher, 1627 English confessor and preacher, 1628 English confessor and preacher, 1629 English confessor and preacher, Antwerp [420,429,435,440,448,456]. EYRE, Vincent. Novice. b. c. 15767 Litchfield diocese (Valladolid, p. 42); e. 6 April 1600 St. Omers (ibid.); dis. before 1 April 1601 (ibid.). FAIRCLOUGH, Alexander. Priest. b. c. 1578 London (Angi. 13, f. 5r); e. c. 1604 England (ibid.); o. before April 1602 Valladolid (Valladolid, p. 45); p. four vows 27 June 1619 Antwerp (Germ. 6, ff. 67r, 68r); d. 4/14 August 1645 Oxford (Angi. 7, f. 146r; Rist. Soc. 47, f. 5v' Angi. 11 , f. 75v). 1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611, 1613 88 England [287, 296, 297, 303, 319]; 1618 procurator, 1619 procurator, 1620 procurator, Brussels [359, 369, 376]; 1621, 1621122 London (England) [384,392]; 1623, 1624 Northampton (England) [401 , 418]; 1625, 1626, [1628 superior (Angl. 13, f. 77r)], 1629 superior, 1630 superior, 1631 superior, 1632 superior, 1633 superior, 1634 superior, 1636 superior, 1638 superior [425 ,433,453,460,472,481,490,502, 516,527], [1639 superior (Angi. 13, f. 200v)], [1641 superior, 1642 superior, 1643 superior, 1644 superior (Angl. 11 , ff. 35v, 44v, 53v, 63v)] Residence of St. Mary (England). FAIRFAX, John. See STONE, Andrew.

FAIRFAX, John. Brother. b. c. 1601 York (400); e. 24 September 1621 Liege (400); p. 28 August 1633 Liege (Germ. 83, f. 174r); d. December 1635 Rome (Hist. Soc. 45, f. 2v). 1621122 novice, 1622123 novice, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angi. 13, f. 84r)], 1629, 1630, 1631 , 1632, [28 December 1633, sent to Belgium (Hist. Soc.


BroGRAPHlCAL SUMMARY

165

62, f. 82v)], 1633, 1634 Liege [392, 399,400,401,418,425,433,453, 460,472, 481,490,502]; 1635 English College, Rome [513]. FALAPIN, John. Brother. b. c. 1592 Tournai (400); e. 1 February 1613 Louvain (400); d. 2 April 1663 Liege (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 82r). 1613 novice, 1614 novice, 1615, 1617, 1618, 1621, 1621122, 1622/23, 1623 Louvain [320, 327, 340, 353, 358, 359, 384, 392, 399, 400, 401]; 1624 Liege [418]. FALCONER, John (alias DINGLE).89 Priest. b. c. 1577 Litton, Dorset (Liber Ruber, I, 360-61; Responsa, I, 67-71); e. 13 November 1604 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 24v; 172, f. 84r); o. 20 December 1603 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 119); p. four vows 21 July 1619 Arras (Germ. 6, ff. 64r, 77r); d. June 1656 (Angl. 7, f. 195r) or 7 July 1656 England (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 72r). 1604 novice, 1605 novice, 1606 novice, Rome [250, 257, 267]; [28 May 1607, sent to Flanders (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 72r)]; 1609, 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [287,296, 297, 303, 319]; 1618 socius to master of novices, Liege [360]; 1621, 1621122, 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (London, England) [384, 392, 401]; 1624 Northampton [418,419] ; 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 77r)] , 1629, 1630 Residence of St. Mary (England) [425, 433, 453, 460]; 1631, 1632 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, Ghent [472, 473, 481]; 1633 socius to novice master, confessor, admonitor, 1634 confessor, Watten [490, 502]; 1635, 1636 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1638 confessor, admonitor, prefect of health, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 204v)] Liege [511, 516, 527]; [1641 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1642 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1643 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1644 confessor, admonitor, 1645 confessor, admonitor, 1646 confessor, admonitor, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 39r, 47v, 57r, 67r, 74r, 84v)]; [1648, 1649 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 96r, 103r)]. FARLEY, Eliot. See TURNER, Joseph. FARMER, Thomas (alias STILLINGTON, BARKER, and TEMPLY). Priest. b. c. 1595 Buckinghamshire (Liber Ruber, I, 175); e. 14 August 1621 England (402); o. 9 August 1620 Rome (Liber Ruber, 1,175); p. four vows 6 September 1632 Derby (Germ. 8, ff. 322r, 327r); d. 19 April 1683 England (Angl. 11, f. 256v). 1621122 Leicester (England) [392]; 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401 , 402]; 1624 Leicester (England) [418]; 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 75v)] Residence of St. Anne (England) [425, 433]; 1629 tertian, Ghent [453,454]; 1630, 1631 , 1632, 1633 minister, procurator, consultor, 1634 minister, procurator, consultor, College of the Immaculate Conception (formerly the Residence of St. Anne, Leicester, England) [460, 46~, 481, 490, 502] ; 1636, 1638


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[516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 201v)], [1641,1642,1643,1644,1645 (Angl. 11, ff. 35v, 45r, 53v, 63v, 72v)] Residence of St. Mary (England); [1646 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 79v)]; [1647 College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) (Angl. 11, f. 88v)]; [1648 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1649 confessor, spiritual prefect, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 96r, 103r)].

FARRINGTON, John (alias RISHTON). Scholastic. b. c. 1604 Lancashire (426); e. 1625 Watten; d. 13/14 February 1629 Ghent (Angl. 7, f. IlOr; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 161 v; 454). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, Watten [425, 426, 433]; [1628 philosopher, Liege (Angl. 13, f. 83r)]. FARRINGTON, John (alias RISHTON). Priest. b. c. 1615 Lancashire (Angl. 13, f. 213r); e. 1637 Ghent; o. 4 April 1643 Liege (Angl. 11, f. 58v); p. four vows 17 January 1655 Watten (Germ. 15, ff. 275r, 276r); d. 3/15 August 1656 Valenciennes (Angl. 7, f. 195r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 72v). 1638 novice, Ghent [527]; [1639 novice, Watten (Angl. 13, f. 213r)]; [1641 theologian, 1642 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 37r, 45v)]; [1643 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 57r)] ; [1644 sent to Lisbon (Angl. 11, f. 69r)]; [1649 teacher of Greek, Hebrew and Mathematics, Coimbra (Lus. 45, f. l1r)]. FARRINGTON, Ralph (alias RISHTON). Scholastic. b. c. 1602 Lancashire (419); e. 1624 Watten; d. 28 October 1629 Lancashire (Angl. 7, f. 110v). 1624 novice, 1625 novice, Watten [418, 419, 425]; 1626 philosopher, [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f. 82v)] Liege [433, 434]; 1629 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [453,454]. FARRINGTON, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1611 Lancashire (473); e. 1631 Watten; o. c. 1640 Belgium; p. spiritual coadiutor 10 April 1648 (o.s.) St. Aloysius (Germ. 66, f. 280r); d. 25 January/4 February 1678 England (Angl. 7, f. 237r; Hist. Soc. 49, f. 252r). 1631 novice, 1632 novice, Watten [472,473]; 1633, 1634 theologian, Liege [490, 491, 502]; 1636 theologian, Ghent [516]; 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 206v)] theologian, Liege [527]; [1641 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 38r)]; [1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 43v, 62r, 62r, 71r, 80v, 89r, 97r, 104v)]. FAUNT, Lawrence Arthur.9o Priest. b. c. 1552 Leicester (Angl. 14, f. 78r); e. 13 June 1570 Louvain (ibid.) or 1571 Munich (Germ. Sup. 44b, f. 2); v. 10 August 1572 Munich (103); o. 1580 Rome (ibid.); p. four vows 10 January 1591 Vilnius (Germ. 2, ff. 161r, 162r); d. 28 February 1591 Vilnius (Angl. 14, f. 78r). 1578 theologian, Rome [90]; 1584, 1587, 1590 Poznan [103, 119, 139, 149].


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

167

FECK, Thomas. Priest. b. c. 1573 London (Angl. 13, f. 6v; Liber Ruber, I, 108); e. 28 October 1601 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 23v; 172, f. 53v); o. 21 April 1601 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 108); p. four vows 18 December 1639 Ghent (Germ. 10, ff. 311r, 326r); d. 31 May 1648 Liege (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 74r) or 1 June 1648 (Angl. 11, f. 102r). 1602 novice, 1603 novice, theologian, 1604 theologian, Rome [233, 241, 249); [11 November 1604, sent to Valladolid (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 71r)); [1606 minister, English College, Seville (Baet. 8, f. 216r)); 1609, 1610 preacher, 1611 preacher, 1612 English preacher, 1613 English preacher, 1614 English preacher, 1615 professor of grammar, English College, St. Omers [289,298,306,311 ,321,328, 341); 1621, 1621122 Northampton (England) [384, 392); 1623, 1624 Leicester (England) [401,418); 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 75v)], 1629, 1630, 1631 Residence of St. Ann~ (England) [425 , 433, 453, 460, 472]; 1632, 1633, 1634 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [481,482,490, 502); 1635, 1636 confessor, 1638 confessor, admonitor, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 214r)] Ghent [511 , 516, 527); [1641 confessor, admonitor, 1642 confessor, admonitor, 1643 confessor, admonitor, 1644 confessor, admonitor, 1645, 1646, 1647 Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 36v, 45v, 54v, 65r, 73v, 83v, 92r)]. FERERIQUI, Paul. IPriest. [1644 rector, 1645 rector, English College, Seville (Baet. 14/1, f. 127v; Baet. 141 n, f. 290v)]. FELTON, Francis. Priest. b. c. 1577 Valladolid (Murphy, St Gregory's College, Seville, p. 66); e. c. 1626 (Baet. 9/1, f. 122v); o. before 1603 (Seminary Priests, I, 113); p. three vows 13 July 1636 Seville (Hisp. 37, ff. 189r, 190r); d. 12 December 1647 Marchena (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 25v). 1631 consultor, confessor, curate, 1633 confessor, 1634 confessor, English College, Seville [475,492, 505];9l [1639 novitiate, Seville (Baet. 9/1, f. 205v)); 1639 consultor, confessor, 1640 minister, confessor, 1642 minister, consultor, 1643 minister, 1644 confessor, San Lucar [534, 537; Baet. 9/11, f. 276v; Baet. 141 n, ff. 256r, 276r, 293v); [1645 confessor, prefect of the church, English College, Seville (Baet. 9ill, f. 309v; Baet. 14/1, f. 127v)]. FELTON, John. See GROSS, John. FENELL, John. See WALSINGHAM, Francis.

FERNANDES, Manuel. Priest. b. 1577 Viana do Alentejo ,(Leite, Hist6ria da Compahnia de Jesus no Brasil, VIII, 233); e. 12 July 1593 Evora (ibid.); p. 8 December 1611 Bahia (ibid.); d. 14 August 1654 Bahia (ibid.) . One of the Portuguese Jesuits imprisoned in England. See Cardim, Femao; Leite, Hist6ria da Compahnia de Jesus no Brasil, VIII, 223-25.


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FERNANDEZ, Andreas. Brother. 1628 English College, Seville [447] . FERNANDEZ, Gabriel. Brother. 1639, 1640 English College, Seville [533, 537]. FESARD, Giles. Priest. b. c. 1538 Tisbury (Foley, Records, VIllI, 250-51); e. 23 February 1568 Rome (Rom. 169, ff. 8r, 9v; 170, f. 95r); o. c. 1570 (before 17 September) Rome?; p. three vows 17 September 1570 Prague (Germ. 1, f. 338r); d. 3 July 1571 Prague (AASI, 4612411, p. 813). 1569 theologian, 1570 theologian, Rome [60, 70]; 1570 substitute for master of novices, Prague [68, 76]. FETTIPLACE, John (vere or alias LAWARD). Novice brother. b. c. 1574 Buckinghamshire (SC, Anglia ill, 98); e. 1 February 1607 Louvain (ibid.). FILCOCK, Roger. Priest. b. c. 1570 Sandwich, Kent (Seminary Priests, I, 116); e. c. 1600 England (ibid.); o. c. 1597 Valladolid (ibid.; Valladolid, p. 13); d. 27 February 1601 London (Seminary Priests, I, 116). FINES, Christopher. See ROBSON, Christopher. FIORAVATUS, Hieronymus. Priest. d. 9 October 1630 Rome (Hist. Soc. 43, f. lOr). 1595 rector, English College, Rome [165]. FIRMAN (or FREEMAN), Richard. Priest? e. 5 April 1563 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 5v; 170, f. 61r); d. 15 November 1574 Loreto (Hist. Soc. 42, f. 6v). [1569 theologian, Rome (Rom. 78b, f. 72r)]. FISHER, John (vere PERCY, John).92 Priest. b. 27 September 1568 Holmside, Durham (AASI, 4612411, p. 103) but sometimes York (Angl. 13, ff. 13r, 39r, 66v; 96v, 143r, 189r; diocese of York, Liber Ruber, I, 71); e. 2 May 1594 Tournai (AASI, 4612411, p. 103); o. 13 March 1593 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 71); p. four vows 14 May 1609 near London (Germ. 4, ff. 523r, 526r); d. 3 December 1641 London (Angl. 7, f. 142r; Angl. 11, f. 32r; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 37v). 1596 novice, Tournai [168, 170]; [1596 sent to England (AASI, 46124/1, p. 103)]; 1598,1609, 1609110, 1610, 1611 England [194,287,296,297,303]; 1613 prefect of English mission, Brussels [320]; 1614 professor of Sacred Scripture, Louvain


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

169

[327]; 1621, 1621122, 1623 consultor to provincial, 1624 consultor to provincial, 1625, 1626 consultor to provincial, [1 628 (Angl. 13, f. 66v)], 1629 consultor to provincial, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (London, England) [384,392,401, 418,424,425,433 , 453]; 1630, 1631 Residence of St. Mary (England) [460, 472]; 1632, 1633 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1634, 1636, 1638 [481,490, 502, 516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 189r)], [1641 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor (Angl. 11, f. 32r)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) . FISHER, John (junior). Priest. b. c. 1609 Yorkshire (461); e. 1628 Watten; o. c. 1637 Liege; p. spiritual coadiutor 11 May 1636 (Ang!. 13, f. 309v); d. 20 October 1654 England (Angl. 7, f. 192v; Rist. Soc. 48, f. 69v). 1629 novice, Watten [453]; 1630 philosopher, 1631 philosopher, 1632 philosopher, 1633 philosopher, 1634 theologian, 1636 theologian, Liege [460, 461,472, 481,490, 502,516]; 1638 [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 203v)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644,1645,1646,1647, 1648, 1649 (Ang!. ll, ff. 36r, 45r, 54r, 64v, 73r, 83r, 91 v, 99r, 106r) Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (England).

FISHER, John. See FLOYD, John. FISHER, Lawrence (vere STANDISH). Priest. b. c. 1605 Lancashire (434); e. 1626 Watten; o. c. 1634 Liege; p. four vows 19 September 1641 Worcester (Germ. ll, ff. 166r, 169r); d. 6 September 1670 England (Hist. Soc. 49, f. 170r). 1626 novice, Watten [433, 434]; [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f. 83v)], 1629 philosopher, 1630 theologian, 1631 theologian, 1632 theologian, 1633 theologian, Liege [453, 460, 472, 481 , 490]; 1634 tertian, Ghent [502, 503]; 1635 English College, St. Omers [5ll]; 1636, 1638 [516, 527], [1639 (Ang!. 13, f. 200r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648 consultor, 1649 consultor (Ang!. 11, ff. 35v, 44v, 53v, 63r, 72r, 82r, 90r, 98r, 105r)] Residence of St. George (England). FISHER, Philip (alias COPLEY, Thomas).93 Priest. b. c. 1596 Madrid (400); e. 23 October 1617 Liege (354); o. c. 1623 Belgium; p. four vows 26 October 1630 (o.s.) London (Germ. 8, ff. 210r, 2l7r); d. 21 March 1652 Maryland (Rist. Soc. 48, f. l11r). 16l7, novice, Liege [354]; 1618 theologian, 1621 theologian, 1621122 theologian, 1622123 theologian, Louvain [359, 384,392,399, 400]; 1623, 1624 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401,418,424]; 1625 tertian, Ghent [425, 426]; 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 67v)], 1629 minister, procurator, consultor, 1630 minister, procurator, consultor, 1631 minister, procurator, 1632 minister, procurator, consultor, 1633 minister, procurator, consultor, 1634 minister, procurator, consultor, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [433,453 , 460,472,481 , 490,502]; 1636 superior, 1638 [516,517,527], [1639 (Ang!. 13, f. 204r)], [1641, 1642, 1643 superior, 1644 (Angl. 11, ff. 36r, 45v, 54r, 64v)] Maryland mission;


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[1645, 1646, 1647 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 70r, 79v, 88r)]; [1648, 1649 Maryland mission (Angl. 11, ff. 101 v, 106r)]. FITTON, Francis (alias VIDELL; vere BIDDULPH). Priest. b. c. 1596 Stafford (Angl. 13, f. 101 v); e. c. 1618 Villagarcia; v. 25 January (427) or 28 January 1621 (Cast. 15, f. 404r); o. between 1622 and 1625 Spain; p. four vows 5 March 1634 Leicestershire (Germ. 9, ff. 16r, 29r); d. 15 April 1673 (Foley, Records, VIIIl, 257). [1619 novice, Villagarcia (Cast. 15, f. 364v)]; [1622 (Cast. 15, f. 404r)], 1625 English College, Valladolid [427]; [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 72r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [453, 460, 472, 481 , 490]; 1634 professor of philosophy, 1636 professor of moral theology, Liege [502, 503, 516]; 1638 minister, consultor [527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 194r)], [1641 minister, consultor, 1642 minister, consultor, 1643 minister, consultor, 1644 minister, consultor, 1645 minister, consultor, 1646 consultor, 1647 consultor, 1648 consultor, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 33v, 43r, 51v, 61v, 71r, 80v, 89r, 97r, 104v)] College of Blessed Aloysius (England). FITZHERBERT, Francis. See DARBY, Francis. FITZHERBERT, Thomas. 94 Priest. b. 4 September 1552 Swynnerton, Staffordshire (Rom. 56, f. 171r; Seminary Priests, I, 117); e. 31 July 1614 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 28r; 172, f. 171r); o. 24 March 1602 Rome (Seminary Priests, I, 117); p. four vows 30 August 1618 Louvain (Germ. 5, ff. 450r, 453r); d. 17 August 1640 Rome (Hist. Soc. 46, f. 2v). [May 1615 novice, Rome (Rom. 55, f. 21 v)]; 1617, 1618 English procurator, Brussels [353,358]; 1619 rector, [1619 rector (Rom. 55, f. 126r)], [1622 rector (Rom. 55, f. 252r)], 1623 rector, 1625 rector, 1626 rector, 1627 rector, 1628 rector, 1630 rector, 1632 rector, 1633 rector, 1635 rector, [1636 rector (Rom. 57, f. 35r)], [1639 rector (Rom. 57, f. 173r)] English College, Rome [370,409,410, 431,437,443,450,467,486,487,497,513]. FITZSIMON, Henry.95 Priest. b. 31 May 1566 Dublin (Foley, 'Chronological Catalogue of the Irish Province,' Records, VIII2, 8); e. 15 April 1592 Tournai (ibid.); o. c. 1596 Louvain?; p. four vows 1608 (ibid.); d. 29 November 1643 Kilkenny (ibid.). Fitzsimon passed through England on his way to Ireland in late 1597 or early 1598. See ARSI, Fl. Belg. 1m, p. 677. FITZWILLIAMS, Richard. See WILLIAMSON, Richard. FLACK, William. Priest. b. June 1560 Suffolk (Rom. 53, f. 68v; Liber Ruber, I, 53); e. 9 June 1585 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 18r; 17l1A, f. 98v);96 o. 1590 Spain (203); p. spiritual coadiutor 14 October 1601 St. Omers (Germ. 60, f. 82r); d. 13 December 1637 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 119v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 46v; 528).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

l71

1586 theologian, [1587 theologian (Rom. 53, f. 68v)] Rome [105]; [14 May 1589, permission to travel to Spain (Hist. Soc. 61, f. 46r)]; 1590, 1593 English College, Valladolid [127, 149]; 1596 procurator, consultor, confessor, 1597 procurator, consultor, admonitor, 1599 procurator, consultor, admonitor, 1599, 1601 consultor, procurator, 1602 consultor, procurator, 1603 consultor, procurator, 1604 consultor, procurator, confessor, 1605 consultor, procurator, confessor, 1606, 1607 consultor, procurator, 1609 consultor, procurator, confessor, 1611 procurator, 1612 procurator, 1613 consultor, procurator, 1614 consultor, procurator, 1615 consultor, admonitor, confessor, 1617 consultor, confessor, English College, St. Omers[158, 168, 170, 181, 195,203,224,230,239,247,254,264,274,289,306, 311, 321, 328, 341, 354]; 1618 procurator, 1619 Watten [360, 367]; 1621 procurator, 1621122 confessor, consultor, 1622123 confessor, 1623 confessor, admonitor, 1624 confessor, ad monitor, 1625 confessor, admonitor, 1626 confessor, admonitor, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 88r)] English College, St. Omers [384, 392, 399, 400,401,418,425,433]; 1629 rector, 1630 rector, 1631 rector, Ghent [453, 460, 472]; 1632 confessor, 1633, 1634, 1636 English College, St. Omers [481, 490,502, 516].

FLEKNEY, William. Priest. b. c. 1577 Hereford (Angl. 13, f. 6v) or Oxford (Angl. 13, ff. 14r, 41r, 69v); e. 1610 England (303); o. 1 April 1600 Arras (Seminary Priests, I, 118); p. four vows 29 August 1627 (o.s.) Wales (Germ. 7, ff. 439r, 446r); d. 6 August 1632 England (Angl. 7, f. III v; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Hist. Soc. 45, f. 43r). 1611, 1613 England [303, 319]; 1621, 1621122, 1623, 1624 consultor, 1625 consultor, 1626 consultor, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 69v], 1629 consultor, 1630 consultor, 1631 minister, procurator, consultor, College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales) [384, 392, 401, 418, 425, 433, 453, 460, 472]. FLETCHER, Antony (alias BLACKNOLL). Priest. b. c. 1563 York (Angl. 13, f. 5v) or Westmoreland (Angl. 13, f. 13v); e.late 16121 early 1613 England;97 o. 18 December 1610 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 154); p. spiritual coadiutor 12 May 1622 London (Germ. 62, f. 429r); d. 1 September 1623 London (Angl. 7, f. 93r; Hist. Soc. 43, ff. 159r, 258r). 1613 England [309]; 1621, 1621/22 procurator for viceprovince, 1623 procurator for the province, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (London, England) [384,392, 401]. FLINT, Thomas (or John). Priest. b. c. 1575 Warwickshire (Angl. 13, f. 15r); Lichfield diocese (Liber Ruber, I, 98); e. 18 October 1621 England (402); o. Easter 1600 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 98); p. four vows 7 October 1632 London (Germ. 8, ff. 334r, 335r); d. 26 December 1638 England (Angl. 7, f. 120v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; 528). 1621122 Yorkshire [392]; 1623 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401 ,402]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 76v)] Residence of St. George (Worcester, England) [418, 425, 433]; 1629, 1630, 1631 College of St. Francis


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Xavier (Wales) [453, 460, 472]; 1632, 1633 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [481, 482, 490]; 1634, 1636 College of Blessed Aloysius (England) [502,503,516].

FLOYD, Charles. Priest. b. c. 1562 Anglesea (Seminary Priests, I, 120; Liber Ruber, I, 99); e. 1611 Louvain; o. Easter 1598 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 99). 1611 novice, Louvain [306]. FLOYD, Griffin. Priest. b. c. 1570 Bangor, Wales (Liber Ruber, I, 75); e. 8 September 1593 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 20v; 1711A, 143v); o. l3 March 1593 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 75); dis . 24 February 1612 (Hist. Soc. 54, f. 23r).98 1593 novice, 1595 novice, Rome [153, 165]; [16 October 1595, permission to travel to Milan (Hist. Soc. 61, f. 50r)]; 1596 theologian, 1597 lecturer in Hebrew, Milan [175, 176, 185]; [1600 penitentiary, Loreto (Rom. 54, f. 48r)]; [18 April 1601, sent to Poland (Hist. Soc. 62, f. 69r)]; 1601 lecturer in philosophy, 1602 professor of philosophy, 1604 professor of philosophy, consultor, 1605 professor of philosophy, consultor, 1606 Braniewo [228, 235, 252, 260, 269]; 1609 England [287].99 FLOYD, Henry. Priest. b. c. 1560 Norfolk (Angl. l3, f. 7r); e. 1600 England (ibid.); o. c. 1590 Valladolid (Seminary Priests, I, 120); p. four vows 6 December 1618 (o.s.) London (Germ. 6, ff. 15r, 22r); d. 7 March 1641 London (Angl. 7, f. 141 v; Angl. 11, f. 41r) or 14/24 March (Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47r; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 33r). 1608 English confessor, [1610 confessor, 1611 confessor [Lus. 44/I, ff. 237v, 274v)], 1612 English confessor, Lisbon [281, 310]; 1621 superior, 1621122 superior, Suffolk (England) [384, 392]; 1623, 1624, 1626, [1628 (Angl. l3, f. 67v)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. l3, f. 188v)] House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401, 418, 424, 433, 453, 460,472,481,490,502,516,527]. FLOYD, Henry (vere or alias WILLIAMS). Priest. b. 1621 Cheshire (Angl. 14, f. 178v); e. 7 September 1643 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 58r); o. c. 1650 Liege; p. spiritual coadiutor 5 August 1663 Grafton, Worcs. (Germ. 17, f. 119r); d. 3 October 1687 England (Foley, Records, VillI, 268). [1643 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, f. 56v)]; [1644 philosopher, 1645 philosopher, 1646 philosopher, 1647 theologian, 1648 theologian, 1649 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11 , ff. 66r, 74r, 84r, 92r, 100v, 107v)]. FLOYD, John. Scholastic? b. c. 1565 Bangor (Wales) (Angl. 14, f. 84v; Liber Ruber I, 40); e. 17 January 1584 Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 27v); d. 25 August 1590 Pont-a-Mousson (AASI, 46/24/1, p. 814).


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

173

[1584 novice, Verdun (Franc. 10, f. 27v)]; [1587 student, Pont-a-Mousson (Franc. 10, f. 79v)], [1590 student, Pont-a-Mousson (Franc. 10, f. 139r)].

FLOYD, John.JOo Priest. b. 14 October 1574 Badlingham, Norfolk but Cambridge (Angl. 13, ff. 55v, 88r, 120r, 170v, 215r, 252r, 293r, 320r); diocese of Ely (Liber Ruber, I, 76); e. 1 November 1592 Rome (Rom. 169,f. 20r; 171/A, f. 140v); o. c. 1599 Spain (367); p. four vows 31 July 1609 Douai (Germ. 4, ff. 534r, 535r); d. 16/17 September 1649 St. Omers (Angl. 7, f. 184v; Angl. 11, f. 109r; Rist. Soc. 47, f. 71v). 1593 novice, 1596 theologian, 1597 theologian, Rome [153, 179, 184]; [20 May 1597, permission to travel to Valladolid (Rist. Soc. 61 , f. 50v)]; 1597 perfect of studies, 1599 prefect of students, English College, Valladolid [180, 201]; [1604 procurator, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 27a, f. 3r)]; 1607, 1609 consultor, English preacher, English College, St. Omers [274,289]; 1609/10, 1610 England [296, 297]; 1611 consultor, 1613 consultor, admonitor, prefect of students, professor of scholastic theology, 1614 professor of theology; 1615 prefect of studies, writer; 1617 prefect of studies, consultor, admonitor, Louvain [306,320, 327, 339, 340, 353]; 1617 consultor, 1618 consultor, 1619 consultor, 1621, 1621122 consultor, 1622123 writer, 1623 consultor, 1624 consultor, 1625 consultor, 1626 consultor, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 88r)] English College, St. Omers [354, 360, 367, 384, 392, 399, 400, 401, 418, 425, 433]; 1629 confessor, consultor, tertian instructor, Ghent [453]; 1630, 1631 confessor, 1632 preacher, consultor, 1633 consultor, 1634 consultor, 1636 confessor, consultor, admonitor, 1638 confessor [460, 472, 481, 490, 502, 516, 527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 215r)], [1641 confessor, admonitor, 1642 confessor, admonitor, 1643 admonitor, 1644 admonitor, 1645 admonitor, confessor, 1646 admonitor, 1647 admonitor, 1648 admonitor, 1649 admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 39v, 48r, 57v, 67v, 74v, 85r, 93v, 99v, 106v)] English College, St. Omers. FLOYD, John (alias FISHER, John). Priest. b. c. 1600 Wales (426); e. 1625 Watten; o. c. 1631 Liege; p. spiritual coadiutor 11 May 1636 Wales (Germ. 64, f. 341r); d. 7 August 1670 England (Rist. Soc. 49, f. 112v). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, Watten [425,426,433]; [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f. 83r)], 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, Liege [453,460] ; 1631 tertian, Ghent [472]; 1632, 1633 teacher of grammar, 1634 teacher of grammar, 1635, 1636, 1638 [481 ,482,490,502,511 ,5 16,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 193r)], [1641,1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649 (Angl. 11, ff. 33r, 43r, 51r, 61r, 71r, 80r, 88v, 96v, 104r)] College of St. Francis Xavier (Wales). FLOWER, Charles (vere WALDEGRAVE).I ol Priest. b. 22 April 1591 Essex (Fl. Belg. 11, f. 56v); e. 17 June 1616 (400); o. December 1619 (FI. Belg. 11, f. 56v); p. spiritual coadiutor 22 February 1628 London (Germ. 63, f. 445r); d. 23 December 1655 England (Angl. 7, f. 194r; Rist. Soc. 48, f. 25r). 1618 theologian, Louvain [358, 359]; 1621 Liege [384]; 1621122 prefect, English College, St. Omers [392]; 1622123 socius to procurator, 1623 socius to procurator, 1624 socius to procurator, confessor, 1625 socius to procurator, Brussels


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[399,400,407,410,418,420,425,429]; 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 68r)] Rouse of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [433, 434]; 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632 Residence of St. Mary (England) [453, 460, 472, 481]; 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 Residence of St. George (England) [490,502,516,527]; [1639 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 13, f. 201r)]; [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 Residence of St. George (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 35r, 44v, 53r, 63r, 72r]; [1646, 1647 minister, Ghent (Angl. 11, ff. 84v, 92y); [1648, 1649 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 98r, 105v)].

FOIS, Peter. Brother. 1619 novice, Liege [360] . FORCER, Francis. 102 Priest. b. c. 1584 York (Angl. 13, f. 87r); e. 1603/4 Spain (Baet. 8, f. 208y); o. between 1611 and 1619 Spain; p. four vows 19 March 1623 Madrid (Risp. 5, ff. 312r, 315r); d. 23 February/5 March 1655 England (Angl. 7, f. 192v; Rist. Soc. 48, f. 41 v). [1606 Ecija (Baet. 8, f. 208v)]; [1611 Cadiz (Baet. 8, f. 237r)]; 103 [1619 preacher, confessor (Tolet. 22, f. 13v)], 1619 procurator, 1620 procurator, 1623 procurator, Madrid [366, 375,405];104 [1628 Ghent (Angl. 13, f. 87r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632,1633,1634, 105 1636,1638 [453,454,460,472,481,490,502,516,527], [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 198r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646 superior declared 7 September 1646, 1647 superior, 1648 superior, 1649 superior (Angl. 11, ff. 35r, 44r, 52y, 62v, 72r, 81 v, 91r, 98v, 105r)] Residence of St. John (England). FORCER, John (alias MILDFORT). Priest. b. 20 December 1580 Eden, Durham (Rom. 54, f. 205r; Liber Ruber, I, 123; Responsa, I, 103-05); e. 30 October 1605 Rome (Rom. 169, f. 25r; Rom. 172, f. 94r); o. 25 December 1604 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 124); p. spiritual coadiutor 18 January 1618 (o.s.) London (Germ. 62, f. 78r); d. 4 September 1630 Durham (Angl. 7, f. 11Oy; Rist. Soc. 43, f. 135v; Rist. Soc. 45, f. 43r). 1605 novice, 1606 novice, Rome [257, 267]; [20 April 1608 sent to Belgium (Rist. Soc. 62, f. 72r)]; 1609/10, 1610, 1611, 1613 England [296,297,303,319]; 1621 , 1621122, 1623 Residence of St. Michael (York, England) [384, 392, 401]; 1624,1625,1626, [1628(Angl.13,f. 73v)], 1629 ResidenceofSt. John (Durham, England) [418,425,433 , 453]. FORD, Henry (alias DRAKE; vere GUILDFORD). Priest. b. c. 1603 Sussex (Liber Ruber, I, 201); e. 1625 (Liber Ruber, I, 202; Angl. 13, f. 83r); o. c. 1631 Liege; d. 4 February 1638 London (Angl. 7, f. 119v; Rist. Soc. 46, ff. 46y, 47r). 1625 novice, 1626 novice, Watten [425,426,433]; [1628 philosopher (Angl. 13, f. 83r), 1629 theologian, 1630 theologian, Liege [453, 460]; 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636 Rouse of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [481,490, 502, 516]. FORD, John. Brother b. 24 September 1592 Litchfield (Franc. 12, f. 9r) or 21 September 1593 (Franc. 12, f. 119r); e. 25 December 1614 Liege (Franc. 12, f. 9r) or 25 December 1615


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

175

(Franc. 12, f. 119r); p. 8 September 1629 Liege (Germ. 81, f. 224r); d. 4 February 1664 St. Omers (Hist. Soc. 48, f. 83r). 1615 novice, 1617 novice, 1618, 1621 , 1621122, 1622/23, 1623 Louvain [340, 353, 358, 359, 384, 392, 399, 400, 401]; 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 83v)], 1629 Liege [418, 425,433,453]; 1630, 1631 English College, St. Omers [460, 461,472]; 1632 socius to procurator, 1633 socius to procurator, 1634 socius to procurator, 1635 socius to procurator, 1636 socius to procurator, 1638 socius to procurator, 1639 socius to procurator [489, 500, 509, 515, 521 , 531, 535], [1641 socius to procurator, 1642 socius to procurator, 1645 socius to procurator, 1648 socius to procurator, 1649 socius to procurator (Franc. 23, ff. 15v, 28v, 37r, 46v, 73v; Franc. 12, ff. 119r, 180r)] Paris. FORSTER, Bartholomew. See DARCY, Bartholomew.

FORSTER, Charles. Priest. b. c. 1624 London (Angl. 14, f. l78v) or Hertford (Angl. 11, f. 48r); e. 7 September 1642 Watten (Angl. 11 , f. 48r); o. c. 1650 Liege?; p. spiritual coadiutor 23 November 1654 Stoakesley (Germ. 67, f. 264r); d. 2 July 1680 Ghent (Angl. 7, f.247v). [1642 novice, 1643 novice, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 47r, 56v)]; [1644 philosopher, 1645 philosopher, 1646 philosopher, 1647 theologian, 1648 theologian, 1649 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 66r, 74r, 84r, 92v, 100v, 107v)]. FORSTER, Francis. Priest. b. c. 1602 London (400); e. 26 November 1622 Liege (ibid.); o. c. 1627 Liege; p. four vows 8 December 1635 St. Omers (Germ. 9, ff. 118r, 123r); d. 29 September/9 October 1653 England (Angl. 7, f. 191 v; Rist. Soc. 48, f. 4Ir). 1622123 novice, 1623 novice, 1624 theologian, 1625 theologian, 1626 theologian, [1628 theologian (Angl. 13, f. 81r)] Liege [399, 400, 401, 418, 419, 425, 433]; 1629 socius, spiritual prefect, admonitor, Watten [453]; 1630 minister, Liege [460, 461]; 1631 spiritual prefect, confessor, socius, admonitor, prefect of the church, 1632 spiritual prefect, confessor, socius, admonitor, prefect of the church, Watten [472,473,481]; 1633 confessor, admonitor, director of sodalities, 1634 confessor, admonitor, English College, St. Omers [490,502]; 1636 confessor, spiritual prefect, 1638 confessor, spiritual prefect, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 204v)] Liege [516, 527]; [1641 rector, 1642 rector, master of novices, consultor to the provincial, 1643 rector, master of novices, consultor to the provincial, 1644 rector, consultor to the provincial, Watten (Angl. 11, ff. 38r, 46v, 56r, 66v)]; [1645 sent from France to English province (Franc. 23, f. 43r)]; [[1645 socius to the provincial, consultor, admonitor, rector of Watten, 1646 socius to the provincial, consultor, admonitor, 1647 socius to the provincial, consultor, admonitor, 1648 socius to the provincial, consultor, admonitor, 1649 socius to the provincial, consultor, admonitor (Angl. 11, ff. 70r, 79r, 88r, 96r, 103r)]. FORSTER, John. Priest. b. c. 1619 Hertfordshire (Angl. 13, f. 213r); e. 1638 Ghent; o. 15 April 1645 Liege (Angl. 11 , f. 76r); p. spiritual coadiutor 20 September 1648 (Angl. 11, f. 102r); d. 31 May 1693 England (Foley, Records, VIllI, 275).


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1638 novice, Ghent [527]; [1639 novice, Watten (AngI. 13, f. 213r)]; [1641 philosopher, 1642 theologian, 1643 theologian, 1644 casuist, Liege (Angl. 11, ff. 37v, 46r, 55r, 65v); [June 1645 sent from England to Flandro-Belgian province (FI. Belg. 45, f. 128r)]; [1645 socius to the procurator, 1646 socius to the procurator, Brussels (AngI. 11 , f. 85v; FI. Belg. 45, ff. 118v, 132v)]; [1647 tertian, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 93r)]; [1648 socius to the procurator, 1649 socius to the procurator, Brussels (AngI. 11, ff. 101 v, 108v; FI. Belg. 17, p. 25; FI. Belg. 45, ff. 155v, 166v)] . FORSTER, Robert. See DARCY, Robert.

FORSTER, Thomas (or Seth). Priest. b. c. 1588 York (AngI. 13, f. 6r); e. 1617 England (ibid.); o. 27 December 1614 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 157); p. four vows 27 March 1628 York (Germ. 6, ff. 517r, 524r); d. 2 March 1648 England (Hist. Soc. 47, f. 74r) or 21 March 1648 (AngI. 11, f. 102r). 1621 York (England) [384]; 1621 /22 Staffordshire (England) [392]; 1623, 1624, 1625,1626, [1628 (AngI. 13, f. 73r)] , 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638 [401,418,425,433,453,460,472,481,490,502,516, 527], [1639 (AngI. 13, f. 197r)], [1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 (AngI. 11, ff. 34v, 44r, 52v, 62v, 71 v)] Residence of St. Michael (York, England); [1646, 1647 Residence of St. Dominic (England) (AngI. 11, ff. 81v, 91v)]. FORSTER, Thomas. Brother. b. 1 April 1616 London (Rom. 60, f. 28v); e. 7 September 1646 Rome (Rom. 173, f. 73v; Rom. 169, f. 36v). [1650 English College, Rome (Rom. 81, f. 15v)]. FORSTER, William. See ANDERSON, William. FORTESCUE, Adrian. See TALBOT, Adrian.

FOUCART, Jean. Priest. d. 5 May 1608 Arras (Hist. Soc. 43, f. 129v). 1594 rector, 1596 rector, 1597 rector, 1598 rector, 1601 rector, English College, St. Omers [158, 170,181, 195,224]. FOULKES, Jerome. Priest. b. c. 1575 Northampton (AngI. 13, ff. 17r, 46v, 77r, 107r, 154r) or Warwick (AngI. 13, ff. 7r, 200v, 231 v, 272v); e. 1609 England (297); o. before 1609; p. four vows 12 May 1622 London (Germ. 6, ff. 242r, 249r); d. 31 October/9 November 1645 England (AngI. 11, f. 86r; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 34r). 1610, 1611, 1613 England [297, 303, 319]; 1621 Northampton (England) [384]; 1621122 Yorkshire (England) [392]; 1623, 1624 Northampton (England) [401, 418]; 1625, 1626 Residence of St. George (England) [425,433]; [1628 (AngI. 13,


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

177

f. 77r)], 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1636, 1638, [1639 (Angl. 13, f.

200v)] Residence of St. Mary (England) [453,460,472,481,490,502,516,527]; [1641 consultor, 1642 consultor, 1643 consultor, 1644 consultor, 1645 consultor, College of the Immaculate Conception (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 34r, 43v, 52r, 62r, 71 v)].

FOWLER, Francis. Priest. b. c. 1610 London (482); e. 1632 Watten; o. c. 1639 Belgium; p. four vows 25 January 1644 York (Gal. 6, ff. 593r, 594r); d. 25 March 1659 England (Ang!. 7, f. 199r; Hist. Soc. 48, f. 44r). 1632 novice, 1633 novice, Watten [481, 482, 490]; 1634 theologian, 1636 theologian, Liege [502,503, 516]; [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 214v)], [1641 procurator, consultor (Angl. 11, f. 39r)] Ghent; [1642 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 42v); [1643 Residence of St. John (England) (Angl. 11, f. 53r)]; [1644 Residence of St. Michael (England) (Angl. 11, f. 62v)] [1645 Residence of St. Mary (England) (Ang!. 11, f. 72v)]; [1646 House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 79r)]; [1647, 1648, 1649 College of the Holy Apostles (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 89v, 97v, 103v)]. FOWLER, Richard (vere DARELL). Priest. b. c. 1596 Scotney, Sussex (Liber Ruber, I, 169; Responsa, I, 266-67); e. 12 November 1616 Flanders (Liber Ruber, I, 169); o. c. 1620 Belgium; d. 10 November 1628 London (Angl. 7, f. 110r; Hist. Soc. 43, f. 159v). 1618 theologian, 1621 Louvain [358,359,384]; 1621/22 Northampton (England) [392]; 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 78v)] Residence of Blessed Stanislaus (Devon, England) [401 , 418,425, 433]. FRANCIS, William, See MUMFORD, William.

FREEMAN, John. Priest. b. c. 1607 Lincoln (Cast. 16/1, f. 44r); e. 13 April 1632 Spain (Valladolid, p. 143); o. between 1625 and 1632 Valladolid (Seminary Priests, II, 117); p. four vows 4 May 1642 (Cast. 16/11, f. 377v). [1633 novice, English College, Valladolid (Cast. 1611, f. 44r)]; [1636 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 16/1, f. 147r)]; [1639 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 1611, f. 231r)]; [1642,1645,1649 English College, Valladolid (Cast. 161TI, ff. 281 v, 414r, 415r)]. FREEMAN, Michael. Priest. b. c. 1578 Menthorpe, Yorkshire (Liber Ruber, 1,114-15; Responsa, 1,11-13); e. 21 April 1608 Louvain (367) or 13 July 1608 (SC, Anglia III, 98); o. 24 May 1603 Rome (Liber Ruber, I, 115); p. four vows 22 July 1621 St. Omers (Germ. 6, ff. 120r, 125r); d. 26 September 1642 Durham (Angl. 7, f. 143r; Angl. 11, f. 48v; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 47v). 1609/10 England [296]; 1610 consultor, 1611 consultor, prefect, 1613 consultor, professor of Scholastic Theology; 1614 professor of Sacred Scripture, Louvain


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[298,306,320,327]; 1615 professor of Sacred Scripture, Louvain and procurator, Brussels [339, 340]; 1617 minister, consultor, 1618 minister, consultor English College, St. Omers [354, 360]; 1619 Watten [367]; 1621 English College, St. Omers [384]; 1621122 admonitor, confessor, spiritual prefect, Louvain [392]; 1623, 1624 superior, York (England) [401, 418]; 1625 superior, 1626 superior, [1628 superior (Angl. 13, f. 72v)] Residence of St. Michael (England) [425,433]; 1629, 1630 substitute for the provincial, Ghent [453 , 460]; 1631 tertian instructor, consultor, admonitor, Ghent [472]; 1632 rector, 1633 rector, 1634 rector, 1636 rector, Ghent [481, 490, 502, 516]; 1638 superior, [527], [1639 superior (Angl. 13, f. 197v)], [1641 superior (Angl. 11, f. 34v)] Residence of St. John (England).

FREiRE, Pedro. Priest? d. late 1582-early 1583 Southampton. One of the Portuguese Jesuits imprisoned in Southampton in November, 1582. See Dias, Estevao. FREVILLE, John. Priest. b. c. 1604 Cambridge (Angl. 14, f. 115r); e. 23 June 1643 Watten (Angl. 11, f. 58r); o. c. 1650 Liege?; p. spiritual coadiutor 23 November 1654 St. Dominic's (Germ. 67, f. 265r); d. 18 December 1667 London (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 88r). [1643 novice, Watten (Angl. 11 , f. 56v)]; [1644 philosopher, 1645 philosopher, 1646 philosopher, 1647 theologian, 1648 theologian, 1649 theologian, Liege (Angl. 11 , ff. 66r, 74r, 84r, 92v, lOOv, lO7v)]. FREVILLE, Robert (vere JENISON).J o6 Priest. b. c. 1590 Durham (400); e. 1 September 1617 Liege (354); o. c. 1622 Belgium; p. four vows 15 October 1630 (o.s.) London (Germ. 8, ff. 133r, 140r); d. 10 October 1656 England (Angl. 7, f. 195r; Rist. Soc. 48, f. 122v). 1617 novice, Liege [354]; 1618 novice, 1621 theologian, 1621122 theologian, Louvain [359, 384, 392]; 1622/23 tertian, Ghent [399, 400]; 1623 socius to novice master, consultor, admonitor, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [401]; 1624 Hampshire (England) [418, 419]; 1625, 1626 master of novices, consultor, [1628 (Angl. 13, f. 66v)], 1629 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1630 confessor, spiritual prefect, admonitor, 1631 consultor, 1632 consultor to provincial, 1633 consultor to provincial, 1634 consultor to provincial, 1636 consultor to provincial, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) [424,425, 433,453,460,472,481,490,502,516]; 1638 socius to provincial, consultor to provincial, admonitor, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 187r)] provincial curia [527]; [1641 consultor to provincial, House of Probation of St. Ignatius (England) (Angl. 11, f. 32r)]; [1642, 1643 Residence of St. Thomas (England) (Angl. 11, ff. 45r, 54r)]; 1644 rector, 1645 rector, 1646 rector, consultor to provincial, Ghent (Angl. 11, f. 67r, 74r, 84v); [1649 consultor, ad monitor, 1649 consultor, admonitor, Residence of St. Thomas (England) (Angl. 11 , ff. 98v, lO5v)]. FULIGATTUS, Julius. Priest. d. 12 November 1653 Rome (Rist. Soc. 48, f. 68v).


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1595 confessor, consultor, English College, Rome [165].

FULWOOD, Richard. Scholastic. b. c. 1604 Lancashire (503); e. 1634 Watten; d. 19/27 September 1641 Liege (Angl. 7, f. 142r; Angl. 11, f. 41r; Hist. Soc. 46, f. 47v; Hist. Soc. 47, f. 62r). 1634 novice, Watten [502, 503]; 1636 philosopher, 1638 philosopher, [1639 (Angl. 13, f. 209r)] Liege [516, 527]. Notes l. See D. M. Rogers, 'John Abbot (1588- 71650),' Recusant History 1 (1951 ) 22-33; 'John Abbot: Further Notes on his Life and Writings,' ibid. 245-50. 2. See Thomas Abernethie, Abjuration of Poperie (Edinburgh, 1638) and Alasdair Roberts, 'Thomas Abernethy, Jesuit and Covenanter,' Records of the Scottish Church History Society 24 (1991) 141-60. 3. See AR Foreign, p. 87; Clancy, p. 111; Polgar, nUl, 139; Philip Caraman, SJ., 'An English Baronius,' The Month 263 (1982) 22-24. 4. For years Allen petitioned to work on the English mission but without success. See ARSI, Aquit. 1, f. 93r; Lugd. 1, ff. 24v, 31 v. 5. See AR, ##16, 17; AR Foreign, p. 6. 6. See AR, ##27, 28, 713.5; A. F. Allison, "Who Was John Brereley" The Identity of a Seventeenth-Century Controversialist,' Recusant History 16 (1983) 17-41 and 'Lawrence Anderton, SJ., A Postscript,' ibid., 316-18. 7. Robert seems to have been a troublesome fellow. Another document (Germ. Sup. 119) tells of a Robertus Anglus and his consistent violations of the Society's Institute. He met with Mannaerts on the latter's official visitation in 1582 and was dismissed. Someone presumably re-considered and allowed Robert to remain for another decade (pp. 2, 30-31). He later became a familiar figure in volumes regarding the fate of those who left the Society. See Fondo Gesuitico 685. 8. Regarding his dismissal and subsequent attempt to rejoin, See ARSI, Rom. 14, f. 61 v; Lugd. 1, f. 227r. 9. See Clancy, p. 9l. 10. We know very little about Ashley. He returned to England in March of 1598 and was almost immediately assigned by Henry Gamet to work with Edward Oldcorne. His name appears in no catalogue. 1l. Polgar, 11112, 123; Clancy, p. 113. 12. See AR Foreign, p. 7. 13. Babthorpe arrived in Madrid in late 1636 or early 1637. See ARSI, Tolet. 10, ff. 167v-168r, 218r. 14. Polgar, III, 2, 414. 15. Barton had petitioned to join the Society in early 1639. The delay between petition and admission seems to have been caused by some concern regarding his fitness for the Society. See ARSI, Baet. 6/1, ff. 266v-67r, 295v, 3] 8r, 321r. For his interview before admission, see Rom. 171 , pp. 205-06. 16. See Clancy, p. Ill; Clancy, 'Priestly Perseverance,' 294. See also ARSI, Angl. 7, f. 204r for the full story of his flight. 17. Apparently Batson's dismissal resulted from his involvement in politics. See Hicks, Letters of Persons, pp.lxv, 220, 224; ARSI, Fl. Belg. 1, pp. 294, 303,


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370; Germ. 166, ft. 182r-183r, 186r, 301-304v; Germ. 167, ft. 106r, 312r, 366r-367r; Rom. 13, ft. 304v, 318v. 18. See AR, #184.5. 19. Bedford stopped in Loreto in December, 1611 as he travelled from Rome to St. Omers. See SC, Anglia III, 106. 20. In late 1611 or early 1612 Bedford travelled to Poland. An account of his journey can be found in SC, Anglia III, 110. 2l. Belost spent his early years in the Society (1561-65) in Louvain where he received young Englishmen who aspired to the priesthood and to the Society. See ARSI, Germ. 143, ft. 7,89; Germ. 144, ft. 10, 12; Germ 145, f. 270; Germ. 146, f. 50. 22. See ARSI, Franc. 1, f. 301 for the general's response to Bennet's petition to join the Society. 23. Bennet was in Genoa when he received his instructions to proceed to Ponta-Musson to meet with William Sutton (Franc. 1, f. 345). Their journey resulted in their death. 24. Bentley asked to be relieved of his responsibilities on the English mission because of the dangers involved. The general understood the problem and summoned Bentley to Rome, presumably to work at the English College. Bentley stopped at Prague and, apparently, was impressed with the Jesuits there. The general then allowed Bentley to decide whether he would remain in Prague or continue on to Rome. See ARSI, Angl. 1, f. 429v; Boh. 2, pp. 79, 88. 25. Bevan was dismissed because of a number of crimes that he had committed at the English College in Liege. The extant letters to and from the general do not specify the nature of the crimes but they are described as such that would make him liable for prison or the galleys (ARSI, Angl. 2, ft. 223r, 226v). 26. Foley does not give the source for this date. Bickley sought admission in a letter to the general of 12 July 1592 (See Fondo Gesuitico 651/607). Should his entrance be dated sometime in that year? 27. By January, 1605 Blackfan was in St. Omers (See Fondo Gesuitico 644/62). 28. In 1610 Blackfan was at the English College, yalladolid and petitioning to be sent on the English mission. See ARSI, Cast. 7, f. 370v. 29. Blackfan was vice-prefect in Spain and working'out of the English College in Valladolid from, at least, December, 1616 to January l62l. See ARSI, Cast. 8, ft. 133r, 139v, 185r, 214v, 234r, 242v, 282r, 324r. ' 30. See 'Father Richard Blount and Scotney Castle' in The Troubles of Our Catholic Forefathers Related by Themselves, edited by John Morris, First Series (London, 1872) 187-215. . 3l. Apparently Blount was the first priest permitted to do his novitiate in England. See ARSI, Tolet. 5, f. 383v. 32. In December, 1638 Bluet was in Malaga where he prepared to return to the English province. By 1640 Bluet was in Brussels. See ARSI, Baet 61I, f. 237v.; Hisp. 70, f. 417r. 33. See Polgar, lIllI, 326; Paul Skwarczynski, 'Elsinore 1580: John Rogers and James Bosgrave,' Recusant History 16 (1982) 1-16. 34. Between 1574 and his departure for England in 1580, Bosgrave seems to have been restless. He was in Pultusk in 1575 and writing to the general, seeking


BroGRAPHlCAL

SUMMARY

181

reassignment either in Rome, Louvain, or Vienna. He was sent to Vilnius in late 1576. The possibility of his being sent to Sweden was discussed in 1578. See ARSI, Germ. 137, ff. 50,401; Germ. 155, f. 131; Germ. 156. f. 336. 35. Regarding his departure for England and his return, see ARSI, Germ. 158, f. 117; Germ. 164, ff. 301r-v; Opp. NN. 339, ff. 134r-v. 36. See Clancy, p. 137. 37. See AR Foreign, p. 7; Polgar, III/1, l77. 38. The date is an approximation: he died shortly after his ordination but before his first Mass. 39. See Edouard R. Hambye, S.I., 'Le P. Fran~ois Bray (1584-1624): Un irlandais aux origines de la mission navale des jesuites belges,' AHSI 15 (1946) 144-54. 40. Shortly before his death, Braye landed in England, much to the dismay of the English provincial, Richard Blount, who asked the general to instruct the Belgian provincials to prevent this from happening again. During this brief stay in England, he met with the Duke of Buckingham to discuss naval security and Irish affairs. See ARSI, Angl. 1, f. 202; Fl. Belg. 4, pp. 547, 581-82; Fl. Belg. 70/1, p. 401. 41. He later became a Puritan and was often discussed in volumes regarding the fate of former Jesuits. See Fondo Gesuitico 685. 42. See Mario Colpo, SJ, 'Paschase Broet, c. 1500-1562,' AHSI 59 (1990) 239-56. 43 . In early 1636 Bromfield requested to be sent back to Flanders for reasons of health. In December, the general told him to stay in Valladolid. Whether Bromfield then left the Society or died, we do not know. See ARSI, Cast. 10, ff. 231 v, 256. 44. For a personal account of his vocation, See Fondo Gesuitico MSS 2, III, ff. 71-72. 45 . He was still in Braniewo in November, 1577 when he wrote to the general CARSI, Pol. 80, ff. 69r-70v). 46. See Henry Chadwick, 'Father Braye Jesuyte,' Recusant History 1 (1951) 125-27. 47. See AR, #128. 48. Is this Thomas Burton? 49. See Fondo Gesuitico 683/1/9; AR, #116; AR Foreign, pp. 23-31; Polgar, lIllI, 420-23; Clancy, p. 16; Thomas M. McCoog, SJ., 'Campion's Plea for a Disputation,' The Month 2nd n.s. 14 (1981) 414-417; Marion Colthrope, 'Edmund Campion's Alleged Interview with Queen Elizabeth in 1581,' Recusant History 17 (1985) 197-200; Jerzy Mirewicz, SJ., 'Dramat, kt6rego Szekspir nie napisal. Edmund Campion, 1540-15 81,' in Obroncy i sludzy Europy (Krak6w, 1987) 87-93. 50. See AR Foreign, p. 183. 51. Letters from Campion to his superiors about his admission into the Society can be found in SC, Anglia III, 128, 129, 103; Anglia IV, 3. 52. See Clancy, p. 105. 53. In 1613 Canderel asked to be sent to the English mission. The general promised to discuss the request with the prefect. See ARSI, Tolet. 7, f. 125r.


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54. In 1617 Cerronio had asked the general's permission to accompany an unnamed duke to England. The general refused but Cerronio had already departed. In the subsequent controversy, Cerronio was so reprimanded that it was feared for a time that he had fled the Society and was headed to England (as an apostate?). He returned to his province and died in the Society. See ARSI, Med. 23, ff. 490r, 504v, 587v; Med. 24, ff. 7r, 126r, 129r, 139r, 150r, 154r, 155v, 156v, 158v, 160r, 163v-164r, 169r; Fl. Belg. 3, pp. 410, 527, 535, 538; Gall. Belg. 1, pp. 351,488; Hist. Soc. 141, ff. 261-67. He arrived in England sometime during the summer of 1617 and achieved some fame for his tale of a conspiracy between Spain and France to assassinate King James and Prince Charles. In a letter dated 11 October 16l7, John Chamberlain wrote 'The Jesuit that came from Milan is sent away without seeing the King, who gave order that the Lord Archbishop and Master Secretary Winwood should hear what he could say. They dealt with him by all manner of good means, and drew from him as he protested the uttermost of his knowledge, which was not all worth the whistling, being certain strange chimeras and farfetched imaginations of plots and dangers not worth the knowing, much less the relating. Whereupon it was thought good to dispatch him away, the rather for that he grew scandalously debauched with boys and otherwise.' See Elizabeth McClure Thomson, The Chamberlain Letters (n.p. [New York?], 1966) pp. 187-88. 55. See AR, #131. 56. In 1591 Chambers was pursuing a degree at the University of Wtirzburg. See Merkle, Wiirzburg, I, 26. 57. The general approved his request to go to England on 24 June 1608. See ARSI Lugd. 2, f. 221r. 58. See AR, #137. 59. See Fondo Gesuitico 683/1/26; Polgar, nU2, 560-61. 60. See AR, ##142, 143, 144, 145, 146; AR Foreign, p. 38. 6l. He had first asked to be sent to England in July, 1595 but was not sent for two years. He finally arrived sometime before 11 July 1597, the date of his first extant letter to the general. After three years in the mission, he was able to return to the safety of the continent for a short break in 1600. See ARSI, Angl. 37, f. 62r; Fondo Gesuitico 651/614. 62. See Clancy, pp. 117-18. 63. There are a number of inconsistencies in the entries for this man. See 264, 305, 367. 64. See Fondo Gesuitico 683/1/14; Polgar, IIU1, 518. 65. See AR, ##157, 158, 159. 66. See Polgar, nUl, 523 . 67. See Polgar, nUl, 528. 68. See AR Foreign, p. 99; Clancy, p. 118. 69. Crathorne could not adapt to the climate in Seville. By the early spring of 1628 he was complaining about his health. By August, he was in Liege (See ARSI, Baet. 5/1, ff. 292, 294v). 70. See AR, ##163.3, 163.5, 892; AR Foreign, pp. 4~3; Polgar, In/1 , 531-32; A. F. Allison, 'A Group of Political Tracts, 1621- 1623, by Richard Verstegan,' Recusant History 18 (1986) 128-42.


BIOGRAPHlCAL SUMMARY

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7l. See Polgar, IIU1, 53l. 72. Cudner had departed for India on 14 March on the ship S. Greg6rio. See Josef Wicki, SJ., 'Liste der Jesuiten Indienfahrer 1541-l758' in Aufsatze zur Portugiesischen Kulturgeschichte (1967) 275. 73. Darcy (alias Wilson) stopped at Loreto on his way from Rome to Louvain in December, 161l. See SC, Anglia 111, 106. 74. Is this the same John Davis discussed in Seminary Priests, II, 82? 75 . See AR, ##344, 479. 76. Dawson was ordained by 21 August 1603 on which date he wrote to Thomas Owen about a proposed trip to England to see his family and to take care of some business. Apparently he was preparing to join the Society. Unfortunately he was arrested shortly after his arrival and remained in prison until his exile in 1606. See SC, Anglia 111, 35; Foley, Records, VIUl, 196. 77. See Fondo Gesuitico 685; Polgar, lillI, 558-62; Peter Milward, Religious Controversies of the Jacobean Age: A Survey of Printed Sources (London, 1978) pp. 187-94; Malcolm Noel, De Dominis (1560-1624): Venetian, Anglican, Ecumenist and Relapsed Heretic (London, 1984); Enrico de Mas, '11 'De Radiis Visus et Lucis'. Un trattato scientifico pubblicato a Venezia nel1611 dallo stesso editore del 'Sidereus Nuncius" in Novita celesti e crisi del sapere. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi galileiani (Firenze, 1983) 159-66; Josip Mihojevic, 'Pismo Marka Antuna Dorninisa Splocanina,' Marulic 16 (1983) 125-40. 78. There seems to be some confusion about the nationality of this man. Some catalogues clearly identify him as an Englishman from Sandwich; in others, he is Belgian. 79. Two undated papers (estimated to be from 1601) tell of a John Baptista, a former Jesuit, and now a priest in Belgium. Apparently he abandoned the habit (apostatized?) because he was displeased with the proceedings against the Queen. See PRO, SP 15/34/39, 4l. 80. It seems that Docking wanted to join the Carthusians! I can not explain why he remains in the catalogues for three years after his dismissal. 81 . He returned to England and was interrogated at Plymouth by the mayor on 2 November 1633. He was then sent to the county gaol. See Murphy, St. Gregory's College, Seville, p. 110; Foley, Records, VII, 403; PRO, SP 16/250/19, 19i. 82. Eaton had applied for the Society in 1586 and had been accepted that year. It is not known why he postponed entrance for two years. See ARSI, Gall. 92, f. 14; Franc. 1, f. 266. 83 . In 1590 Eaton was pursuing a masters of arts degree at the University of Wtirzburg. See Merkle, Wiirzburg, I, 20. 84. See AR, ##495, 496, 497. 85. Eustace had entered the Society in Rome but was sent to Watten in October, 1628. See ARSI, Angl. 1, ff. 282v, 293r. 86. See AR, ##32, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259; Polgar, lIllI, 635. 87. He later joined the Augustinians at Antwerp (Seminary Priests, II, 97; Valladolid, p. 56).


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88. He was captured on Christmas Day 1613 and was still in prison in September of the following year (ARSI, Angi. 37, ff. 132v, 133v). 89. See AR, ##263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268. 90. See AR Foreign, pp. 60-62. 91. Felton served briefly as the procurator in Madrid in 1636. See ARSI, Tolet. 10, f. 166v. 92. See AR, ##595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603; Timothy H. Wadkins, 'King James Meets John Percy, SJ. (25 May, 1622),' Recusant History 19 (1988) 146- 54; The Percy 'Fisher' Controversies and the Ecclesiastical Politics of Jacobean Anti-Catholicism, 1622-1625,' Church History 57 (1988) 153-69. 93. See Polgar, lIllI, 663. 94. See AR, ##278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288; AR Foreign, p. 70; Polgar, lIllI, 664. 95. See AR, ##289, 290; AR Foreign, pp. 70-71; Polgar, lIllI, 664; Richard Sharpe, 'The Origin and Elaboration of the 'Catalogus praecipuorum sanctorum Hiberniae' attributed to Fr. Henry Fitzsimon, SJ.,' Bodleian Library Record 13 (1989) 202-30. 96. Did he leave the Society to rejoin a few years later? ARSI, FI. Belg. 80, f. 42 gives his entrance date as 3 December 1591. 97. Fletcher was sent to England in September, 1612 (Liber Ruber, I, 154). 98. By August 1615, Floyd was offering his services to the English government. He claimed that he had grown weary of the Society of Jesus because it tended more to politics than to religion. In his examination, he explained that he could serve England by working for the recall of the Jesuits and by declaring false all reports of persecution in the kingdom. See PRO, SP 14/81/59ii, 60, 61, 70. In the register of the general's letters there is a curious entry dated 20 June 1620: a letter to a Griffin Floyd in Paris. Floyd had petitioned the general that he be granted a doctorate for his studies at Pont-a-Mousson. There is no mention of the man's status. Indeed, he may not even be the same man. The general, however, admonished him that it was better to be known by the quality of one's life and not by worldly honors. See ARSI, Franc. 4, f. 33v. 99. Floyd was in Loreto in December, 1611. See SC, Anglia III, 106. 100. See AR, ##292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304,305,306,307; AR Foreign, pp. 71-74; Antony F. Allison, 'Richard Smith's Gallican Backers and Jesuit Opponents,' Recusant History 18 (1987) 329-401; 19 (1989) 234-85; 20 (1990) 164-206. 101. See AR Foreign, p. l77. 102. See AR Foreign, p. 75. 103. Forcer was in Cadiz from 1610 until, at least, 1615. See ARSI, Baet. 4/1, ff. 15v-16r, 115r, 151r; Baet. 4/11, f. 88r. 104. Forcer left Madrid for Flanders around November, 1626 (See ARSI, Tolet. 8, f. 418v). 105. In July, 1635 Forcer was back in Madrid briefly as a temporary procurator. See ARSI, Tolet. 10, f. 101. 106. See Ann M. C. Forster, 'A Durham Family: Jenisons of Walworth,' Recusant History 3 (1955) 2-15.


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