Difference between revisions of "William Bridge 1600/01-1671"
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====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== | ||
− | Born in [[place of birth::Cambridgeshire]]. BA [[education::Emmanuel College, Cambridge]] 1623, MA and [[occupation::fellow]] 1626. Lectured at several [[location::East Anglia|East Anglian]] parishes before becoming [[occupation::curate]] at [[location:St George Tombland, Norwich]]; his puritan views and nonconformity led to his deprivation by [[associates::Bishop Wren]] in 1636, and he moved to [[location::Rotterdam]] to be a [[occupation::pastor]] there. He returned to [[location::England]] in 1641, preaching and writing in [[location::London]], and appointed [[occupation::town preacher]] at [[location::Great Yarmouth]], and a member of the [[organisations::Westminster Assembly]], in 1642. He was a prominent [[occupation::preacher]], and active in ecclesiastical politics, throughout the 1640s and 50s but was ejected in 1661, spending time ministering to various independent congregations in [[location::London]] and [[location::Surrey]] before returning to [[location::Yarmouth]] in 1667. Arrested and tried for encouraging nonconformity, he retired to [[location::Clapham]] where he died. Numerous sermons and tracts were published throughout his life, and posthumously. | + | Born in [[place of birth::Cambridgeshire]]. BA [[education::Emmanuel College, Cambridge]] 1623, MA and [[occupation::fellow]] 1626. Lectured at several [[location::East Anglia|East Anglian]] parishes before becoming [[occupation::curate]] at [[location::St George Tombland, Norwich]]; his puritan views and nonconformity led to his deprivation by [[associates::Bishop Wren]] in 1636, and he moved to [[location::Rotterdam]] to be a [[occupation::pastor]] there. He returned to [[location::England]] in 1641, preaching and writing in [[location::London]], and appointed [[occupation::town preacher]] at [[location::Great Yarmouth]], and a member of the [[organisations::Westminster Assembly]], in 1642. He was a prominent [[occupation::preacher]], and active in ecclesiastical politics, throughout the 1640s and 50s but was ejected in 1661, spending time ministering to various independent congregations in [[location::London]] and [[location::Surrey]] before returning to [[location::Yarmouth]] in 1667. Arrested and tried for encouraging nonconformity, he retired to [[location::Clapham]] where he died. Numerous sermons and tracts were published throughout his life, and posthumously. |
====Books==== | ====Books==== |
Latest revision as of 22:14, 21 May 2021
William BRIDGE 1600/01-1671
Biographical Note
Born in Cambridgeshire. BA Emmanuel College, Cambridge 1623, MA and fellow 1626. Lectured at several East Anglian parishes before becoming curate at St George Tombland, Norwich; his puritan views and nonconformity led to his deprivation by Bishop Wren in 1636, and he moved to Rotterdam to be a pastor there. He returned to England in 1641, preaching and writing in London, and appointed town preacher at Great Yarmouth, and a member of the Westminster Assembly, in 1642. He was a prominent preacher, and active in ecclesiastical politics, throughout the 1640s and 50s but was ejected in 1661, spending time ministering to various independent congregations in London and Surrey before returning to Yarmouth in 1667. Arrested and tried for encouraging nonconformity, he retired to Clapham where he died. Numerous sermons and tracts were published throughout his life, and posthumously.
Books
In his will, Bridge bequeathed his "whole library of books, except such written papers as my executor with the advice of Mr Greenhill or others shall think fit to be printed", to his son Samuel (vicar of Wivenhoe, Essex, d.1695). The size of his library is not known.
Characteristic Markings
None of Bridge's books have been identified.
Sources
- Greaves, Richard L. "Bridge, William (1600/01–1671), Independent minister." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Matthews, A. G. Calamy revised. Oxford, 1934.