Samuel Harsnett Explained

Samuel Harsnett
Archbishop Of:Archbishop of York
Province:Province of York
Diocese:Diocese of York
Enthroned:1629
Ended:1631
Predecessor:George Montaigne
Successor:Richard Neile
Ordination:1583[1]
Other Post:Bishop of Chichester (1609–1619)
Bishop of Norwich (1619–1628)
Birth Name:Samuel Halsnoth
Birth Date:June 1561
Birth Place:Colchester, Essex
Death Date:25 May 1631
Death Place:Moreton-in-Marsh, Gloucestershire
Buried:St Mary's Church, Chigwell
Nationality:British
Religion:Anglicanism
Parents:William & Agnes Halsnoth
Spouse:Thomasine Harsnett
Children:Thomasine Harsnett
Alma Mater:Pembroke College, Cambridge

Samuel Harsnett (or Harsnet) (June 1561 – May 1631), born Samuel Halsnoth, was an English writer on religion and Archbishop of York from 1629.

Early life

Born in St Botolph's parish, Colchester, Essex,[2] the son of William Halsnoth, a baker, and his wife Agnes,[3] Harsnett was probably educated at Colchester's free school, now Colchester Royal Grammar School.[1] After leaving school, he entered King's College, Cambridge as a sizar on 8 September 1576[1] and removed into Pembroke Hall[4] where he gained a BA in 1580/1 and was elected a Fellow on 27 November 1583.[1] In 1583 he was ordained into the Church of England,[1] where he was soon disciplined by Archbishop Whitgift for preaching against predestination at St Paul's Cross on 27 October 1584.[1] As David Hughson notes, "he was one of those divines who opposed the decrees of the synod of Dort and he wrote a very learned treatise against absolute predestination".[2] In 1584 he proceeded Master of Arts by seniority.[1]

Academic career

In March 1587 Harsnett became headmaster of Colchester Royal Grammar School.[4] In recognition of his achievements, the school has had, since 1908, a school house bearing his name.[5] Preferring his studies at Cambridge University to the position, he resigned his office in November 1588, disliking the "painful trade of teaching",[1] and returned to Pembroke Hall where he studied divinity, gaining his BD c.1590.[1]

He re-entered himself into Pembroke Hall,[2] where he was first a fellow and was elected master on 1 November 1605, remaining in that position until 1616, when he resigned because accusations totalling fifty-seven articles were made against him,[4] by the Fellows of Pembroke to King James I.[1] He was also Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University for the years 1606, the same year he gained his Doctor of Divinity degree,[1] and 1614.[1]

Ministerial career

In 1592 he served the office of Junior Proctor[1] and five years later became chaplain to Richard Bancroft,[4] then Bishop of London and shortly to become Archbishop of Canterbury by whose favour he quickly rose through the ranks. On the authority of Bancroft, he obtained the rectory of St Margaret, New Fish Street, London which he resigned in 1604 and the vicarage of Chigwell in Essex on 14 June 1597[1] which he resigned in 1605.[4] Whilst at Chigwell, his wife, Thomazine, died in 1601, having given birth in 1600 to a short-lived daughter.[3] Even after 1605 he continued to reside at Chigwell, where he had purchased a house and estate. In 1619 he purchased land in the parish on which he founded both a Latin school (which survives as Chigwell School) and an English school in 1629.[3]

In 1598 he was promoted, becoming the prebendary of Mapesbury on 5 August[1] and on 17 January 1602 the archdeacon of Essex[1] – both posts chosen for him by Bishop Bancroft. On 16 April 1604 Sir Thomas Lucas of Colchester, father of Charles Lucas, installed him in the rectory of Shenfield, Essex.[4]

Having been Bishop of Chichester since 13 November 1609,[1] on 8 August 1619, he became Bishop of Norwich, resigning the living of Stisted he had held since 1609.[1] He spent most of his time when absent from his city at the bishop's palace in Ludham, which he rebuilt after a fire and consecrated a chapel for divine worship.[6] In May 1624 he was charged before Parliament with high-handedness by the citizens of Norwich and in that same year he also persecuted the Puritans in Great Yarmouth, leading to a complaint by them to King Charles I in 1627.[1]

On 26 November 1628, he was elected Archbishop of York, and on 10 November 1629 he was sworn a Privy Councillor.[1]

Death and commemoration

Towards the end of his life he fell ill, signing his will on 13 February 1631, to which he signed a codicil on 18 May, and taking the waters at Bath in April of that year.[1] He died at Moreton-in-Marsh while returning from Bath on 25 May 1631 and his body took ten days to return to Chigwell.[1] He was buried at St Mary's Church, Chigwell alongside his wife and daughter, both named Thomasine who had both died in 1601. A memorial brass of Harsnett can be found in St Mary's Church, Chigwell, although it has been moved from its original position over his grave. The image on the brass is believed to be a true representation of him and he most likely sat for it shortly before his death. It has been suggested that it is of Flemish origin but, because of the similarities it bears to the brass of Edward Filmer in St Peter's and St Paul's Church, East Sutton, Kent, it is now believed to be by Edward Marshall. His epitaph on the brass reads:[1]

Hic iacet Samuell Harsnett quondam vicarius huius ecclesiæ primo indignus episcopus Cicestrensis deindignior Norwicencis demum indignissim' archiepiscop' Eboraceñ qui obiit XXV die maii anno dñi: 1631
Here lies Samuel Harsnett once vicar of this church, first unworthy bishop of Chichester, then more unworthy bishop of Norwich, finally most unworthy archbishop of York; he died on the 25th day in May in the year of our Lord 1631.
There are two changes from the inscription he requested in his will – his name is spelt as "Samuell", not "Samuel" and "deindignior" should have been "dein indignior".[1]

In his home town of Colchester he is commemorated by a statue on the town hall[7] and a stained-glass window in St Botolph's Church.

His collection of books was bequeathed to the borough of Colchester for the use of local clergy. Harsnett's library now comprises 839 volumes with 20 incunabula and is in the Albert Sloman Library of the University of Essex.[8] [9]

Religious views

Harsnett is noted for his sceptical attitude towards demons and witchcraft. As the chaplain to Bishop Bancroft, Harsnett was commissioned to write a treatise condemning the 1590s exorcisms of John Darrell, having sat on the 1598 commissions which investigated his activities.[1] Darrell, curate at St Mary's Church, Nottingham was a puritan minister who performed a series of public exorcisms in the English Midlands. Eventually, the exorcisms caused such a disturbance that they attracted the attention of Anglican authorities in London. Harsnett's A Discovery of the Fraudulent Practises of John Darrel (1599)[10] was a polemical piece intended to discredit Darrell's puritan agenda. It was drafted as a piece of political propaganda, but it also genuinely questioned the belief in demons. In this way, Harsnett sought natural explanations for supposedly supernatural phenomena.

In 1603, he wrote another book, A Declaration of Egregious Popish Impostures, published by order of the Privy Council,[1] which condemned exorcisms performed by Roman Catholic priests in the 1580s. Shakespeare used this book as a source, pulling words and phrases when writing the play King Lear, mainly spoken by Edgar while he feigns madness, and John Milton is said to have been influenced by it when writing L'Allegro.

As a member of England's religious authority, Harsnett's sceptical attitudes, divided equally between puritanism and popery,[4] set important precedents for English policy. For example, by coming close "to denying the reality of witchcraft" he may have contributed to the relative lack of witch hunts in England, compared to other countries.[11]

Harsnett was a strident anti-Calvinist. The extent of his Arminian theology has been discussed by historians.

Writings

Harsnett is known to have written eight works, which are as follows:

Notes and references

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Stott, Godfrey. A History of Chigwell School . 170–7. 1960. W. S. Cowell Limited.
  2. Book: Hughson, David. London, Being an Accurate History and Description . 293–4. 1809. W. Stratford. William . Stratford. J. . Stratford.
  3. Web site: Brass of the Month: Chigwell, Essex . 30 December 2008 . The Monumental Brass Society. 31 October 2006.
  4. Book: Chalmers, Alexander. The General Biographical Dictionary. J. Nichols. 1814. 188–9.
  5. Book: Martin, Geoffrey Haward. Geoffrey Martin (historian). The History of Colchester Royal Grammar School, 1539–1947. 1947. Borough of Colchester.
  6. Book: The Beauties of England and Wales, Or, Delineations, Topographical, Historical, and Descriptive, of Each County. John. Britton. Edward. Wedlake Brayley. Joseph. Nightingale. James. Norris Brewer. John. Evans. John. Hodgson. John. Harris. Francis Charles. Laird. Frederic. Shoberl. John. Bigland. Thomas. Rees. Thomas. Hood. Thomas Maiden. 1810. 31.
  7. Web site: Virtual Tour of Colchester . 14 January 2008 . 22 January 2005.
  8. Web site: Galligan . Francesca . The Library of Archbishop Samuel Harsnett: A Report . University of Essex . 1 May 2024.
  9. Web site: Wyvern : News : November 2003 . 17 December 2010 . University of Essex . 5 January 2002 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120331093115/http://www.essex.ac.uk/wyvern/Archive/2003-11/news.htm . 31 March 2012.
  10. Book: Lake. Peter. Questier. Michael. Conformity and Orthodoxy in the English Church, c1560-1660. 2000. Boydell Press. Woodbridge. 978-0851157979. 48. 1st.
  11. Book: Witchcraft and Magic in Europe: The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Marijke. Gijswijt-Hofstra. Brian P.. Levack. Roy. Porter. Bengt. Ankarloo. Continuum International. 1999. 978-0-485-89005-1. 34, 55.