Thomas Preston (monk) explained

Thomas Preston (15633 April 1640?)[1] was an English Benedictine monk serving as one of the leaders of the mission to re-establish the Benedictine Order in England after the closure of monasteries during the 16th century. He is also remembered for his writings upholding the cause of James I of England in the allegiance oath controversy.

Life

Born in Shropshire, Preston studied in the English College, Rome, where he was taught by Gabriel Vasquez.[2] [3] He joined the Benedictine Order at Monte Cassino in 1590.[4] Following the decree granted by the Inquisition and confirmed by Clement VIII in 1602 for a mission to the Benedictines in England, Preston and Anselm Beech were sent to England in the spring of 1603.[5] They landed at Great Yarmouth and made contact with Sigebert Buckley, last survivor of the monks of St. Peter, Westminster, who had recently been released from imprisonment in Framlingham.[6] They lived with Buckley, who by letters of 1607 and 1609[7] granted and confirmed to them authority to admit brethren to membership of the monastery and Congregation of which he had been the only surviving representative. To Preston, already the superior of the English of the Congregation of Monte Cassino, he entrusted the care of the English Congregation.[8] Buckley died in 1610.[9] Meanwhile, Preston had been indicted as a priest, and was soon afterwards imprisoned.[10]

Expelled from England three years later, he took part at Rheims in the negotiations for the union of the English monks of Monte Cassino, Valladolid, and the old English Congregation.[11] He returned to England and was again imprisoned, first in The Clink in Southwark, and later in Croydon Palace of the Archbishop of Canterbury.[10]

Preston passed much of the rest of his life in prison. He died in The Clink prison, 5 April 1640. In one prison or another he wrote, under the assumed name of Widdrington, several works treating of the oath of allegiance.[12] Preston "evermore disowned" the books written under the name of Widdrington,[13] but there is no doubt that he was the author of them.[14] Towards the end of his life, however, he seems to have altered his views, or at any rate to have made full submission on the question of the oath to the authorities of Rome.[10] [15]

Works

Preston took the pen name of Roger Widdrington for his controversial writings, concealing his own authorship, and using the real name of a Roman Catholic squire in Northumberland,[16] a Bailiff of Hexham who was associated with the recusant Radcliffe family and the conspirator Thomas Percy.[17] These publications upheld the oath of allegiance to King James I which the King himself was proposing (Preston being one of the group of Benedictines and secular priests who were apologists for it), against the opposing policy of the Jesuits.[10] The 1611 Apologia was given a false imprimatur although in fact being published in London by government order: it is possible that the real Widdrington was complicit in the use of his name, though it was quickly recognised that he was unlikely to be the true author.[18]

Among his works are:

Schulckenius was Adolf Schulcken, a Dutch theologian and supporter of Robert Bellarmine, thought at the time by many opponents to be pseudonymous.[20]

See also

Notes and References

  1. The biography by Anselm Cramer gives the life-dates as 1567–1647, and shows that Preston's birth name was Roland, 'Thomas' being his name in religion. See Anselm Cramer, 'Preston, Roland (1567–1647)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, 2004).
  2. Widdrington, Roger.
  3. Bennet Weldon, Chronological Notes containing the Rise, Growth and Present State of the English Congregation of the Order of St Benedict (Stanbrook, 1881), p. 40 (Archive).
  4. (Augustine Baker), ed. Clement Reyner, 'Prima monachorum Anglorum in congregationem Cassinensem admissio, et difficultates inde exortae', Apostolatus Benedictinorum in Anglia (Laurentius Kellamus, Douai 1626), Tractatus 1, p. 242-44. (Bayerische StaatsBibliothek digital) (in Latin)
  5. Ethelred L. Taunton, The English Black Monks of St Benedict. A sketch of their history from the coming of St Augustine to the present day, 2 Vols (John C. Nimmo, London 1897), II, pp. 22–24. (Augustine Baker), ed. Clement Reyner, 'Quae fuerit vero occasio instaurandi antiquam congregationem Benedictinorum in Anglia', Apostolatus Benedictinorum in Anglia (1626), Tractatus 2, pp. 16 ff. (Bayerische StaatsBibliothek digital) (in Latin)
  6. Anthony Marett-Crosby, 'Buckley, Robert (1516/17–1610)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004).
  7. Taunton, The English Black Monks of St Benedict, II, pp. 80–83.
  8. H.Connolly, 'The Buckley Affair', in Downside Review 30 (1931) 49–74. J. Stevens, 'The Revival of the English Congregation of Benedictin Monks after the Suppression of the Religious Orders in England' in The History of the Antient Abbeys, Monasteries, Hospitals, Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, being two additional volumes to Sir William Dugdale's Monasticon Anglicanum (London 1722), I, pp. 181–84, at p. 182 (Google books).
  9. Weldon, Chronological Notes, pp. 46, 76.
  10. Thomas Preston.
  11. Weldon, Chronological Notes, pp. 94–95: Taunton, The English Black Monks of St Benedict, II, pp. 85–87.
  12. The terms of the oath are given by Taunton, The English Black Monks of St Benedict, II, pp. 103–04, note 2.
  13. Weldon, Chronological Notes, p. 180; (Augustine Baker), ed. Clement Reyner, 'Verus et legitimus status contoversiae in hoc secundo tractatu disceptandae', Apostolatus Benedictinorum in Anglia, Tractatus 2, pp. 24–25. (Bayerische StaatsBibliothek digital) (in Latin)
  14. Doubt over the identification is mentioned by E.L. Taunton, The English Black Monks of St Benedict, II, p. 108 (Archive).
  15. Weldon says 'he maintained a bad cause too well, which upon better considerations he afterwards detested', Chronological Notes, p. 40.
  16. Maurus Lunn, "The Anglo-Gallicanism of Dom Thomas Preston, 1567–1647", in D. Baker (ed.), Schism, Heresy and Religious Protest, Papers read at the tenth summer meeting and eleventh winter meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society- Studies in Church History 9 (Cambridge University Press, 1972), pp. 239–46, at p. 242 (Google books)
  17. 'The Re-examination of Thomas Fenwicke, 1616', in Report of the MSS of the Duke of Buccleugh and Queensferry, Vol. I (Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, 1899), pp. 174–76.
  18. Maurus Lunn, 'The Anglo-Gallicanism of Dom Thomas Preston', pp. 242–3.
  19. Peter Milward, 'Kellison, Matthew (1561–1642)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004).
  20. W. B. Patterson, James VI and I and the Reunion of Christendom (Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 102. Google Books