, a native of Norfolk, was elected fellow of C. C. C. Cambridge
, a native of Norfolk, was
elected fellow of C. C. C. Cambridge in 1536, proceeded
M. A. the year following, became their steward in 1539,
and not long after obtained leave of the society to go and
study abroad for a limited time; which he afterwards procured to be extended for two years more. By assiduous
application he became, as Strype informs us, not only a
great proficient in the Greek and Latin tongues, but an
“eminent Protestant divine, and a learned minister of the
gospel.
” His works, indeed, which are written with much
plainness and simplicity, but at the same time with great
strength of reasoning and argument, sufficiently shew that
he ought to be ranked in the list of the most considerable
reformers. This extraordinary merit, while it obliged him
to continue an exile during the reign of queen Mary, recommended him powerfully to the favour of her sister Elizabeth; who no sooner came to the crown than she appointed him one of her chaplains, gave him a commission
to act under her as an ambassador, and nominated him to
the vacant see of Rochester; but after a long absence, he
either died on his return, or soon after, and never became
possessed of the bishopric. It is said he was buried in the
church of St. Thomas Apostle, in London, Aug. 30, 1559.
, one of the English reformers, was a native of Norfolk, or Suffolk, and educated at Cambridge, where
, one of the English
reformers, was a native of Norfolk, or Suffolk, and educated at Cambridge, where he took his bachelor’s degree
in 1530. He was presented on May 24, 1547, to the
rectory of St. Stephen Walbrook, ol which he was deprived in 1554, and imprisoned twice in queen Mary’s
time, but escaped to Marpurg. From Strasburgh, in the
same year, we find him addressing an “Epistle to the
Faithful in England,
” exhorting them to patient perseverance in the truth. After queen Mary’s death, he returned to England, and in 1560 was preferred to the rectory of Buckland, in Hertfordshire, and in 1563 to that of
St. Dionis Backchurch, in London. He was also a prebend of the fourth stall in Canterbury cathedral, and had
been, in Cranmer’s time, chaplain to that celebrated prelate. Tanner’s account of his promotions is somewhat different. We learn from Strype, in his life of Grindall,
that he objected at first, but afterwards conformed to the
clerical dress, some articles of which at that time were
much scrupled by the reformers who had lived abroad.
He died at Canterbury, about 1570, in his sixtieth year.
In the Heerologia, a work not much to be depended on,
it is said that he was professor of divinity at Oxford, an
assertion contrary to all other authority. He wrote:
, a learned and philosophical antiquary, was a native of Norfolk, where he was born in 1735, and having inherited
, a learned and philosophical antiquary, was a native of Norfolk, where he was born in 1735, and having inherited from an uncle, Mr. Brown of Exeter, an ample fortune, was early enabled to pursue his inclinations, which led him chiefly to the study of antiquities. He was partly educated at Clare-hall, Cambridge, but afterwards entered of Lincoln’s-inn, and, we presume, studied the law, as he was afterwards chosen recorder of Lynn in Norfolk. He was elected F.R.S. in 1767, and F.S.A. in 1770; and to the Archecologia made various communications, which gave him such reputation with the society, that in 1784, on the demise of Dr. Milles, he was elected president, on which occasion he introduced a number of new regulations, and the appointment of two regular secretaries, and a draughtsman, to attend constantly. On St. George’s day following, however, he was obliged to resign the chair, in favour of George lord de Ferrars, afterwards earl of Leicester and marquis Townsend, a majority of nearly two to one having appeared against him. He afterwards printed a letter in vindication of himself, and reflecting upon the noble earl, and from that period ceased to make any communications to the society.
ttye vice chancellor (whom the university-wags usually styled Miss Greene), the tripos-orator, being a native of Norfolk, and assuming the Norfolk dialect, instead
Besides his astronomical work,- he published in 1731,
under the name of Dicaiophilus Cantabrigiensis, “The
Rights of Churches and Colleges defended; in answer to a
pamphlet called * An Enquiry into the customary estates
and tenant-rights of those who hold lands of church and
other foundations, by the term of three lives, &c. by
Everard Fleetwood, esq.;' with remarks upon some other
pieces on the same subject,
” 8vo. The author of this
pamphlet, to which our author replied, was not Fleetwood,
which was an assumed name, but Samuel Burroughs, esq. a
master in chancery. Dr. Long published also a “Commencement-Sermon, 1728;
” and an answer to Dr. Gally’s
pamphlet “On Greek Accents.
” We shall subjoin a few
traits of him, as delineated in 1769, by Mr. Jones: " He
is now in the eighty-eighth year of his age, and, for his
years, vegete and active. He was lately (in October) put
in nomination for the office of vice-chancellor. He executed that trust before; I think in the year 1737. A very
ingenious person, and sometimes very facetious. At the
public commencement in the year 1713, Dr. Greene
(master of Bene't college, and afterwards bishop of Ely)
being then vice-chancellor, Mr. Long was pitched upon for
the tripos-performance; it was witty and humourous, and
has passed through divers editions. Some that remembered the delivery of it told me, that, in addressing ttye
vice chancellor (whom the university-wags usually styled Miss Greene), the tripos-orator, being a native of Norfolk,
and assuming the Norfolk dialect, instead of saying, Domine vice-cancellarie, did very archly pronounce the words
thus, Domina vice-cancellaria; which occasioned a general
smile in that great auditory. His friend the late Mr. Bonfoy of Ripton told me this little incident: `That he and
Dr. Long walking together in Cambridge, in a dusky evening, and coming to a short post fixed in the pavement,
which Mr. B. in the midst of chat and inattention, took to
be a boy standing in his way, he said in a hurry, `Get
out of my way, boy.‘ `That boy, sir,’ said the doctor
very calmly and slily, `is a post-boy, who turns out of his
way for nobody.'
, one of the best English historians of the fifteenth century, was a native of Norfolk, a Benedictine of St. Albans, and historiographer
, one of the
best English historians of the fifteenth century, was a native of Norfolk, a Benedictine of St. Albans, and historiographer royal, about 1440, in the reign of Henry VI. He
compiled two historical works of considerable length, the
one “A History of England,
” beginning at the 57th Henry
III. the year 1273, and concluding with the funeral oF
Henry V. and the appointment of Humphrey duke of Gloucester to the regency of England. His other work is entitled
“Ypodigma Neustrise,
” a sort of history of Normandy, an*
ciently called Neustria, interspersed with the affairs of England from the beginning of the tenth century to 1418. In
the dedication of this work, which, with the other, was
published by archbishop Parker in 1574, Fol. he tells Henry
V. that when he reflected on the cunning intrigues, frauds,
and breaches of treaties in his enemies the French, he was
tormented with fears that they would deceive him: and had
composed that work, which contained many examples of
their perfidy, to put him upon his guard. Walsingham
himself allows that his style is rude and unpolished, and he
relates many ridiculous stories of visions, miracles, and portents, but all this was the credulity of the age. In what belongs to himself he is more to be praised: his narrative is
far more full, circumstantial, and satisfactory, than that of
the other annalists of those times, and contains many things
no where else to be found.
, an English prelate, was a native of Norfolk, born in 1612, and the son of Lawrence Womock,
, an English prelate, was a native of Norfolk, born in 1612, and the son of Lawrence Womock, B. D. rector of Lopham and Fersfield in that county. He was admitted pensioner of Corpus Christi, Cambridge, July 4, 1629, and in October following was chosen a scholar of sir Nich. Bacon’s foundation. He took the degree of A. B. in 1632, was ordained deacon Sept. 21, 1634, and proceeded A.M. in 1639. He is supposed to have succeeded his father in the living of Lopham upcfi his diocese in 1642, but was ejected by the Norfolk committee for the examination of those who were deemed scandalous ministers, and appears to have been afterwards imprisoned for his principles of religion and loyalty, and to have suffered extreme hardships. After the restoration v however, he was promoted by letters mandate to the degree of D. D. and made both archdeacon of Suffolk, Sept. 8, 1660, and a prebendary of Ely. In 1662 he was presented to the rectory of Horningsheath in Suffolk, and in 1663 to that of Boxford in the same county. He was at length promoted, but late in life, to the bishopric of St. David’s, Nov. 11, 1683, a preferment which, owing to his short continuance in it, was detrimental to his relations. He died March 12, 1685, aged seventy-three, and was buried near the remains of his only daughter in the south aile of the church of St. Margaret, Westminster, where, on a small compartment affixed to the pillar next the west end, is an inscription to his memory.