FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER XIV
An Account of the Persecutions in Great Britain and
Ireland, Prior to the Reign of Queen Mary I
Gildas, the most ancient British writer
extant, who lived about the time that the Saxons left
the island of Great Britain, has drawn a most shocking
instance of the barbarity of those people.
The Saxons, on their arrival, being heathens
like the Scots and Picts, destroyed the churches and murdered
the clergy wherever they came: but they could not destroy
Christianity, for those who would not submit to the Saxon
yoke, went and resided beyond the Severn. Neither have
we the names of those Christian sufferers transmitted
to us, especially those of the clergy.
The most dreadful instance of barbarity
under the Saxon government, was the massacre of the monks
of Bangor, A.D. 586. These monks were in all respects
different from those men who bear the same name at present.
In the eighth century, the Danes, a roving
crew of barbarians, landed in different parts of Britain,
both in England and Scotland.
At first they were repulsed, but in A.D.
857, a party of them landed somewhere near Southampton,
and not only robbed the people but burned down the churches,
and murdered the clergy.
In A.D. 868, these barbarians penetrated
into the center of England, and took up their quarters
at Nottingham; but the English, under their king, Ethelred,
drove them from their posts, and obligted them to retire
to Northumberland.
In 870, another body of these barbarians
landed at Norfolk, and engaged in battle with the English
at Hertford. Victory declared in favor of the pagans,
who took Edmund, king of the East Angles, prisoner, and
after treating him with a thousand indignities, transfixed
his body with arrows, and then beheaded him.
In Fifeshire, in Scotland, they burned many
of the churches, and among the rest that belonging to
the Culdees, at St. Andrews. The piety of these men made
them objects of abhorrence to the Danes, who, wherever
they went singled out the Christian priests for destruction,
of whom no less than two hundred were massacred in Scotland.
It was much the same in that part of Ireland
now called Leinster, there the Danes murdered and burned
the priests alive in their own churches; they carried
destruction along with them wherever they went, sparing
neither age nor sex, but the clergy were the most obnoxious
to them, because they ridiculed their idolatry, and persuaded
their people to have nothing to do with them.
In the reign of Edward III the Church of
England was extremely corrupted with errors and superstition;
and the light of the Gospel of Christ was greatly eclipsed
and darkened with human inventions, burthensome ceremonies
and gross idolatry.
The followers of Wickliffe, then called
Lollards, were become extremely numerous, and the clergy
were so vexed to see them increase; whatever power or
influence they might have to molest them in an underhand
manner, they had no authority by law to put them to death.
However, the clergy embraced the favorable opportunity,
and prevailed upon the king to suffer a bill to be brought
into parliament, by which all Lollards who remained obstinate,
should be delivered over to the secular power, and burnt
as heretics. This act was the first in Britain for the
burning of people for their religious sentiments; it passed
in the year 1401, and was soon after put into execution.
The first person who suffered in consequence
of this cruel act was William Santree, or Sawtree, a priest,
who was burnt to death in Smithfield.
Soon after this, Sir John Oldcastle, Lord
Cobham, in consequence of his attachment to the doctrines
of Wickliffe, was accused of heresy, and being condemned
to be hanged and burnt, was accordingly executed in Lincoln's
Inn Fields, A.D. 1419. In his written defense Lord Cobham
said:
"As for images, I understand that they be
not of belief, but that they were ordained since the belief
of Christ was given by sufferance of the Church, to represent
and bring to mind the passion of our Lord Jesus Christ,
and martyrdom and good living of other saints: and that
whoso it be, that doth the worship to dead images that
is due to God, or putteth such hope or trust in help of
them, as he should do to God, or hath affection in one
more than in another, he doth in that, the greatest sin
of idol worship.
"Also I suppose this fully, that every man
in this earth is a pilgrim toward bliss, or toward pain;
and that he that knoweth not, we will not know, we keep
the holy commandments of God in his living here (albeit
that he go on pilgrimages to all the world, and he die
so), he shall be damned: he that knoweth the holy commandments
of God, and keepeth them to his end, he shall be saved,
though he never in his life go on pilgrimage, as men now
use, to Canterbury, or to Rome, or to any other place."
Upon the day appointed, Lord Cobham was
brought out of the Tower with his arms bound behind him,
having a very cheerful countenance. Then was he laid upon
a hurdle, as though he had been a most heinous traitor
to the crown, and so drawn forth into St. Giles's field.
As he was come to the place of execution, and was taken
from the hurdle, he fell down devoutly upon his knees,
desiring Almighty God to forgive his enemies. Then stood
he up and beheld the multitude, exhorting them in most
godly manner to follow the laws of God written in the
Scriptures, and to beware of such teachers as they see
contrary to Christ in their conversation and living. Then
was he hanged up by the middle in chains of iron, and
so consumed alive in the fire, praising the name of God,
so long as his life lasted; the people, there present,
showing great dolor. And this was done A.D. 1418.
How the priests that time fared, blasphemed,
and accursed, requiring the people not to pray for him,
but to judge him damned in hell, for that he departed
not in the obedience of their pope, it were too long to
write.
Thus resteth this valiant Christian knight,
Sir John Oldcastle, under the altar of God, which is Jesus
Christ, among that godly company, who, in the kingdom
of patience, suffered great tribulation with the death
of their bodies, for His faithful word and testimony.
In August, 1473, one Thomas Granter was
apprehended in London; he was accused of professing the
doctrines of Wickliffe, for which he was condemned as
an obstinate heretic. This pious man, being brought to
the sheriff's house, on the morning of the day appointed
for his execution, desired a little refreshment, and having
ate some, he said to the people present, "I eat now a
very good meal, for I have a strange conflict to engage
with before I go to supper"; and having eaten, he returned
thanks to God for the bounties of His all-gracious providence,
requesting that he might be instantly led to the place
of execution, to bear testimony to the truth of those
principles which he had professed. Accordingly he was
chained to a stake on Tower-hill, where he was burnt alive,
professing the truth with his last breath.
In the year 1499, one Badram, a pious man,
was brought before the bishop of Norwich, having been
accused by some of the priests, with holding the doctrines
of Wickliffe. He confessed he did believe everything that
was objected against him. For this, he was condemned as
an obstinate heretic, and a warrant was granted for his
execution; accordingly he was brought to the stake at
Norwich, where he suffered with great constancy.
In 1506, one William Tilfrey, a pious man,
was burnt alive at Amersham, in a close called Stoneyprat,
and at the same time, his daughter, Joan Clarke, a married
women, was obliged to light the fagots that were to burn
her father.
This year also one Father Roberts, a priest,
was convicted of being a Lollard before the bishop of
Lincoln, and burnt alive at Buckingham.
In 1507 one Thomas Norris was burnt alive
for the testimony of the truth of the Gospel, at Norwich.
This man was a poor, inoffensive, harmless person, but
his parish priest conversing with him one day, conjectured
he was a Lollard. In consequence of this supposition he
gave information to the bishop, and Norris was apprehended.
In 1508, one Lawrence Guale, who had been
kept in prison two years, was burnt alive at Salisbury,
for denying the real presence in the Sacrament. It appeared
that this man kept a shop in Salisbury, and entertained
some Lollards in his house; for which he was informed
against to the bishop; but he abode by his first testimony,
and was condemned to suffer as a heretic.
A pious woman was burnt at Chippen Sudburne,
by order of the chancellor, Dr. Whittenham. After she
had been consumed in the flames, and the people were returning
home, a bull broke loose from a butcher and singling out
the chancellor from all the rest of the company, he gored
him through the body, and on his horns carried his entrails.
This was seen by all the people, and it is remarkable
that the animal did not meddle with any other person whatever.
October 18, 1511, William Succling and John
Bannister, who had formerly recanted, returned again to
the profession of the faith, and were burnt alive in Smithfield.
In the year 1517, one John Brown (who had
recanted before in the reign of Henry VII and borne a
fagot round St. Paul's,) was condemned by Dr. Wonhaman,
archbishop of Canterbury, and burnt alive at Ashford.
Before he was chained to the stake, the archbishop Wonhaman,
and Yester, bishop of Rochester, caused his feet to be
burnt in a fire until all the flesh came off, even to
the bones. This was done in order to make him again recant,
but he persisted in his attachment to the truth to the
last.
Much about this time one Richard Hunn, a
merchant tailor of the city of London, was apprehended,
having refused to pay the priest his fees for the funeral
of a child; and being conveyed to the Lollards' Tower,
in the palace of Lambeth, was there privately murdered
by some of the servants of the archbishop.
September 24, 1518, John Stilincen, who
had before recanted, was apprehended, brought before Richard
Fitz-James, bishop of London, and on the twenty-fifth
of October was condemned as a heretic. He was chained
to the stake in Smithfield amidst a vast crowd of spectators,
and sealed his testimony to the truth with his blood.
He declared that he was a Lollard, and that he had always
believed the opinions of Wickliffe; and although he had
been weak enough to recant his opinions, yet he was now
willing to convince the world that he was ready to die
for the truth.
In the year 1519, Thomas Mann was burnt
in London, as was one Robert Celin, a plain, honest man
for speaking against image worship and pilgrimages.
Much about this time, was executed in Smithfield,
in London, James Brewster, a native of Colchester. His
sentiments were the same as the rest of the Lollards,
or those who followed the doctrines of Wickliffe; but
notwithstanding the innocence of his life, and the regularity
of his manners, he was obliged to submit to papal revenge.
During this year, one Christopher, a shoemaker,
was burnt alive at Newbury, in Berkshire, for denying
those popish articles which we have already mentioned.
This man had gotten some books in English, which were
sufficient to render him obnoxious to the Romish clergy.
Robert Silks, who had been condemned in
the bishop's court as a heretic, made his escape out of
prison, but was taken two years afterward, and brought
back to Coventry, where he was burnt alive. The sheriffs
always seized the goods of the martyrs for their own use,
so that their wives and children were left to starve.
In 1532, Thomas Harding, who with his wife,
had been accused of heresy, was brought before the bishop
of Lincoln, and condemned for denying the real presence
in the Sacrament. He was then chained to a stake, erected
for the purpose, at Chesham in the Pell, near Botely;
and when they had set fire to the fagots, one of the spectators
dashed out his brains with a billet. The priests told
the people that whoever brought fagots to burn heretics
would have an indulgence to commit sins for forty days.
During the latter end of this year, Worham,
archbishop of Canterbury, apprehended one Hitten, a priest
at Maidstone; and after he had been long tortured in prison,
and several times examined by the archbishop, and Fisher,
bishop of Rochester, he was condemned as a heretic, and
burnt alive before the door of his own parish church.
Thomas Bilney, professor of civil law at
Cambridge, was brought before the bishop of London, and
several other bishops, in the Chapter house, Westminster,
and being several times threatened with the stake and
flames, he was weak enough to recant; but he repented
severely afterward.
For this he was brought before the bishop
a second time, and condemned to death. Before he went
to the stake he confessed his adherence to those opinions
which Luther held; and, when at it, he smiled, and said,
"I have had many storms in this world, but now my vessel
will soon be on shore in heaven." He stood unmoved in
the flames, crying out, "Jesus, I believe"; and these
were the last words he was heard to utter.
A few weeks after Bilney had suffered, Richard
Byfield was cast into prison, and endured some whipping,
for his adherence to the doctrines of Luther: this Mr.
Byfield had been some time a monk, at Barnes, in Surrey,
but was converted by reading Tyndale's version of the
New Testament. The sufferings this man underwent for the
truth were so great that it would require a volume to
contain them. Sometimes he was shut up in a dungeon, where
he was almost suffocated by the offensive and horrid smell
of filth and stagnant water. At other times he was tied
up by the arms, until almost all his joints were dislocated.
He was whipped at the post several times, until scarcely
any flesh was left on his back; and all this was done
to make him recant. He was then taken to the Lollard's
Tower in Lambeth palace, where he was chained by the neck
to the wall, and once every day beaten in the most cruel
manner by the archbishop's servants. At last he was condemned,
degraded, and burnt in Smithfield.
The next person that suffered was John Tewkesbury.
This was a plain, simple man, who had been guilty of no
other offence against what was called the holy Mother
Church, than that of reading Tyndale's translation of
the New Testament. At first he was weak enough to adjure,
but afterward repented, and acknowledged the truth. For
this he was brought before the bishop of London, who condemned
him as an obstinate heretic. He suffered greatly during
the time of his imprisonment, so that when they brought
him out to execution, he was almost dead. He was conducted
to the stake in Smithfield, where he was burned, declaring
his utter abhorrence of popery, and professing a firm
belief that his cause was just in the sight of God.
The next person that suffered in this reign
was James Baynham, a reputable citizen in London, who
had married the widow of a gentleman in the Temple. When
chained to the stake he embraced the fagots, and said,
"Oh, ye papists, behold! ye look for miracles; here now
may you see a miracle; for in this fire I feel no more
pain than if I were in bed; for it is as sweet to me as
a bed of roses." Thus he resigned his soul into the hands
of his Redeemer.
Soon after the death of this martyr, one
Traxnal, an inoffensive countryman, was burned alive at
Bradford in Wiltshire, because he would not acknowledge
the real presence in the Sacrament, nor own the papal
supremacy over the consciences of men.
In the year 1533, John Frith, a noted martyr,
died for the truth. When brought to the stake in Smithfield,
he embraced the fagots, and exhorted a young man named
Andrew Hewit, who suffered with him, to trust his soul
to that God who had redeemed it. Both these sufferers
endured much torment, for the wind blew the flames away
from them, so that they were above two hours in agony
before they expired.
In the year 1538, one Collins, a madman,
suffered death with his dog in Smithfield. The circumstances
were as follows: Collins happened to be in church when
the priest elevated the host; and Collins, in derision
of the sacrifice of the Mass, lifted up his dog above
his head. For this crime Collins, who ought to have been
sent to a madhouse, or whipped at the cart's tail, was
brought before the bishop of London; and although he was
really mad, yet such was the force of popish power, such
the corruption in Church and state, that the poor madman,
and his dog, were both carried to the stake in Smithfield,
where they were burned to ashes, amidst a vast crowd of
spectators.
There were some other persons who suffered
the same year, of whom we shall take notice in the order
they lie before us.
One Cowbridge suffered at Oxford; and although
he was reputed to be a madman, yet he showed great signs
of piety when he was fastened to the stake, and after
the flames were kindled around him.
About the same time one Purderve was put
to death for saying privately to a priest, after he had
drunk the wine, "He blessed the hungry people with the
empty chalice."
At the same time was condemned William Letton,
a monk of great age, in the county of Suffolk, who was
burned at Norwich for speaking against an idol that was
carried in procession; and for asserting, that the Sacrament
should be administered in both kinds.
Sometime before the burning of these men,
Nicholas Peke was executed at Norwich; and when the fire
was lighted, he was so scorched that he was as black as
pitch. Dr. Reading standing before him, with Dr. Hearne
and Dr. Spragwell, having a long white want in his hand,
struck him upon the right shoulder, and said, "Peke, recant,
and believe in the Sacrament." To this he answered, "I
despise thee and it also;" and with great violence he
spit blood, occasioned by the anguish of his sufferings.
Dr. Reading granted forty days' indulgence for the sufferer,
in order that he might recant his opinions. But he persisted
in his adherence to the truth, without paying any regard
to the malice of his enemies; and he was burned alive,
rejoicing that Christ had counted him worthy to suffer
for His name's sake.
On July 28, 1540, or 1541, (for the chronology
differs) Thomas Cromwell, earl of Essex, was brought to
a scaffold on Tower-hill, where he was executed with some
striking instances of cruelty. He made a short speech
to the people, and then meekly resigned himself to the
axe.
It is, we think, with great propriety, that
this nobleman is ranked among the martyrs; for although
the accusations preferred against him, did not relate
to anything in religion, yet had it not been for his zeal
to demolish popery, he might have to the last retained
the king's favor. To this may be added, that the papists
plotted his destruction, for he did more towards promoting
the Reformation, than any man in that age, except the
good Dr. Cranmer.
Soon after the execution of Cromwell, Dr.
Cuthbert Barnes, Thomas Garnet, and William Jerome, were
brought before the ecclesiastical court of the bishop
of London, and accused of heresy.
Being before the bishop of London, Dr. Barnes
was asked whether the saints prayed for us? To this he
answered, that "he would leave that to God; but (said
he) I will pray for you."
On the thirteenth of July, 1541, these men
were brought from the Tower to Smithfield, where they
were all chained to one stake; and there suffered death
with a constancy that nothing less than a firm faith in
Jesus Christ could inspire.
One Thomas Sommers, an honest merchant,
with three others, was thrown into prison, for reading
some of Luther's books, and they were condemned to carry
those books to a fire in Cheapside; there they were to
throw them in the flames; but Sommers threw his over,
for which he was sent back to the Tower, where he was
stoned to death.
Dreadful persecutions were at this time
carried on at Lincoln, under Dr. Longland, the bishop
of that diocese. At Buckingham, Thomas Bainard, and James
Moreton, the one for reading the Lord's Prayer in English,
and the other for reading St. James' Epistles ion English,
were both condemned and burnt alive.
Anthony Parsons, a priest, together with
two others, was sent to Windsor, to be examined concerning
heresy; and several articles were tendered to them to
subscribe, which they refused. This was carried on by
the bishop of Salisbury, who was the most violent persecutor
of any in that age, except Bonner. When they were brought
to the stake, Parsons asked for some drink, which being
brought him, he drank to his fellow-sufferers, saying,
"Be merry, my brethren, and lift up your hearts to God;
for after this sharp breakfast I trust we shall have a
good dinner in the Kingdom of Christ, our Lord and Redeemer."
At these words Eastwood, one of the sufferers, lifteed
up his eyes and hands to heaven, desiring the Lord above
to receive his spirit. Parsons pulled the straw near to
him, and then said to the spectators, "This is God's armor,
and now I am a Christian soldier prepared for battle:
I look for no mercy but through the merits of Christ;
He is my only Savior, in Him do I trust
for salvation;" and soon after the fires were lighted,
which burned their bodies, but could not hurt their precious
and immortal souls. Their constancy triumphed over cruelty,
and their sufferings will be held in everlasting remembrance.
Thus were Christ's people betrayed every
way, and their lives bought and sold. For, in the said
parliament, the king made this most blasphemous and cruel
act, to be a law forever: that whatsoever they were that
should read the Scriptures in the mother-tongue (which
was then called "Wickliffe's learning"), they should forfeit
land, cattle, body, life, and goods, from their heirs
for ever, and so be condemned for heretics to God, enemies
to the crown, and most arrant traitors to the land.
Chapter XV
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