46:. Next year the prison-keeper on his own authority permitted him to visit his wife in Essex, but complaints were made of this lenient treatment to Lord Burghley. Wright appealed for mercy to Burghley, who replied by informing him of the charges brought against him. Wright sent a voluminous answer (Strype, Annals, iii. ii. 228). He seems to have returned to prison and remained there until September 1582, when he declared his willingness to subscribe to his good allowance of the ministry of the church of England and to the Book of Common Prayer.’ After giving sureties for his future conformity, he was released. He was subsequently rector of Dennington, Suffolk, from 1589 until his death in 1624.
84:
42:'s part to obtain the arrest of Wright, he and his patron were examined in the court of ecclesiastical commission in October 1581 in the presence of Lord Burghley. It was shown that Wright had asked, in regard to the solemnisation of the queen's accession day (17 Nov.), ‘if they would make it an holy day, and so make our queen an idol. Wright was committed to the
72:
The Lives of the
Puritans: Containing a Bibliographical Account of Those Divines who Distinguished Themselves in the Cause of Religious Liberty, from the Reformation Under Queen Elizabeth, to the Act of Uniformity in 1662, Volume
97:
129:
134:
139:
38:, Essex, where he held religious meetings (Strype, Aylmer, pp. 54 seq.). He was incorporated M.A. of Oxford on 11 July 1581. After several efforts on
22:
Wright matriculated as a pensioner of
Trinity College, Cambridge, on 21 May 1571, and graduated B.A. 1574, and M.A. 1578. He was an ardent
76:
144:
64:
102:
31:
34:, he became acquainted with Robert, second lord Rich, and about 1580 acted as his chaplain in his house,
124:
119:
39:
113:
88:
43:
35:
19:(1556?–1624) was an English Anglican priest, a nonconformist under Elizabeth I.
93:
23:
54:
He was the son of John Wright of Wright's Bridge, Essex. He died in 1624.
27:
87: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
67:", Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 63
30:
from
Villiers or Cartwright in the Genevan form. At
106:. Vol. 33. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
8:
130:English Calvinist and Reformed ministers
135:16th-century English Puritan ministers
7:
140:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
14:
65:Wright, Robert (1560-1643) (1900)
103:Dictionary of National Biography
82:
1:
26:, and received ordination at
161:
98:Wright, Robert (1560-1643)
75:, Publisher Black, 1813,
145:People from Great Leighs
152:
107:
86:
85:
70:Benjamin Brook,
160:
159:
155:
154:
153:
151:
150:
149:
110:
109:
96:, ed. (1893). "
92:
83:
60:
52:
12:
11:
5:
158:
156:
148:
147:
142:
137:
132:
127:
122:
112:
111:
80:
79:
68:
59:
56:
51:
48:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
157:
146:
143:
141:
138:
136:
133:
131:
128:
126:
123:
121:
118:
117:
115:
108:
105:
104:
99:
95:
90:
89:public domain
78:
74:
69:
66:
63:Sidney Lee, "
62:
61:
57:
55:
49:
47:
45:
41:
40:Bishop Aylmer
37:
33:
29:
25:
20:
18:
17:Robert Wright
101:
81:
71:
53:
44:Fleet prison
36:Great Leighs
21:
16:
15:
125:1624 deaths
120:1556 births
94:Lee, Sidney
114:Categories
58:References
32:Cambridge
24:Calvinist
77:page 239
50:Personal
91::
28:Antwerp
100:".
116::
73:1
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.