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by verifying quotations and copying passages from the fathers in various libraries, to which it would have been impossible for the Jesuit to obtain admission. Unable at last to maintain his position in face of the ever-growing persecution, he left
England in 1582, and took up his residence in the
223:; in 1595 a charge of contradictory implication had been preferred against him to the Spanish Government, namely that he was an agent of Elizabeth. Both charges led to the enhancement of his reputation. A series of 200 letters from the Duke to him is preserved in the archives of the
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in his sixteenth year he confessed his faith with a courage that grew with the various trials, of which he has left us an interesting memoir. At last he was forced to keep in hiding, and in 1572 he was imprisoned for
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In 1601, while in Spain, he felt moved to take a vow to offer himself for the priesthood, and he was ordained in Rome 24 March 1602. After this he acted as Roman agent for the
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246:, Rome, from 1618 to 1639. He died there, closing, at the age of eighty-eight years, a life that had been filled with an unusual variety of duties.
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in 1630. This work was highly valued for its sound and broad-minded criticism of the lax political principles professed in those days.
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commenced their Jesuit mission to
England, Fitzherbert put himself at their service, and helped Campion in the preparation of his
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A Defence of the
Catholycke Cause, By T.F., with an Apology of his innocence in a fayned conspiracy of Edward Squire
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One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
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In 1580 he married and had children, but he did not give up his religious works. When
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Harrison until he was succeeded, in 1609, by the future bishop,
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A Confutation of certaine
Absurdities uttered by M. D. Andrews
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His wife died in 1588, and he soon afterwards took a vow of
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He also wrote books in the controversy that grew out of
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Records of the
English Province of the Society of Jesus
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Records of the
English Province of the Society of Jesus
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The
Obmutesce of F. F. to the Epphata of D. Collins
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285:A Supplement to the Discussion of M. D. Barlow
19:For other people named Thomas Fitzherbert, see
311:(Paris, 1632), a translation from Turcellini's
99:(1552 – 17 August 1640) was an
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