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CATHOLIC RECORD SOCIETY: LETTERS OF THOMAS FITZHERBERT 1608-1610, VOLUME 41

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CATHOLIC RECORD SOCIETY: LETTERS OF THOMAS FITZHERBERT 1608-1610, VOLUME 41

by L. Hicks, S.J. (editor)

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  • Hardcover
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About This Item

London: Catholic Record Society, 1948. First Edition. Hardcover. Blue cloth. Gilt stamping. 155p + 23p report from the society. Some pages unopened and uncut. Reader will have to slice them open to access content. Corners bumped. Light signs of shelf wear. Otherwise a clean and tight book in very good condition. The Catholic Record Society (Registered Charity No. 313529), "the premier Catholic historical society in the United Kingdom", founded in 1904, is a scholarly society devoted to the study of Reformation and post-Reformation Catholicism in England and Wales. Particularly active members in its early years were Joseph Gillow, J. H. Pollen, and Joseph S. Hansom. The society was initially established as a text publication society, with the aim of publishing Catholic historical records. Only later did it become a more general historical society. It has been credited with making much otherwise obscure archival material more readily available.<br /> This volume contains the letters of Thomas Fitzherbert (1552 - 17 August 1640), an English Jesuit. Fitzherbert was born at Swynnerton, Staffordshire. His father having died whilst he was an infant, he was, even as a child, the head of an important family and the first heir born at Swynnerton, where his descendants have since flourished and still remain Catholics. He was trained to piety and firmness in his religion by his mother, and when sent to Oxford 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. In 1580 he married and had children, but he did not give up his religious works. When Edmund Campion and Robert Persons commenced their well-known mission, Fitzherbert put himself at their service, and helped Campion in the preparation of his Decem Rationes 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 north of France. Here, as a lay Catholic of birth, means, and unexceptionable character, he was much trusted by the Catholic leaders, and closely watched by Walsingham's emissaries, whose letters contain frequent insinuations against his ulterior intentions (see Foley, Records of English Province S.J., II, 220-228). His wife died in 1588, and he soon afterwards took a vow of celibacy. He is next found in the household of the young Duke of Feria, whose mother was Lady Anne Dormer. With him or in his service he lived in Flanders, Spain, Milan, Naples, and Rome for some twenty years, until the Duke died in 1607, on the point of setting out for a diplomatic mission to Germany, on which Fitzherbert was to have accompanied him. It was during this period that he was charged in 1598 by Squire with having tempted him to murder Queen Elizabeth; in 1595 a charge of contradictory implication had been preferred against him to the Spanish Government, viz. 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 Archdiocese of Westminster. 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 archpriest Harrison until he was succeeded, in 1609, by the future bishop, Father Richard Smith. But in 1606 he had made a third vow, namely, to enter the Society of Jesus, which he did about the year 1613. He was soon given the important post of superior in Flanders, 1616 to 1618, afterwards recalled and made rector of the English College, 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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Details

Bookseller
Kubik Fine Books Ltd, ABAA US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
141111
Title
CATHOLIC RECORD SOCIETY: LETTERS OF THOMAS FITZHERBERT 1608-1610, VOLUME 41
Author
L. Hicks, S.J. (editor)
Format/Binding
Hardcover
Book Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Edition
First Edition
Publisher
Catholic Record Society
Place of Publication
London
Date Published
1948
Keywords
Anglo-Catholic, British, English, anti-Catholicism

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About the Seller

Kubik Fine Books Ltd, ABAA

Seller rating:
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Dayton, Ohio

About Kubik Fine Books Ltd, ABAA

Store located at 24 Park Avenue in Dayton, Ohio. Open Monday-Friday 10am-4:30pm and on Saturdays by chance/appt. We have over 50,000 books of all types - specialities include Roman Catholic theology and culture, military history, ancient and medieval studies, and general rare books in all fields. Company president Owen D. Kubik has been a full-time bookseller for over 35 years.

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Cloth
"Cloth-bound" generally refers to a hardcover book with cloth covering the outside of the book covers. The cloth is stretched...
Unopened
A state in which all or some of the pages of a book have not been separated from the adjacent pages, caused by a traditional...
First Edition
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A.N.
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Used to mean that the binding of a book has not been overly loosened by frequent use.
Shelf Wear
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