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Richard Montagu

Richard Montagu (or Mountague) (1577 – 13 April 1641) was an English cleric and prelate.

Early life edit

Montagu was born during Christmastide 1577 at Dorney, Buckinghamshire, where his father Laurence Mountague was vicar, and was educated at Eton. He was elected from Eton to a scholarship at King's College, Cambridge, and admitted on 24 August 1594. His name occurs in the list of junior fellows for the quarter Midsummer to Michaelmas 1597. He graduated BA before Lady Day 1598, MA 1602, BD 1609.[1] He assisted Sir Henry Savile in the literary work he carried on at Eton, and the second book issued from the Eton press was his edition of The two Invectives of Gregory Nazianzen against Julian, 1610. He was also to have edited Basil the Great, but the work was never completed.[2]

In 1610, he received the living of Wootton Courtney, Somerset; on 29 April 1613, he was admitted Fellow of Eton and in the same year received the rectory of Stanford Rivers, Essex. On 9 December 1616 he was installed Dean of Hereford, a post which he exchanged with Oliver Lloyd for a canonry of Windsor, in which he was installed on 6 September 1617. He was admitted Archdeacon of Hereford on 15 September 1617. He held also the rectory of Petworth, Sussex, where he rebuilt the parsonage, and was chaplain to the king. He held these preferments with his fellowship at Eton by dispensation from James I.[2]

Controversial writer edit

On the death, in 1614, of Isaac Casaubon, with whom he had previously corresponded about the Exercitationes ad Baronii Annales (against Baronius), Montagu was directed by the King to publish the work. It appeared the same year, and in 1615 James requested him to prepare an answer to Baronius on similar lines. This work, based on studies of classical and patristic antiquity, was at first apparently held back at Archbishop George Abbot's command, but it was issued in 1622 under the title of Analecta Ecclesiasticarum Exercitationum. In the epistle dedicatory addressed to the King, Montagu states his object to be to trace the origins of Christian faith and doctrine, and show that the Anglican position was derived from the "ancient founts". Montagu's aim was to support the Church of England against its enemies. He would not recognise the foreign Reformed bodies as lawful branches of the church. He never completed the task which he had set himself.[2]

In his Diatribae upon the first part of the late History of Tithes, 1621, he entered directly into the controversy of the day, in an attempt to beat John Selden on tithes. Controversy against Catholic teachers in his parish was answered in a pamphlet called A Gag for the New Gospel, by Matthew Kellison; he replied in A Gagg for the New Gospell? No. A New Gagg for an old Goose, 1624. The 'Gagg' had contained forty-seven propositions which it attributed to the Church of England. Of these Montagu only allowed eight to be her true doctrine, again demarcating Anglican doctrine on two fronts. He also issued a defensive work,[3] rebutting Marco Antonio de Dominis who charged Montagu with supporting "praying unto saints and angels in time of need". It proved a magnet for controversy, with answer after answer coming from the presses. There was a complaint from two East Anglian ministers, John Yates and Nathaniel Ward; Ward had been overseas to 1624, and it was a few years later that he became vicar of Stondon Massey, close to Stanford Rivers in Essex, and one of Thomas Hooker's anti-Laudian group.[4][5] The House of Commons referred the book to Abbot. Abbot applied for authority to the King, and remonstrated with Montagu. But James himself approved of his work. "If that is to be a Papist" he said, "so am I a Papist". The matter did not rest with the King's death.[2]

Appello edit

Controversy around Montagu's positions played an important part in the period 1625–9, both in publications and in political moves, and was one of the issues setting the tone for the reign of Charles I. Montagu had the open support of three bishops (John Buckeridge, John Howson, and William Laud). His Appello Caesarem: a just Appeale from two unjust Informers (London, 1625) came out with an imprimatur from Francis White, dean of Carlisle, after George Abbot's refusal to license it. It was partly written in self-justification, but also attacked some Calvinist tenets, including the perseverance of the saints.[6] Francis Rous defended double predestination against Montagu in Testis Veritatis (1626).[2][7]

The House of Commons took up the matter, and accused the author of dishonouring the late King (James I). A debate on the matter was followed by Montagu's committal to the custody of the serjeant-at-arms. He was, however, allowed to return to Stanford Rivers on giving a bond. Charles then made Montagu one of his chaplains, and let the Commons know on 9 July that he was displeased. On 11 July parliament was prorogued. On 2 August, when the parliament was sitting at Oxford, Montagu was too ill to attend, and after discussion in which Edward Coke and Robert Heath took part, the matter was allowed to drop. But the question was too serious to rest for long. On 16 and 17 January 1626 a conference was held by Charles's command, as the result of which the bishops of London (George Montaigne), Durham (Richard Neile), Winchester (Lancelot Andrewes), Rochester (Buckeridge), and St. David's (Laud) reported to George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham that Montagu had not gone further than the doctrine of the Church of England, or what was compatible with it.

York House Conference edit

The January meeting was followed shortly by a watershed conference beginning 11 February, prompted by Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick in Buckingham's house, York House, Strand, and later called the York House conference. It took place with the Bishop of Lichfield (Thomas Morton) and the master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge (John Preston), representing the opposition to Montagu and Francis White. Buckeridge, supported by White and John Cosin, defended Montagu's orthodoxy. Buckeridge even denied that the Council of Trent had erred in any directly fundamental article of faith. A second conference was held a few days later, at which Montagu defended his theses in person against Morton and Preston.[8] The two days of discussion, attended by nobility, changed no minds.

Subsequent developments edit

The committee of religion renewed their censure of the Appeal, and the House of Commons voted a petition to the King that the author might be fitly punished and his book burned. The King issued a proclamation (14 June 1626) commanding silence on points of controversy. In March 1628 the House of Commons again appointed a committee of religion to inquire into the cases of Montagu, Roger Mainwaring, and Cosin.[2]

Montagu still had the strongest supporters at court in Laud and Buckingham himself; and on the death of George Carleton, bishop of Chichester and an opponent, he was appointed to the vacant see. He was elected on 14 July 1628 and received dispensation to hold Petworth with his bishopric. On 22 August Montagu was confirmed in Bow Church. During the ceremony one Jones, a stationer, made objection to the confirmation but the objection was over-ruled as informal; and on 24 August he was consecrated at Croydon, on the same day that news came of Buckingham's assassination. A bitter pamphlet, called Anti-Montacutum, an Appeale or Remonstrance of the Orthodox Ministers of the Church of England against Richard Mountague, was published in 1629 at Edinburgh. The House of Commons again took up the matter, and attempts were made at conciliation, by the issue of the declaration prefixed to the Thirty-nine Articles and printed in the Book of Common Prayer, by a letter from Montagu to Abbot disclaiming Arminianism, by the grant of a special pardon to Montagu, and by the issue of a proclamation suppressing the Appello Caesarem.[2]

Bishop edit

In his diocese Montagu lived at Aldingbourne and Petworth. His process to recover the estate and manor of Selsey, Sussex was decided against him by Robert Heath, now chief justice, in the common pleas, in 1635. He was still engaged in his research into ecclesiastical history, and published several treatises. In 1638 he was at work on a book on the Eucharistic Sacrifice, which he submitted to the approval of Laud. He was also apparently at this time much mixed up in the tortuous negotiations with the papacy which were conducted through Gregorio Panzani; at the same time Montagu was asking licence for his son to visit Rome, and the matter became in the hands of William Prynne a plausible accusation of romanising.[2]

On the translation of Matthew Wren, bishop of Norwich, to Ely, Montagu was appointed to the vacant see. He was elected on 4 May 1638, and the election received the royal assent on 9 May. He had long been suffering from a quartan ague, as well as gout and kidney stones. He was again attacked in the House of Commons on 23 February 1641 on account of a petition from the inhabitants of St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, against an inhibition directed by the bishop against Mr. Carter, parson of that parish, and a commission was appointed to consider his offences. Before any further steps were taken, he died on 13 April 1641, and was buried in Norwich Cathedral.[2]

Works edit

Besides works already mentioned, Montagu wrote:[2]

  • Antidiatribae ad priorern partem diatribes J. Caesaris Bulengeri, Cambridge, 1625.
  • Eusebii de Demonstratione Evangelica libri decem ... omnia studio R. M. Latine facta, notis illustrata, 1628.
  • Apparatus ad Origines Ecclesiasticas, Oxford, 1635.
  • De Originibus Ecclesiasticis, first part, London, 1636; second part, London, 1640.
  • Articles of Inquiry put forth at his Primary Visitation as Bishop of Norwich (unauthorised), Cambridge, 1638; (corrected by the bishop), London, 1638; new edition, Cambridge, 1841.
  • Acts and Monuments of the Church, London, 1642.
  • Versio et Notae in Photii Epistolas, London, 1651.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Montagu, Richard (MNTG594R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Montagu, Richard" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  3. ^ Immediate Addresse unto God alone, first delivered in a Sermon before his Majestie at Windsore, since reuised and inlarged to a just treatise of Invocation of Saints, 1624.
  4. ^ Tom Webster (30 October 2003). Godly Clergy in Early Stuart England: The Caroline Puritan Movement, 1620–1643. Cambridge University Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-521-52140-6. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
  5. ^ Macauley, John S. "Mountague, Richard". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19031. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ Kenneth Fincham, Nicholas Tyacke, Altars Restored: The Changing Face of English Religious Worship, 1547-c.1700 (2007), p. 130.
  7. ^ Francis J. Bremer, Tom Webster, Puritans and Puritanism in Europe and America: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia (2006), p. 2231.
  8. ^ "Buckeridge, John" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

References edit

Attribution edit

Further reading edit

  • Sheila Lambert, Richard Montagu, Arminianism and Censorship, Past and Present, No. 124 (Aug. 1989), pp. 36–68.
Church of England titles
Preceded by Bishop of Chichester
1628–1638
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Norwich
1638–1641
Succeeded by

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This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article April 2019 Richard Montagu or Mountague 1577 13 April 1641 was an English cleric and prelate Contents 1 Early life 2 Controversial writer 3 Appello 4 York House Conference 5 Subsequent developments 6 Bishop 7 Works 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Attribution 10 Further readingEarly life editMontagu was born during Christmastide 1577 at Dorney Buckinghamshire where his father Laurence Mountague was vicar and was educated at Eton He was elected from Eton to a scholarship at King s College Cambridge and admitted on 24 August 1594 His name occurs in the list of junior fellows for the quarter Midsummer to Michaelmas 1597 He graduated BA before Lady Day 1598 MA 1602 BD 1609 1 He assisted Sir Henry Savile in the literary work he carried on at Eton and the second book issued from the Eton press was his edition of The two Invectives of Gregory Nazianzen against Julian 1610 He was also to have edited Basil the Great but the work was never completed 2 In 1610 he received the living of Wootton Courtney Somerset on 29 April 1613 he was admitted Fellow of Eton and in the same year received the rectory of Stanford Rivers Essex On 9 December 1616 he was installed Dean of Hereford a post which he exchanged with Oliver Lloyd for a canonry of Windsor in which he was installed on 6 September 1617 He was admitted Archdeacon of Hereford on 15 September 1617 He held also the rectory of Petworth Sussex where he rebuilt the parsonage and was chaplain to the king He held these preferments with his fellowship at Eton by dispensation from James I 2 Controversial writer editOn the death in 1614 of Isaac Casaubon with whom he had previously corresponded about the Exercitationes ad Baronii Annales against Baronius Montagu was directed by the King to publish the work It appeared the same year and in 1615 James requested him to prepare an answer to Baronius on similar lines This work based on studies of classical and patristic antiquity was at first apparently held back at Archbishop George Abbot s command but it was issued in 1622 under the title of Analecta Ecclesiasticarum Exercitationum In the epistle dedicatory addressed to the King Montagu states his object to be to trace the origins of Christian faith and doctrine and show that the Anglican position was derived from the ancient founts Montagu s aim was to support the Church of England against its enemies He would not recognise the foreign Reformed bodies as lawful branches of the church He never completed the task which he had set himself 2 In his Diatribae upon the first part of the late History of Tithes 1621 he entered directly into the controversy of the day in an attempt to beat John Selden on tithes Controversy against Catholic teachers in his parish was answered in a pamphlet called A Gag for the New Gospel by Matthew Kellison he replied in A Gagg for the New Gospell No A New Gagg for an old Goose 1624 The Gagg had contained forty seven propositions which it attributed to the Church of England Of these Montagu only allowed eight to be her true doctrine again demarcating Anglican doctrine on two fronts He also issued a defensive work 3 rebutting Marco Antonio de Dominis who charged Montagu with supporting praying unto saints and angels in time of need It proved a magnet for controversy with answer after answer coming from the presses There was a complaint from two East Anglian ministers John Yates and Nathaniel Ward Ward had been overseas to 1624 and it was a few years later that he became vicar of Stondon Massey close to Stanford Rivers in Essex and one of Thomas Hooker s anti Laudian group 4 5 The House of Commons referred the book to Abbot Abbot applied for authority to the King and remonstrated with Montagu But James himself approved of his work If that is to be a Papist he said so am I a Papist The matter did not rest with the King s death 2 Appello editControversy around Montagu s positions played an important part in the period 1625 9 both in publications and in political moves and was one of the issues setting the tone for the reign of Charles I Montagu had the open support of three bishops John Buckeridge John Howson and William Laud His Appello Caesarem a just Appeale from two unjust Informers London 1625 came out with an imprimatur from Francis White dean of Carlisle after George Abbot s refusal to license it It was partly written in self justification but also attacked some Calvinist tenets including the perseverance of the saints 6 Francis Rous defended double predestination against Montagu in Testis Veritatis 1626 2 7 The House of Commons took up the matter and accused the author of dishonouring the late King James I A debate on the matter was followed by Montagu s committal to the custody of the serjeant at arms He was however allowed to return to Stanford Rivers on giving a bond Charles then made Montagu one of his chaplains and let the Commons know on 9 July that he was displeased On 11 July parliament was prorogued On 2 August when the parliament was sitting at Oxford Montagu was too ill to attend and after discussion in which Edward Coke and Robert Heath took part the matter was allowed to drop But the question was too serious to rest for long On 16 and 17 January 1626 a conference was held by Charles s command as the result of which the bishops of London George Montaigne Durham Richard Neile Winchester Lancelot Andrewes Rochester Buckeridge and St David s Laud reported to George Villiers 1st Duke of Buckingham that Montagu had not gone further than the doctrine of the Church of England or what was compatible with it York House Conference editThe January meeting was followed shortly by a watershed conference beginning 11 February prompted by Robert Rich 2nd Earl of Warwick in Buckingham s house York House Strand and later called the York House conference It took place with the Bishop of Lichfield Thomas Morton and the master of Emmanuel College Cambridge John Preston representing the opposition to Montagu and Francis White Buckeridge supported by White and John Cosin defended Montagu s orthodoxy Buckeridge even denied that the Council of Trent had erred in any directly fundamental article of faith A second conference was held a few days later at which Montagu defended his theses in person against Morton and Preston 8 The two days of discussion attended by nobility changed no minds Subsequent developments editThe committee of religion renewed their censure of the Appeal and the House of Commons voted a petition to the King that the author might be fitly punished and his book burned The King issued a proclamation 14 June 1626 commanding silence on points of controversy In March 1628 the House of Commons again appointed a committee of religion to inquire into the cases of Montagu Roger Mainwaring and Cosin 2 Montagu still had the strongest supporters at court in Laud and Buckingham himself and on the death of George Carleton bishop of Chichester and an opponent he was appointed to the vacant see He was elected on 14 July 1628 and received dispensation to hold Petworth with his bishopric On 22 August Montagu was confirmed in Bow Church During the ceremony one Jones a stationer made objection to the confirmation but the objection was over ruled as informal and on 24 August he was consecrated at Croydon on the same day that news came of Buckingham s assassination A bitter pamphlet called Anti Montacutum an Appeale or Remonstrance of the Orthodox Ministers of the Church of England against Richard Mountague was published in 1629 at Edinburgh The House of Commons again took up the matter and attempts were made at conciliation by the issue of the declaration prefixed to the Thirty nine Articles and printed in the Book of Common Prayer by a letter from Montagu to Abbot disclaiming Arminianism by the grant of a special pardon to Montagu and by the issue of a proclamation suppressing the Appello Caesarem 2 Bishop editIn his diocese Montagu lived at Aldingbourne and Petworth His process to recover the estate and manor of Selsey Sussex was decided against him by Robert Heath now chief justice in the common pleas in 1635 He was still engaged in his research into ecclesiastical history and published several treatises In 1638 he was at work on a book on the Eucharistic Sacrifice which he submitted to the approval of Laud He was also apparently at this time much mixed up in the tortuous negotiations with the papacy which were conducted through Gregorio Panzani at the same time Montagu was asking licence for his son to visit Rome and the matter became in the hands of William Prynne a plausible accusation of romanising 2 On the translation of Matthew Wren bishop of Norwich to Ely Montagu was appointed to the vacant see He was elected on 4 May 1638 and the election received the royal assent on 9 May He had long been suffering from a quartan ague as well as gout and kidney stones He was again attacked in the House of Commons on 23 February 1641 on account of a petition from the inhabitants of St Peter Mancroft Norwich against an inhibition directed by the bishop against Mr Carter parson of that parish and a commission was appointed to consider his offences Before any further steps were taken he died on 13 April 1641 and was buried in Norwich Cathedral 2 Works editBesides works already mentioned Montagu wrote 2 Antidiatribae ad priorern partem diatribes J Caesaris Bulengeri Cambridge 1625 Eusebii de Demonstratione Evangelica libri decem omnia studio R M Latine facta notis illustrata 1628 Apparatus ad Origines Ecclesiasticas Oxford 1635 De Originibus Ecclesiasticis first part London 1636 second part London 1640 Articles of Inquiry put forth at his Primary Visitation as Bishop of Norwich unauthorised Cambridge 1638 corrected by the bishop London 1638 new edition Cambridge 1841 Acts and Monuments of the Church London 1642 Versio et Notae in Photii Epistolas London 1651 Notes edit Montagu Richard MNTG594R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c d e f g h i j Montagu Richard Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Immediate Addresse unto God alone first delivered in a Sermon before his Majestie at Windsore since reuised and inlarged to a just treatise of Invocation of Saints 1624 Tom Webster 30 October 2003 Godly Clergy in Early Stuart England The Caroline Puritan Movement 1620 1643 Cambridge University Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 521 52140 6 Retrieved 6 July 2012 Macauley John S Mountague Richard Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19031 Subscription or UK public library membership required Kenneth Fincham Nicholas Tyacke Altars Restored The Changing Face of English Religious Worship 1547 c 1700 2007 p 130 Francis J Bremer Tom Webster Puritans and Puritanism in Europe and America A Comprehensive Encyclopedia 2006 p 2231 Buckeridge John Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 References editAttribution edit Lee Sidney ed 1894 Montagu Richard Dictionary of National Biography Vol 38 London Smith Elder amp Co Stephen Leslie ed 1886 Buckeridge John Dictionary of National Biography Vol 7 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 206 207 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Montagu Richard Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 748 Further reading editSheila Lambert Richard Montagu Arminianism and Censorship Past and Present No 124 Aug 1989 pp 36 68 Church of England titlesPreceded byGeorge Carleton Bishop of Chichester1628 1638 Succeeded byBrian DuppaPreceded byMatthew Wren Bishop of Norwich1638 1641 Succeeded byJoseph Hall Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Montagu amp oldid 1163699749 York House conference, 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