Suffolk Committees for Scandalous Ministers 1644-46
Edited by Clive Holmes

In the 1640s Parliament intervened against clergymen with Royalist sympathies, and in the political jargon of the time they were referred to as 'Scandalous Ministers'. As the Civil War developed two Suffolk committees were empowered to hear evidence against any minister (or schoolmaster) who was 'scandalous' in either life or doctrine, or in any way 'malignant' (ill-affected to Parliament). This volume shows how the national split was mirrored in a Suffolk village with questions of allegiance being posed at parish level. The records in this book are, for the most part, the charges bought by Suffolk parishioners, and provide an account of popular religious beliefs. Perhaps most valuable are the splendid cameos of rural life; of the constables of Blyford undertaking a midnight raid on an unlicenced alehouse to impress soldiers; of the Christmas celebrations at Little Cornard; of Nicholas Stoneham watching a Sunday football match at Eyke.


128 pages
Size: 23 x 15
13 digit ISBN: 9780900716003
Binding: Hardback
First published: 01/Jan/1970
Price: 47.95 USD, 25.00 GBP
Series: Suffolk Records Society

BIC class: CTKB

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008

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