Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAP. I FROM THE ACCESSION OF CHARLES I TO THE MEETING OF THE LONG PARLIAMENT
- CHAP. II THE EXILES TO AMERICA
- CHAP. III FROM THE MEETING OF THE LONG PARLIAMENT TO THE YEAR 1647. (Nov. 1640—1647.)
- CHAP. IV THE COMMONWEALTH AND THE PROTECTORATE
- CHAP. V THE RESTORATION
- A The Poll of the Election for the Chancellorship in 1626
- B The Manner of the Presentation of the Duke of Buckingham his Grace to the Chancellorship of the University of Cambridge
- C Ordinances established for a publique Lecture of Historie in the University of Cambridge
- D Order of the King at the Court at Whitehall the 30th of Aprill 1630, respecting the Nomination to Lord Brooke's History Lecture
- E Matriculations for the Years 1620–1669
- F Subscriptions on Admission to Holy Orders during the Commonwealth and the Protectorate
- INDEX
F - Subscriptions on Admission to Holy Orders during the Commonwealth and the Protectorate
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAP. I FROM THE ACCESSION OF CHARLES I TO THE MEETING OF THE LONG PARLIAMENT
- CHAP. II THE EXILES TO AMERICA
- CHAP. III FROM THE MEETING OF THE LONG PARLIAMENT TO THE YEAR 1647. (Nov. 1640—1647.)
- CHAP. IV THE COMMONWEALTH AND THE PROTECTORATE
- CHAP. V THE RESTORATION
- A The Poll of the Election for the Chancellorship in 1626
- B The Manner of the Presentation of the Duke of Buckingham his Grace to the Chancellorship of the University of Cambridge
- C Ordinances established for a publique Lecture of Historie in the University of Cambridge
- D Order of the King at the Court at Whitehall the 30th of Aprill 1630, respecting the Nomination to Lord Brooke's History Lecture
- E Matriculations for the Years 1620–1669
- F Subscriptions on Admission to Holy Orders during the Commonwealth and the Protectorate
- INDEX
Summary
In connexion with the evidence afforded by the Subscription and Ordination Books, above described, Dr Venn cites the additional facts supplied by the Consignation Books, as they were termed, in the diocese of Norwich, being the records of the Visitations of Dioceses by their bishops,—occasions on which every incumbent and curate of a parish was cited to appear, and, after the Restoration, every schoolmaster and teacher. The different dioceses, however, differ materially as regards the amount of evidence thus afforded, that presented by Norwich being exceptionally full; a feature which may be at least partially referred to the vigilance with which Matthew Wren ruled the diocese. But, in any case, if we were to extend our researches throughout England, and include all the men educated at the Colleges of both Universities, the aggregate of the clergy thus obtaining episcopal ordination after Episcopacy had been legally suppressed would be found to be very considerable; sufficiently so, indeed, to warrant us in concluding that those who desired episcopal ordination had no difficulty in obtaining it during the entire period in question, down to the very eve of the Restoration; while it is not less evident, that certain of those who thus obtained ordination, did so before,—in some cases, just before,—presentation to a living by the Parliamentary Committee.
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- The University of Cambridge , pp. 680 - 682Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1911