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John Patrick: Papers
| Title |
John Patrick: Papers |
| Reference |
GBR/0012/MS Add.11-13, MS Add.15-16 |
| Creator |
Patrick, John, d 1695 |
| Covering Dates |
1651–1688 (Circa) |
| Extent and Medium |
5 volumes; paper |
| Repository |
Cambridge University Library, Department of Manuscripts and University Archives |
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| Content and context |
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John Patrick, Church of England clergyman and religious controversialist, was baptized on 19 April 1632 at Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, the second son of Henry Patrick (bap. 1596, d. 1665), mercer, and his wife, Mary Naylor (d. in or after 1665), of Nottinghamshire. Patrick matriculated from Queens' College, Cambridge, on 10 July 1647, graduated BA in 1651, and proceeded MA in 1654. He served as vicar of Battersea for his brother during 166271, and then became preacher at Charterhouse, London.
At Charterhouse Patrick began to publish his works, beginning with his Reflexions upon the Devotions of the Roman Church (1674). A Century of Select Psalms and Portions of the Psalms of David (1679) was for the use of Charterhouse, and ran to many subsequent editions. He also contributed to Plutarch's Morals Translated from the Greek by Several Hands (168494). On 30 June 1685 he was collated a canon of Peterborough. In 1687 he published Religion of Protestants a Safe Way to Salvation. Also in 1687 he published Transubstantiation No Doctrine of the Primitive Fathers, and in 1688 A Full View of the Doctrines and Practices of the Ancient Church, both of which works were part of the Anglican resistance to James II's religious policies.
On 28 July 1690 Patrick was collated precentor of Chichester. Presumably because of his publications defending the Church of England, Archbishop Tillotson made him DD by Lambeth decree in 1691. He died at Charterhouse on 19 December 1695.
Collections of notes and references on theologians and theology.
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Access and Use
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Please cite as Cambridge University Library, Department of Manuscripts and University Archives, John Patrick: Papers, MS Add.11-13, MS Add.15-16 |
| Further information |
Microfilm available |
| Index Terms |
| Theology |
| Patrick, John (? 1632-1695) Church of England clergyman and religious controversialist |
| Manuscripts/MS Add.11-13, MS Add.15-16 contains: |
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MS Add.11
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Commonplace book. Arranged under headings 'Abjectio' to 'Uxor', with two additional headings. Shorthand appears occasionally in the entries. . notes and scribblings on fos. 1r, 182v. fo. 1: 'ex libris Johannis Patricke Reginal. Pret. Hx 1652'. fo. 182v: 'John Patricke'. 1 volume. |
1652 |
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MS Add.12
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Clavis Theologiae. Collection of references to the works of patristic and later theologians, arranged under Biblical and theological headings and sub-headings, with an index. The majority of sub-headings carry no reference. |
1651 |
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MS Add.13
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Clavis Theologiae. Collection of references to the works of patristic and later theologians, arranged under Biblical and theological headings and sub-headings, with an index. The majority of sub-headings carry no reference. With additional commonplace material. |
1651 |
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MS Add.15
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Notes on the Virgin Mary. Rough collection of notes and references relating to the Virgin Mary, compiled by John Patrick, presumably in preparation for the publication of his work The Virgin Mary misrepresented by the Roman Church, London, 1688, to the pages of which there appear to be occasional references. |
1688 |
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MS Add.16
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Collections on the cult of the Virgin Mary. Rough collection of notes and references relating to the cult of the Virgin Mary in the Roman Catholic church, and on the doctrine of transubstantiation, compiled by John Patrick, presumably in preparation for the publication of his works Transubstantiation no doctrine of the primitive fathers, London, 1687, The Virgin Mary misrepresented by the Roman Church, and A full view of the doctrines and practices of the ancient church relating to the eucharist', both London, 1688. At the end are inserted two leaves containing a copy of Elizabeth I's charter to the University of Cambridge, with case and opinion on a question of riot, the opinion being signed by Henry Montagu, 1st earl of Manchester. |
1687 |
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