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BARBON (BAREBONE Or BAREBONES) , PRAISE- See also: GOD (c
.
1596-1679), See also: English See also: leather-seller and Fifth See also: Monarchy See also: man, was admitted freeman of the Leathersellers See also: Company on the loth of See also: January 1623 and liveryman on the 13th of See also: October 1634
.
About the same See also: time he became See also: minister to a See also: congregation which assembled at his own See also: house, " The See also: Lock and See also: Key," in
See also: Fleet Street, where his preaching attracted large audiences
.
The exact nature of his religious opinions is not perfectly clear
.
He is styled by his enemies a Brownist and Anabaptist, i.e. probably Baptist, but he wrote two books in support of paedobaptism, and his congregation had separated from a larger one of See also: Baptists on that point of controversy
.
Later he belonged to the See also: sect of Fifth Monarchy men
.
He was the See also: object of the abuse and ridicule of the opposite party, and his meetings were fre-389
quently disturbed by riots
.
On the loth of See also: December 1641 his house was stormed by a See also: mob and he narrowly escaped with his See also: life
.
Barbon, who was a man of substantial See also: property, was summoned by See also: Cromwell on the 6th of See also: June 1653 as a member for See also: London to the See also: assembly of nominees called after him in derision Barebone's Parliament
.
His name is occasionally mentioned, but he appears to have taken no See also: part in the debates
.
In i66o he showed See also: great activity in endeavouring to prevent the Restoration
.
He published Needham's See also: book, See also: News from Brussels in a Letter from a Near Attendant on His Majesty's See also: Person
.
. .,' which retailed unfavourable anecdotes See also: relating to See also: Charles's morals, and on the 9th of
See also: February he presented the petition to the Parliament, which proposed that all officials should abjure the Stuarts, and all publicly proposing the Restoration should be deemed guilty of high treason
.
His conduct See also: drew upon him several royalist attacks
.
On the 31st of See also: March he was obliged to sign an engagement to the council not to disturb the
See also: peace, and on the 26th of See also: November 1661 he was arrested, together with See also: John
See also: Wildman and See also: James Harrington, and was imprisoned in the Tower till the 27th of
See also: July 1662, when he was released on See also: bail
.
Barbon, who was married, was buried on the 5th of January 1680
.
He was the author of A Discourse tending to prove
.
.
See also: Baptism
.
. . to be the See also: ordinance of Jesus Christ
.
As also that the Baptism of Infants is warentable (1642), the preface of which shows a spirit of wide religious tolerance; and A Reply to the Frivolous and Impertinent answer of R
.
B. and E
.
B. to the Discourse of P
.
B
.
(1643)
.
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