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JOHN JEWEL (1522-1571)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 364 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN JEWEL (1522-1571)  , bishop of Salisbury, son of John Jewel of Buden, Devonshire, was born on the 24th of May 1522, and educated under his
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uncle John Bellamy, rector of Hampton,and other private tutors until his matriculation at Merton college, Oxford, in
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July 1535 . There he was taught by John Parkhurst, afterwards bishop of Norwich; but on the 19th of August 1539 he was elected scholar of Corpus Christi college . He graduated B.A. in 1540, and M.A. in 1545, having been elected
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fellow of his college in 1542 . He made some mark as a teacher at Oxford, and became after 1547 one of the chief disciples of Peter Martyr . He graduated B.D. in 1552, and was made vicar of Sunningwell, and public orator of the university, in which capacity he had to compose a congratulatory
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epistle to Mary on her accession . In
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April 1554 he acted as notary to Cranmer and Ridley at their disputation, but in the autumn he signed a series of Catholic articles . He was, nevertheless, suspected, fled to
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London, and thence to
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Frankfort, which he reached in March 1555 . There he sided with Coxe against Knox, but soon joined Martyr at Strassburg, accompanied him to Zurich, and then paid a visit to Padua . Under Elizabeth's succession he returned to England, and made earnest efforts to secure what would now be called a low-church settlement of religion . Indeed, his attitude was hardly distinguishable from that of the Elizabethan Puritans, but he gradually modified it under the stress of office and responsibility . He was one of the disputants selected to confute the Romanists at the
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conference of Westminster after
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Easter 1559; he was select preacher at St Paul's
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cross on the 15th of
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June; and in the autumn was engaged as one of the royal visitors of the western counties . " His cone d'elire as bishop of Salisbury had been made out on the 27th of July, but he was not consecrated until the 21st of
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January 156o .

He now constituted himself the

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literary apologist of the Elizabethan settlement . He had on the 26th of November 1559, in a sermon at St Paul's Cross, challenged all comers to prove the
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Roman case out of the Scriptures, or the
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councils or Fathers for the first six
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hundred years after Christ . He repeated his challenge in 1560, and Dr Henry Cole took it up . The chief result was Jewel's Apologia ecclesiae Anglicanae, published in 1562, which in Bishop Creighton's words is " the first methodical statement of the position of the Church of England against the Church of Rome, and forms the ground-
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work of all subsequent controversy." A more formidable antagonist than Cole now entered the lists in the person of Thomas Harding, an Oxford contemporary whom Jewel had deprived of his prebend in Salisbury
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Cathedral for recusancy . He published an elaborate and bitter Answer in 1564, to which Jewel issued a Reply in 1565 . Harding followed with a Confutation, and Jewel with a Defence, of the Apology in 1566 and 1567; the combatants ranged over the whole field of the Anglo-Roman controversy, and Jewel's
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theology was officially enjoined upon the Church by Archbishop Bancroft in the reign of James I . Latterly Jewel had been confronted with criticism from a different quarter . The arguments that had weaned him from his Zwinglian simplicity did not satisfy his unpromoted brethren, and Jewel had to refuse
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admission to a benefice to his friend Laurence Humphrey (q.v.), who would not
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wear a surplice . He was consulted a good
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deal by the government on such questions as England's attitude towards the council of Trent, and
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political considerations made him more and more hostile to Puritan demands with which he had previously sympathized . He wrote an attack on Cartwright; which was published after his
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death by Whitgift . He died on the 23rd of September 1571, and was buried in Salisbury Cathedral, where he had built a library . Hooker, who speaks of Jewel as " the worthiest divine that Christendom hath bred for some hundreds of years," was one of the boys whom Jewel prepared in his house for the university; and his Ecclesiastical Polity owes much to Jewel's training .

Jewel's

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works were published in a folio in 1609 under the direction of Bancroft, who ordered the Apology to be placed in churches, in some of which it may still be seen chained to the lectern; other
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editions appeared at Oxford (1848, 8 vols.) and Cambridge (Parker
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Soc., 4 vols.) . See also Gough's
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Index to Parker Soc . Publ . ; Strype's Works (General Index); Acts of the Privy Council; Calendars of Domestic and
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Spanish State Papers; Dixon's and Frere's Church Histories; and
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Dictionary of
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National Biography (
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art. by Bishop Creighton) . (A . F .

End of Article: JOHN JEWEL (1522-1571)
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