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ADRIAN SARAVIA (1531—1613)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 207 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ADRIAN SARAVIA (1531—1613)  , theologian, was born at Hesdin, Pas-de-
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Calais, of a
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Spanish
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father and Flemish
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mother, both Protestants . He entered the
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ministry at Antwerp, had a hand in the Walloon Confession and gathered a Walloon congregation in Brussels . He migrated to the Channel Islands early in the reign of Elizabeth; and, after a period as schoolmaster, officiated (1564—1566) at St Peter's, Guernsey, then under Presbyterian discipline . Subsequently he held the mastership of the grammar school at Southampton, and in 1582 was professor of divinity and minister of the reformed church at
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Leiden . From Leiden he wrote (9
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June 1585) to Lord Burghley advising the assumption of the
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protectorate of the Low Countries by Elizabeth . He became domiciled in England in 1587--1588, leaving Holland on the
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discovery of his complicity in a
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political plot, and was appointed (I 588) rector of Tattenhall,
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Staffordshire . His first
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work, De diversis gradibus ministrorum Evangelii (1590; in
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English, 1592, and reprinted), was an
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argument for episcopacy, which led to a controversy with Theodore Beza, and gained him incorporation (9 June 1590) as D.D. at Oxford, and a prebend at Gloucester (22 Oct . 1591) . On 6th December 1595 he was admitted to a canonry at Canterbury (which he resigned in 1602), and in the same
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year to the vicarage of
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Lewisham, Kent, where he became an intimate friend of Richard Hooker, his near neighbour, whom he absolved on his deathbed . He was made prebendary of Worcester (1601) and of Westminster (5
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July 16oi) . In 1604, or early in 1605, he presented to James I. his Latin
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treatise on the Eucharist, which remained in the Royal Library unprinted, till in 1885 it was published (with
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translation and introduction) by Archdeacon G . A .

Denison . In 1607 he was nominated one of the translators of the Authorised Version of 1611, his
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part being Genesis to end of Kings ii . On the 23rd of March 1610 he exchanged Lewisham for the rectory of
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Great Chart, Kent . He died at Canterbury on the 15th of
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January 1612, and was buried in the
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cathedral on the 19th of January . See the particulars collected in Denison's "
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Notice of the Author " prefixed to De sacra eucharistia . (A .

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Adrian Saravia was an high Anglican Lutheran, promoting the Unaltered Augsburg Confession and Lutheran Eucharitic theology.
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