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ROWLAND TAYLOR (d. 1555)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 473 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROWLAND TAYLOR (d. 1555)  ,
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English
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Protestant martyr, was born at Rothbury, Northumberland; he took minor orders at Norwich in 1528 and graduated LL.B. at Cambridge in 1530 and LL.D. in 1534 . Adopting reformed views he was made
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chaplain by Cranmer in 1540 and presented to the living of
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Hadleigh, Suffolk, in 1544 . In Whitsun week, 1547, he preached a " notable sermon " at St Paul's
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Cross, and was given the third stall in Rochester
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cathedral . In 1549 he was placed on a commission to examine Anabaptists, and in 1551 he was appointed chancellor to Bishop Ridley, select preacher at Canterbury, and a
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commissioner for the reform of the
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canon law; in 1552 Coverdale made him archdeacon of Exeter . Apparently he advocated the cause of Lady Jane Grey, for on the 25th .of
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July 1553, only six days after Mary's proclamation as queen, he was committed to the custody of the
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sheriff of Essex . He was released not long afterwards, and with the support of his parishioners offered strenuous resistance to the restoration of the Mass . He was consequently imprisoned in the King's Bench prison on the 26th of March 1554 . The sturdy Protestantism of Taylor and his
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flock, who seem to have caused various commotions, marked him out for the
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special enmity of Mary's government; and he was one of the first to suffer when in
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January 1555 parliament had once more given the clerical courts liberty of jurisdiction . He was sentenced on the 22nd, excommunicated on the 29th, degraded by Bonner on the 4th of
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February, and burnt on the 9th at Aldham
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Common near Hadleigh . His blameless character had made a
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great impression on his age, and he was commemorated in many popular
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ballads . He was regarded as the ideal of a Protestant parish priest; he was married and had nine children . The alleged descent of Jeremy Taylor from him has not been proved .

See

Thomas Quinton Stow's
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Memoirs of Rowland Taylor (1833);
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Diet. of Nat . Biogr. lv . 463-4, and authorities there cited . (A . F .

End of Article: ROWLAND TAYLOR (d. 1555)
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