Feckenham, John de

Feckenham, John de
Feckenham, John de
Last Abbot of Westminster, and confessor of the Faith; b. in Feckenham Forest, Worcestershire, in 1515(?); d. at Wisbech Castle, 16 Oct., 1585

Catholic Encyclopedia. . 2006.

Feckenham, John de
     Catholic_Encyclopedia John de Feckenham
    Last Abbot of Westminster, and confessor of the Faith; b. in Feckenham Forest, Worcestershire, in 1515(?), of poor parents named Howman; d. at Wisbech Castle, 16 Oct., 1585. He became a Benedictine monk at Evesham, and studied at Gloucester Hall, Oxford (B. D., 11 June, 1539), returned to Evesham to teach junior monks till the dissolution, 27 Jan., 1540, when he received a pension of 15 marks. Rector of Solihull, Worcestershire (1544?-1554), he became known as an orator and controversialist. He was domestic chaplain to Bishop Bell of Worcester till 1543, and then to Bonner of London till 1549. He was sent to the Tower by Cranmer for defending the Faith, but in 1551 was "borrowed out of prison" to hold public disputations with the new men, e. g. with Jewel and Hooper. Again relegated to the Tower, he was released by Queen Mary, 5 Sept., 1553, and was much employed as a preacher in London; he was advanced to benefices, and in March, 1554, made dean of St. Paul's. He showed great mildness to the heretics, many of whom he converted, and saved others from the stake. He prepared Lady Jane Grey for death, though he could not convince her of her errors, as he did Sir John Cheke, the king's tutor. Feckenham interceded for Elizabeth after Wyatt's rebellion, obtaining her life and subsequent release. He took the degree of D. D. at Oxford, May, 1556, and on 7 Sept., 1556, was appointed abbot of the royal Abbey of Westminster, restored to the order by the queen. The Benedictines took possession on 21 November (since known as dies memorabilis), and the abbot was installed on 29 November, beginning his rule over a community of about twenty- eight, gathered from the dissolved abbeys. He successfully defended in Parliament, 11 Feb., 1557, the threatened privileges of sanctuary, and restored the shrine of the Confessor in his abbey church.
    Elizabeth at her accession offered (November, 1558) to preserve the monastery if he and his monks would accept the new religion, but Feckenham steadily refused, bravely and eloquently defending the old Faith in Parliament and denouncing the sacrilegious innovations of the Anglicans. He gave sanctuary to Bishop Bonner, and quietly went on planting trees while awaiting the expulsion, which took place 12 July, 1559. He generously resigned a large part of the money due him to the dean who succeeded him. Nevertheless, in May, 1560, he was sent to the Tower "for railing against the changes that had been made". Three years later he was given into the custody of Horne, the intruded Bishop of Winchester, but in 1564 he was sent back to the Tower, his episcopal jailer having failed to pervert him. Feckenham himself said that he preferred the prison to the pseudo-bishop's palace. In 1571 he prepared his fellow-prisoner, Blessed John Storey, for death, and a little later was sent to the Marshalsea. In the Tower he and his fellow-confessors had been "haled by the arms to Church in violent measure, against our wills, there to hear a sermon, not of persuading us but of railing upon us." He was released on bail, 17 July, 1574, after fourteen years' confinement, and lived in Holborn, where he devoted himself to works of charity. He encouraged boys in manly sports on Sundays, preferring that they should practise archery rather than attend the heretical services. But falling ill, he was permitted to go to Bath, where in 1576 he built a hospice for poor patients and did much good. But his zeal for the Faith excited fresh rancour, and in 1577 he was committed to the custody of Cox, Bishop of Ely, who was requested to bring him to conformity. Feckenham's so-called "Confession" (British Museum, Lansdowne MSS., No. 30, fol. 199) shows how egregiously Cox failed, and in 1580 he petitioned the council to remove the abbot, who was accordingly sent to Wisbech Castle, a dismal prison belonging to the Bishops of Ely, which he shared with Watson, Bishop of Lincoln, and other confessors. Here he died a holy death, fortified by the Sacred Viaticum, and was buried in Wisbech Church. He was worn out by an imprisonment of twenty- three years for conscience' sake; a striking example of Elizabeth's ingratitude. Protestant (Protestantism) writers unite in praising his virtues, especially his kindness of heart, gentleness, and charity to the poor. Even Burnet calls him "a charitable and generous man". His best-known work is against Herne, "The Declaration of such Scruples and Stays of Conscience touching the Oath of Supremacy", etc. He also wrote "Caveat Emptor", a caution against buying abbey lands, and a commentary on the Psalms, but these are lost.
    Most complete life in TAUNTON, English Black Monks of St. Benedict (London, 1897); BRADLEY in Dict. Nat. Biog., s. v., with good bibliography; WOOD, Athenæ Oxon., II, 222; WELDON, Chronological Notes on English Congregation O. S. B. (Stanbrook Abbey, 1883); GILLOW, Bibl. Dict. Eng. Cath., II; GASQUET, Last Abbot of Glastonbury and other Essays (London, 1908), s. v. Feckenham at Bath; STAPLETON (vere HARPSFIELD), Counterblast to Mr. Hornes vayne blaste against Mr. Feckenham (London, 1567); REYNER, Apostolatus Benedictinorum in Angliâ (Douai, 1626); State Papers, Elizabeth, Domestic, XXII, XXXVI, CXIV, CXXXI, CXXXII, CXLIII, etc.; DIXON, History of the Church of England (London, 1891), IV, V.
    BEDE CAMM
    Transcribed by WGKofron With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company. . 1910.


Catholic encyclopedia.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Feckenham, John de — ▪ English priest original name  John Howman   born c. 1515, , Feckenham, Worcestershire, Eng. died 1584/85, Wisbech, Cambridgeshire       English priest and the last abbot of Westminster.       Feckenham was a monk at Evesham until that monastery …   Universalium

  • John Feckenham — (vers 1515 octobre 1584), connu également sous le nom de John Howman of Feckingham et plus tard de John de Feckenham ou John Fecknam, était un ecclésiastique anglais qui fut le dernier abbé de Westminster. Sommaire 1 Sous Henri VIII et Édouard VI …   Wikipédia en Français

  • John de Feckenham —     John de Feckenham     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► John de Feckenham     Last Abbot of Westminster, and confessor of the Faith; b. in Feckenham Forest, Worcestershire, in 1515(?), of poor parents named Howman; d. at Wisbech Castle, 16 Oct., 1585 …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Feckenham — is a village in the county of Worcestershire, England. It lies some three miles south west of the major town of Redditch. Feckenham is around twelve miles north east of the ancient city of Worcester.HistoryFeckenham village arose because it… …   Wikipedia

  • John Bell (bishop) — John Bell LL. D ( d. 1556) was Bishop of Worcester (1539 1543), who served during the reign of Henry VIII of England. Anglican PortalReformationThe advent of movable type during the renaissance and its further innovation by Gutenberg, Fust, and… …   Wikipedia

  • John Feckenham — Infobox clergy name = John Feckenham image size = 220px caption = Detail of Lady Jane Grey and Feckenham Artist likely Northcote and Engraved by J. Rogers birth date = c. 1515 birth place = Feckenham Forest, Worcestershire death date = October… …   Wikipedia

  • John Cheke — Sir John Cheke (16 June 1514 ndash; 13 September 1557) was an English classical scholar and statesman, notable as the first Regius Professor of Greek at Cambridge University.The son of Peter Cheke, esquire bedell of Cambridge University, he was… …   Wikipedia

  • Sir John St. John, 1st Baronet — (1585 ndash; 1648) of Lydiard Tregoze and Battersea, Wiltshire, England and Sheriff of Wiltshire from 1632 to 1633. He was the youngest of five children born to Sir John St. John and Lucy Hungerford.He married twice, first to Anne Leighton,… …   Wikipedia

  • Geoffrey Chaucer — Chaucer redirects here. For other uses, see Chaucer (disambiguation). Geoffrey Chaucer …   Wikipedia

  • Geoffrey Chaucer — Nacimiento c. 1343 …   Wikipedia Español

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”