Robert Browne (Brownist)
Robert Browne (1550s – 1633) was the founder of the Brownists, a common designation for early Separatists from the Church of England before 1620. In later life he was reconciled to the established church and became an Anglican priest.
Biography
Browne[1] was born at Tolethorpe Hall in Rutland, England sometime in the 1550s, the third of seven children of Anthony Browne and his wife Dorothy, daughter of Sir Philip Boteler. In 1572 he graduated from Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.[2] It was probably while Browne was at Corpus Christi that he first met Robert Harrison from Norwich. They were both influenced by the Puritan theologian Thomas Cartwright.
Browne became a lecturer at St Mary's Church, Islington, where his dissident preaching against the doctrines and disciplines of the Church of England began to attract attention.[3] During 1578 he returned to Cambridge and came under the influence of Richard Greenham, Puritan rector of Dry Drayton, near Cambridge. Browne may have been encouraged to complete his ordination and serve at a parish church. He was offered a lecturer position at St Bene't's Church, Cambridge possibly through Greenham, but his tenure there was short lived. He may have come to reject the Puritan view of reform from within the Church, and started to look outside the established Church.
Browne was the first seceder from the Church of England and the first to found a church of his own on Congregational principles. By 1581 he had attempted to set up a separate church in Norwich; he was arrested but released on the advice of William Cecil, his kinsman. Browne and companions left England and moved to Middelburg in the Netherlands later in 1581. There they organised a church on what they conceived to be the New Testament model, but the community broke up within two years owing to internal dissensions.
His most important works, A Treatise of Reformation without Tarying for Anie, in which he asserted the right of the church to effect necessary reforms without the authorisation of the civil magistrate; and A Booke which sheweth the life and manners of all True Christians which set out the theory of congregational independency, were published at Middelburg in 1582. The following year two men were hanged at Bury St Edmunds for circulating them.[4]
Browne was only an active Separatist from 1579–1585 and returned to the Church of England. He served as Headmaster of St Olave's Grammar School, Southwark 1586–89 and was also Headmaster of Stamford School between 1589 and 1591. He was much engaged in controversy with some of those who held his earlier separatist position and who now looked upon him as a renegade. In particular he several times replied to John Greenwood and Henry Barrowe; one of his replies, entitled A Reproofe of certaine schismatical persons and their doctrine touching the hearing and preaching of the word of God (1587–1588) sheds light upon the development of Browne's later views.
He was ordained deacon and priest by Richard Howland, Bishop of Peterborough in September 1591.[5] He held the benefice of Little Casterton[6] (in which parish Tolethorpe lay) and then Thorpe Achurch in Northamptonshire from 1591 to 1631, where he lived on the Lilford Hall estate until shortly before his death.
He was married twice, firstly to Alice Allen, thought to be one of his Middelburg congregation, with whom he fathered nine children. Alice Browne died in July 1610 and in February 1612 Browne married Elizabeth Werrener at St Martin's Church, Stamford. He was imprisoned 32 times during his life for his non-conformist beliefs and died in jail at Northampton, after he was imprisoned for hitting a constable. He is buried in St Giles's churchyard, Northampton.[7]
He is considered the father of the Congregational body in the English-speaking world, and "The Father of the Pilgrims" due to the Mayflower passengers in 1620 being part of the Brownist movement.
Works
- A True and Short Declaration (1581)
- A Treatise of Reformation without Tarrying for any and of the Wickedness of those Preachers which will not reform till the Magistrate command or compel them (1582) – The church had a right to effect necessary reforms without permission of civil magistrate
- A Book which sheweth the Life and Manners of all true Christians (1582) – defines congregational autonomy
- An answere to master Cartwright his letter for ioyning with the English Church (1583)
- A true and short declaration, both of the gathering and ioyning together of certaine persons, and also of the lamentable breach and division which fell amongst them (1583)
- A Reproof of Certain Schismatical Persons (15??)
- A New Year's Guift (1589)
References
- Biography of Robert Browne, Lilford Hall, retrieved 28 August 2012
- "Browne, Robert (BRWN570R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Cromwell, Thomas (1835). Walks through Islington. London. pp. 82–4.
- Neal, Daniel (1732). "The history of the Puritans, or, Protestant non-conformists..." Internet Archive. Open Library. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
- Persons: Person: Brown, Robert (1591 - 1633) (–) in "CCEd, the Clergy of the Church of England database" (Accessed online, )
- Persons: Person: Browne, Robert (159 - 159) (–) in "CCEd, the Clergy of the Church of England database" (Accessed online, )
- http://www.edintone.com/independents/robert-browne/ includes photos of a memorial stone erected in 1923
External links
- Robert Browne of Lilford; this article has more biographical detail about Browne.
- English dissenters – Brownists — this ExLibris article also has more biographical detail about Browne.
- Robert Browne - The Rebel Who Inspired A Nation Documentary trailer. A short film about Robert Browne produced by The Robert Browne of Lilford Foundation, a charity set up in his memory.
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Browne, Robert. |
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wood, James, ed. (1907). "article name needed". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne.