Difference between revisions of "Richard Baxter 1615-1691"
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− | ===[[name::Richard]] [[name::BAXTER]] [[date of birth::1615]]-[[date of death::1691 | + | ===[[name::Richard]] [[name::BAXTER]] [[date of birth::1615]]-[[date of death::1691]]=== |
====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== | ||
− | Born in the village of [[place of birth::Rowton, Shropshire]], son of [[family::Richard Baxter]] (d. | + | Born in the village of [[place of birth::Rowton, Shropshire]], son of [[family::Richard Baxter]] (d.1663) of [[location::Eaton Constantine]], [[location::Shropshire]], and [[family::Beatrice Adeney]] (d.1635). Baxter did not receive a university education but had a voracious appetite for books and ‘became one of the most learned of seventeenth-century divines’ (''ODNB''). [[occupation::Schoolmaster]] in [[location::Dudley]], [[location::Worcestershire]]; [[occupation::assistant]] to [[associates::William Madstard]], [[occupation::vicar]] of [[location::Bridgnorth]], [[location::Shropshire]] 1639. [[occupation::vicar|Vicar]] of [[location::Kidderminster]], [[location::Worcestershire]] 1648 (ejected 1662); licensed to preach in [[location::London]], 1672. A hugely influential devotional author, and a leading figure in late 17th-century English nonconformity. |
====Books==== | ====Books==== | ||
Baxter's surviving library catalogue shows him to have had a collection of ca.1500 volumes. | Baxter's surviving library catalogue shows him to have had a collection of ca.1500 volumes. | ||
+ | [[file:BaxterRichard.jpeg|thumb|500px|Baxter's inscription in a copy of J. Caudry, ''Sabbatum redivivum'', 1645, Princeton University Library]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Characteristic Markings==== | ||
+ | [https://catalog.princeton.edu/catalog/9926393583506421 Princeton University Library 5885.246.11] has Baxter's inscription on the flyleaf, above a biblical quotation. | ||
====Sources==== | ====Sources==== |
Latest revision as of 03:00, 11 July 2023
Richard BAXTER 1615-1691
Biographical Note
Born in the village of Rowton, Shropshire, son of Richard Baxter (d.1663) of Eaton Constantine, Shropshire, and Beatrice Adeney (d.1635). Baxter did not receive a university education but had a voracious appetite for books and ‘became one of the most learned of seventeenth-century divines’ (ODNB). Schoolmaster in Dudley, Worcestershire; assistant to William Madstard, vicar of Bridgnorth, Shropshire 1639. Vicar of Kidderminster, Worcestershire 1648 (ejected 1662); licensed to preach in London, 1672. A hugely influential devotional author, and a leading figure in late 17th-century English nonconformity.
Books
Baxter's surviving library catalogue shows him to have had a collection of ca.1500 volumes.
Characteristic Markings
Princeton University Library 5885.246.11 has Baxter's inscription on the flyleaf, above a biblical quotation.
Sources
- Cambers, A. Godly reading, Cambridge, 2011, 131.
- Hoare, P. (gen.ed.), The Cambridge history of libraries in Britain and Ireland. 3 vols. Cambridge, 2006, II 179-80.
- Keeble, N. H. "Baxter, Richard (1615–1691), ejected minister and religious writer." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Matthews, A. G. Calamy revised. Oxford, 1934.
- Nuttall, G. A transcript of Richard Baxter’s library catalogue, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 2 (1951), 207-21, 3 (1952) 74-100.