- Edward Rishton
Edward Rishton (born in
Lancashire , 1550; died atSainte-Ménehould ,Lorraine ,29 June 1585 [Charles Dodd , followed byThompson Cooper in the "Dictionary of National Biography " and others, erroneously ascribes his death to 1586] ) was an EnglishRoman Catholic priest.Life
He was probably a younger son of John Rishton of
Dunkenhalgh and Dorothy Southworth. He studied at theUniversity of Oxford from 1568 to 1572, when he proceeded B.A. probably fromBrasenose College . During the next year he was converted to Catholicism, and went toDouai College to study for the priesthood.He was the first Englishman to matriculate at Douai, and is said to have taken his M.A. degree there. While a student he drew up and published a chart of ecclesiastical history, and was one of the two sent to
Reims in November, 1576, to see if the college could be removed there. After his ordination atCambrai (6 April, 1576) he was sent to Rome.In 1580 he returned to England, visiting Reims on the way, but was soon arrested. He was tried and condemned to death with
Edmund Campion and others on 20 November, 1581, but was not executed, being left in prison, first in theKing's Bench prison , then in theTower of London . On 21 January he was exiled with several others, being sent under escort as far asAbbeville , whence he made his way to Reims, arriving on 3 March.With the intention of taking his doctorate in divinity he proceeded to the
University of Pont-à-Mousson in Lorraine, but the plague broke out, and though he went to Saint-Ménehould to escape the infection, he died of it and was buried there.Works
At the suggestion of
Robert Persons , he completedNicholas Sanders 's imperfect "Origin and Growth of the Anglican Schism". After his death this book was published by Father Persons, and subsequent editions included two tracts attributed to Rishton, the one a diary of an anonymous priest in the Tower (1580-5), which was probably the work of FatherJohn Hart , S.J.; the other a list of martyrs with later additions by Persons.Publication of the "Tower Bills" makes it certain that Rishton did not write the diary, and his only other known works are a tract on the difference between Catholicism and Protestantism (Douai, 1575) and "Profession of his faith made manifest and confirmed by twenty-one reasons".
References
*
John Pitts , "De illustribus Angliae scriptoribus" (Paris, 1619)
*Charles Dodd , "Church History" (Brussels vere Wolverhampton, 1737-42), II, 74, a very inaccurate account
*Anthony à Wood , "Athenae Oxonienses", ed. Bliss (London, 1813 - 20)
*Kinsella and Deane, "The Rise and Progress of the English Reformation" (Dublin, 1827), a translation of Sanders
*David Lewis, "Rise and Growth of the Anglican Schism" (London, 1877, the best translation of Sanders, the editor accepts the diary in the Tower as being by Rishton
*Thomas Francis Knox , "First and Second Douay Diaries" (London, 1878)
*Henry Foley , "Records Eng. Prov. S.J.", VI (London 1880);
*Joseph Foster, "Alumni Oxonienses" (Oxford, 1891);
*Joseph Gillow , "Bibl. Dict. Eng. Cath".
*Richard Simpson, "Edmund Campion", revised ed. (London, 1896-1907)
*Thompson Cooper in "Dictionary of National Biography "
*Robert Parsons, "Memoirs" in "Catholic Record Society ", II, IV (London, 1906)
*Tower Bills, ed. John Hungerford Pollen in "Catholic Record Society", III (London, 1906)External links
*worldcat id|lccn-nr93-8786
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