- Matthew Hutton (Archbishop of York)
:"For the later Archbishop of York of the same name, see
Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of Canterbury ". Matthew Hutton (1529 — 1606) wasarchbishop ofYork from 1595 – 1606.Life
Hutton, the son of Matthew Hutton of
Priest Hutton , in the parish of Warton,Lancashire , was born in that parish in 1529. He became asizar in Cambridge University in 1546. He was fellow of Trinity College, and graduated B.A. 1551–2, M.A. 1555, and B.D. 1562. In 1561 he was electedLady Margaret's Professor of Divinity , and next year master of Pembroke Hall, and regius professor of divinity. In the same year he was collated prebendary ofSt. Paul's ,London , and in 1563 instituted rector ofBoxworth ,Cambridgeshire (resigned in 1576). About the same time he obtained a canonry at Ely. In 1564 he distinguished himself by his ability in the theological disputations before Queen Elizabeth at Cambridge (cf. NICHOLS, Progresses of Eliz.), and his character was established as one of the ablest scholars and preachers in the university. He was created D.D. there in 1565, and later in the year was installed a canon ofWestminster . In the succeeding year he was one of theLent preachers at court and a preacher atSt. Paul's Cross . After his appointment in April 1567 as dean of York he resigned his mastership at Pembroke, the regius professorship, and his canonries ofEly andWestminster . Subsequently he was collated to prebends atYork and Southwell. He was suggested as fit to succeedEdmund Grindal in thesee ofLondon in 1570, but his election was opposed byArchbishop Parker . An interesting letter to Burghley, dated6 October . 1573, is preserved at Hatfield, giving at length his opinions on prevailing differences in church government. He was suspected of leaning to thePuritan s, and this led to a dispute withArchbishop Sandys , who in 1586 preferred a charge of thirteen articles against him. Hutton defended himself with spirit, and, though compelled to make submission, admitted nothing more than the use of violent and indiscreet expressions.On
9 June 1589 he was elected through Burghley's influence to the bishopric ofDurham . On11 December 1594 , and in February 1594–5, he wrote beautiful and pathetic appeals to Burghley on behalf ofLady Margaret Neville , who had been condemned on account of the rebellion of her father, Charles, sixth earl of Westmoreland, and he was not only successful in his application for mercy, but gained a pension for the lady.On
14 February . 1595–6 he was elected archbishop of York. The grammar school and almshouses at Warton were shortly afterwards founded by him. In Harington's ‘Nugæ Antiquæ,’ ii. 248, there is an interesting account of a very bold sermon which he preached before Queen Elizabeth atWhitehall . He acted as lord president of the north from 1595 to 1600, and in 1598 he had in his custodySir Robert Ker [q.v.] of Cessford, one of the wardens of theScottish Marches . His courtesy to his prisoner was afterwards acknowledged by King James and by Sir Robert himself. One of his last public acts was to write a letter to Robert Cecil,Lord Cranborne , counselling a relaxation in the prosecution of the puritans. He died at Bishopthorpe on16 January 1605 –6, and was buried in York Minster. His monument is in the south aisle of the choir (cf. WOOD, Fasti Oxon., ed. Bliss, i. 197).He married in 1565
Catherine Fulmetby , or Fulmesby, who died soon after. In 1567 he married Beatrice, daughter ofSir Thomas Fincham . She died on5 May 1582 , and on20 November following he married Frances, widow ofMartin Bowes . [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=QTQGAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA55&lpg=PA55&dq=bowes+levett&source=web&ots=lrTuLRRz37&sig=oZWj-CeGL5kjHwde3KvCFRwy0Ss&hl=en#PPA55,M1 Will of Frances, widow of Martin Bowes, daughter and heiress of Richard Scrope, Esq., Archaeologica Aeliana, 1861] ] (The archbishop's wife Frances left to her grandson Matthew Bowes her home in Coppergate, York, that she had purchased from "ParcivallLevett of York, merchant.") The archbishop left several children by the second marriage. Of these, Timothy Hutton, the eldest son, born 1569, was knighted in 1605, the year in which he was high sheriff ofYorkshire , and died in 1629; the second son wasSir Thomas Hutton ofPopleton (d 1620). The archbishop was blamed by some for granting leases of church lands to his children. He was an ancestor ofMatthew Hutton (Archbishop of Canterbury) (1693 — 1758).An original portrait of Hutton is at
Marske, North Yorkshire , in the possession of descendants. A second portrait was twice engraved, first by Perry, and secondly for Hutchinson's ‘Durham.’ The ‘Hutton Correspondence,’ published by theSurtees Society , contains many of the archbishop's letters.Works
He is author of:
*"A Sermon preached at York before … Henry, Earle of Huntington", London, 1579, 12mo.
*"Brevis et Dilucida Explicatio veræ, certæ, et consolationis plenæ doctrinæ de Electione, Prædestinatione ac Reprobatione," Harderwijk, 1613, 8vo.ources
*Cooper's Athenæ Cantabr. ii. 421, and authorities there cited
*Hutton Correspondence, ed. byJames Raine , 1843, for Surtees Society *Calend. of MSS. preserved at Hatfield (Hist. MSS. Com.), ii. 60
*Fuller's Worthies, "Lancashire"
*British Museum Catalogue
*(Taken fromDictionary of National Biography , 1891)References
External links
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=YdIKAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA627&lpg=PA627&dq=%22sir+martin+bowes%22+burke&source=web&ots=qCtpl2aa7O&sig=gi9t_NqkOowUBwE5Hx2BQ1qNLvw&hl=en Hutton of Marske, Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, Bernard Burke, 1847]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=BSkAAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA758&lpg=PA758&dq=%22sir+martin+bowes%22+burke&source=web&ots=Cx421GU6Vs&sig=X2wBKxL3WRDuKCrIwrRp7kAUUOY&hl=en Hutton of Marske, A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, Bernard Burke, 1862]
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