- John Conant
Reverend John Conant BA, MA, DD (
18 October 1608 -12 March 1694 ) was a clergyman andVice Chancellor ofOxford University .He was born at
Yettington , Bicton, in south-eastDevon , the eldest son of Robert Conant and his wife, Elizabeth Morris. He was educated first in the free school atIlchester, Somerset , and then under the instruction of the schoolmaster Thomas Branker, with additional instruction by his uncle John, rector ofLimington inSomerset . Taken by his uncle to Oxford in 1627, he was enrolled on 18 February as a commoner of Exeter. There he was tutored by Lawrence Bodley, nephew of the benefactor of theBodleian Library . Conant quickly gained a mastery of Greek, debating publicly in that language, and also excelled inHebrew , Syriac, andArabic . His potential was recognised byJohn Prideaux , the anti-Arminian rector of Exeter, who commented that he found nothing difficult. John Conant graduated BA on 26 May 1631, and MA on 12 January 1634; on 30 June 1632 he was chosen a probationer of Exeter College, and on 3 July 1633 made a fellow. He was ordained deacon and tutored pupils until 1642, when the disruption of Oxford by civil war forced him to depart, abandoning valuable books which he never regained.With plans to join his uncle at Limington, Conant found by the time he arrived, his uncle, a supporter of the parliamentary cause, had gone to London. There his uncle preached to the House of Commons on 26 July 1643, calling on it to reform the church, and was a member of the
Westminster assembly (not the nephew, as some sources incorrectly assert). Remaining for a while at Limington, Conant preached and carried out parish duties, until so menaced byroyalist troops that he joined his uncle in London and began to assist him in the parish of St Botolph,Aldersgate , but he soon took up residence with the family of Lord and Lady Chandos atHarefield ,Middlesex , whom he served as chaplain. Lady Chandos, the daughter ofHenry Montagu , Earl of Manchester, was his patron, awarding him an annual stipend of £80, much of which he used to relieve the poor and needy of the parish, and provide them with bibles and schooling.Meanwhile, he gave a weekday lecture for several years at nearby
Uxbridge . On 20 December 1645 the committee for plundered ministers offered him the rectory of Whimple, Devon, but Conant refused it. When in 1647 subscription to theSolemn League and Covenant was required of college fellows, Conant refused to take it, writing a letter from Harefield dated 27 September 1647, resigning his fellowship at Exeter.In 1649 when the rector of Exeter died, a majority of the fellows wanted Conant's uncle for the position, but the elder Conant, wishing to remain at the parish of St Thomas, Salisbury, urged his nephew for the post; the nephew was duly elected on 7 June 1649, and admitted to the office on 29 June 1649. Confronted with the question of affirming his loyalty to the parliamentary government by taking the engagement, which in October 1649 was made mandatory for members of colleges, Conant took it, but declared to the commissioners that in doing so he was not abridging his liberty to declare allegiance to any other future power that God might put over him, and did not necessarily approve of all that the government had done.
Taking up his duties with alacrity, Conant was an ideal choice for rector. He found the college deficient in discipline and deeply in debt, and remedied both, enforcing strict observance of the college statutes. He also attended the academic exercises and daily prayers of the college and catechized the college servants. Refuting
Socinianism andRoman Catholicism in weekly instruction to the undergraduates, he drew on such standard works of reformed scholasticism as Johannes Wollebius's Compendium theologiae Christianae and Johannes Piscator's Aphorismi doctrinae Christianae. For more advanced students he led a study of biblical prophecy, using Thomas Parker's The Visions and Prophecies of Daniel Expounded (1646), a book by a New England minister which asserted that the pope was theantichrist . Conant's style of leadership at Exeter attracted large numbers of students, including some from abroad. He was awarded the DD on31 May 1654 .During his time as rector of Exeter, John Conant preached regularly at three nearby parishes: he preached every Friday morning at seven o'clock at All Saints' for more than ten years, developing a complete body of divinity for his auditors; he preached almost every Sunday for several years at St Michael's; and he preached at St Mary Magdalen's every other Sunday for half of each year. As vicar of
Kidlington , near Oxford, which was annexed to the rectory of Exeter, he also preached frequently, although he declined the rectory ofEwelme in Oxfordshire, which was also attached to the college.In August 1651 he married Elizabeth Reynolds (d. 1707), youngest daughter of Edward Reynolds, then rector of
Braunston, Northamptonshire ; the couple had six sons and six daughters.Conant was presbyterially ordained to the ministry at Salisbury in October 1652, and in September 1654 he was appointed
Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford. He lectured twice a week in order to fulfil the duties of that office, basing his lectures on the biblical annotations ofHugo Grotius , whose philological scholarship was much admired even by those who rejected hisArminianism . In 1657 as compensation for the sequestered income of his divinity chair, Conant was awarded byOliver Cromwell the income from the rectory ofAbergele ,Denbighshire , returning much of which to its resident vicar and to the poor of the parish. None of his theological lectures were ever published, and Conant later destroyed his notes for them.Shortly after
Richard Cromwell succeeded his father aschancellor of Oxford University, he named John Conant as vice-chancellor, on 9 October 1657. Prior to this the bursars' accounts of Jesus College show him handling payments to the university by 1654. While vice-chancellor Conant restored many traditions, such as the wearing of caps and hoods, which his predecessor John Owen had considered popish. He went to London in 1659 with Seth Ward andJohn Wilkins to help thwart the grant of auniversity charter to Durham College. And he now sought to enforce discipline in the whole university just as he had in Exeter College. In 1659 he was instrumental in procuring the enormous library ofJohn Selden for the Bodleian.Described by his contemporaries as thin and short in stature, Conant became completely blind in 1686. He died on
12 March 1694 and was buried in the rebuiltAll Saints' Church, Northampton , where he is commemorated by a monument and Latin epitaph.ources
*
Dictionary of National Biography
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.