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Thomas Mason (priest)
English clergyman and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Thomas Mason (1580–1619?) was an English clergyman and writer.
Life
On his own account, his father was the heir of Sir John Mason.[1] Mason was admitted at Magdalen College, Oxford, on 29 November 1594, matriculated on 7 January 1595.[1] He may not have graduated; there is possible confusion with another Thomas Mason at Magdalen of the period.[1]
From 1614 to 1619, Mason held the vicarage of Odiham in Hampshire, and probably died around 1620. On 13 April 1621 his widow, Helen Mason, obtained a licence for twenty-one years to reprint his version of Foxe's Book of Martyrs for the benefit of herself and her children.[1][2] Its dedications to George Abbot and Sir Edward Coke probably proved their value in getting this protection, for a book that reflected typical political prejudices of the time after the Gunpowder Plot.[3] About ten years later Helen Mason's attempt to stretch the monopoly to cover a new abridgement of Foxe's work ran into a legal rebuff.[4]
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Works
He published:
- Christ's Victorie over Sathan's Tyrannie, London, 1615; a condensed version of John Foxe's ‘Book of Martyrs,’ with extracts from other works. The running title is ‘The Acts of the Church.’ An enlarged edition appeared in 1747–8 in 2 vols., edited by "Rev. Mr. Bateman, Rector of St. Bartholomew the Great", i.e. Richard Thomas Bateman.[5][6]
- A Revelation of the Revelation … whereby the Pope is most plainly declared and proved to be Anti-Christ, London, 1619.[1]
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Family
Mason's widow Helen married Stephen Bachiler, as his second wife,[7] or third wife, in 1627. Richard Dummer married Thomas and Helen's daughter (Mary) Jane.
Notes
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