Kenneth Fincham
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The roles and influence of household chaplains, c. 1600–c. 1660
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In her diary for 1617-1619, Lady Anne Clifford recorded some revealing contacts with two household chaplains. With one, Richard Rands, she began reading through the Old Testament until her husband, the 3rd Earl of Dorset, 'told me it would hinder his study'. Clifford was engrossed in a dispute with Dorset over her inheritance, and had 'much talk' with another chaplain, Geoffrey Amherst, about the gossip in London following her decision to reject James I's offer of arbitration. The influence of royal chaplains was central to any narrative of ecclesiastical politics in the reigns of James I and Charles I. Both monarchs made extensive use of the learning and experience of their chaplains, many of whom, as a result, were prominent players in court intrigue and royal initiatives. Chaplains attached to the households of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London represented a distinct and significant sub-group.

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Chaplains in early modern England

Patronage, literature and religion

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