Mary Morrissey
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Episcopal chaplains and control of the media, 1586–1642
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The chapter explores why episcopal chaplains were the obvious choice of deputies for the bishops in the task of press licensing. Episcopal chaplains had a rather different relationship with their employer than the domestic chaplains of most aristocrats. An episcopal chaplaincy was an important route to a royal chaplaincy showing two examples, namely Samuel Purchas (chaplain to John King of London) and John Buckeridge (chaplain to Archbishop Whitgift). A chaplain's routine function was to lead morning and evening prayers in the chapel; he was also expected to preach and to assist the bishop at ordinations. Whitgift's panel of correctors did not tie press control unambiguously to the office of episcopal chaplain, but it probably promoted the assumption that press licensing was a particular task undertaken by those men.

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Chaplains in early modern England

Patronage, literature and religion

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