Edmund Chillenden

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Edmund Chillenden (fl. 1631–1678) was an English soldier, known as an agitator and theological writer. At different times he was a Leveller and a Fifth Monarchist.[1]

Life[]

With 60 others, he was arrested at a religious meeting in London in January 1641 at the house of Richard Sturges.[2] He was a prisoner of war in 1642 in Oxford Castle, and wrote a pamphlet on the terrible conditions of his confinement, against William Smith.[3][4]

He was an officer in the parliamentary New Model Army, in 1646 a Lieutenant and intelligence officer in Whalley's Regiment.[5] He was on the army's General Council in 1647, and a supporter of the Levellers.[6]

Jason Peacey writes of

…informal networks of Puritan activists on the radical Protestant fringe … who were particularly involved in the advancement and propagation of particular religious visions, and explicitly concerned with spreading their message through the medium of print and through 'conspiratorial' publications. This circle included John Lilburne, Samuel Richardson, Edmund Chillingworth, and John Vicars.[7]

Works[]

He published :

  • Preaching without Ordination, London, 1647. Lazarus Seaman wrote a brief answer to this work, appended to his Vindication of the Judgment of the Reformed Churches and Protestant Divines from Misrepresentations concerning Ordination and Laying on of Hands, London 1647. Another reply appeared under the title of Church Members set in Joynt, by Filodexter Transilvanus, (Benjamin Woodbridge), London, 1648.
  • Nathan's Parable; with a Letter to his Excellency the Lord General Cromwell, London, 1653, 4to.[8]
  • A true relation of the state of the case between the ever-honourable Parliament and the officers of the Army, that fell out on the eleventh and twelfth of October, 1659, London 1659. A condemnation of the Army's actions in expelling the Rump Parliament

Notes[]

  1. ^ Michael R. Watts, The dissenters: from the Reformation to the French Revolution (1986), p. 137.
  2. ^ Keith Lindley, The English Civil War and revolution: a sourcebook (1998), p. 90.
  3. ^ The inhumanity of the Kings prison-keeper at Oxford (1643).
  4. ^ Charles Carlton, Going to the Wars: The Experience of the British Civil Wars, 1638-1651 (1994), p. 249.
  5. ^ Austin Woolrych, Britain in Revolution p. 362.
  6. ^ Woolrych, Britain in Revolution, p. 381.
  7. ^ Jason Peacey, Politicians and Pamphleteers: propaganda during the English civil wars and interregnum (2004), p. 98.
  8. ^ s:Chillenden, Edmund (DNB00)

References[]

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Chillenden, Edmund". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

Further reading[]

  • Michael A. Norris, Edward Sexby, John Reynolds and Edmund Chillenden : agitators, "sectarian grandees" and the relations of the New Model Army with London in the spring of 1647. Historical Research, 76:191 (2003), 30-53
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