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Richard Carpenter (theologian)

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Nationality
  
English

Role
  
Theologian

Occupation
  
Clerk in holy orders

Died
  
1627

Known for
  
Theology

Education
  
Exeter College, Oxford

Name
  
Richard Carpenter


Born
  
bapt. 16 February 1575[/6] (not certain)
Phillack, Cornwall, England

Richard Carpenter (1575–1627) was an English clergyman and theological writer.

Contents

Biography

He was probably born in Cornwall in 1575. A Richard Carpenter was baptised at Phillack, Cornwall, on 16 February 1575[/6], son of Thomas Carpenter. It is not certain, however, that he and this Richard Carpenter were the same person. He matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford, on 28 May 1592, and took his degrees of B.A. on 19 February 1596, B.D. 25 June 1611, and D.D. 10 February 1616–17. He was elected to a Cornish fellowship at his college on 30 June 1596, and retained it until 30 June 1606; under the advice of Thomas Holland, the Rector, he studied theology, and became noted as a preacher.

In 1606 he was appointed by Sir Robert Chichester to the rectories of Sherwell and Loxhore, near Barnstaple, and it has been suggested that he was the Richard Carpenter who from 1601 to 1626 held the vicarage of Cullompton. His will, dated in 1625, describes him as pastor of Sherwell (not Sheviock, as per will abstract), Devon.

He died on 18 December 1627, and was buried in the chancel of Loxhore Church, where a monument was erected to his memory.

Works

Carpenter's literary productions were confined to theology. He was the author of:

  • A Sermon Preached at the Funeral Solemnities of Sir Arthur Ackland, 9 January 1612.
  • A Pastoral Charge at the Triennial Visitation of the Bishop of Exon. at Barnstaple, 1616.
  • Christ's Larum Bell of Love resounded, 1616.
  • The Conscionable Christian, three sermons preached before the judges of the circuit in 1620, London, 1623.
  • His learning is praised by Charles Fitzgeoffry in his Affaniae, and two letters addressed to him by Degory Wheare in 1603 and 1621 are in the Epistolae Eucharistice with Wheare's Pietas erga Benefactores, 1628. Some verses by Carpenter are printed in the Funebre Officium in Memoriam Elizabethae Angliae reginae of the University of Oxford, 1603, and in the collection (Pietas erga Jacobum Angliae regem) with which that body in the same year welcomed the new king.

    Family

    While he was a tutor at Oxford, Christopher Trevelyan was among his pupils, and through this introduction Carpenter married Susanna, born about 1688, daughter of Sir John Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet and Urith Chichester. his pupil's youngest sister, and obtained his benefice from Sir Robert Chichester. The marriage took place at Nettlecombe, Somerset, on 1 September 1606.

    The children of Richard and Susanna Carpenter were:

  • 1) Susanna Carpenter, bp. Nettlecombe, 28 Oct 1607.
  • 2) John Carpenter, b. ca. 1608.
  • 3) Mary Carpenter, b. say 1610.
  • 4) Richard Carpenter, b. say 1612.
  • 5) Ann Carpenter, b. say 1614.
  • 6) Elizabeth Carpenter, b. say 1616.
  • 7) Edward Carpenter, b. say 1618.
  • 8) Sarah Carpenter, b. say 1620.
  • 9) Thomas Carpenter, b. say 1622.
  • This Richard Carpenter was not the Richard Carpenter of Amesbury, Wiltshire, father of William Carpenter of Providence, Rhode Island.

    Nor should he be confused with Richard Carpenter (vicar of Poling). This Richard was at Kings College, Cambridge, in 1622, twice lived in Europe for a few years and was vicar of Poling from 1635 to about 1642. He married in middle age and finally settled not in Amesbury but Aylesbury, in Buckinghamshire, where he died about 1670.

    References

    Richard Carpenter (theologian) Wikipedia