Nisha Rathode (Editor)

William Carter (martyr)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Died
  
January 11, 1584, Tyburn

Role
  
Martyr

Name
  
William Carter

Feast
  
January 11


William Carter (martyr) https2bpblogspotcomd3GBPk8lUUtA3vBOwjPI

Similar People
  
Roberto Calvi, John Southworth, Ralph Sherwin, Oliver Plunkett, Alexander Briant

Venerated in
  
Roman Catholic Church

The bureau xcom declassified the truth behind william carter


Blessed William Carter (c. 1548 – 11 January 1584) was a Roman Catholic English printer and martyr.

Contents

Obscure saint bl william carter encounter


Biography

William Carter was born in London in 1548, the son of John Carter, a draper, and Agnes, his wife. He was apprenticed to John Cawood, queen's printer, on Candlemas Day, 1563, for ten years, and afterwards acted as secretary to Nicholas Harpsfield, last Catholic archdeacon of Canterbury, while Harpsfield was a prisoner in Fleet Prison.

On the latter's death he married and set up a press on Tower Hill. In September 1578 he was confined for about a month in the Poultry Compter, a small prison run by a Sheriff in the City of London, apparently for failure to attend divine service as established by act of Parliament. In December 1579 he was committed the Gatehouse "for not conforming himself in matters of religion". As the prisons were at that time unusually overcrowded he was released on bond in June 1581.

Among Catholic books he printed a new edition (1000 copies) of Dr. Gregory Martin's "A Treatise of Schisme", in 1580, for which he was arrested and imprisoned in the Tower of London, 1582, and paid for his own meals there down to midsummer, 1583. His wife died while he was in prison.

Having been tortured on the rack, he was indicted at the Old Bailey — the central criminal court in England — on 10 January 1584, for having printed Dr. Martin's book, in which was a paragraph where confidence was expressed that the Catholic Hope would triumph, and pious Judith would slay Holofernes. This was interpreted as an incitement to assassinate the Queen. At this time, with increasing tensions between Queen Elizabeth I of England and King Philip II of Spain, which would culminate with the sailing of the Spanish Armada four years later, manifestations of Catholic faith in England were often interpreted as a treasonable taking the side of the Spanish enemy and punished accordingly. He was executed for treason at Tyburn the next day.

References

William Carter (martyr) Wikipedia