William Lloyd,
A Sermon at the Funeral of Sr Edmvnd-Bvry Godfrey, one of His Majesties Justices of the Peace, Who was Barbarously Murthered.
London, Printed by Tho. Newcomb, for Henry Brome at the Gun, at the West-end of St. Pauls, MDCLXXVIII. (1678)
Lloyd’s violent anti-papal sermon which helped to inflame the hysteria around the Popish Plot. Complete in all respects including the final blank often missing.
$300.00
Lloyd’s violent anti-papal sermon which helped to inflame the hysteria around the Popish Plot. Complete in all respects including the final blank often missing.
Lloyd’s violent anti-papal sermon which helped to inflame the hysteria around the Popish Plot. Complete in all respects including the final blank often missing.
The volume(s) measure about cm. by cm. by cm.
Each leaf measures about 197 mm. by 148 mm.
- Main description
- Condition
- Biography / Bibliography
Main description
The full title reads:
A Sermon at the Funeral of Sr Edmvnd-Bvry Godfrey, one of His Majesties Justices of the Peace, Who was Barbarously Murthered. Preached on Thursday the last day of October 1678. In the Parish Church of St. Martin in the Fields. By William Lloyd D.D. Dean of Bangor, one of His Majesties Chaplains in Ordinary. Vicar of the said parish of St. Martin. London, Printed by Tho. Newcomb, for Henry Brome at the Gun, at the West-end of St. Pauls, MDCLXXVIII. [1678]
The volume is paginated as follows: [4], 42, [2] p. Last leaf is blank.
The volume collates as follows: [A]2, B-F4, G2.
In this issue pages 17 and 24 are correctly numbered.
ESTC: R20443 Wing L2700
Condition
The Volume is in Very good Condition disbound, with generally clean, well margined leaves, some mild general toning, as well as some small creases and fox marks. The first and last leaf with some dirt stains and creasing. Stab Holes present.
Please take the time necessary to review the slideshow in order to gain a better understanding of the content and condition of the volume. Every leaf has been photographed.
Biography / Bibliography
Per Wikipedia; William Lloyd (18 August 1627 – 30 August 1717) was an English divine who served successively as bishop of St Asaph, of Lichfield and Coventry and of Worcester.
Lloyd was born at Tilehurst, Berkshire, in 1627, the son of Richard Lloyd, then vicar, who was the son of David Lloyd of Henblas, Anglesey. By the age of eleven, he had understanding in Greek and Latin, and somewhat of Hebrew, before attending Oriel and Jesus Colleges, Oxford (later becoming a Fellow of Jesus College).[1] He graduated M.A. in 1646. In 1663 he was prebendary of Ripon, in 1667 prebendary of Salisbury, in 1668 archdeacon of Merioneth, in 1672 dean of Bangor and prebendary of St Paul’s, London, in 1680 bishop of St Asaph, in 1689 lord-almoner, in 1692 bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, and in 1699 bishop of Worcester.[2] As Bishop of Lichfield he rebuilt the diocesan residence at Eccleshall Castle, which had been destroyed in the Civil War.[3]
‘He wrote several tracts against popery, and his puritanical tendencies further showed themselves in allowing the princess to attend the congregationalist chapel in the Hague, and in the violent anti-papal sermon which he preached at St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields at the funeral of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey on 31 Oct. 1678.’ DNB
Lloyd was an indefatigable opponent of the Roman Catholic tendencies of James II of England, and was one of the seven bishops who, for refusing to have the Declaration of Indulgence read in his diocese, was charged with publishing a seditious libel against the king. However, he was acquitted in 1688, which was one of the events that lead to the fall of James II.
He engaged Gilbert Burnet to write The History of the Reformation of the Church of England and provided him with much material. He was a good scholar and a keen student of biblical apocalyptic literature and himself “prophesied” to Anne, Queen of Great Britain, Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer, William Whiston, and John Evelyn the diarist. Lloyd was a staunch supporter of the Glorious Revolution.
He lived to the age of ninety-one and died at Hartlebury Castle on 30 August 1717. He was buried in the church of Fladbury, near Evesham in Worcestershire, of which his son was rector and where a monument is erected to his memory with a long inscription.
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