Great Tew Circle

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The Great Tew Circle was a group of clerics and literary figures who gathered in the 1630s at the manor house of Great Tew, Oxfordshire in southern England, and in London. [1]

Contents

Lord Clarendon referred to the Circle as "A college situate in a purer air", referring to its pursuit of truth away from the partisan passions of the town. The house was the property of the noble Cary family, and the circle was brought together by Lucius Cary, who became 2nd Viscount Falkland on the death of his father in 1633. The most prominent of those taking part was Edward Hyde, the future 1st Earl of Clarendon, who after 1660 would become known as a leading statesman, and then a historian. [2]

Views

Late engraving (1811) of Lord Falkland, after a portrait by Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen FalklandEngraving.jpg
Late engraving (1811) of Lord Falkland, after a portrait by Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen

In the vexed religious climate of the time, the Circle was heterodox, inclining to sympathy with Socinianism. [3] The favoured approach of some of those involved has been defined as "Arminian humanism", and in any case opposed to rigid Calvinism; [4] this approach fitted with political views that were essentially royalist. [5] The central religious figure of the Circle was William Chillingworth. [6] Falkland himself had a Catholic convert, Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, for his mother, and found the tolerant approach of Erasmus attractive. [7] He organised the circle with his wife Lettice. [8]

Influences

Major influences on the thinking of the circle were Hugo Grotius [1] and Richard Hooker because of the place the latter made for the use of reason in Biblical interpretation and church polity. [9] These writers formed part of the broader Christian humanist tradition of Jacobus Acontius, George Cassander, Sebastian Castellio, Bernardino Ochino and Faustus Socinus. [1] The anti-patristic views of Jean Daillé were also significant. [10] According to the writings of Hyde (as Lord Clarendon), the gatherings and discussions themselves were modelled on those of Cicero and Erasmus, with guests being welcome to differ on points of view. Discourse also took place around the dinner table, with Clarendon likening the "Convivium Philosophicum or Convivium Theologicum ("philosophical-" or "theological feast") to Erasmus's Convivium Religiosum ("godly feast")." [1]

Tolerance, eirenicism, latitude

Chillingworth was influenced by Acontius, and the Circle read Acontius alongside Johannes Crellius, a Socinian. [11] They found greater relevance in the eirenicism of Acontius than in the theology (Unitarianism) of Socinus himself. [12] The context, as explained by the historian Hugh Trevor-Roper, was that of the Thirty Years' War with its Protestant defeats of the 1620s and Catholic expansion; but also of the doctrines of the contra-Remonstrants in an environment of increasing skepticism on religious matters. [13] Falkland and Chillingworth had been seared by the "Pyrrhonian crisis" of skepticism rampant. [14] Opposed to fideism, the Circle found in the use by Grotius of probabilism a more attractive option to deal with the challenge of skepticism. [15]

Trevor-Roper supported the claims of the Great Tew group to the eirenic moral high ground on religious toleration and a commitment to rational dialogue on religion. This analysis has been challenged from the direction of the Circle's political thought, with its commitment to sovereignty. It has also been argued that these are two sides to the understanding of the period of the term "Socinian". [3] The eirenic style was understood by Puritan opponents as Arminian rhetoric, and they moved away from compromise with it, to polemic and contemplation of war. [16]

The major theologians of the circle (Chillingworth, Hales, Taylor) have regularly been claimed as precursors of the Latitudinarians, a term anachronistic before 1660. [17] They are now considered to have paved the way for the Cambridge Platonists, in the attitude that there is no single basis for essential and true beliefs. [18] The distinction now usual between the Cambridge Platonists and other Latitudinarians is a conventional one, introduced by John Tulloch in the 19th century. [19]

Participants

Participation in any actual dialogues as described by Hyde is problematic to establish; and the time scale has different points on it, though a beginning date of 1634 (Martinich) seems to be agreed widely. After about 1640 the troubled political situation overshadowed theoretical discussion and writing. The influence of the circle can be traced in theological production (especially Chillingworth's Religion of Protestants, 1638), [20] literary works and translation in a humanist vein, and the political line pursued by Falkland and Hyde in 1640–1, attempting to find a middle position between Puritan and Laudian extremes.

Memorial to Falkland, who died at the first battle of Newbury of 1643, fighting recklessly on the royalist side, some 30 miles south of Great Tew Falkland Memorial - geograph.org.uk - 1181172.jpg
Memorial to Falkland, who died at the first battle of Newbury of 1643, fighting recklessly on the royalist side, some 30 miles south of Great Tew

Among those mentioned as being in Falkland's circle are:

Churchmen
Men of letters
Politicians and lawyers

Associations

Since Great Tew was best known as an open house for Oxford scholars, and Falkland's contacts included a group centred on London and the court, it is artificial at best to assign membership in the circle to some who are known to have associated with the group.

Relationship to other groups

Lettice Cary, Viscountess Falkland, as a widow Letice Falkland.jpg
Lettice Cary, Viscountess Falkland, as a widow

Falkland himself is identified as one of the Tribe of Ben, the followers of Jonson; [45] and others of the Circle were also in the Tribe. Falkland also gave the first of the poetical tributes in the 1638 Oxford memorial volume Jonson Virbius, and others of the Circle who contributed were Henry Coventry, May and Digges. [46]

Hales and Chillingworth have been identified with an "Oxford School of rational theology", containing also Christopher Potter and William Page. [47] It has been said that, despite the political difference over the defence of episcopacy, there is no clear distinction between the Great Tew line and Laudianism in theology. [48] Falkland, Hyde and Sir John Colepepper were leaders of the "Country Alliance" of 1640. [49]

Katherine Jones was someone common to the Great Tew Circle and the Hartlib Circle. [50] Robert Payne was a central figure in the so-called Welbeck Academy, around the Cavendishes, with which Hobbes was more closely associated than with Great Tew. [51]

The widowed Lady Falkland (Lettice) took in John Duncon, brother of Eleazar Duncon and Edmund Duncon, who had lost his Essex rectory during the Civil war. He later wrote her biography (1648, in the form of an exchange of letters). [52] [53] It has been suggested that the household was run on lines similar to the Little Gidding community. [54]

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References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Gary Remer (31 January 2008). Humanism and the Rhetoric of Toleration. Penn State Press. p. 144. ISBN   978-0-271-02811-8 . Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  2. Ted-Larry Pebworth, ed. (2000). Literary circles and cultural communities in Renaissance England. University of Missouri Press. p. 174. ISBN   978-0-8262-1317-4 . Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  3. 1 2 Sarah Mortimer (4 March 2010). Reason and Religion in the English Revolution: The Challenge of Socinianism. Cambridge University Press. pp. 63–5. ISBN   978-0-521-51704-1 . Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  4. See Arminianism in the Church of England.
  5. Patrick Müller (19 January 2009). Latitudinarianism and didacticism in eighteenth century literature: moral theology in Fielding, Sterne, and Goldsmith. Peter Lang. p. 17. ISBN   978-3-631-59116-1 . Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  6. Tom Sorell (26 January 1996). The Cambridge Companion to Hobbes. Cambridge University Press. p. 22. ISBN   978-0-521-42244-4 . Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  7. Jean-Louis Quantin (25 April 2009). The Church of England and Christian antiquity: the construction of a confessional identity in the 17th century. Oxford University Press. p. 215. ISBN   978-0-19-955786-8 . Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  8. Allen, Elizabeth. "Cary [née Morison], Lettice, Viscountess Falkland". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/66709.(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  9. Michael Brydon, The Evolving Reputation of Richard Hooker: An examination of responses 1600–1714 (2006), p. 52.
  10. John William Packer (1969). The transformation of Anglicanism, 1643-1660: with special reference to Henry Hammond . Manchester University Press ND. pp.  69. GGKEY:2UELGKR2ZUF. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
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  12. Sarah Mortimer (4 March 2010). Reason and Religion in the English Revolution: The Challenge of Socinianism. Cambridge University Press. p. 6. ISBN   978-0-521-51704-1 . Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  13. Reid Barbour (2002). Literature and Religious Culture in Seventeenth-Century England. Cambridge University Press. pp. lxxx. ISBN   978-0-521-00664-4 . Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  14. Hugh Trevor-Roper, From Counter-Reformation to Glorious Revolution (1992), p. 176.
  15. Daniel Garber; Michael Ayers (2003). The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1034 and 399. ISBN   978-0-521-53720-9 . Retrieved 26 March 2012.
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  17. E.g. Edward Augustus George, Seventeenth Century Men of Latitude; forerunners of the new theology (1908); .
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  20. In full The Religion of Protestants, a safe way to salvation, or, An answer to a booke entitle Mercy and truth, or, Charity maintain'd by Catholiques, which pretends to prove the contrary (Oxford, 1638).
  21. Malcolm, p.92 note 53.
  22. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Brückmann, Patricia C. "Cressy, Hugh Paulinus". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/6676.(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  23. 1 2 3 4 Martinich, p. 103.
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  32. Martinich, pp. 63–4, and p. 217.
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  54. A. L. Maycock, Nicholas Ferrar of Little Gidding (1938), note p. 231.