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Curiosities of Puritan Nomenclature by Charles Wareing Endell Bardsley
[The right of translation is reserved]
Printed by William Clowes and Sons, Limited, London and Beccles.
DEDICATED TO
HIS FELLOW MEMBERS
OF THE
HARLEIAN SOCIETY.
* * *
PREFACE.
I will not be so ill-natured as to quote the names of all the writers who have denied the existence of Puritan eccentricities at the font. One, at least, ought to have known better, for he has edited more books of the Puritan epoch than any other man in England. The mistake of all is that, misled perhaps by Walter Scott and Macaulay, they have looked solely to the Commonwealth period. The custom was then in its decay.
I have to thank several clergymen for giving me extracts from the registers and records under their care. A stranger to them, I felt some diffidence in making my requests. In every case the assistance I asked for was readily extended. These gentlemen are the Rev. W. Sparrow Simpson, St. Matthew, Friday Street, London; the Rev. W. Wodehouse, Elham, Canterbury; the Rev. J. B. Waytes, Markington, Yorks.; the Rev. William Tebbs, Caterham Valley; the Rev. Canon Howell, Drayton, Norwich; the Rev. J. O. Lord, Northiam, Staplehurst; and the Rev. G. E. Haviland, Warbleton, Sussex. The last-named gentleman copied no less than 120 names, all of Puritan origin, from the Warbleton records. I beg to thank him most warmly, and to congratulate him on possessing the most remarkable register of its kind in England. Certain circumstances led me to suspect that Warbleton was a kind of head-quarters of these eccentricities; I wrote to the rector, and we soon found that we had "struck ile." That Mr. Heley, the Puritan incumbent, should have baptized his own children by such names as Fear-not and Much-mercy, was not strange, but that he should have persuaded the majority of his parishioners to follow his example proves wonderful personal influence.
Amongst the laity, I owe gratitude to Mr. Chaloner Smith, Richmond, Surrey; Mr. R. R. Lloyd, St. Albans; Mr. J. E. Bailey, F.S.A., Manchester; Mr. J. L. Beardsley, Cleveland, U.S.A.; Mr. Tarbutts, Cranbrook, Kent; and Mr. Speed, Ulverston.
Of publications, I must needs mention Notes and Queries, a treasure-house to all antiquaries; the Sussex Arch?ological Society's works, and the Yorkshire Arch?ological and Topographical Journal. The "Wappentagium de Strafford" of the latter is the best document yet published for students of nomenclature. Out of it alone a complete history of English surnames and baptismal names might be written. Though inscribed with clerkly formality, it contained more pet forms than any other record I have yet seen; and this alone must stamp it as a most important document. The Harleian Society, by publishing church registers, have set a good example, and I have made much use of those that have been issued. They contain few instances of Puritan extravagance, but that is owing to the fact that no leading Puritan was minister of any of the three churches whose records they have so far printed. I sincerely hope the list of subscribers to this society may become enlarged.
For the rest-the result of twelve years' research-I am alone responsible. Heavy clerical responsibilities have often been lightened by a holiday spent among the yellow parchments of churches in town and country, from north to south of England. As it is possible I have seen as many registers as any other man in the country, I will add one statement-a very serious one: there are thousands of entries, at this moment faintly legible, which in another generation will be wholly illegible. What is to be done?
Should this little work meet the eye of any of the clergy in Sussex, Kent, and, I may add, Surrey, I would like to state that if they will search the baptismal records of the churches under their charge, say from 1580 to 1620, and furnish me with the result, I shall be very much obliged.
Vicarage, Ulverston,
March, 1880.
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NOTE.
W. D. S. in the Prologue = "Wappentagium de Strafford."
Curiosities of Puritan Nomenclature
Charles Wareing Endell Bardsley
Literature
Chapter 1 No.1
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Chapter 2 The Paucity of Names after the Conquest.
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Chapter 3 Pet Forms.
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Chapter 4 The March of the Army.
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Chapter 5 POPULARITY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
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Chapter 6 Objectionable Scripture Names.
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Chapter 7 Losses.
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Chapter 8 Introductory.
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Chapter 9 Originated by the Presbyterian Clergy.
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Chapter 10 Curious Names not Puritan.
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Chapter 11 Instances.
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Chapter 12 A Scoffing World.
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Chapter 13 Bunyan's Debt to the Puritans.
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Chapter 14 Royal Double Names.
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Chapter 15 Conjoined Names.
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Chapter 16 Hyphened Names.
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Chapter 17 The Decay of Single Patronymics in Baptism.
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Chapter 18 The Influence of Foundling Names upon Double Baptismal Names.
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Chapter 19 No.19
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Chapter 20 No.20
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Chapter 21 No.21
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