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  1. John Bastwick by Wenceslaus Hollar. John Bastwick (1593–1654) was an English Puritan physician and controversial writer. He was punished for his sedition and this included having his ears removed. He was supported by petitions from his wife Susanna Bestwick.

  2. John Bastwick (born 1593, Writtle, Essex, Eng.—died September/October 1654) was an English religious zealot who, in the reign of Charles I, opposed the liturgical and ecclesial reforms introduced by Archbishop William Laud into the Church of England, reforms that Bastwick believed to represent a return to “popery.”.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. John Bastwick. b.1593 d.1654. MD Padua (1622) Ex LRCP (1624-5) LRCP (1627) John Bastwick, MD, was born at Writtle, in Essex, in the year 1593. He was entered at Emmanuel college, Cambridge, in 1614, but continued there for a short time only.

  4. 8 de nov. de 2018 · A Iust Defence of John Bastwick, Doctor in Phisicke, against the Calumnies of John Lilburne (1645) only mentions his own “banishment” indirectly, as a time when his wife offered friendship and assistance to Lilburne and Lilburne performed “small favours … in the time of my imprisonment.”

    • David Cressy
    • 2018
  5. Overview. John Bastwick. (1593—1654) religious controversialist and pamphleteer. Quick Reference. (1593–1654). Bastwick was an indefatigable opponent of Laud and the bishops. Born in Essex, he went to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and then practised as a physician. In the 1630s he ... From: Bastwick, John in The Oxford Companion to British History »

  6. Prynne reached the age of sixty-nine, and John Bastwick, fifty-nine, more than respectable longevity for the mid-seventeenth century. Only Lilburne, in his early Mark Kishlansky is the Frank B. Baird Professor of English and European History at Harvard University.

  7. 1 de jul. de 2020 · This chapter considers the case of John Bastwick, William Prynne, and Henry Burton, whose persecutions in the 1630s and later release by the Long Parliament brought to the fore questions of loyalty, obedience, and religious conscience in England in the years leading up to civil war.