FIRST EDITION
Textually Complete
Beautifully Rebound
Matching custom clamshell storage box
Good Condition+
$49,500
1 in stock
FIRST EDITION
Textually Complete
Beautifully Rebound
Matching custom clamshell storage box
Good Condition+
1 in stock

1563 John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs or Acts and Monuments of the Church.
Partly paginated and partly foliated; numbering is extremely irregular and difficult. Collation has been checked using the catch words for continuity.
COLLATION
Prelims [24] (General title page and the next 11 leaves of the prelims are supplied in fine facsimile on sympathetic paper which include the Kalender printed without red ink.), Text in six parts [1741 but really 1807] ( The first 4 leaves of the text (pp.1-8) are also supplied in fine facsimile with the original imprinting beginning with page 9. ), To the Reader [1], A diligent index [8] (ends on the letter I so lacking the last 21 pages), Colophon engraving [1] (supplied in facsimile).
CONDITION
A well read volume that has under gone a degree of conservation and restoration work. The paper is generally clean and supple in the main with minimal staining and normal soiling from centuries of reading without offense. Many blank corners have been restored with translucent tissue, most short marginal tears have been repaired, has some worm traces in the lower blank places and a few foredges have been cropped short all without loss to the text. The gutters are clean, no mold, mildew or objectional odors are present.
was an English Puritan preacher and author of The Book of Martyrs, a graphic and polemic account of those who suffered for the cause of Protestantism. Widely read, often the most valued book beside the Bible in the households of English Puritans, it helped shape popular opinion about Roman Catholicism for at least a century. The feeling of the English populace against Spain, important in the politics of the age, was fanned by the book’s description of the Inquisition. It dealt chiefly, however, with the martyrdom of English Protestants from the 14th century through the reign of Queen Mary I in Foxe’s own time.
After studying at the University of Oxford and holding a fellowship for seven years, Foxe fell under suspicion of harbouring Protestant views more extreme than the authorities of his college would allow. He resigned and in 1547 moved to London, where he became tutor to the grandchildren of the duke of Norfolk. He was ordained a deacon of the Church of England. Foxe worked for the Reformation, writing several tracts. He also began his account of martyrs but had carried it no further than 1500 when the accession of the Roman Catholic queen Mary I in 1553 forced him to flee overseas. In Strasbourg, France, he published his partly completed martyrology in Latin as Commentarii rerum in ecclesia gestarum (1554; “Commentaries on Affairs Within the Church”). He then went to Frankfurt, where he lent a moderating support to the Calvinistic party of John Knox, and thence to Basel, Switzerland, where he wrote a burning appeal to the English nobility to restrain the queen from persecuting Protestants: Ad inclytos ac praepotentes Angliae proceres (“To the Renowned and Powerful Nobles of England,” 1557). With the aid of manuscripts sent to him from England, he carried his account of the martyrs up to 1556 and had it printed in 1559, the year following the accession to the throne of the Protestant queen, Elizabeth I.
Foxe returned to London and devoted himself to the completion of his great work. Pursuing official registers and using the memories of eyewitnesses, he enlarged his story. His English translation was printed in March 1563 under the title Actes and Monuments of these Latter and Perillous Dayes. It immediately acquired the popular name The Book of Martyrs. In 1570 he produced his greatly improved second edition. This was the crown of his achievement; he made few changes in his third (1576) and fourth (1583) editions.
Foxe was ordained an Anglican priest in 1560, but having Puritan scruples he refused all offices, obtaining two church stipends that required no duties. He often preached, however, and a sermon delivered at Paul’s Cross (A Sermon, Of Christ Crucified [1570]) had a wide sale. In the plague of 1563 he ministered to the victims and wrote a moving tract of consolation. When Anabaptists in 1575 and Jesuits in 1581 were condemned to death, Foxe wrote vehement letters to Queen Elizabeth and her councilors, begging reprieves.
Foxe’s monument is his book. It has been criticized as prolix, carelessly edited, one-sided, sometimes credulous, but it is factually detailed and preserves much firsthand material on the English Reformation unobtainable elsewhere.
| Weight | 300 oz |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 16 × 12 × 10 in |
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