Edward Coffin
Edward Coffin (alias Hatton) (1570 – 17 April 1626) was an English
Jesuit
.
Life
Coffin was born at
Rheims on 19 July 1585. He left that city for Ingoldstadt on 7 November 1586, in company with Robert Turner, who defrayed the cost of his education. On 26 July 1588, he entered the English college at Rome. Having been ordained priest on 13 March 1592-3 he was sent to England on 10 May 1594, and he entered the Society of Jesus in this country on 13 Jan. 1597-8.[1]
In the Lent of 1598, on his way to the novitiate in
Saint-Omer's College on 17 April 1626.[1]
He edited the posthumous reply of Robert Persons to William Barlow, bishop of Lincoln, entitled A Discussion of Mr. Barlowes Answer to the Book entitled the Judgment of a Catholic Englishman concerning the Oath of Allegiance, St. Omer, 1612, 4to. Coffin wrote the elaborate preface, which occupies 120 pages.[1]
After studies at Reims and Ingolstadt he was ordained at the English College, Rome, and sent to England.[1]
Works
He wrote:
- the preface to Robert Persons's "Discussion of Mr. Barlowe's Answer" (Saint-Omer, 1612),
- Refutation of Hall, Dean of Worcester's "Discourse for the Marriage of Ecclesiastical Persons" (1619),
- "Art of Dying Well", from the Latin of Robert Bellarmine (1621);
- "True Relation of Sickness and Death of Cardinal Bellarmine", by C.E. of the Society of Jesus (1622), tr. into Latin,
- De Morte, etc. (Saint-Omer 1623 8vo.);
- Marci Antonii de Dominis Palinodia (Saint-Omer, 1623), tr. by Fletcher in 1827 as "My Motives for Renouncing the Protestant Religion";
- De Martyrio PP. Roberts, Wilson et Napper (Stonyhurst MSS., Anglia, III, n. 103).[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e Cooper 1887.
- doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5805. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- Attribution
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cooper, Thompson (1887). "Coffin, Edward (1571-1626)". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 215–216.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Edward Coffin". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.