On 16 July 1556 a martyr named Julius Palmer was executed in Newbury, Berkshire. Born in Coventry to a father who served as mayor at one time there, and later worked as an upholsterer, he was provided with a good education. A fellow of Magdalen College in Oxford, he was said to have had ‘a very prompt and ready memory, a wit sharp and pregnant’. He studied philosophy and languages, and could speak Latin and Greek. A hard worker, he entered Oxford University in 1550 during the reign of Edward VI, spending his days waking at 4am and eventually settling in his bed after 10pm. In 1552 the Protestant King Edward died, and after a brief tussle for the crown, Mary I came to power. The Catholic daughter of Henry VIII and his first wife Katherine of Aragon, she was resolved to bring England back under the authority of the pope. Her father had begun the move away from Papal Authority in the 1530s, when the pope ruled that his marriage to Katherine of Aragon was legal. He had been trying to divorce her to marry his new love, Anne Boleyn, and his reaction to the papal decision was to sever England’s reliance on papal authority. England was still very much a Catholic country when Henry died in 1547, with some tweaks including a state-controlled edition of the Bible. Under Edward VI and his two Protectors, the dukes of Somerset and then Northumberland, England swung more towards a Protestant religion. Under Mary, and her Spanish Habsburg husband Philip of Spain, all that would change.
In the early 1550s, ‘slanderous libels and railing verses’ were nailed to the doors of areas within Magdalen College, and Palmer, having argued with the president Dr Haddon, was quickly rumoured to have been the culprit. Palmer denied any involvement, but was still expelled from the university under suspicion of the offence. He then worked as a tutor to the children of Sir Francis Knollys, and later taught at Reading Grammar School, which would have been near the site of today’s Town Hall and St Laurence's Church. Palmer’s thoughts on religion now became not only public but treasonous, according to the words of one John Bullingham. Bullingham wrote that Palmer once walked with him to St James’ Palace in London, where he ‘leaned at the great gate of that place’, and spoke of the ‘misery and calamities we are fallen for the pope and his religion’. He told Bullingham to ‘consider what hangeth over our heads’, and stated that ‘rather than I will yield unto them, I will beg my bread’.
In another meeting, he met Palmer at St Paul’s Cathedral, which then had its medieval pre-1666 spire. Palmer told Bullingham that an image of God was ‘an idol, and that the pope is antichrist, and his clergy the filthy stink-hole of hell’.
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A man tied to a burning stake, Wellcome Collection, Public Domain. |
In the early years of Mary and Philip’s reign, the burnings of those who refused to adopt the Catholic religion began. Everyone from bishops to tradesmen were tied to stakes and consumed by flames, protesting their faith as they died. Palmer, it was said, became interested in these events, gathering information about the deaths of Bishop John Hooper in Gloucester and of Bishops Ridley and Latimer in Oxford. Palmer tried to keep his Protestant views, which were inspired by the writings of John Calvin, private. However it soon became clear that he did not adhere to the state religion, storming out of a lecture on Catholicism because of ‘the friar’s blasphemous talk’ and failing to adhere to Tudor customs of respect when dealing with Catholic priests.
By 1555 Palmer was employed as a schoolmaster at Reading Grammar School, and lived within the town. However on learning that he was being investigated for his Protestant beliefs, he planned an escape. Leaving his job and his home, he went to his mother who disowned him, saying that his father had ‘bequeathed nought for heretics’. It was then, in 1556, that he managed to obtain a job as tutor in a school in Gloucestershire. Remembering how quickly he had left Reading, he made the decision to revisit the town quietly and pick up the cash and belongings he had left in his chamber.
He came to the town and lodged at an inn called The Cardinal’s Hat, ‘desiring his hostess to assign him a close chamber, where he might be alone from all resort of company’. However the friends he had relied on to help him gather his things turned on him. One man, Hampton, visited him at the inn and gathered information about his future plans, the men ending their conversation in an argument. After he left, Palmer called for his evening meal and went to bed, but officials came bursting in, ‘with lanterns and bills, requiring him in the king and queen’s name to make ready himself, and quietly to depart by them’. Palmer was clapped into a dungeon – according to John Foxe, he was suspended by his wrists – and prepared for his trial in Reading.
Palmer was outspoken and pragmatic at his examination, saying that ‘the queen's sword was not put in her hand to execute tyranny, and to kill and murder the true servants of God’. It was decided that he would travel to Newbury and face the rest of the judicial process there. A Protestant sympathiser and resident of Reading, Master Rider, sent a servant to Palmer secretly the night before his departure, saying that he would provide anything he needed that evening. Palmer replied warmly that he ‘lacked nothing’ and thanked Rider for his concern. Palmer faced another examination on 16 July 1556 at Newbury by a council that had assembled in the choir of the parish church, St Nicholas. He was interrogated about his writings and his religious opinions but stood firm, replying that he ‘forsook the pope’.
Julius Palmer was committed back to prison in Newbury and was burned on the same day as his trial, at around 5pm on 16 July 1556. He visibly comforted the others who were also to be burned, telling them to trust Christ and ‘rejoice and be martyrs, glad, for great is your reward in heaven’. Although they could kill the body, he said, men were ‘not able to touch the soul’. After he was tied to the stake, he prayed loudly, despite one Newbury man throwing a bundle of firewood at his face so hard Palmer bled. As the attacker was admonished by the sheriff, the flames flickered around Palmer, who held up his hands and beat his chest praying for Jesus to receive his soul.
But Palmer’s story was not yet over. It was noted that, when the fires had died down and the three men were believed to be dead, Palmer, ‘as a man waked out of sleep, moved his tongue and jaws, and was heard to pronounce this word "Jesus !"’. This was viewed by Foxe and other sympathisers as a miracle, writing, ‘God grant us all to be moved with the like spirit, working in our hearts constantly to stand in defence and confession of Mary’.
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Source:
The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe: A New and Complete Edition with a Preliminary Dissertation by the Rev. George Townsend. R.B. Seeley and W. Burnside. London. 1837. p201-219, Volume 8.