George Ashwell (controversialist) (original) (raw)

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Anglican polemic controversialist

George Ashwell (1612 – 1694) was an Anglican polemic controversialist.

Ashwell was born in the parish of St. Martin Ludgate, 8 November 1612. He was the son of Robert Ashwell, of Harrow. He was a scholar of Wadham College, Oxford, 1627; graduated B.A. 4 Dec. 1632, M.A. 1635, and became fellow of his college. He was tutor in the family of Thomas Leigh, a nonconformist, but his own sympathies were of another sort. He was the friend of Peter Heylin, who wrote, at his suggestion, on 'Parliament's Power in Laws for Religion,' which was published in 1645. He was made B.D. on 23 June 1646, and became chaplain to Sir Anthony Cope, lord of the manor of Hanwell, Oxfordshire. On the death of Dr. Robert Harris, 1658, he succeeded him in the rectory of Hanwell, where he died on 8 Feb. 1693-4. Ashwell has a significant private library of works in English and Latin.[1]

Ashwell published:

Ashwell left behind him in manuscript, An Answer to Plato Redivivus, a work by Henry Neville.

  1. ^ "George Ashwell 1612-1694 - Book Owners Online". www.bookowners.online. Retrieved 23 October 2022.