Simeon Ashe
Simeon Ashe or Ash (died 1662) was an English nonconformist clergyman, a member of the Westminster Assembly and chaplain to the Parliamentary leader Edward Montagu, 2nd Earl of Manchester.
Life
He was educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge.[1] He began his career as minister in Staffordshire, but was ejected from his living on account of his refusal to read the Book of Sports and to conform to other ceremonies. On his dismissal Sir John Burgoyne befriended him and allowed him the use of an 'exempt' church at Wroxhall; and he was afterwards under the protection of Robert Greville, 2nd Baron Brooke. He was a regular Sunday preacher at Warwick Castle, and friend of Thomas Dugard.[2]
When the First English Civil War broke out, he became chaplain to the Earl of Manchester. At the close of the war he received the living of St. Austin, and was also one of the Cornhill lecturers. He was nominated to the Westminster assembly after the death in 1643 of Josias Shute.[3]
Although he had joined the side of the parliament, Ashe was strongly opposed to the extreme party of the Cromwellians; and when the time was ripe for the English Restoration he was among the divines who went to Breda to meet Charles II of England. He died a few days before the passing of the Act of Uniformity, and was buried on 24 August 1662. Had he lived to see the passing of the act, he would have vacated his living. Ashe was a man of some property, and while he held the living of St. Austin, his house was always open to his clerical brethren. Walker charges him with exercising severity against the conforming clergy.
Works
In 1644 he joined with William Goode, another chaplain of the Earl of Manchester, in writing a pamphlet entitled A particular Relation of the most Remarkable Occurrences from the United Forces in the North. This was followed by another pamphlet, for which Ashe alone was responsible, entitled A True Relation of the most Chiefe Occurrences at and since the late Battell at Newbery. The writer's object in both cases was to vindicate the conduct of his patron. In John Vicars's Parliamentary Chronicle there is a letter of his, describing the proceedings of the Earl of Manchester in reducing several garrisons after the battle of Marston Moor.
Ashe was the author of sermons, including
- 'A Sermon on Ps. ix. 9,' preached before the House of Commons on 30 March 1642.
- 'A Sermon before the House of Lords,' 26 Feb. 1644.
- 'A Funeral Sermon on the Death of the Countess of Manchester,' 12 Oct. 1658, &c.
He also edited some treatises of John Ball, John Brinsley, Ralph Robinson, and others.
Notes
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Ashe, Simeon". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- v
- t
- e
- John Arrowsmith
- Simeon Ashe
- Robert Baillie
- Thomas Baylie
- Robert Blair
- Samuel Bolton
- John Bond
- William Bridge
- Ralph Brownrigg
- Anthony Burges
- Cornelius Burges
- Jeremiah Burroughs
- Adoniram Byfield
- Richard Byfield
- Edmund Calamy
- Archibald Campbell
- John Campbell
- Richard Capel
- Joseph Caryl
- Thomas Case
- Daniel Cawdry
- William Cecil
- Francis Cheynell
- John Clotworthy
- Thomas Coleman
- John Conant
- Edward Conway
- John Cook
- Edward Corbet
- Robert Crosse
- Robert Devereux
- Robert Douglas
- Calybute Downing
- John Dury
- John Earle
- John Elphinstone
- Daniel Featley
- Basil Feilding
- Nathaniel Fiennes
- William Fiennes
- Thomas Ford
- Thomas Gataker
- George Gillespie
- John Glynne
- Thomas Goodwin
- William Gouge
- William Greenhill
- William Grey
- John Hacket
- Matthew Hale
- Henry Hammond
- Robert Harley
- John Harris
- Robert Harris
- Arthur Haselrig
- Alexander Henderson
- Philip Herbert
- Charles Herle
- Thomas Hill
- Richard Holdsworth
- Edward Howard
- Joshua Hoyle
- Archibald Johnston
- John Ley
- John Lightfoot
- Richard Love
- William Lyford
- John Maitland
- Stephen Marshall
- John Maynard
- William Mew
- Edward Montagu
- George Morley
- Matthew Newcomen
- William Nicholson
- Philip Nye
- Herbert Palmer
- Algernon Percy
- Andrew Perne
- William Pierrepont
- John Pym
- Edward Reynolds
- Robert Reynolds
- Henry Rich
- Francis Rous
- Benjamin Rudyerd
- Samuel Rutherford
- Robert Sanderson
- Henry Scudder
- Lazarus Seaman
- Obadiah Sedgwick
- John Selden
- Josias Shute
- Sidrach Simpson
- William Spurstowe
- Edmund Staunton
- Peter Sterry
- Oliver St John (1580–1646)
- Oliver St John (1598–1673)
- William Strode
- William Strong
- Zouch Tate
- Henry Tozer
- Anthony Tuckney
- William Twisse
- Henry Vane the Elder
- Henry Vane the Younger
- Richard Vines
- George Walker
- Samuel Ward
- Thomas Westfield
- Philip Wharton
- Jeremiah Whitaker
- John White
- Bulstrode Whitelocke
- John Wilde
- Henry Wilkinson
- Walter Yonge
- Thomas Young