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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hugh_PeterHugh Peter - Wikipedia

    Hugh Peter (or Peters) (baptized 29 June 1598 – 16 October 1660) was an English preacher, political advisor and soldier who supported the Parliamentary cause during the English Civil War and later the trial and execution of Charles I.

  2. Hugh Peter (born 1598, Fowey, Cornwall, England—died October 16, 1660, London) was an English Independent minister, army preacher, and propagandist during the Civil War and Commonwealth. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, he was ordained a priest in the Anglican Church in 1623.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. 7 gen 2023 · Hugh Peter, A Dying Fathers Last Legacy, 1660. His older brother Thomas Peter, baptised in Fowey in 1597, was already a clergyman for the Church of England. He had become the vicar at Mylor in 1628 and remained there until he was forced to leave by Royalists during the Civil War in 1643.

  4. 4 apr 2022 · As part of the IJBS Blog Series, Professor Alan Marshall (@johnalan57) examines the dramatic pulpit techniques deployed by the influential Parliamentarian preacher and polemicist, Hugh Peter. Hugh Peter was a key Parliamentary figure of the 1640s and 1650s, and someone who was often dismissed as: “the grande Canale or common shore ...

  5. Hugh Peter, a Puritan minister who did good things for New England, was one of the accusers of Anne Hutchinson at her 1637 and 1638 trials and pushed for her banishment. He would have been aware of Mary Dyer and her “monstrous” miscarriage.

  6. The Strenuous Puritan: Hugh Peter, 1598–1660. By Raymond Phineas Stearns. Urbana: University of Illinois, 1954. 463 pages. $7.50. - Volume 23 Issue 4

  7. Hugh Peter, Puritan, 1598 -1660. Hugh Peter was the son of Thomas Dyckwoode or Dykeveldt, a merchant, alias Peter, descended from a family who had left the Netherlands to escape religious persecution. His mother was Martha Treffry of Place, Fowey.