Martyrs and manuscripts: Thomas More and Margaret Clitherow
As these two manuscript biographies show, print was not the only way to circulate a celebrated life. Sir Thomas More [1478–1535] and Margaret Clitherow [1553–86] were perhaps England’s two most celebrated lay Roman Catholics in the sixteenth century. Both were seen by generations of Catholics as martyrs who had laid down their lives for the ‘true faith’. These accounts of their lives and deaths were both written from positions of close personal knowledge: the life of More was written by his son-in-law, William Roper [c. 1495–1578], and Clitherow’s was written by her confessor, the seminary priest John Mush [1552–1612]. The manuscript shown here is the earliest known copy of Mush’s account. These narratives depicted as heroes people that the English state condemned as traitors. In the eyes of Elizabethan Protestants, More and Clitherow had died not for their faith but for sedition. Neither of the biographies in these manuscripts were printed until the seventeenth century, and they then appeared from continental Catholic presses. Yet these manuscripts demonstrate the ways in which such documents could circulate among a community without the aid of print, and thus the ways in which memories which some considered subversive and even dangerous could be kept alive. CL
William Roper, ‘The Life and Death of Sir Thomas More’, title page.
CUL: MS Add.7958, fo. 25r
John Mush, ‘A True Report of the Life and Martyrdom of Mrs Margaret Clitherow’, fo. 1r.
YML: MS T.D.1,. By the kind permission of the Diocese of Middlesbrough