Israel Tonge (11 November 1621 – 1680), aka Ezerel or Ezreel Tongue, was an English divine and an informer in the "Popish" plot. [1]
He was born at Tickhill, near Doncaster, the son of Henry Tongue, minister of Holtby, Yorkshire. He graduated from University College, Oxford and became a schoolmaster at Churchill, Oxfordshire where he became interested in gardening, alchemy, and chemistry. In 1656 he became a doctor of theology, and taught grammar at the Cromwellian Durham College until its closure in 1659. Following the Restoration, he held a succession of livings. He became chaplain of the garrison of Dunkirk until this was sold to the French in 1661. On 26 June 1666 he became rector of St Mary Staining. The church burnt down during the Great Fire of London. [1]
Tongue blamed the Jesuits for both his own and London's losses.[1] His obsession was so great that he wrote many articles denouncing the Roman Catholic Church and containing conspiracy theories about the Rome's insatiable quest for power.[2] From 1675, Tonge was acquainted with the fervently anti-Catholic physician, Sir Richard Barker. Barker provided Tonge with food, lodgings, and money. He encouraged Tonge's anti-Catholic studies and had him appointed as rector of Avon Dassett in Warwickshire - although according to Tonge "illegall practices" prevented him taking up the position.[1]
Barker also sponsored the Baptist preacher Samuel Oates. In 1677 at the physician's barbican home, Tonge met Samuel's son, Titus Oates. Tonge provided Titus with money and the two agreed to co-author a series of anti-Catholic pamphlets. In fact Titus converted to Catholicism and left England for the English College at St Omer. At the time Tonge was puzzled by Oates's disappearance but he would later claim that he encouraged Oates's actions in order to learn more about the Jesuits.[1]
On Oates's return he further stoked Tonge's paranoia with stories of Jesuit conspiracies, including a plot against a feared anti-Catholic author - Tonge himself.[1] So excited was Tonge that through his friend Christopher Kirkby he managed to obtain an audience with Charles II, where he summarised Oates' claims. Charles soon became a complete sceptic about the Plot, but his initial reaction was that " among so many particulars he could not say that there might not be some truth". [3]He was at least sufficiently impressed to ask the Lord Treasurer, the Earl of Danby to investigate. Danby agreed that the matter deserved inquiry, despite opposition from Sir Joseph Williamson, who knew Tonge and believed he was insane.[4]
Tonge then took two crucial decisions: firstly he persuaded Oates to swear to the truth of his allegations before the much respected magistrate, Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey. Secondly he persuaded the King and Danby to put the matter before a full meeting of the Privy Council. At the hearing Tonge himself made a bad impression: his reputation for madness was too well known , and he was " altogether smiled at ".[5] Oates on the other hand gave a superb performance: so detailed and convincing was his story that the Council ordered the arrest of all the leading Jesuits accused, as well as Edward Coleman, former secretary to the Duke of York.[6] The news of this,followed by the murder of Godfrey, caused public hysteria to erupt.
During the years of the Plot, Tonge was a secondary figure: he did not claim to have any first hand evidence, and was never a witness in any of the Plot trials. However a generous allowance from the Crown allowed him to live out his last years in comfort at Whitehall; the Crown even paid for his funeral.[7]
Tonge's reputation has suffered through his close association with Oates, and some historians have bracketed them as a pair of perjurers. However J.P. Kenyon, in his classic study of the Plot, concludes that Tonge truly believed Oates' lies, because they confirmed his own fixed belief in a Jesuit conspiracy.[8] That Tonge was a honest fanatic seems to have been the view of most of those who knew him, including the King, Danby, and Gilbert Burnet, who wrote in 1678 that Tonge was " so lifted up that he seemed to have lost the little sense he had."[9]