John Betham
John Betham (1642?-1709) was an English Catholic priest, the tutor to the Chevalier de Saint George, son of James II of England and later called the Old Pretender.
Life
He was a native of Warwickshire, where his elder brother owned an estate. He completed his studies in the English college at Douai, and was ordained priest there. Afterwards he went to Paris (1667), where he resumed his studies, and after ten years was created a doctor of the Sorbonne. Then he came to England on the English mission, but the excitement caused by Titus Oates's narrative of the Popish Plot meant he returned to the France.
Betham then revived an old project for erecting a seminary for the benefit of such of the English clergy taking degrees in the university of Paris. Arras College at Paris had been founded as early as 1611 for the maintenance of learned writers in defence of the catholic religion. In 1667 this institution was expanded by Thomas Carre; but the scheme was not completed till many years later, when Betham was appointed to preside over the seminary.
He was appointed one of the chaplains and preachers in ordinary to King James II. This office he held till the Glorious Revolution, and soon afterwards he followed James to St. Germain. He was appointed preceptor to the Chevalier de Saint George, and after King James's death that office was confirmed to him by commission, dated 30 October 1701. Betham was a sympathizer with Jansenism, and Mary of Modena objected to his views. Broad as Betham may have been in theology, his curriculum for the young Chevalier has been seen as narrow.[1]
Betham was able to purchase a house and garden in the Rue des Postes, Faubourg Saint Marceau, and open St. Gregory's seminary by letters patent from the king of France in 1701. Some years before he died he retired there, where he ended his days in 1709.
Notes
- ↑ John Callow, King in Exile (2004), pp. 211-2.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Betham, John". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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