Pierre Du Moulin

For his son, see Peter du Moulin.
Pierre Dumoulin (Cornelis Danckerts the Elder, 1630s)

Pierre Du Moulin (Petrus Molinaeus in Latin; 1568–1658) was a Huguenot minister in France who also resided in England for some years.

Life

Born in Buhy in 1568, he was the son of Joachim Du Moulin, a Protestant minister in the Orleans area. Pierre was educated at the Protestant Academy of Sedan and subsequently trained for the ministry in London and Cambridge. In 1592 he moved to the University of Leiden where he taught for several years. In 1598 he returned to France and became a minister of the Huguenot church in Paris and Charenton. Du Moulin returned to England in 1615 at the invitation of King James I.[1] Through the King he was made a D.D. at Cambridge and was appointed a prebendary at Canterbury Cathedral in 1615 (Stall IV).[lower-alpha 1] In 1621 his situation in France became dangerous and he moved back to Sedan where he taught at the Academy. In 1624 he returned to England where he obtained an ecclesiastical sinecure from King James. He returned to Sedan in 1625 and died there in 1659.[1]

Works

He was a prolific author, penning a critique of the Roman Catholic Mass based on the Bible, Anatomie de la Messe, and a defense of the French Reformed Confession of Faith against its Jesuit detractors, Bouclier de la Foi. An English translation of his Tirannie que les papes ont exercé depuis quelque siècles sur les roys d'Angleterre [Tyranny that the Popes exercised for some centuries over the kings of England]  was published posthumously in 1674 by his son Peter Du Moulin.[3]

In September, 1610, the biting satire Anti-Coton, in which it is proved that the Jesuits are guilty of parricide against Henri IV was followed by many pamphlets for and against the Jesuits. The Anti-Coton pamphlet attacked the Jesuits, and especially Father Pierre Coton, the confessor of Henry IV, of whose murder the Jesuits had been accused by their enemies. Daurignac says (Hist. Soc. Jesus, vol. i., p. 295) that this pamphlet was attributed to Pierre Du Moulin.[4]

Family

Lewis Du Moulin and Peter Du Moulin were his sons.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pierre Du Moulin.

Notes

  1. He is recorded as Petrus Molines and Petrus Du Molin in the Clergy of the Church of England database project.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 Armstrong, Brian G; Larminie, Vivienne (September 2004), Du Moulin, Pierre (1568–1658), Oxford University Press, retrieved 13 March 2010 ; online ed., Oct 2008.
  2. Persons: Du Molin, Peter (1615–1692) in "CCEd, the Clergy of the Church of England database" (Accessed online, 2 February 2014)
  3. du Moulin, The late Reverend Doctor Peter (1674), du Moulin, Peter, ed., The papal tyranny, as it was exercised over England for some ages, London: H Brome (ESTC R6385).
  4. http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_04.html

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 15, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.