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Thomas Ken Free Music

Biography

Thomas Ken Free Music

Thomas Ken

English cleric who was considered the most eminent of the English non-juring bishops, and one of the fathers of modern English hymnology.
(born July 1637, Berkhampsted, Hertfordshire, England — died March 19, 1711, near Warminster, Wiltshire)

Ken trained at Win­ches­ter and New Coll­ege, Ox­ford, and was or­dained an Ang­li­can priest in 1662. In 1663, he be­came Rec­tor of Lit­tle East­on, and Rec­tor of Wood­hay and Pre­ben­da­ry of Win­ches­ter in 1669. He pub­lished a Man­u­al of Pray­ers, for the use of the schol­ars of Win­ches­ter Coll­ege, in 1674. He was brief­ly chap­lain to Prin­cess Ma­ry, and lat­er to the Brit­ish fleet. He be­came Bi­shop of Bath and Wells in 1685. He was one of sev­er­al bi­shops im­pris­oned in the Tow­er of Lon­don for re­fus­ing to sign James II’s “De­clar­a­tion of In­dul­gence” (hop­ing to re­store Ca­thol­i­cism in Eng­land); he was tried and ac­quit­ted. Ken wrote much po­e­try, pu­blished post­hu­mous­ly in 1721.

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External Pages

cyberhymnal.org/bio/k/e/ken_t.htm

hymnary.org/person/Ken_Thomas

britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/314679/Thomas-Ken

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Ken