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'''Thomas DeLaune''' (d. 1685), was an Irish non-conformist writer known for running a grammar school and printing house.<ref>Andrews, H. (2009). ''Delaune, Thomas''. Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 2024, from <nowiki>https://www.dib.ie/biography/delaune-thomas-a2517</nowiki></ref> He was born in Brinny, County Cork on an unknown date.<ref name=":0">Lewis, S. (2022). The Reception of Thomas Delaune's Plea for the Non-Conformists in England and America, 1684–1870. ''Church History'', ''91''(1), 41–61. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009640721002869</nowiki></ref> Protestant persecution forced him to flee to England where he met [[Edward Hutchinson]], a Baptist minister and writer. Thomas would later marry his daughter Hannah. Thomas was a scholar, not considering himself to be a minister or lay preacher but entered into many religious debates. He would speak against [[Richard Baxter]], [[Obadiah Wills]], and [[Joseph Whiston]] on the subject of [[infant baptism]]. Thomas DeLaune would end up dying in prison in 1685. He was accused and found guilty of writing seditious material against the king and the [[Book of Common Prayer]] in January of 1684. Deprived of his income as a schoolmaster, his wife and two children would move to live near his prison in Newgate.<ref name=":0" /> They would eventually suffer and die from undernourishment. Thomas died in Newgate, in prison, fifteen months after his incarceration. Thomas DeLaune would be considered a martyr for generations of [[Nonconformists]]. | '''Thomas DeLaune''' (d. 1685), was an Irish non-conformist writer known for running a grammar school and printing house.<ref>Andrews, H. (2009). ''Delaune, Thomas''. Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 2024, from <nowiki>https://www.dib.ie/biography/delaune-thomas-a2517</nowiki></ref> He was born in Brinny, County Cork on an unknown date.<ref name=":0">Lewis, S. (2022). The Reception of Thomas Delaune's Plea for the Non-Conformists in England and America, 1684–1870. ''Church History'', ''91''(1), 41–61. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009640721002869</nowiki></ref> Protestant persecution forced him to flee to England where he met [[Edward Hutchinson]], a Baptist minister and writer. Thomas would later marry his daughter Hannah. Thomas was a scholar, not considering himself to be a minister or lay preacher but entered into many religious debates. He would speak against [[Richard Baxter]], [[Obadiah Wills]], and [[Joseph Whiston]] on the subject of [[infant baptism]]. Thomas DeLaune would end up dying in prison in 1685. He was accused and found guilty of writing seditious material against the king and the [[Book of Common Prayer]] in January of 1684. Deprived of his income as a schoolmaster, his wife and two children would move to live near his prison in Newgate.<ref name=":0" /> They would eventually suffer and die from undernourishment. Thomas died in Newgate, in prison, fifteen months after his incarceration. Thomas DeLaune would be considered a martyr for generations of [[Nonconformist (Protestantism)|Nonconformists]]. DeLaune would be one of 8,000 [[Dissenters]] who were executed or died in prison during Charles II's reign.<ref>Compton, A. (2018). Thomas Delaune: The life and times of Ireland's first Baptist martyr (M. A. Haykin, Ed.). ''Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies''. Retrieved 2024, from <nowiki>https://static1.squarespace.com/static/57b5f4a2f7e0ab87b8abc3c8/t/6185bd42e02b0768d51ea74b/1636154692037/No.+6+-+Delaune.pdf</nowiki></ref> | ||
=== <u>List of works:</u> === | === <u>List of works:</u> === | ||
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* ''Thomas Delaune'' (ca.1635-1645-1685) by Andy Compton, in The British Particular Baptists - Vol. I Revised, edited by Michael A. G. Haykin and Terry Wolever | * ''Thomas Delaune'' (ca.1635-1645-1685) by Andy Compton, in The British Particular Baptists - Vol. I Revised, edited by Michael A. G. Haykin and Terry Wolever | ||
* [https://static1.squarespace.com/static/57b5f4a2f7e0ab87b8abc3c8/t/6185bd42e02b0768d51ea74b/1636154692037/No.+6+-+Delaune.pdf Thomas Delaune: The life and times of Ireland's first Baptist martyr] by Andy Compton, in Occasional Publications edited Michael A. G. Haykin | * [https://static1.squarespace.com/static/57b5f4a2f7e0ab87b8abc3c8/t/6185bd42e02b0768d51ea74b/1636154692037/No.+6+-+Delaune.pdf Thomas Delaune: The life and times of Ireland's first Baptist martyr] by Andy Compton, in Occasional Publications edited Michael A. G. Haykin | ||
* [https://archive.org/details/historyofengli02cros/page/366/mode/2up?q=delaune The History of the English Baptists] by Thomas Crosby, ''*start on p. 366*'' |