Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Robert Campion: Edmund Campion's Brother?

View through CrossRef
In a recent, short monograph, Leslie Campion has attempted to link Edmund Campion to his namesake, the son of an Edmund Campion of Sawston, Cambs., who (Edmund Sr) died in 1544. The argument, though circumstantial, is plausible. However, one piece of additional evidence is not considered—nor could the author have been aware of it. This is the Oxford apprenticeship indenture of one Robert ‘Campian’ to Christopher Noke, freemason, made on 4 October 1579, which is printed below. There Robert is identified as the son of an Edmund Campian, late of London, stationer, deceased. This, of itself, would suggest that Robert was a brother of the Jesuit, and, indeed, the newly proposed Campion pedigree indicates a Robert Campion as an older brother of Edmund. Unfortunately, this would require our apprentice to be over 40 years old! A more likely candidate is a Robert Campian, aged ca 14 years, who made a deposition before the University (Vice-) Chancellor's court on 8 January 1573 regarding William Goodyere, Under Butler of St John's College. The connection to St John's is, of course, significant, as is the apprenticeship to Noke, who was suspected of recusancy in 1577. Thus, it is tempting to join the two Oxford Roberts together and to identify him as Edmund Campion's younger brother, but, if we do, then we must look for an Edmund Sr who lived into the later 1550s at least. Additional investigation would be needed to determine where (or whether) he could be grafted on to Leslie Campion's tree, but the name ‘Robert’ requires at least a reexamination of the Witham branch, and the author himself seems to allow this possibility (p. 55). As for Robert Campian, the apprentice freemason, he cannot be traced in later Oxford records in spite of the provision for his subsequent entrance into the craft guild and the freedom of the City.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Robert Campion: Edmund Campion's Brother?
Description:
In a recent, short monograph, Leslie Campion has attempted to link Edmund Campion to his namesake, the son of an Edmund Campion of Sawston, Cambs.
, who (Edmund Sr) died in 1544.
The argument, though circumstantial, is plausible.
However, one piece of additional evidence is not considered—nor could the author have been aware of it.
This is the Oxford apprenticeship indenture of one Robert ‘Campian’ to Christopher Noke, freemason, made on 4 October 1579, which is printed below.
There Robert is identified as the son of an Edmund Campian, late of London, stationer, deceased.
This, of itself, would suggest that Robert was a brother of the Jesuit, and, indeed, the newly proposed Campion pedigree indicates a Robert Campion as an older brother of Edmund.
Unfortunately, this would require our apprentice to be over 40 years old! A more likely candidate is a Robert Campian, aged ca 14 years, who made a deposition before the University (Vice-) Chancellor's court on 8 January 1573 regarding William Goodyere, Under Butler of St John's College.
The connection to St John's is, of course, significant, as is the apprenticeship to Noke, who was suspected of recusancy in 1577.
Thus, it is tempting to join the two Oxford Roberts together and to identify him as Edmund Campion's younger brother, but, if we do, then we must look for an Edmund Sr who lived into the later 1550s at least.
Additional investigation would be needed to determine where (or whether) he could be grafted on to Leslie Campion's tree, but the name ‘Robert’ requires at least a reexamination of the Witham branch, and the author himself seems to allow this possibility (p.
55).
As for Robert Campian, the apprentice freemason, he cannot be traced in later Oxford records in spite of the provision for his subsequent entrance into the craft guild and the freedom of the City.

Related Results

If I Had Possession over Judgment Day: Augmenting Robert Johnson
If I Had Possession over Judgment Day: Augmenting Robert Johnson
augmentvb [ɔːgˈmɛnt]1. to make or become greater in number, amount, strength, etc.; increase2. Music: to increase (a major or perfect interval) by a semitone (Collins English Dicti...
‘Only another man’: Homosociality in Jane Campion’s Bright Star and The Power of the Dog
‘Only another man’: Homosociality in Jane Campion’s Bright Star and The Power of the Dog
This chapter engages with the central male figures in Campion’sBright Star (2009) and The Power of the Dog (2021). While Bright Star focuses on the tensions between the spaces acco...
Edmund Campion
Edmund Campion
Edmund Campion (b. 1540–d. 1581) was born in London and educated there and at Oxford, as a member of the newly founded St John’s College, a pillar of Mary Tudor’s Catholic revival....
ReFocus: The Films of Jane Campion
ReFocus: The Films of Jane Campion
Jane Campion’s work shines a spotlight on gender relations, often through complex female characters and an innovative approach to the screen representation of women functioning at ...
Two Friends : Circumstances of a Historic Feminist Collaboration
Two Friends : Circumstances of a Historic Feminist Collaboration
Foregrounding the collaborative nature of film production, this chapter moves beyond an auteurist paradigm to consider the shared production process between Campion and two key cre...
A study of the role of "Anucha", the younger brother, in Ramakien and parallels with Thai historical narrative
A study of the role of "Anucha", the younger brother, in Ramakien and parallels with Thai historical narrative
Ramakien, the Thai rendition of the Indic epic Ramayana, is an important part of the Thai literary tradition. Characters and themes from Ramakien can be seen in many aspects of Tha...
Claiming Campion: The Question of Jane Campion’s Politics Revisited
Claiming Campion: The Question of Jane Campion’s Politics Revisited
Stephen Kuster’s chapter provides analysis of Campion’s early films through an ethnographic framework, considering the power dynamics at work. Kuster suggests documentary lays clai...
Jane Campion’s Palimpsestuous Gothic: Kinship in Top of the Lake: China Girl
Jane Campion’s Palimpsestuous Gothic: Kinship in Top of the Lake: China Girl
Schmertz’s chapter explores Top of the Lake: China Girl (2017) as a consideration of the incest taboo and the traffic in women that manifests it, framed by the work of Gayle Rubin ...

Back to Top