Clement Barksdale

Clement Barksdale (1609–1687) was an English author.

Life

Barksdale was born at Winchcombe, Gloucestershire in November 1609. He received his earlier education in the Abingdon Grammar School, Berkshire. He entered Merton College, Oxford, as ‘a servitor,’ in Lent term 1625, but removed shortly to Gloucester Hall (afterwards Worcester College, Oxford), where he took his degrees in arts. He entered holy orders, and in 1637 acted as chaplain of Lincoln College. In the same year he proceeded to Hereford, where he became master of the free school, vicar-choral, and soon after vicar of All Hallows in that city. When the garrison of Hereford was taken by the parliamentary army in 1646, he retreated to Sudeley Castle by the intervention of the Chandos family. In this family he acted as chaplain during the opening years of the civil war.

Later, he found shelter at Hawling in Cotswold, where he taught a private school with success and had several pupils of rank. It was here that he composed his ‘Nympha Libethris, or the Cotswold Muse, presenting some extempore Verses to the Imitation of yong Scholars,’ 1651. At the Restoration he was presented to the livings of Naunton, near Hawling, and of Stow-on-the-Wold in Gloucestershire. These he retained until his death in January 1687, in his seventy-ninth year, when (says Anthony à Wood) he left behind him ‘the character of a frequent and edifying preacher and a good neighbour.’

Works

His major works are:

He made also translations of books and tractates by Cyprian, Grotius, Anna Maria van Schurman, and others.

References

     This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Barksdale, Clement". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. 

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