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he bought barley and distributed it to the poor. To the poor at
Carlisle and Dalston he made regular allowances. He paid for the education of poor boys at Dalston Grammar School, and for putting them out as apprentices; he supported poor scholars at the universities; he subscribed largely to the French Protestants and to foreign converts. Dalston Grammar School was given an endowment by Rainbowe; the original endowment was looted during the
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with his predecessor and metropolitan, Sterne. Rainbowe found his diocese required reform. Negligent clergy publicly affronted their bishop, and his outspoken denunciation of immorality appears to have offended some great lady about the court. In years of scarcity, when his own stores were exhausted,
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In
November 1633 he was recalled to Cambridge. The master and fellows of Magdalene College elected him to a by-fellowship on the foundation of Dr Goch, with a promise of the first open founder's fellowship that should fall vacant. He became a successful tutor, numbering among his pupils two sons of
274:, a collection of Christ's discourses and sayings, but it was never completed. With his life, by Jonathan Banks (anon. 1688), appear some meditations by him, and one or two short poems, as well as the sermon preached at his funeral by his chancellor,
174:, near Cambridge; in 1637 he became dean of Magdalene; and in 1642 Master, by the gift of the Earl of Suffolk. From the mastership he was dismissed, by order of parliament, in 1650. In 1652 he accepted from the Earl of Suffolk the small living of
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Rainbowe was famous as a preacher. In later life he abandoned the ornate rhetoric of his early days for plainness. Three of his sermons were printed; the first of these, "Labour forbidden and commanded" (London, 1635, 4to), was preached at
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Rainbowe died on 26 March 1684, and was buried, by his own request, at
Dalston (1 April), under a plain stone, with a simple inscription. His wife Elizabeth, daughter of
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in place of one who was deprived of the office on account of his scurrility. Rainbowe was facetious but acquitted himself to the satisfaction of his auditors.
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88:, was second son of Sir Edward Wray of Glentworth in Lincolnshire. The Wrays possessed influence, and the connection proved important to the young Rainbowe.
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Digest of the
Reports Made by the Commissions of Inquiry into Charities, The Charity Commission of Great Britain, W. Clowes & Son, (1841)
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237:, and his journey and settlement in his diocese; and the ruined state of his palace involved him in building, and in litigation about
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in 1660, Rainbowe was restored to his mastership at
Cambridge, and appointed chaplain to the king. In the following year he was made
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253:(his predecessor as master of Magdalene), whom he married in 1652, survived him. After his death she resided chiefly at
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with her sister's son, Sir Edward Hasell. She died in 1702, and was also buried in
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had obtained for him induction without the intervention of the ‘Tryers.’
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352: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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on 23 September 1634. Rainbowe planned a treatise, to be called
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to York. Rainbowe was consecrated in July 1664, in London, by
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he was suddenly called on by the vice-chancellor to act as
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In July 1630 he accepted the mastership of a school at
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111:. From Westminster he proceeded in July 1623 to
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127:of Magdalene in 1633 and Master in 1642. While
54:Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge
806:People educated at Westminster School, London
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368:. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
299:. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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213:in November 1662. In 1664 he was elected
811:Alumni of Corpus Christi College, Oxford
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16:English academic, clergyman and preacher
826:Masters of Magdalene College, Cambridge
821:Fellows of Magdalene College, Cambridge
856:17th-century Church of England bishops
816:Alumni of Magdalene College, Cambridge
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422:Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge
395:Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge
50:Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge
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851:People from West Lindsey District
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68:He was born on 20 April 1608 at
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113:Corpus Christi College, Oxford
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168:Francis Leke, Baron Deincourt
93:Queen Elizabeth's High School
319:"Rainbow, Edward (RNBW625E)"
117:Magdalene College, Cambridge
40:academic, Church of England
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323:A Cambridge Alumni Database
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182:. He became rector of
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282:References
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82:Ludborough
48:. He was
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46:preacher
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