Griffin Higgs
Encyclopedia
Griffin or Griffith Higgs (1589–1659) was an English chuchman, the dean of Lichfield from 1638.

Life

Higgs was born at South Stoke
South Stoke
South Stoke could be one of the following places in England:*South Stoke, Lincolnshire - old name for Stoke Rochford*South Stoke, Oxfordshire*South Stoke, Somerset*South Stoke, West Sussex...

, Oxfordshire
Oxfordshire
Oxfordshire is a county in the South East region of England, bordering on Warwickshire and Northamptonshire , Buckinghamshire , Berkshire , Wiltshire and Gloucestershire ....

, the second son of Griffith Higgs by Sarah, daughter of Robert Paine of Caversham
Caversham
Caversham may refer to:*Caversham, Berkshire, a town in Reading, England*Caversham, New Zealand, a suburb of Dunedin*Caversham, Western Australia, a suburb of PerthAlso...

 in the same county. After attending Reading school he entered St. John's College, Oxford, in 1606, and acquired a reputation both as an orator and disputant. He graduated B.A. on 26 June 1610.

In 1611 Higgs was elected probationer fellow of Merton College, and proceeding M.A. on 27 June 1615 (Wood, Fasti, &c., i. 362), had two small cures successively bestowed on him by the college. He served the office of senior proctor 1622–3 (ib. i. 404) ‘with great courage, tho' of little stature.’ He commenced B.D. on 1 April 1625 (ib. i. 423), and in 1627 went to the Hague as chaplain to Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, in which capacity he remained for twelve years. His preaching was greatly admired by the queen, who made him several presents, as he mentioned in his will. On 12 Feb. 1629–30 he took his doctor's degree at Leyden, and was incorporated at Oxford on the 27th of that month (ib. i. 452). By Laud's interest he was collated precentor of St. David's on 21 May 1631 (Le Neve, Fasti, ed. Hardy, i. 316), instituted vicar of West Cliffe, Kent, about 1636 (Hasted, Kent, iv. 32), and in 1638 made dean of Lichfield (Le Neve, i. 563), ‘the cathedral of which,’ says Wood, ‘he adorned to his great charge.’ He was also chaplain in ordinary to the king.

When the civil war broke out he lost all his preferments, and retired to South Stoke, but afterwards to Oxford, where he remained until its surrender. For this he was adjudged a delinquent and his estate sequestered. He only obtained a pardon by paying a fine of £480 on 21 Sept. 1647.

Death and legacy

Higgs died unmarried at South Stoke on 16 December 1659, and was buried in the chancel of the church. By will dated 22 Aug. 1659 (P. C. C. 8, Nabbs) he gave 5l. to the church of South Stoke, and 100l. to buy land for the poor of that town. He also gave 600l. to purchase free land of socage to the value of 30l. a year for the maintenance of a schoolmaster there, the purchase to be made by the warden and fellows of Merton College, who were appointed patrons of the school to be erected at South Stoke. He left 100l. to buy divinity books for the Bodleian Library
Bodleian Library
The Bodleian Library , the main research library of the University of Oxford, is one of the oldest libraries in Europe, and in Britain is second in size only to the British Library...

, and to Merton and St. John's Colleges for the like purpose 50l. apiece. His library, which had been scattered during the war, the greatest portion being kept at Stafford, he left to Merton College, with provision for a librarian's salary of 10l. annually, but the corporation of Stafford successfully resisted the attempts of the college to obtain the books. Higgs likewise gave money to found a divinity lecture at Merton College, and 15l. annually to augment the allowance of the postmasters there.

Works

He wrote a life of Sir Thomas White the founder of his college, in Latin verse, which was preserved in manuscript in the college library. Bound up with it is another manuscript by Higgs, entitled 'A True and Faithfull Relation of the Risinge and Fall of Thomas Tucker, Prince of Alba Fortunata, Lord of St. John's, with all the Occurrents which happened throughout his whole Domination,' an account of the mock ceremonie on choosing a lord of misrule at Christmas. Of this narration 250 copies were printed in 1816 by Philip Bliss, under the title 'An account of the Christmas prince: as it was exhibited in the University of Oxford in 1607,' London. Appended are several extracts from the dramas acted on the occasion.

His other writings are: 1. ‘Problemata Theologica,’ Leyden, 1630. 2. ‘Miscellaneæ Theses Theologicæ,’ defended by him when he was made D.D., Leyden, 1630. He left other works in manuscript. He has verses in ‘Ultima Linea Savilii,’ 1622.

The Griffith Higgs of South Stoke whose epitaph is printed in ‘Notes and Queries,’ 1st ser. vol. x. p. 266, was Higgs's nephew. He died in 1693, not 1698.
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