Robert Brady (writer)
Robert Brady MD (1627–1700) was an English academic and historical writer supporting the royalist position in the reigns of Charles II of England and James II of England. He was also a physician.
Biography
Brady was son of Thomas Brady, an attorney of Denver, Norfolk. He was educated in Downham Market and at Caius College, Cambridge.[1] He was made Master of Caius College in 1660, on the English Restoration. In the 1670s, he hoped to write for the prominent politicians Joseph Williamson and Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury, but they declined the offer. It was only when William Sancroft became Archbishop of Canterbury that Brady found a patron.[2]
Beginning in 1677, Brady held the position of Regius Professor of Physic at Cambridge. He sat as Member of Parliament for the University in 1681 and 1685.[3]
In historical controversy, he was opposed to William Petyt and James Tyrrell, along what would become Tory versus Whig lines, then forming in the Exclusion crisis of the 1680s. Brady is regarded as holding to an uncompromising royalist position.[4] Others on the Whig side were William Atwood, Edward Cooke, and Sir John Somers.
J. P. Kenyon takes him as a pioneer among the royalist scholars of English medieval history, who were working towards a formulation akin to our contemporary view.[5] John Pocock[6] regards as "unforgettably damaging" the effect the (proto)-Tory Brady and others made, in attacking the doctrine of the "Ancient Constitution" as a failed description of the real circumstances of political arrangements in the England of the Middle Ages. On the narrow point of the actual legal effects of the Norman Conquest, Brady had been anticipated by Samuel Daniel, in views that are quite close to modern scholars.[7] He moved from there to argue for absolutism,[8] and that Magna Carta was not a major charter for popular freedom.[9] Brady's ideas drew on Henry Spelman and Robert Filmer.[2]
David C. Douglas remarks that although his motivations as a scholar were at least as political as those of his opponents, his techniques were so far superior that his work remained of importance.[10] Brady was aided in his later work by a position from 1686 in the archives of the Tower of London.[2][11]
Offices held
Academic offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Regius Professor of Physic 1677–1700 |
Succeeded by Christopher Green |
Preceded by | Master of Gonville and Caius College 1660–1700 |
Succeeded by James Halman |
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
Preceded by | Member of Parliament for Cambridge University 1681–1689 With: Sir Thomas Exton 1679–1689 |
Succeeded by Sir Isaac Newton Sir Robert Sawyer |
Bibliography
- A Full and Clear Answer to a Book Written by William Petit, Esq. (1681)
- An Introduction to the Old English History (1684)
- A Complete History of England (1685)
- An Historical Treatise of Cities and Burghs (1690)
References
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- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Andrew Pyle (editor), Dictionary of Seventeenth Century British Philosophers (2000), article pp. 117–8.
- ↑ Concise Dictionary of National Biography
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- ↑ Patrick Wormald, The Making of English Law: King Alfred to the Twelfth Century (2001), p. 8 ISBN 0631227407.
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- ↑ David C. Douglas, English Scholars (1939), p. 155.
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- Pages with reference errors
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- 1627 births
- 1700 deaths
- English historians
- 17th-century English medical doctors
- Alumni of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
- Masters of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
- Members of the pre-1707 Parliament of England for the University of Cambridge
- People from Denver, Norfolk