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LINCOLN COLLEGE. 
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LATER HISTORY, 1538-1892.— In the history of a 
small community like Lincoln College we see in an 
intensified form the bitterness of party strife which 
from age to age agitated the nation. In the period of 
the Reformation, Henry VIII. to Elizabeth, we find 
numerous expulsions of Fellows for religion, and 
repeated attempts by the Crown to enforce its own 
way of thinking by the appointment, contrary to the 
College statutes, of outsiders to the Headship of the 
College. In the time of the Stuarts, and especially 
just before the Civil War, we find frequent brawls in 
College, proceeding even to blows ; and these divi- 
sions continue till the expulsion in 1648 by the 
Puritans of the Royalists, followed in 1660 by the 
expulsion of the intruded Puritans by the Royalists, 
and in 1662 the ejection of Nonconformists on ' Black 
Bartholomew.' Soon the struggle is renewed; and 
in 1683 we have a Fellow expelled because he has 
spoken against passive obedience, and contrariwise 
in 1685 George Hickes,the most distinguished member 
of the College, is out-voted for the headship because 
he is an out-and-out advocate of the king's divine 
right. And so on throughout the eighteenth century, 
when Fellows were expelled because of their refusal 
to take the oaths to the House of Hanover, into the 
nineteenth, when the late James Bowling Mozley was 
passed over for a Fellowship because thought to be a 
' Newmanite.' 
In the midst of all this domestic strife, Lincoln has not failed from age to age to rear men eminent in the pursuits characteristic of the time. A few names may be cited — Richard Knolles, Fellow 1566- 1572, whose History of (he Turks (first edition, Lond. 1603), was a work of rare merit ; William Gifford, Arch-
bishop of Rheims, 1623-29, and Primate of France ; 
Robert Sanderson, Fellow 1606- 1619, the acute 
logician and casuist ; Sir William Davenant, the 
restorer of the drama ; George Hickes, Fellow 1664- 
168 1, the pioneer of Northern studies, and a leader of 
the Non-jurors ; John Potter, Fellow 1694- 1706, 
Greek scholar, and Archbishop of Canterbury ; John 
Wesley, Fellow 1726-1751 ; Nathaniel Crewe, Fellow 
and Rector, afterwards Bishop of Durham, and John 
Radcliffe, Fellow, afterwards the celebrated London 
physician, both better known than beloved in their 
lifetime, but whose princely benefactions to Oxford 
have blotted out the memory of their contemporary 
ill-repute ; and, among those whose memory is still 
recent, William Jacobson, Bishop of Chester, James 
Eraser, Bishop of Manchester, and Mark Pattison. 
The College has from first to last been numerically small. Its relative position, as one of the four least populous Colleges, has not altered from Elizabeth's reign to Victoria's. The following are some state- ments of its numbers : 1552, 26 members in resi- dence, i.e., the Rector, eleven Fellows, and fourteen other persons ; 1588, 38 members in residence, i.e , the Rector, twelve Fellows, sixteen commoners, nine servitors; 1605, 54 members in residence; 1612, 100 members, probably not all in residence, i.e., the Rector, twelve Fellows, sixty commoners, and twenty- seven battelars ; 1746, 47 members in residence, i.e., the Rector, twelve Fellows, eight gentlemen-com- moners, eighteen commoners, and eight servitors.
An account of the constitution and history of the College will be found in The Colleges of Oxford (Methuen, 1891).
Andrew Clark.
CoULEGlVM LtNCOL,NIENSE. 
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