Home / Bolton, Robert Jr. The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester, from its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I. New York: Charles F. Roper, 1881. Revised posthumous edition. / Passage

The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester (1881 revised edition, Vol. I)

Bolton, Robert Jr. The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester, from its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I. New York: Charles F. Roper, 1881. Revised posthumous edition. 333 words

Some, of the name and character, were murdered in cold blood, and massacred without any legal forms of justice.

" It is a singular fact, (continues Mr. Disosway, to whom we are indebted for the materials of this sketch,) that the Reformation originated in France, upon her own soil, and its earliest seeds were germinated in the University of Paris, then a stronghold of Romanized faith, At this time, the University was the principal seat of European learning and Roman Catholic orthodoxy.

" Among the people of Picardy and Dauphiny, the first principles of the great work appeared before they were manifest in any other country. This is the fact, if we regard dates ; and, therefore, the earliest honors of the Reformation belong to France ; a circumstance which has been generally overlooked. Still Luther, in zeal, knowledge and success, was the master-spirit of the age ; and, in its fullest sense, he deserves the epithet of the first reformer.

" Among the first doctors of theology in Paris, who zealously embraced the ever-blessed Reformation, was Lefevre ; who, while engaged in a task of collecting the legends of saints and martyrs, felt a ray of divine light from on higli suddenly flash into his mind; and, abandoning his work, cast away such foolish things and embraced the Holy Scriptures. The new impulse grew rapidly in his heart, and he soon communicated its divine truth to his classes in the University. Of this individual, Beza remarked ; ' It was he who boldly began the revival of the holy religion of Jesus Christ.' Thus a new era opened in France, and the Reformation soon niade rapid progress. One of its first witnesses in the court of royalty was the celebrated princess, Margaret of Valois, Duchess of Alencon, and sister to the reigning monarch, Francis the First.* She is said to have dignified her profession by a pure, religious and blameless life, amidst the dissolute and literary household of her royal brother, etc.