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Edward Hawarden
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Edward Hawarden (aka Harden; 9 April 1662 – 23 April 1735) was an English theologian and controversialist.


Life
Hawarden was born in , England. His family were who maintained domestic chapels in their residences in Appleton in Widnes. Edward, after a course at the English College, Douai, remained there as a classical tutor, and after his ordination (7 June 1686), as professor of philosophy. Rudge, F.M. "Edward Hawarden." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 17 January 2019

In 1688, having taken the bachelor's degree at the University of Douai, he spent two months as tutor of divinity at Magdalen College, Oxford, which James II of England purposed making a seat of Catholic education. The impending revolution against James forced Hawarden to return to Douai, where he soon proceeded D.D. and was installed in the chair of divinity. One of his students was the historian . "Hugh Tootell (alias Charles Dodd)", Firmly I Believe and Truly: The Spiritual Tradition of Catholic England, (John Saward, John Morrill, Michael Tomko, eds.), OUP Oxford, 2013, p. 302

In 1702 he was persuaded to take part in the concurrence for one of the royal chair of divinity in the university, but the influence of a hostile minority secured the installation of another candidate by mandatory letters from the court. Shortly afterwards complaints were lodged at Rome that the Douai professors, Hawarden in particular, were propagating the errors of . Hawarden was dismissed from the university, "Hawarden, Letter March 14, 1711", Pitts Theology Library but a subsequent official investigation completely exonerated all.

In 1707 Hawarden left Douai to take charge of the mission of Gilligate, Durham, and later , near Lancaster. Brief entries in the give an idea of his daily life until the seizure of Aldcliffe Hall in 1717, after which he moved to London, probably on his appointment as Controversy-writer.

Hawarden received the thanks of the University of Oxford for his defence of the in the famous conference with (1719). He died, aged 73, in London.


Works
Among his works are:

A collective edition of his works was published at Dublin in 1808.

Attribution
  • The entry cites:
    • Charles William Sutton in Dictionary of National Biography, s. v.,
    • , Bibl. Dict. Eng. Cath., s. v.;
    • Tyldesley Diary, ed. Joseph Gillow & Anthony Hewitson (Preston, 1873);
    • Douay Diaries, ed. Thomas Francis Knox (1878).

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