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Savoy Conference
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The Savoy Conference of 1661 was a significant discussion that took place, after the Restoration of Charles II, in an attempt to effect a reconciliation within the Church of England.


Proceedings
It was convened by , in his lodgings at the in London. The Conference sessions began on 15 April 1661, and continued for around four months. By June, a deadlock became apparent.
(2026). 9780521531313, Cambridge University Press. .

The conference was attended by commissioners: 12 Anglican , and 12 representative ministers of the and factions. Each side also had nine deputies (called assistants or coadjutors). The nominal chairman was , the Archbishop of York. The object was to revise the Book of Common Prayer. for the Presbyterian side presented a new liturgy, but this was not accepted. As a result the Church of England retained internal tensions about governance and theology, while a significant number of dissenters left its structure and created non-conformist groups retaining Puritan theological commitments.

In 1662 the Act of Uniformity followed, mandating the usage of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and spurring the .


Commissioners
The nominated commissioners and deputies were as follows:Listed in John Henry Blunt, The Annotated Book of Common Prayer (1872).

  • , Archbishop of York
  • , Bishop of London
  • , Bishop of Durham
  • John Warner, Bishop of Rochester
  • Henry King, Bishop of Chichester
  • Humphrey Henchman, Bishop of Salisbury
  • George Morley, Bishop of Worcester
  • Robert Sanderson, Bishop of Lincoln
  • Benjamin Laney, Bishop of Peterborough
  • Brian Walton, Bishop of Chester
  • Richard Sterne, Bishop of Carlisle
  • , Bishop of Exeter

For the presbyterians:


Deputies
On the episcopal side there were:

On the presbyterian side there were:

There was to have been one more deputy on the presbyterian side, Roger Drake. A clerical error caused his name to appear as "William Drake" in the official document, and he did not actually attend., The Declaration of indulgence, 1672: a study in the rise of organised dissent (1908), p. 18.


Publications
  • "Order of the Savoy Conference," in Gee and Hardy Documents Illustrative of English Church History, pp. 588–94 (London, 1896)
  • Prof. Charles Woodruff Shields, Book of the Common Prayer... as amended by Westminster Divines, 1661 (Philadelphia, 1867; new ed., New York, 1880).
  • , History of the Puritans, part iv (New York, 1863)

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