rdfs:comment
| - At eighteen he matriculated at St. John's College, Oxford, where he became a chaplain. Being ejected by the vice-chancellor, Tobias Matthew, in 1579, he went to Reims in August, was ordained at Châlons, and returned to England in June, 1580. He was indicted for high treason, 7 February, 1584, but for some reason, not tried. In January, 1585, he was sent into exile. He then spent some little time at Reims, recovering his health, and made a pilgrimage to Rome on 15 April, 1586, before returning to the English mission.
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abstract
| - At eighteen he matriculated at St. John's College, Oxford, where he became a chaplain. Being ejected by the vice-chancellor, Tobias Matthew, in 1579, he went to Reims in August, was ordained at Châlons, and returned to England in June, 1580. Hartley helped Robert Parsons and Edmund Campion in printing and distributing their books in England. On 4 August 1581 a search of Stonor Park in Oxfordshire found the press on which Campion's Decem Rationes had been printed. Hartley, along with members of the Stonor family, printers and some servants, were arrested at Stonor Park. Hartley was sent to Marshalsea Prison, London. Here he was detected saying Mass in a cell before Lord Vaux, and for this he was laid in irons on 5 December, 1583. He was indicted for high treason, 7 February, 1584, but for some reason, not tried. In January, 1585, he was sent into exile. He then spent some little time at Reims, recovering his health, and made a pilgrimage to Rome on 15 April, 1586, before returning to the English mission. In September, 1588, he was arrested in Holborn, London, and, as his friend Father Warford said, incurred the suspicion of having apostatized.
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