Edward Thwing

He returned to Reims because of ill health and became a reader of Greek and Hebrew, and a professor of rhetoric and logic.

Those who harboured them, and all those who knew of their presence and failed to inform the authorities would be fined and imprisoned for felony.

[3] He and Dominican friar Robert Nutter were sent to Wisbech Castle, a state ecclesiastical prison.

Henry Garnet reported that the keeper would allow detainees permission to move within a five-mile radius.

[7] Thwing was hung, drawn, and quartered at Lancaster, along with Robert Nutter on 26 July 1600.

Edward Thwing was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1982 as one of the Eighty-five martyrs of England and Wales.