He was a client of Mary Fitzroy, and "one of London's most popular and most effective preachers.
"[1] Initially Huntingdon was a religious conservative, writing a pamphlet under the pseudonym "Ponce Pantolabus" against evangelicals.
[2] The Genealogy of Heresy (modern spelling), it was in verse, published c. 1542; and is not now extant.
[5] Huntingdon was one of those who stood witness against the Scottish reformer Alexander Seton.
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