% dhiirch; Easiren appears ia 
aca: at this time than in being ap 
the fervice to the Englifh initead of the Latin language ; 
but though choral mufic was not much affected by the {mall 
progrefs that was made in the reformation under this pins 
.yet it was in frequent danger of utter abolition by t 
violence of the times, and fanaticifm of the molt Siow 
_reformers. 
After Henry’s breach with the Roman pontiff, feveral 
flight alterations were made in the liturgy, yet {till the fer- 
vice was in Latin, and fang: in the ufual man ner. 
' was publifhed in 1535. 
whole "bible was 
tions oa Corer ale. 
In 1539, the Bloody AG, or Six Articles 2 Convocation, 
pafled ; and in the fame year, a book o: remonies was 
publifhed, in which is ee following paflage ‘Eicarable to 
choral mufic: “ The fober, difcrete, and devout finging, 
mutic, and playing with organs, ufed in the church, in the 
fervice o: are or o- to move and ftir the people to 
the Fortctneté “of God , the which is ther fung : 
by that fweet rahe uch to excite them to prayer and 
devotion, and alfo to put them in remembraunce of the hea- 
-venly triumphant —— where i is everlafting joy, continual 
ud, and praife to 
Hen oe prince of 2 and the eldeft fon of deie.t 
was born at Stirling in 15 e was an amia 
complifhed prince, and a great patron of learning. “Hed 
in 1612 to the grief o of the nation, which had formed of 7 
the higheft expeditions. 
Henry of untingdon, an Englifh hiftorian, cation of 
Lincoln, ~ archdeacon of Huatingdon, flourifhed in the 
levi He wrote a pt of England to the year 
rohiche was publifhed in 1576. 
NRY; e ity ifeo, ack fon of John I. king of 
Portigaly was born In very early life he fhewed 
an ardent srtachenest to the fludy of mathematics and cof- 
mography, which was encouraged by his father, who pro- 
vided for him the beit mafterg of the age. He hada palion 
for glory and naval enterprife, and ferved with diftinction 
the reduction of Ceuta, and in other engagements in Africa, 
and was made by his father commander in chief of the Por 
i one So in that connie He feat. out, while he was 
n a voyage of difcoyery, 
ule alee Cape Be siti and its duccefs caufed 4 
entirely to devote himfelf to that obje&. Near Cape $ 
HENRY. 
and " 
leagues beyond the Cape. 
Henry received every affiftance 
in fis ingen 4 proje 
rom thes’ court of Portugal ; 
Ww i he finifhed his ufeful life about the year 1460. 
caer: ever produced, and may be regarded as the author 
ef all the commercial ve iad to which Portugal att 
by her Eaft Indian poffeffion — 
ENRY, NICHOLAS, 
He was very con- 
verfant with the hiftor of his owne country, and left be- 
hind him fome curious x yaar relative to the public 
rights of the French, with a particular reference to the 
reigns of Philip-Auguftus, Lewis VIII. .» and St. Lewis. 
e was accidentally killed by the fall of a building in 17 52 
when Pe was in the fixtieth year of his age. oreri. 
Henry, Marruew, a born 
fhire, in aie year 1663. 
a clergyman of confiderable seaming and greatly efteemed 
for his piety. 
chofe rather to quit their livings than abandon the rights 
‘of _conf{cience. atthew, the fubje@ of this 
gob! 
bar} 
When he was about eighteen years of age he was fent to aa 
academy for the education of young pecians for the minilry, 
which was under the fuperintendance of Mr. Doolittle at 
alae where he parived his fltudies with much ardour. 
Here inued onl 0 years, when his tutor was | 
ealed, = nie perfecting fpirit ot the times, to difmifs his 
pupils, In 1685 Mr. Henry went to Gray’s Inn, London, 
with the i ra es te of itudying the jt ‘but the real bent of 
his mind was for theological mie nih and here he promot romoted 
meetings for the oe of Chriftian senates and the ftudy 
of the feriptures. Having been little m 
London, he returned to his father’s, and be 
whenever an SPPOFUBIEY occurred. His 
generally acceptable, and he was foon invited to fettle as 
pattor with a congregation of diflenters at Chelter, with 
Which he comp lied. After a refidence of t five years 
hefter, he removed to Hackney, where his I 
pera in oe village, and in London, were singh race 
ut 
Vincent, = #3 -ye, he obferved a commodions fituation or fant. ed at Nantwich, in Chefhire, in 1714, as he was 
a fea-po there built his town of Sagrez, which, in returnin: - a vilit to his old congregation. He was only 
its plan Ae Taihcatoas, Ke any other in Portu rtugal, in ‘ally fty-fecond year of his age, and his death was uml- 
eS 3, made docks and for fhip-building, vi ted am s, and the diflenters at 
extended the ufe FY: the compafs, and determined the modes paras His. creat sank as an author as fucianni4 A 
~ of. : the longitude and latitude by ag aed the Bible,’’ in five volumes folio, of which four 
ens 1418 he attempted to double hh he mel Old Teftament, — the fifth Se Evangelits and the the AGs of 
, and proceeded only to an ifland which he the Apoftles. Another volume, had he lived to 
‘Puerto Sa ‘In the next year his people dif a it, a i accomplithed his plan, but she died before he 
adeira: in 1434 one of his er paffed bape Beer had ; gre the expolfition to the Romans. It was atterwar 
and in the following year he carried his difcoveries confider- finifhed by Dr. Evans. This work has been frequently re- 
farther. In 1442 another of his captains poten printed, and is now a ft book with the Pee 
xe coatt fome Guinea negroes, and a quantity party, He was author of = gh ", WOrk, 
the of a trading hich his i ? and * 
! eftal 
company under the apes of the eee The difcovery of 
the Azores took 1448, and in 1449 the prince’s 
fleets difcovered the Cape Verde Iflands, and d coafted fixty 
—e 
wi 11s t 
the moft popular, . 
Heyy, Roser, was fon ok a farmer at) 
ils 
..of St. Ninians, Scotland, w 
at Broad-Oak, in Flint- _ 
His father, Mr. Philip Henry, was 
He was one of the ejected mimifters who. 
was, fay 7s a. hiltorian, one of the greateft characters that his 
+ 
