Family Histories
for the death of Edward Wightman:
The King to the sheriff of our city of Litchfield, Greeting.
Whereas, the reverend father in Christ, Richard, by divine providence,
of Coventry and Litchfield, Bishop, hath signified unto us, that he
judicially proceeding, according to the exigence of ecclesiastical canons
and of the laws and customs of this kingdom of Burton-upon-Trent, in the
diocese of Coventry and Litchfield, of and upon the wicked heresies of
Ebion, Cirinthus, Valintian, Arrius, Macedonius, Simon Magnus, of Manes,
Manichees, Photinus, and of the Anabaptists, and other arch-heriticks;
and moreover of other cursed opinions, belched by the instance of Satan,
excogitated and here-to-for unheard of; the aforesaid Edward Wightman
appearing before the aforesaid reverend father, and other divines and
learned in the law, assisting him in judgment, the aforesaid wicked
crimes, heresies and other detestable blasphemies and errors, stubbornly
and perniciously, knowingly and maliciously, and with a hardened heart,
published, defended and dispersed, by definite sentence of the said divine
father, with the consent of divines, learned in the law aforesaid, justly,
lawfully and canonically, against the said Edward Wightman in that part
brought, stands adjudged and pronounced a heretick, and therefore as a
diseased sheep out the flock of the Lord, lest our subjects he do infect
by his contagion, he hath decreed to be cast out, and cut off.
Whereas, the holy mother church hath not further in this part what it ought
more to do and prosecute, the same reverend father hath left to our secular
power the same Edward Wightman as a blasphemous and condemned heretick to
be punished with the condign punishment as by the letters patent of the
aforesaid reverend father, the bishop of Coventry and Litchfield, in this
behalf thereupon made, as certified unto us in our Chancery.
We therefore as the zealot of justice and the defender of the Catholick
faith, and willing the holy church, and the rights and liberties of the
same, and the Catholick faith to maintain and defend, and such like
heresies and errors everywhere, so much as in the lies, to root out and
extirpate, and heriticks so convict and condemn to punish with consign
punishment, holding that such a heritick in the aforesaid form convicted
and condemned, according to the customs and laws of this our Kingdom of
England in this part accustomed, out to be burned with fire.
We command thee that thou cause the said Edward Wightman, being in thy custody, to be committed to fire in some publick and open place below the city aforesaid, for the cause aforesaid before people; and the same Edward Wightman in the same fire cause really to be burned in destation of said crime, and for the manifest example of other Christians, that they may not fall into the same crime. And this no ways omit, under the peril that shall follow thereon.

From "THE WIGHTMAN HERITAGE" by Wade C. Wightman (1990 ). Internet adaptation by Sandra Schuler Bray.