Anna Trapnel

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Anna Trapnel (fl. 1642-1660)[1] was a travelling Baptist prophet and Fifth Monarchist active in England in the 1650s.

Anna Trapnel

Early life

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Trapnel was born in Poplar in the parish of Stepney to the east of the City of London to William Trapnel, a shipwright, and Anne.[1]

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After her mother’s death, she began to experience religious raptures and visions; she attended the Baptist church and was involved with Familism before joining the Fifth Monarchists in 1652.[2]

In April 1654 she was arrested on charges of witchcraft, madness, whoredom, vagrancy, and seditious intent; she answered the judges’ questions with parables and bible verses and managed to avoid the death penalty.[3]

Most of her publications began as transcriptions of her sayings which were written down by a friend during her times of spiritual rapture.[4]

Many of her works foretold the defeat of all political rulers due to Jesus’ victorious return to earth.[5]

Works

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Notes

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Further reading

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  • Lyn Bennet. ‘Women, Writing, and Healing: Rhetoric, Religion, and Illness in An Collins, “Eliza”, and Anna Trapnel’. Journal of Medical Humanities, vol. 36, 2015, pp. 157–70.
  • Rebecca Bullard. ‘Textual Disruption in Anna Trapnel’s Report and Plea (1654)’. The Seventeenth Century, vol. 23, 2008, pp. 34–53.
  • Kate Chedgzoy. ‘Female Prophecy in the Seventeenth Century: The Instance of Anna Trapnel’. Writing and the English Renaissance, edited by William Zunder and Suzanne Trill, Longman, 1996, pp. 238–54
  • Catie Gill. ‘“All The Monarchies Of This World Are Going Down The Hill” The Anti-Monarchism of Anna Trapnel’s The Cry of a Stone (1654)’. Prose Studies, vol. 29, pp. 19–35.
  • Elspeth Graham. ‘“Licencious Gaddyng Abroade”: A Conflicted Imaginary of Mobility in Early Modern English Protestant Writings’. Études Épistémè, vol. 35, 2019, pp. 1–30.
  • Hilary Hinds. ‘Soul-Ravishing and Sin-Subduing: Anna Trapnel and the Gendered Politics of Free Grace’. Renaissance and Reformation, vol. 25, 2001, pp. 117–37.
  • Kevin Killeen. ‘“People of a Deeper Speech”: Anna Trapnel, Enthusiasm, and the Aesthetics of Incoherence’. The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern Women’s Writing in English, 1540-1700, Oxford University Press, 2022, pp. 203–16.
  • Erica Longfellow. Women and Religious Writing in Early Modern England. Cambridge University Press, 2004.
  • Maria Magro. "Spiritual Biography and Radical Sectarian Women's Discourse: Anna Trapnel and the Bad Girls of the English Revolution". Journal of Medieval and Modern Studies, 2004.
  • Susannah B. Mintz. ‘The Specular Self of “Anna Trapnel’s Report and Plea’. Pacific Coast Philology, vol. 25, 2000, pp. 1–16.
  • Marcus Nevitt. ‘“Blessed, Self-Denying, Lambe-like?” The Fifth Monarchist Women’. Critical Survey, vol. 11, 1999, pp. 83–97.
  • Ramona Wray. ‘“What Say You to [This] Book? [...] Is It Yours?”: Oral and Collaborative Narrative Trajectories in the Mediated Writings of Anna Trapnel’. Women’s Writing, vol. 16, 2009, pp. 408–24.

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