| 31. | After the Uniformity Act of 1662 he was ejected from his living, but continued to preach in conventicles.
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| 32. | On 10 May 1670 he was arrested at his meeting in George Yard, under the Conventicles Act 1670.
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| 33. | In June 1673, while holding a conventicle at Knockdow near Ballantrae, Ayrshire, he was captured by Tolbooth.
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| 34. | Barred from their churches, they held open air field assemblies called conventicles which the authorities suppressed using military force.
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| 35. | On being turned out of his living after the Restoration, he set up a conventicle at Marlborough, Wiltshire.
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| 36. | A conventicle of sixty or more persons to whom he was preaching was broken up at Camberwell in August 1665.
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| 37. | Some of the ministers also took to preaching in the open fields in conventicles, often attracting thousands of worshippers.
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| 38. | In 1692 93 there was a serious controversy among the senior pastors in Hamburg concerning the admissibility of Pietist conventicles.
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| 39. | By 1684 Covenanters were hiding from the authorities in the hills, and increasingly draconian action had ended the large conventicles.
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| 40. | In 1681 a mob led by John Hellier attacked the Quakers'meeting hall during persecutions following the Conventicles Act 1670.
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