He was tolerant of Puritans, encouraging his congregation to attend puritan lectures.[2] He also shielded the future biographer Samuel Clarke (1599–1683).[3]
He wrote an alchemical book, Lithotheorikos of 1621.[4] He is known to have employed Simon Forman.[5]Robert Fludd dedicated Anatomiae Amphitheatrum (1623) to Thornborough.[6]
^William H. Huffman, Robert Fludd and the End of the Renaissance (1988), p. 32.
Further reading
A. L. Rowse, "Bishop Thornborough: A Clerical Careerist", in Richard Ollard and Pamela Tudor-Craig (editors), For Veronica Wedgwood These Studies in Seventeenth-Century History (1986)