Education
He was educated at Saint Edmund"s College, Old Hall, where he studied from April, 1813, to December, 1818.
He was educated at Saint Edmund"s College, Old Hall, where he studied from April, 1813, to December, 1818.
He was then chosen as one of the first students sent to reopen the English College at Rome, where he remained until he took the degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1825. He had been ordained priest, 13 March 1824. He accordingly resided at Alton Towers, Staffordshire, till 1840, with the exception of two years during which Lord Shrewsbury"s generosity enabled him to stay at Rome collecting materials for his great work, Hierurgia or the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, which was published in 1833.
He had previously published two short works: Transubstantiation vindicated from the strictures of the Review
Maurice Jones (1830), and The Liturgy of the Mass and Common Vespers for Sundays (1832). In 1840 he became chaplain to Sir Robert Throckmorton of Buckland (then in Berkshire nowadays in Oxfordshire), and while there wrote his greatest book, The Church of Our Fathers, in which he studies the Salisbury Rite and other medieval liturgical observances.
This work, which has profoundly influenced liturgical study in England and which caused his recognition as the leading authority on the subject, was published in 1849 (vols I and II) and 1853-1854 (volume III). Shortly after, he ceased parochial work, and having resided successfully at Newick, Surrey (1854-1864), he went to live near the South Kensington Museum in which he took the keenest interest and to which he proved of much service.
His Introduction to the Catalogue of Textile Fabrics in that Museum has been separately reprinted (1876) and is of great authority.
He also contributed frequent articles to the Archæological Journal, the Dublin Review, and other periodicals. Foreign many years before his death he held the honourable position of President of the Old Brotherhood of the English Secular Clergy.
After 1840 Doctor Rock was a prominent member of the Adelphi, an association of London priests who were working together for the restoration of the hierarchy.