Background
Philip"s father"s name was Richard and his mother was Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Rokeby, another Yorkshire family.
Philip"s father"s name was Richard and his mother was Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Rokeby, another Yorkshire family.
However, he did give a genealogical account of his family up until 1630. Little is known about him after this date except that he was in America in 1637 at the time of the Pequot War. According to Charles Orr, this work was never printed, but he was able to take a look at it when writing his History of the Pequot War.
Vincent"s family was from Yorkshire descendent from a John Vincent.
Philip also had two brothers, Thomas and William. Philip was christened on November 23, 1600 in Coningsborough.
He was in Peter House in the University of Cambridge and became Master of the Arts there. Francis and John died in infancy.
Henry was born in London in December 1629.
He was ordained in 1625 and given a rectory in Surrey, but resigned in August 1629. The first work published was an account of the Mystic Massacre of the Pequot War. lieutenant is uncertain whether Vincent was present at the events in America he described or got his information from an informant.
This work proved fairly popular and was reissued twice the following year.
lieutenant is attributed to Vincent on the basis of the Latin poem "Ad Lectorem" ("To the Reader"), which is signed "P. Vincentius."
Another work bearing the signature “P. Vincent” was published around the same time: The lamentations of Germany, wherein, as in a glasse, we may behold her miserable condition, composed by Doctor Vincent, Theo. (London, 1638). This is an extended and gruesome illustrated account of atrocities committed during the ongoing religious wars in Germany.
The author of these works may have been the Philip Vincent, baptized in 1600 at Conisbrough, Yorkshire, and educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge. This same Philip Vincent was censured and warned against practicing medicine, 6 September 1639.