. The archbishop's death is given as 1603 because of
Old Style and New Style dates. In August 1583 he was appointed
Archbishop of Canterbury to replace
Edmund Grindal, who had been placed under house arrest after his disagreement with
Queen Elizabeth over "prophesyings" and died in office. Whitgift placed his stamp on the church of the Reformation, and shared Elizabeth's hatred of
Puritans. Although he wrote to Elizabeth remonstrating against the alienation of church property, Whitgift always retained her special confidence. In his policy against the Puritans and in his vigorous enforcement of the subscription test he thoroughly carried out her policy of religious uniformity. He drew up articles aimed at nonconforming ministers, and obtained increased powers for the
Court of High Commission. In 1586, he became a privy councillor. His actions gave rise to the
Martin Marprelate tracts, in which the bishops and clergy were strongly opposed. By his vigilance the printers of the tracts were discovered and punished, though the main writer
Job Throkmorton evaded him. Whitgift had nine leading
presbyterians including
Thomas Cartwright arrested in 1589–90, and though their trial in the Star Chamber for sedition did not result in convictions they did agree to abandon their movement in return for freedom. Whitgift took a strong line against the
Brownist movement and their
Underground Church in London led by
Henry Barrow and
John Greenwood. Their services were repeatedly raided and members held in prison. Whitgift repeatedly interrogated them through the High Commission, and at the Privy Council. When
Burghley asked Barrow his opinion of the Archbishop, he responded: "He is a monster, a miserable compound, I know not what to make him. He is neither ecclesiastical nor civil, even that second beast spoken of in revelation." Whitgift was the prime mover behind the
Act against Seditious Sectaries which was passed in
1593, making
Separatist Puritanism a felony, and he had Barrow and Greenwood executed the following morning. In the controversy between
Walter Travers and
Richard Hooker, he prohibited the former from preaching, and he presented the latter with the rectory of Boscombe in
Wiltshire, to help him complete his
Ecclesiastical Polity, a work that in the end did not represent Whitgift's theological or ecclesiastical standpoints. In 1587, he had Welsh preacher
John Penry brought before the High Commission, and imprisoned; Whitgift signed Penry's
death warrant six years later. In 1595, in conjunction with the Bishop of London and other prelates, he drew up the
Calvinist instrument known as the
Lambeth Articles. Although the articles were signed and agreed by several bishops they were recalled by order of Elizabeth, claiming that the bishops had acted without her explicit consent. Whitgift maintained that she had given her approval. Whitgift attended Elizabeth on her deathbed, and
crowned James I. He was present at the
Hampton Court Conference in January 1604, at which he represented eight bishops. He died at
Lambeth at the end of the following month. He was buried in Croydon at the Parish Church of St John Baptist (now
Croydon Minster): his monument there with his recumbent effigy was practically destroyed when the church burnt down in 1867. ==Legacy==