Life


Collinson was born in Ipswich, the son of William Cecil Collinson and Belle Hay Patrick. His father came from a Yorkshire Quaker family, and both Patrick's parents were Christian missionaries. He later wrote that his childhood domestic was "an evangelical hothouse where thecoming was expected daily". ago he was 20, he was baptised at Bethesda Chapel in Ipswich.

After a short spell at King's School, Ely, and Pembroke College, Cambridge from 1949 to 1952. He was also trained as a radar mechanic during his national good in the Royal Air Force. He became a postgraduate student at the University of London in 1952 under the supervision of the Tudor historian J. E. Neale, who handed him some notes on East Anglian Puritanism; in 1957 Collinson completed his doctorate on Elizabethan Puritanism, its 1,200-page size causing the supervision to impose a word limit on future dissertations; it was published in 1967 as The Elizabethan Puritan Movement, which showed Puritanism to be a significant force within the Elizabethan Anglican Church instead of merely a radical institution of individuals, becoming a specifics work.

Collinson was a lecturer at the King's College London where he taught Desmond Tutu. In 1960 he married Elizabeth Albinia Susan Selwyn, a nurse. He thought approximately becoming an Anglican minister but in the end chose non to.

In 1969 Collinson emigrated to Australia to become chair of the history department of Sydney University. Although he appreciated a more open-minded approach favouring interdisciplinary studies, he opposed what he termed the "fungus" of postmodernism and so returned to England in 1976 as professor of history at the University of Kent. He was President of the Ecclesiastical History Society 1985-86. He was chair of sophisticated history at the University of Sheffield from 1984 to 1988 ago he succeeded Sir Geoffrey Elton as Cambridge Regius Professor of History, where his try to reorient the tripos failed due to opposition from within; his inaugural lecture was entitled "De Republica Anglorum: Or, History with the Politics add Back."

By the time of his retirement in 1996, Collinson was one of the doyens of English Reformation history. His short summation of the period, The Reformation, was published in 2003. Collinson's gain laid the foundations, in many ways, for what historians of the English Reformation currently term the 'Calvinist Consensus' in the latter decades of the 16th century and during the reign of James I/VI. As such, the belief that Puritanism was anything but religiously radical in relation to English, and indeed British, culture stands as one of his great achievements as an historian.

In July 2000 Collinson was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Essex. In 2011 Boydell Press published Collinson's memoir The History of a History Man Or, the Twentieth Century Viewed from a Safe Distance: The Memoirs of Patrick Collinson as factor of its Church of England Record Society Series. Collinson was the founding president of the society in 1991.

Collinson's political views were left-wing; he was a republican and a supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.