Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Bishop John Fisher, 1469–1535: the man and his work
- John Fisher and the promotion of learning
- The University chancellor
- The bishop in his diocese
- Fisher and Erasmus
- Fisher and More: a note
- The polemical theologian
- Fisher's view of the Church
- Fisher, Henry VIII and the Reformation crisis
- Royal ecclesiastical supremacy
- The spirituality of John Fisher
- Appendixes
- 1 Chancellors of the University of Cambridge, c. 1415–1535
- 2 Fisher's career and itinerary, c. 1469–1535
- 3 Statistics of episcopal residence, c. 1486–1535
- 4 Parochial patronage and the episcopate, c. 1520
- 5 The episcopate and ordinations, c. 1487–1546
- Index
1 - Chancellors of the University of Cambridge, c. 1415–1535
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Bishop John Fisher, 1469–1535: the man and his work
- John Fisher and the promotion of learning
- The University chancellor
- The bishop in his diocese
- Fisher and Erasmus
- Fisher and More: a note
- The polemical theologian
- Fisher's view of the Church
- Fisher, Henry VIII and the Reformation crisis
- Royal ecclesiastical supremacy
- The spirituality of John Fisher
- Appendixes
- 1 Chancellors of the University of Cambridge, c. 1415–1535
- 2 Fisher's career and itinerary, c. 1469–1535
- 3 Statistics of episcopal residence, c. 1486–1535
- 4 Parochial patronage and the episcopate, c. 1520
- 5 The episcopate and ordinations, c. 1487–1546
- Index
Summary
This list is based on Emden, Cambridge; detailed references to sources are given only for Rotherham and his successors. I ignore the details given in VCH Cambs, III, 331–3, based on The Historical Register of the University of Cambridge, ed. J. R. Tanner (Cambridge, 1917), which in its turn owed much ultimately to lists by John Caius and in British Library Cotton MS Faustina C. iii, fos. 81–102 (79–100) – from 289 to 1598, continued to 1605 – printed in R. Parker, The History and Antiquities of the University of Cambridge (London, n.d.), pp. 18-99, as of no critical value. The abbreviation occ. is used for ‘occurs’.
John Rickinghall, occ. 1415, 1422; master of Gonville Hall, c. 1416–26; confessor of the duke of Bedford, 1426; bishop of Chichester, 1426H? (Emden, Cambridge, p. 480; C. Hall and C. Brooke, ‘The Masters of Gonville Hall’, in The Caian (1983), p. 46; J. Le Neve, Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, VII, (London, 1964), 2).
Robert Fitzhugh, occ. April 1423; again November 1428; bishop of London, 1431-6 (Emden, Cambridge, p. 232; Le Neve, Fasti, V, 3).
Marmaduke Lumley, occ. June 1425, 1427; bishop of Carlisle, 1429–50; of Lincoln 1450 (Emden, Cambridge, p. 377; Le Neve, Fasti, I, 2; VI, 98).
John Holbroke, occ. November 1429; 1430; master of Peterhouse, 1421–c. 1437 (Emden, p. 309).
William Lascelles, occ. February 1432 (Emden, Cambridge, pp. 353–4); died 22 August 1453 (‘1423’, Emden, Cambridge: cf. F. Peck, Desiderata Curiosa, II (London, 1735), VIII. 10). Richard Cawdray, occ. December 1433; December 1435 (Emden, Cambridge, pp. 126–7).
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- Humanism, Reform and the ReformationThe Career of Bishop John Fisher, pp. 233 - 234Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989