A treatise of religion & learning and of religious and learned men consisting of six books, the two first treating of religion & learning, the four last of religious or learned men in an alphabetical order ... / by Edward Leigh ...

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Title
A treatise of religion & learning and of religious and learned men consisting of six books, the two first treating of religion & learning, the four last of religious or learned men in an alphabetical order ... / by Edward Leigh ...
Author
Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671.
Publication
London :: Printed by A.M. for Charles Adams ...,
1656.
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Subject terms
Religion -- Early works to 1800.
Learning and scholarship.
Literature -- History and criticism.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A47630.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A treatise of religion & learning and of religious and learned men consisting of six books, the two first treating of religion & learning, the four last of religious or learned men in an alphabetical order ... / by Edward Leigh ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A47630.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

Pembroke Hall, Founded 1343.

Mary de S. Paul Countesse of Pembroke, daughter to Guido Chastillion Earl of St Paul in France, procured Licence from King Edward the 3d, to found this House by the name of the Colledge of Mary Valence, after called Pembroke Hall.

Richard Fox Bishop of Winchester, Edmond Grindall and John Whitgift Arch∣bishops of Canterbury, William Fulk Doctor of Divinity, were all Masters of this House, and have by gifts of Lands, Money, Plate, Books, augmented the same, and Lancelot Andrews Doctor of Divinity, late Master and Bishop of Winchester hath given a thousand pounds, with three hundred seventy four folio Books well bound.

Mr Bradford Martyr was Fellow of Pembroke Hall, and first lived in Katherine

Page 102

Hall, and the Masters of those Colledges strove which should have him, as himself relates in one of his Letters, not to boast of himself, but to shew Gods goodness towards him.

* 1.1Bishop Ridley was also of Pembroke Hall, and there in the Orchard learned without Book almost all Pauls Epistles, yea and all the Canonical Epistles, save only the Apocalypse. So he saith of himself.

Notes

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