Athenæ Oxonienses. Vol. 1. an exact history of all the writers and bishops who have had their education in the most ancient and famous University of Oxford, from the fifteenth year of King Henry the Seventh, Dom. 1500, to the end of the year 1690 representing the birth, fortune, preferment, and death of all those authors and prelates, the great accidents of their lives, and the fate and character of their writings : to which are added, the Fasti, or, Annals, of the said university, for the same time ...
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Title
Athenæ Oxonienses. Vol. 1. an exact history of all the writers and bishops who have had their education in the most ancient and famous University of Oxford, from the fifteenth year of King Henry the Seventh, Dom. 1500, to the end of the year 1690 representing the birth, fortune, preferment, and death of all those authors and prelates, the great accidents of their lives, and the fate and character of their writings : to which are added, the Fasti, or, Annals, of the said university, for the same time ...
Author
Wood, Anthony à, 1632-1695.
Publication
London :: Printed for Tho. Bennet ...,
1691-1692.
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Subject terms
University of Oxford -- Bio-bibliography.
Cite this Item
"Athenæ Oxonienses. Vol. 1. an exact history of all the writers and bishops who have had their education in the most ancient and famous University of Oxford, from the fifteenth year of King Henry the Seventh, Dom. 1500, to the end of the year 1690 representing the birth, fortune, preferment, and death of all those authors and prelates, the great accidents of their lives, and the fate and character of their writings : to which are added, the Fasti, or, Annals, of the said university, for the same time ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A71276.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 1, 2024.
Pages
Bach. of Arts.
Thomas Garret was this year admitted, but the Month or Day
when, appears not, because the Register is imperfect; however in
the year following he occurs by the Title of Bach. of Arts.—He
was afterwards Curate of Honey-lane in London; and being much
addicted to the Opinions of Martin Luther, went to Oxon in 1526,
and dispersed divers prohibited Books among his Acquaintance and
Contemporaries, as Anth. Delaber of S. Albans Hall, afterwards a
Civilian of Gloc. College, Nich. Vdall and John Diot both of C C C.
John Clerke, Hen. Summer, Will. Betts, John Taverner a Musitian, of
Card. Coll. &c. All which being Lutherans, or Hereticks as they
were then called, suffer'd much. At length Thomas Garret, after
several Flights from place to place, Sculkings and Imprisonments,
was burnt in Smithfield near London, with Dr. Robert Barnes and
William Hierome, an. 1541, as John Fox, in his Book of Acts and
Monuments of the Church, will at large tell you.
Between the ending of one Register and the beginning of ano∣ther,
are the Acts of the Congregation of this year wanting, many
of which were torn out from the former.
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