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Topic: John Badby


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Lollards - LoveToKnow 1911
LOLLARDS, the name given to the English followers of John Wycliffe; they were the adherents of a religious movement which was widespread in the end of the 14th and beginning of the 15th centuries, and to some extent maintained itself on to the Reformation.
In 1410 John Badby, an artisan, was sent to the stake.
But nothing said would make Badby confess that "Christ sitting at supper did give to His disciples His living body to eat." The Lollards, far from daunted, abated no effort to make good their ground, and united a struggle for social and political liberty to the hatred felt by the peasants towards the Romish clergy.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Lollards   (2860 words)

  
 boys clothes : 15th century
John Badby becomes the first individual burnt at the stake for heresy in England.
John Huss is burned at the stake in Germany.
Emperor John VIII dies and the sucessioin is disputed betweem his brothers Demetrius and Constantine (1448).
histclo.com /chron/c1400.html   (2002 words)

  
 Volume 2 - ACTS AND MONUMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN MARTYRS, PART III
John Hus be present in the congregation of the clergy, and there, whosoever will object to him, either heresy or error, let him object, binding him to suffer the like pain, if he do not prove it.
John Hus is ready to render an account of his faith; and therefore, if any will object unto him any heresy or error, let him write his name in the chancery of the lord archbishop, and bring forth his probations openly before both the parties.
John Hus of any heresy before him?' He answered, `That since the time he knew John Hus, and that he was made inquisitor for heresy in the city and diocese of Prague, no man ever accused the said Mr.
wesley.nnu.edu /john_wesley/christian_library/vol2/CL2Part3.htm   (13359 words)

  
 English Dissenters: Lollards
John of Gaunt (1340-1399) an early supporter of Wycliff view's on church wealth did not wish to breach a possible excommunication.
Phillips, H., "John Wycliffe and the Optics of the Eucharist", In From Ockham to Wycliffe
______, "The Condemnation of John Wyclif at the Council of Constance", in
www.exlibris.org /nonconform/engdis/lollards.html   (3466 words)

  
 Faith & Freedom
Indeed, at the end of the ninth century, Pope John VIII praised the Carolingian emperor Charles II as the savior of the world and "Vicar of Christ," thus beginning the medieval tradition of the divine right of kings.
John XXIII was a man who had purchased the office of Cardinal, denied the resurrection, reportedly seduced and violated some 300 nuns, and poisoned his predecessor, Pope Alexander V. He was later accused by 37 witnesses (mostly priests) of sodomy, theft, murder, and other crimes.
Wycliffe's works were incinerated in 1410, and John Oldcastle, a close friend and advisor to the King, was hanged and roasted for his Lollard convictions in 1417.
www.leaderu.com /orgs/cdf/ff/chap04.html   (4670 words)

  
 BOOK 7
John Badby had but the same answer to give, the same confession to make, on his second as on his first appearance.
Badby was hurried to Smithfield, “and there,” says Fox, “being put in an empty barrel, he was bound with iron chains fastened to a stake, having dry wood put about him.” As he was standing in the barrel, Prince Henry, the king’s eldest son, appeared at the outskirts of the crowd.
John, who was now acknowledged the legitimate holder of the tiara, contributed nothing either to the honor of the Church or the repose of the world.
www.godrules.net /library/wylie/102wylie_a8.htm   (8180 words)

  
 Biographical Sketch - Thomas Roote (1555 - 1609) - Griffin Family Tree   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
The ancient name for Badby was Baddebi, which could have been derived from the Saxon words bade (a pledge in security) and bye (a dwelling or habitation).
Thomas died in 1609 and is buried in a churchyard in Badby.
John Roote was raised by an uncle who adopted him.
www.griffinfamilytree.com /bios/bio_roote_thos.html   (217 words)

  
 Lollard - Cunnan
The Lollards were the English followers of John Wyclif.
Many Lollards were burned at the stake as heretics including John Badby in 1410 and Thomas Harding as late as 1532.
You live in England, most probably during the early 15th century or possibly later in the 15th century or early 16th century.
cunnan.sca.org.au /wiki/Lollard   (326 words)

  
 History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517. | Christian Classics Ethereal Library
John Ashton had been one of the most active of Wyclif’s preachers.
John Foxe’s accounts of the Lollard martyrs are always quaintly related.
It was of this college that John Wesley was a fellow, the man who made a great breach in the Church in England.
www.ccel.org /ccel/schaff/hcc6.ii.vi.vi.html   (2338 words)

  
 Foxe's Book of Martyrs -- 89. JOHN BADBY
Yet the said John Badby, although he were admonished and requested both often and instantly by the said reverend father, said and answered expressly, That he would never believe otherwise than before he had said, taught, and answered.
And then the archbishop, to convince the constant purpose of the said John Badby, commanded the same articles again to be read, often instructing him both by words and examples, informing and exhorting him that thereby he might be brought the sooner to the religion that he was of.
Then the archbishop oftentimes required the said John, in the bowels of Jesus Christ, that he would forsake those opinions and conclusions, and that henceforth he would cleave to the Christian faith; which thing to do, in the audience of all the lords and others that were present, he expressly denied and refused.
www.exclassics.com /foxe/foxe90.htm   (887 words)

  
 The History of Protestantism - Volume First - Book Seventh - Protestantism in England, From the Times of Wicliffe to ...
John Badby had but the same answer to give, the same confession to make, on his second as on his first appearance.
Badby was hurried to Smithfield, "and there," says Fox, "being put in an empty barrel, he was bound with iron chains fastened to a stake, having dry wood put about him." As he was standing in the barrel, Prince Henry, the king's eldest son, appeared at the outskirts of the crowd.
John, who was now acknowledged the legitimate holder of the tiara, contributed nothing either to the honor of the Church or the repose of the world.
www.doctrine.org /history/HPv1b7.htm   (14653 words)

  
 Schaff's account of Wyclif and the Lollards
With Sir John Oldcastle, otherwise known as Lord Cobham from his marriage with the heiress of the Cobham estate, it was different.
John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, was the younger brother of the Black Prince.
John Wyclif.—I. The publication of Wyclif’s works belongs almost wholly to the last twenty-five years, and began with the creation of the Wyclif Society, 1882, which was due to a summons from German scholars.
www.bible-researcher.com /wyclif1.html   (15137 words)

  
 Millers Church History by Andrew Miller - Chapter 25
He was charged with reviving the errors of Marselius of Padua, and John Gaudun, the defenders of the temporal monarch against the pope.
Badby's answers were given with courage and firmness, and in words of simplicity and plain sense.
The witness of the execution of John Badby is now on the throne under the title of Henry V. But it is to be feared that the triumphs of divine grace in that simple artisan made no salutary impression on his mind.
www.the-tribulation-network.com /ebooks/millers/miller30.htm   (7682 words)

  
 Wycliffe and his Followers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
JOHN WYCLIFFE was undoubtedly the boldest and the ablest of the Reformers before the Reformation.
His position was essentially the Platonic, As Plate regarded universals-the notions of genus and species, the Ideas as they were called in his system--as the prius of all individual being, objectively the ground of existence in individual things and subjectively the principle of rational thinking, so also did Wycliffe.
The Council of Constance, which condemned John Huss to the flames was not at fault in associating Wycliffe's name with his.
www.edwardtbabinski.us /sheldon/wycliffe.html   (6125 words)

  
 The Regiment of Princes: Introduction   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
Introduced early in the poem in the reference to the burning of Badby, the anti-Lollard theme is implicit elsewhere, and resurfaces near the end in a defense of icons in churches - a major object of Lollard attack.
John Burrow (1982) has noted that, given Hoccleve's familiarity with French in his daily work at the Privy Seal, it would be surprising if he were not familiar with the dits and begging poems of a poet such as Deschamps.
John Bowers has written interestingly about the differences between the two copies, among other points calling attention to orthographic differences and their implications for textual theory and editorial practice.
www.lib.rochester.edu /camelot/teams/hoccint.htm   (12693 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "John Badby": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
now to treat of; in the number of whom cometh now, by the course of time, to write of one John Badby, a tailor and a layman, who, by the cruelty of Thomas Arundel, archbishop, and other prelates, was brought to his...
JOHN BADBY, ARTIFICER In the year of our Lord 1410,...
A wooden barrel was thrown into a roaring fire with John nailed up inside, and...
amazon.com /phrase/John-Badby   (327 words)

  
 Hospitals: St John the Baptist, Wootton Bassett | British History Online
Walter of Wylye, Bishop of Salisbury, issued in June 1266 his ordinances for a hospital to be founded at Wootton Bassett by Sir Philip Basset, the patron, and Thomas de Gay, the rector.
1) The xenodochium, or hospital, with a free chapel of the Virgin, St. John the Baptist, and All Saints, was to have the bishop's special protection and the same liberties as such houses enjoyed elsewhere in the diocese of Salisbury.
5) John Badby, presented by the queen in 1342, became Isabel's attorney in England in 1343.
www.british-history.ac.uk /report.asp?compid=36570   (554 words)

  
 The History of the Reformation…De Haeretico Comburendo… The Lollards (Part 4)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
I mentioned that for several reasons but the principal reason is that John of Gaunt’s sons eventually became English kings and as kings they became the principal persecutors of the Lollards.
J.A. Wylie writes that Badby was arrested on March 1, 1409 for saying publicly that he thought after the words of consecration the hallowed bread still remained bread.
But Henry V having succeeded his father in 1413, and passed from the houses of ill-fame he had hitherto frequented, to the foot of the altars and the head of the armies, the archbishop immediately denounced Lord Cobham to him, and he was summoned to appear before the king.
www.freerepublic.com /focus/f-religion/1532885/posts   (7631 words)

  
 John Badby   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
Badby bluntly maintained that when Christ sat at supper with his disciples he had not his body in his hand to distribute, and that if every host consecrated at the altar were the Lord’s body, then there be 20,000 Gods in England.
A further court in St Paul’s, London, presided over by Archbishop Thomas Arundel, condemned him to be burned at Smithfield, the tournament ground just outside the city walls.
Heresy and Politics in the Reign of Henry IV: The Burning of John Badby by Peter McNiven Order: ISBN 0851154670
john-badby.iqnaut.net   (209 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "Sir John Oldcastle": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
Among whom this noble knight, Sir John Oldcastle, the Lord Cobham, was complained of by the general proctors to be the chief principal.
Sir John Oldcastle supposed to be the original name of the character of Sir John Falstaffe.-4.
Key Phrases: Sir John Oldcastle, King Henry, Duke of Burgundy, Henry the Fifth, House of Commons, Duke of Orleans, King Richard, Bishop Arundel, Richard the Second, Baron Cobham, Duke of Lancaster, quoth the duke (see more)
amazon.com /phrase/Sir-John-Oldcastle   (360 words)

  
 John Badby - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Badby's death, boiled in a barrel (from John Foxe's Book of Martyrs (1563))
Heresy and Politics in the Reign of Henry IV: The Burning of John Badby by Peter McNiven ISBN 0-85115-467-0
This page was last modified 09:12, 20 September 2006.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Badby   (165 words)

  
 Untitled Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-09)
On the petition of John de Eylesford showing that, whereas the Westminster, manors of Boulewas and Isenbrugg by pretext of a recognisance of 1,000l.
Revocation of protection for half a year, with clause volumus, dated 8 September, granted to Thomas Cotes, going to Brittany in the compnay of Thomas de Percy, on certificate of the sheriffs of London that he has not gone but is in the city on his own affairs.
Kent, 'gentilman,' for not appearing before the justices of the Bench to answer John Badby touchinga plea of debt of 40s.
www.uiowa.edu /~c030149a/Claycamp/tomcotes.htm   (323 words)

  
 Discover the Wisdom of Mankind on HACKED BY TURK-SOPHİA
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www.blinkbits.com /wikifeeds/JO?from=9000   (203 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - 1410 - Calendar Encyclopedia
March 16 - John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset
Beatrice of Portugal, queen of John I of Castile (born 1372)
Isabella of Valois, Princess of France (born 1387)
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /1410.htm   (198 words)

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