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  • Thumbnail for The Lollards
    the Lollards, a proto-Protestant movement of the fifteenth century, and draws inspiration and style from the popular historical novels of Walter Scott...
    2 KB (137 words) - 02:38, 17 February 2024
  • eight were sentenced to "perpetual imprisonment", and the sect leader, Walter Lollard, was burned at the stake. In 1336, in Angermünde in the Brandenburg...
    62 KB (7,770 words) - 18:27, 27 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Oldcastle Revolt
    The Oldcastle Revolt was a Lollard uprising directed against the Catholic Church and the English king, Henry V. The revolt was led by John Oldcastle,...
    11 KB (1,174 words) - 21:22, 29 January 2024
  • scholastic quodlibet defending images in churches, a practice criticised by Lollards. He also wrote commentaries on the Psalm texts Qui Habitat and Bonum Est...
    14 KB (1,743 words) - 18:55, 22 July 2024
  • Walter Brit ( alternatively Brit, Brytte, or Brithus) (fl. 1390), was a fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and the reputed author of several works on astronomy...
    4 KB (521 words) - 10:59, 18 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Beelzebub
    published in 1678. In 1409–1410 The Lanterne of Light (an anonymous English Lollard tract often attributed to John Wycliffe) provided a classification of the...
    21 KB (2,511 words) - 20:03, 12 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lud's Church
    'Lady Lud' and was supposed to commemorate the death of the daughter of a Lollard preacher. A number of climbing routes up the sides of the chasm were pioneered...
    7 KB (765 words) - 12:32, 5 November 2023
  • Thumbnail for Geoffrey Chaucer
    Complaint of the Ploughman – a Lollard satire later appropriated as a Protestant text Pierce the Ploughman's Crede – a Lollard satire later appropriated by...
    79 KB (9,467 words) - 15:53, 15 July 2024
  • is crowned King of the Romans at Cologne. March 2 – William Sawtrey, a Lollard, is the first person to be burned at the stake at Smithfield, London. March...
    5 KB (559 words) - 03:27, 14 October 2023
  • Walter Brut (Welsh: Gwallter Brut) was a fourteenth-century writer from the Welsh borders, whose trial in 1391 is a notable event in the history of Lollardy...
    3 KB (382 words) - 11:43, 5 July 2024
  • Microbial Genomics at the University of Birmingham 16 June 2011 Wyclif and the Lollards Anthony Kenny, Philosopher and former Master of Balliol College, Oxford...
    441 KB (294 words) - 15:15, 14 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pierce the Ploughman's Crede
    related point of interest is that the Crede is a Lollard production that acknowledges the influence of Walter Map's Latin, anti-monastic "Goliardic" satires...
    15 KB (2,111 words) - 21:27, 20 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lambeth Walk
    Palace. Lambeth Walk Doorstep Green, a small park, is between Fitzalan and Lollard Streets. The former boiler house at Sugden House on the corner of Old Paradise...
    6 KB (667 words) - 18:01, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for A Dream of John Ball
    Revolt". It features the rebel priest John Ball, who was accused of being a Lollard. He is famed for his question "When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then...
    7 KB (862 words) - 16:29, 13 April 2024
  • at Westminster Abbey as a gesture of reconciliation. 1414 9 January – a Lollard rebellion in London is suppressed. 27 April – Henry Chichele enthroned...
    8 KB (855 words) - 13:39, 30 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for William Langland
    follower of John Wycliffe. However, this conclusion is challenged by early Lollard appropriation of the Plowman figure (see, for instance, Pierce the Ploughman's...
    11 KB (1,368 words) - 18:36, 27 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pavel Kravař
    was most likely made in a vain attempt to gain allies, hopefully amongst Lollard sympathisers, for the Hussite cause at the Council of Basel, at which reconciliation...
    4 KB (473 words) - 03:32, 26 October 2023
  • Wycliffe's Bible is completed by John Purvey, and Wyclif's followers, known as Lollards, begin to be persecuted in England. 1390–1 – Production of the Book of...
    23 KB (2,712 words) - 21:18, 16 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Amersham
    Tuesday, and establishing a statute fair on 19 September. In 1521, seven Lollard dissenters (William Tylsworth, John Scrivener, Thomas Barnard, James Morden...
    30 KB (3,269 words) - 08:24, 31 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Julian of Norwich
    (which affected large parts of England in 1381), and the suppression of the Lollards. In 1373, aged 30 and so seriously ill she thought she was on her deathbed...
    59 KB (6,675 words) - 09:45, 26 July 2024
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