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         Tunstall Cuthbert:     more books (26)
  1. A sermon of Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham, preached on Palm Sunday, 1539, before King Henry VIII; by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-08-29
  2. Deans of Salisbury: Richard Poore, Thomas Pierce, Eustace, Cuthbert Tunstall, Adam Moleyns, John Piers, Thomas Ruthall, Dean of Salisbury
  3. Évêque de Londres: Mellitus, Cuthbert Tunstall, Robert Lowth, William Warham, Geoffrey Fisher, Dunstan de Cantorbéry (French Edition)
  4. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547-1559). [Subtitle]: (Durham Cathedral Lecture) by D.M. Loades, 1973-01-01
  5. People From Hambleton (District): Roger Ascham, Frank Wild, Jack Hatfield, Cuthbert Tunstall, Walter Braithwaite, Robin Turton, Baron Tranmire
  6. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547-1559). by D.M. Loades, 1973
  7. Évêque de Durham: Rainulf Flambard, Guillaume de Saint-Calais, Thomas Wolsey, Cuthbert Tunstall, Guillaume Walcher, David Edward Jenkins (French Edition)
  8. Diplomate Britannique: Richard Hakluyt, George Jellicoe, Nathaniel Parker-Forth, George Bogle, Cuthbert Tunstall, James Maitland (French Edition)
  9. A Sermon of Cuthbert Tonstall, Bishop of Durham, Preached on Palm Sunday ... by bishop of Durham Cuthbert Tunstall, Cuthbert Tunstall, 2008-08-21
  10. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2009-06-13
  11. A sermon of Cuthbert Bysshop of Duresme made vpon Palme sondaye laste past, before the maiestie of our souerayne lorde kynge Henry the. VIII. kynge of England [and] of France. (1539) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-07-13
  12. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-09-10
  13. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-09-10
  14. A Sermon Preached on Palm Sunday, 1539, Before King Henry Viii. by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-07-24

61. The Galileo Project
tunstall Tunstal, Tonstall, cuthbert. 1. Dates Born Hackforth, Yorkshire, 1474Died London, 18 Nov. 1559 Dateinfo Dates Certain Lifespan 85; 2.
http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/tunstall.html
Tunstall [Tunstal, Tonstall], Cuthbert
1. Dates
Born: Hackforth, Yorkshire, 1474
Died: London, 18 Nov. 1559
Dateinfo: Dates Certain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Gentry
Tunstall was a natural son of Thomas Tunstall, legitimized later by the marriage of his parents and accepted as a member of the family. Whether because he was not the first born son or whether because of his quasi-illegitimate origin, he was sent to the university and destined for the church.
Clearly the family was prosperous if not more.
3. Nationality
Birth: English
Career: English
Death: English
4. Education
Schooling: Oxford, Cambridge; Padua, L.D.
Oxford, c.1491, Balliol College. Apparently because of the plague he migrated to Cambridge.
Cambridge, c.1496, King's Hall (merged before long into Trinity). Biographia britannica says there is no recorded B.A. I am assuming a B.A. or its equivalent, however.
Padua, 1499-1505; L.L.D., 1505, in both Canon and Roman law.
5. Religion
Affiliation: Catholic
Tunstall did not accept the Protestant Reformation. He did temporize with the murderous issue of royal supremacy and held on to his position under both Henry and Edward. He was finally deprived of his position at the end of Edward's reign, was restored under Mary, and then deprived again under Elizabeth less than two months before his death.
6. Scientific Disciplines

62. William Tyndale
In this he hoped to get help from cuthbert tunstall, Bishop of London, and so withthe good will of his master he left Gloucester in the summer of 1523.
http://www.nndb.com/people/569/000094287/
This is a beta version of NNDB Search: All Names Living people Dead people Band Names Book Titles Movie Titles Full Text for William Tyndale Born:
Birthplace:
Gloucestershire, England
Died: 6-Oct-1536
Location of death: Vilvoorde, Brabant, Belgium
Cause of death: Execution
Gender: Male
Religion: Protestant
Ethnicity: White
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Religion Level of fame: Somewhat
Executive summary: Bible translator, burnt at the stake Translator of the New Testament and Pentateuch, born on the Welsh border, probably in Gloucestershire, some time between 1490 and 1495. In Easter term 1510 he went to Oxford, where John Foxe says he was entered of Magdalen Hall. He took his M.A. degree in 1515 and removed to Cambridge, where Erasmus Martin Luther at Wittenberg, he settled with his amanuensis William Roy in Cologne, where he had made some progress in printing a 4to edition of his New Testament, when the work was discovered by John Cochlaeus, dean at Frankfurt, who not only got the senate of Cologne to interdict further printing, but warned King Henry VIII and Thomas Wolsey to watch the English ports. Tyndale and Roy escaped with their sheets to Worms, where the 8vo edition was completed in 1526. Copies were smuggled into England but were suppressed by the bishops, and William Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, even bought up copies on the Continent to destroy them. Attempts were made to seize Tyndale at Worms, but he found refuge at Marburg with Philip, landgrave of Hesse. There he probably met Patrick Hamilton, and was joined by John Frith. About this time he changed his views on the Eucharist and swung clean over from transubstantiation to the advanced Zwinglian position. His

63. Norfolk Post No. 36, American Legion, 1924
The following signed the charter application Callis W. Pollard, Charles B.Borland, Whit P. tunstall, Robert B. tunstall, cuthbert tunstall,
http://www.ls.net/~newriver/va/al36.htm
Sponsored by
NORFOLK POST NO. 36
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
American Legion, 1924 Norfolk's first American Legion Post was organized September 15, 1919. Fifteen Norfolk veterans signed the application for a charter and elected R. Balwin Myers chairman. The following signed the charter application: Callis W. Pollard, Charles B. Borland, Whit P. Tunstall, Robert B. Tunstall, Cuthbert Tunstall, Harold E. Masengill, George Farant Todd, Thos. H. Willcox, Jr., Chas. G. Hunter, J. Carl Peck, Robert P. Beaman, R. Baldwin Myers, E. R. Willcox and Richard C. Henderson. Announcement of the organization caused much interest among the returned service men and almost overnight the roster increased and within a week a thousand applications for membership had been received. Assisted by the War Camp Community Service and quartered in their building, the temporary organization struggled through the first month and started to arrange for permanent organization plans. The first meeting was a large one-about fifteen hundred men attending-and Dr. Thomas V. Williamson, formerly Commanding Officer of Ambulance Company 115th of the Twenty-ninth Division, was elected to command the Post. Thomas H. Gilliam, Jr., former captain of Field Artillery, was elected to the position of adjutant. Officers were opened in the Armory Building and by January 1st the organization had been completed and new offices opened in the Dickson Building. Adjutant Gilliam appointed Fairfield H. Hodges as assistant adjutant and placed him in charge of the Dickson Building office.

64. Index / Formatting The Word Of God
tunstall, cuthbert (Bishop of Durham), 7.2 Tyndale, William, Introduction, 4.3,7.2, 8.1, 8.2, 8.3, 8.6, 11.4 Valera, Cyprian de, 6.6 Valla, Lorenzo, 7.2
http://www.smu.edu/bridwell/publications/ryrie_catalog/topic.htm
INDEX
Adelkind, Israel Cornelius,
Aitken, Jane,
Aitken, Robert,
Alexander, Caleb,
Allen, William,
Amerbach, Johann,
Ammonius of Alexandria,
Anselm of Laon, Introduction
Anshelm, Thomas,
Apiarius, Samuel,
Aprell, Peter, Aristotle, Augustine, Badius, Conrad, Barker, Christopher, Barker, Robert, Barthlet, Thomas, Baskett, Mark, Becke, Edmund, Introduction Bedel, William, Boleyn, Anne, Boyle, Robert, Bomberg, Daniel, Bristow, Richard, Brucioli, Antonio, Busa, Robert, Bydell, John, Calvin, John, Capito, Fabricius, Carey, Matthew, Cartwright, Thomas, Cecil, William (Baron Burghley), Cephalaeus, Wolfius, Cervicornus, Eucherius, Charles V, Emperor, Charles II, King of England, Chayim, Jacob ben, Christian II, King of Denmark, Christian III, King of Denmark, Clarke, Adam, Cockerell, Sydney, Columbus, Christopher, Preface Coronel, Pablo, Coverdale, Miles, Cranach, Lucas (the Elder), Cranmer, Thomas, Crespin, Jean, Cromwell, Thomas, Cyril of Alexandria, Dalaber, Anthony

65. 7. Outlawed English / Formatting The Word Of God
Little Sodbury Manor in 1523 for an audience with Bishop cuthbert tunstall . According to Tyndale’s account, he met a terse rebuff from tunstall my
http://www.smu.edu/bridwell/publications/ryrie_catalog/7_2.htm
7. Outlawed English
fol. F4 r Candelabrum
fol. G4 v r , Numbers 23
Pentateuch , 1530. Colophon to Genesis: Emprented at Malborow in the lande of Hesse, by me Hans Luft, the yere of oure Lorde. M.CCCCC. xxx. the xvij. dayes of Januarij. [Thought to be a false imprimatur for Johannes Hoochstraten of Antwerp].

Octavo. 378 leaves ([8], lxxvi, [4]; [8], lxxvi; [8], lii; [10], lxvii; [4], lxiii, [1]), 6 x 3¾ inches. Bastarda and roman, lines vary from book to book; titles within woodcut borders, eleven full-page woodcut illustrations. Bound in 19th-century dark blue morocco; spine gilt. Lacking one blank. § DMH 4; STC (2nd ed.) 2350. § CD-ROM: 7.2, fol. B5 r 7.2, fol. F3 r ... (Foxe, 1583) The introductory letter, "W. T. To the Reader," is one of the most valuable sources for biographers of Tyndale (1494?–1536) and also one of the most dramatic narratives of the arduous history of rendering the Bible into English. It is here that Tyndale tells of his trip to London from Little Sodbury Manor in 1523 for an audience with Bishop Cuthbert Tunstall. His purpose was to win the bishop’s support for his plan to translate the Bible. In good humanist fashion, he translated an oration by Isocrates in order to demonstrate his facility for Englishing Greek. According to Tyndale’s account, he met a terse rebuff from Tunstall: "my lorde answered me, his house was full." Before long, he recognized that the project would need to be carried out on the Continent, where he was to live from 1524 until his martyrdom in 1536.

66. Editorial Commentary And Additional Information
On 5 August 1553 cuthbert tunstall was released from the Tower. Foxe callshim, doctor Tonstal (1570, p. 1634; 1576, p. 1394; 1583, p. 1465).
http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/foxe/commentary/book11/personids/person11-950.html
Cuthbert Tunstall DNB Bishop of London (1522 - 1530). Bishop of Durham (1530 - 1552, 1553 - 1559). [ DNB On 5 August 1553 Cuthbert Tunstall was released from the Tower. Foxe calls him, 'doctor Tonstal' ( , p. 1634; , p. 1394; , p. 1465). He was present at Gardiner's sermon, 30 September 1554; cited as bishop of Durham ( , p. 1644; , p. 1402; , p. 1473). He was one of John Rogers's examiners on 22 January 1555 ( , pp. 1023-26; , pp. 1414-15; , pp. 1484-86). He examined Rowland Taylor on the same day ( , pp. 1071-73; , pp. 1696-97; , p. 1640; , pp. 1521-22). He was one of the commissioners who presided over the deprivation of Hooper. , pp. 1054-55; , pp. 1432-33; , p. 1505. Tunstall was one of the commissioners who condemned John Bradford, Laurence Saunders and Rowland Taylor to death. , p. 1699; , p. 1450; , pp. 1523-24. He was one of the commissioners who interrogated Robert Ferrar on 4 February 1555. , p. 1732; , pp. 1722-23; , p. 1471; , pp. 1553-54. Bradford was brought to speak to Bonner by the under-marshal of the King's Bench. Talk took place between the lord chancellor, Bonner and John Bradford on 22 January 1555, during which the bishop of Durham, Sir Richard Southwell, Sir Robert Rochester, and Secretary Bourne questioned Bradford's eucharistic doctrine. , pp. 1185-88

67. Editorial Commentary And Additional Information
cuthbert tunstall. (1475 1559) (DNB). Bishop of Durham (1530– 51; 1553–59).On 5 August 1553 released from the Tower. Foxe calls him, doctor Tonstal
http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/foxe/commentary/book10/personids/person274.html
Cuthbert Tunstall DNB Bishop of Durham (1530– 51; 1553–59) On 5 August 1553 released from the Tower. Foxe calls him, 'doctor Tonstal' ( , p. 1634; , p. 1394; , p. 1465). Present at Gardiner's sermon, 30 September 1554; cited as Bishop of Durham ( , p. 1644; , p. 1402; , p. 1473). One of John Rogers's examiners on 22 January 1555 ( , pp. 1023-26; , pp. 1414-15; , pp. 1484-86). Examined Rowland Taylor on the same day ( , pp. 1071-73; , pp. 1696-97; , p. 1640; , pp. 1521-22). One of the Commissioners who condemned John Bradford, Laurence Saunders and Rowland Taylor to death ( , p. 1699; , p. 1450; , pp. 1523-24). One of the Commissioners who interrogated Robert Ferrar on 4 February 1555 ( , p. 1732; , pp. 1722-23; , p. 1471; , pp. 1553-54).

68. Glimpses Bulletin #59: Tyndale Strangled And Burned For The Bible
Tyndale went to the Bishop of London, cuthbert tunstall, to seek permission totranslate the Bible into English. tunstall refused.
http://chi.gospelcom.net/GLIMPSEF/Glimpses/glmps059.shtml
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69. Bishop Of London -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
(Click link for more info and facts about cuthbert tunstall) cuthbert tunstall15221530 (Click link for more info and facts about John Stokesley) John
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/b/bi/bishop_of_london.htm
Bishop of London
[Categories: Bishops, Religion in London]
The current Bishop of London is (Click link for more info and facts about Richard John Carew Chartres) Richard John Carew Chartres , who is the 132nd Bishop, and was installed on January 26, 1996.
The (Click link for more info and facts about Diocese of London) Diocese of London (The capital and largest city of England; located on the Thames in southeastern England; financial and industrial and cultural center) London boroughs. It is third in importance in the (The national church of England (and all other churches in other countries that share its beliefs); has its see in Canterbury and the Sovereign as its temporal head) Church of England after the Archdioceses of (A town in Kent in southeastern England; site of the cathedral where Thomas a Becket was martyred in 1170; seat of the archbishop and primate of the Anglican Church) Canterbury and (The English royal house (a branch of the Plantagenet line) that reigned from 1461 to 1485; its emblem was a white rose) York . The Bishop is one of five senior bishops, alongside the

70. Lord Privy Seal -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
(Click link for more info and facts about cuthbert tunstall) cuthbert tunstall,Bishop of London (15231530) (Click link for more info and facts about
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/l/lo/lord_privy_seal.htm
Lord Privy Seal
[Categories: Government of the UK, Lists of British ministers]
The Lord Privy Seal or Lord Keeper of the (Click link for more info and facts about Privy Seal) Privy Seal is one of the traditional (An office that involves minimal duties) sinecure offices in the British Cabinet. Originally, its holder was responsible for the monarch's personal ("privy") seal (as opposed to the (Click link for more info and facts about Great Seal of state) Great Seal of state , which is in the care of the (The highest officer of the Crown who is head of the judiciary and who presides in the House of Lords) Lord Chancellor
Though one of the oldest offices in government anywhere, since it has no particular function today the office has generally been used as a kind of Minister without Portfolio. Since the end of the prime ministership of (British stateswoman; first woman to serve as Prime Minister (born in 1925)) Margaret Thatcher , the position of Lord Privy Seal has frequently been combined with that of (Click link for more info and facts about Leader of the House of Lords) Leader of the House of Lords . The jocular clarification that the office holder is neither a (A titled peer of the realm) lord , nor a (A small outbuilding with a bench having holes through which a user can defecate) privy , nor a (A device incised to make an impression; used to secure a closing or to authenticate documents)

71. Blackburn Diocese: TUNSTALL Deanery
OVER KELLET St cuthbert (TUN05). Joint Anglican/Methodist Church Address KelletRoad, LA6 1DP Mr G Hudson , tunstall House, tunstall, LA6 2QU
http://www.blackburn.anglican.org/diodir/tundean.htm
TUNSTALL Deanery
Map showing location of churches
Deanery Officers
Area Dean:
Rev TJL Maidment, The Vicarage, 5 Ancliffe Lane, Bolton-le-Sands, Carnforth, LA5 8DS 01524 822 335
Lay Chairman:
Mr CP Whytock, 48 Lythe Fell Avenue, Halton, Lancaster, LA2 6NL 01524 811 336
Chapter Clerk:
Secretary:

Miss M Fothergill, The Green, Borwick, Carnforth, LA6 1JR
Treasurer:
Miss M Bannister, 1 Tarn Cottages, Bolton-le-Sands, Carnforth, LA5 8AE 01524 733 459
BOLTON-LE-SANDS Holy Trinity (TUN-01)
Church Address: Main Road
OS Map Ref: Sunday Services: 8.00 am, 10.30 am, 3.00 pm Vicar Rev TJL MAIDMENT (Tom) , (Appointed: 1988) , The Vicarage, 5 Ancliffe Lane, Bolton-le-Sands, Carnforth, LA5 8DS 01524 822 335 Curate (NSM) Rev BC JONES (Barbara) , (Appointed: 01 July 2000) Photo , 11 Sandown Road, Lancaster, LA1 4LN 01524 65598 Rev L MACLUSKIE (Linda) , (Appointed: 04 September 2002) , 15 Whitendale Drive, Bolton-le-Sands, Carnforth, LA5 8LY 01524 822 769 Reader(s) Mr H Bithell (Harold) , 2 Proctor House, Bolton Lodge, 107 Main Road, Bolton-le-Sands, Carnforth, LA5 8EQ 01524 822 685

72. GENUKI: Archbishops And Bishops Of Great Britain.
cuthbert tunstall, 1522, Thomas Wolsey, 1523, Richard Rawlings, 1523, George Cromer,1522. Henry VIII, 1509, Edward Lee, 1531, John Stokesley, 1530
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/History/Archbishops.html
GENUKI
Homepage
GenUKI
Contents
... England

OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
KINGS OF ARCHBISHOPS OF ARCHBISHOPS OF BISHOPS OF BISHOPS OF BISHOPS OF BISHOPS OF ENGLAND CANTERBURY YORK LONDON DURHAM ST. DAVID'S ARMAGH See founded before A.D. 200 See founded before A.D. 200 See founded before A.D. 200 [Missionary College founded at Iona by St. Columba from Ireland 565] Persecution of the British Church under the Emperor, Diocletian. Martyrdom of St Alban, A.D. 304. St. Columba died at Iona, 597 Bishops of York, London, and Caerleon-on-Usk, at the council of Arles, A.D. 314 Eborius Restitutus British Bishops present at the Councils of Sardica, 347, and of Ariminum, 360 St. Patrick St Ninian settled at Whithorn, in Wigtonshire, cir. A.D. 400 Consecrated in Gaul St. German and Gallican Bishops combated Pelagianism in Britain 429 and 447. "Alleluia" Victory, 430 St. Benen St. Jarlath Cormac St. Mungo, driven from Glasgow, founded St. Asaph, cir. 550 Dubtach I. Aihill I.

73. Genuki Logo Yorkshire Notes And Queries Volume V. 1909
Tragedy, A Yorkshire,; Tridings,; Take, Wm.,; tunstall, cuthbert,; Turbard,Ingolard,; Turnbull, A., (2); Turner Tiger ; Turpin, Dick (and Nevison),
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/CBW/ynq/v5p11.htm
"Yorkshire Notes and Queries"
Volume V. 1909
  • Sykehouse,
  • Sykes, Sir Tatton,
  • Symeon, of Durham,
  • T [C].
  • Tarn,
  • Tavern Signs, see "Signs, "
  • Taylor, Annie,
  • Taylor, Joe, (2)
  • Tayshaw, Archie,
  • Temple of Comus,
  • Terrington Font,
  • Terry, Hubert,
  • Thackley, Stanningley or,
  • Tharlethorp,
  • Theeakeston, Henry, (2)
  • Theatre Royal, Bradford,
  • Thekeston,
    • of Thekeston,
    • Arms,
    • House,
  • Thexton Family, (2)
  • Thirdings,
  • Thivings,
  • Thomas, William,
  • Thompson,
    • C.,
    • Henry (of Escrick),
    • J.(Portrait Painter), (2)
    • Wm, Hepworth (Scholar),
    • J.Portrait Painter,
  • Thoresby, John (Archbishop of York),
  • Thoresby, Ralph,
  • Thornton le Street,
  • Thorntondale, Norman Fort,
  • Thorp Arch (Origin of Name),
  • Thorp, J T.(LL.D.),
  • Thorp, J, T., Kirkdale Cave,
  • Thorp, J, T., Roman Names of Yorkshire Cities and Towns,
  • Threshfield,
  • Thurston, Archbishop of York, (2)
  • Thwaytes, Henry,
  • Tickhill, (2)
  • Tiger Story,
  • "Tiger" Turner, (2)
  • Tiles,
  • Tillotson, Archbishop, (3)
  • Tison,
  • Todeni, Robert de (Lord of Belvoir),
  • Tragedy, A Yorkshire,
  • Tridings,
  • Take, Wm.,
  • Tunstall, Cuthbert,
  • Turbard, Ingolard,
  • Turnbull, A., (2)

74. Fathom :: The Source For Online Learning
So he went to the Bishop of London, cuthbert tunstall, who was a great scholar cuthbert tunstall would have nothing to do with him, because tunstall was
http://www.fathom.com/feature/122346/
Media Index
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By Institution American Film Institute British Library British Museum Cambridge University Press Columbia University London School of Economics Natural History Museum New York Public Library RAND Science Museum University of Chicago University of Michigan Museum Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Beyond Mere Translation: The Radical Work of William Tyndale
EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION
Fathom
: Why was Tyndale's translation the single most significant act of the English Reformation?
David Daniell : That's a very good question. You are to understand that the New Testament was written originally in Greek. The Church, however, had it in Latin from the fourth century, and the Latin translation made by Saint Jerome, though honourable in intent, was not always very accurate. In sixteenth-century Europe, the humanist scholarspeople such as Erasmuswere finding many things wrong with that Latin translation.
The Church had been using that translation for over 1,000 years, and wouldn't allow there to be any other translation but their own, because all their practices were based on that translation. Erasmus himself in 1516 published his own Latin translation from the original Greek New Testament. It caused a scandal. In one column he had his own Latin translation, and in the other column he had the original Greek. This was the first time the original Greek had been circulated in print, and instantly it went through Europe like wildfire; it was probably the most significant volume of the sixteenth century in any subject. Martin Luther seized on it and in 1522 he produced his German New Testament. This was the first time the Greek New Testament had been in any European vernacular.

75. Higher Praise Greatest Preachers (William Tyndale)
He secured an interview with cuthbert tunstall, the Bishop of London, whosesponsorship he hoped to attain. The interview was inconclusive as tunstall
http://www.higherpraise.com/preachers/tyndale.htm

76. History Of Our English Bible
In October, cuthbert tunstall began to have all the copies he could trace gatheredand burned. They still were circulated. tunstall then made arrangements
http://www.fbinstitute.com/engbible/7.html
Fundamental Baptist Institute Facts From History About Our King James Bible. Written and Published by by Rev. Ronald D. Lesley, Th. M., D.D. Chapter VII William Tyndale THE TYNDALE BIBLE 1534 AD. One of the best-kept secrets in English Bible History is that of William Tyndale’s Bible. Many people have heard something of Tyndale, but very few have ever read his work or about him. Yet no other Englishman, not even Shakespeare, has reached so many by his life’s work. Tyndale translated the New Testament twice, and made three revisions before his death. In 1534 the Tyndale New Testament was finished. And it was his greatest work that would bring many souls to Jesus Christ, as their personal Saviour. Those scholars who prepared the Authorized 1611 King James Bible spoke with one voice. Of course they did, that voice which could never be acknowledged by them was that of William Tyndale. Much of the New Testament in the 1611 Authorized King James Bible came directly from the Tyndale New Testament. In 1611, there were six million English speaking people, today the figure is approaching a billion. The Bible, or parts of it, is now published in over one thousand other languages.

77. William Tyndale - Dr. Herbert Samworth
He secured an interview with cuthbert tunstall, the Bishop of London, cuthbert tunstall – Bishop of London who rejected Tyndale’s petition to translate
http://www.solagroup.org/articles/historyofthebible/hotb_0004.html
William Tyndale By Dr. Herbert Samworth On the surface there would have been little reason to think that the birth of a child in Slimbridge, Gloustershire, England in 1494 would change English history. However, that child, William Tyndale, would later translate and print the Word of God in the English vernacular and the impact of that translation is still felt today. Although few recognized it at the time, the dawning of a new day began with the recovery of the Greek language and its application to Biblical studies. In 1499 Erasmus of Rotterdam, the great humanist, arrived at Oxford University. Although Erasmus enjoyed an international reputation as a scholar, it appears that when he landed in England he was still ignorant of the Greek language. At Oxford were Thomas Linacre and John Colet who urged him to undertake its learning. Colet himself was lecturing on the Epistles of Paul and his studies brought a vibrancy to the text that contrasted sharply with the sterility associated with the Scholastic method of teaching. After his time at Oxford, Erasmus departed for the European continent to pursue the study of Greek. That pursuit reached its climax in 1516 when the pages of the

78. The Story Of Thomas More, John Farrow, Chapter 6
Accompanying him as a fellow envoy was his friend, cuthbert tunstall, later tobe Bishop of London. In addition to their royal credentials they carried a
http://www.cin.org/farmor06.html
The Story of Thomas More, John Farrow DESPITE MORE'S LAMENTATIONS that he had scant opportunity for literary activity, his pen was constantly engaged. In his thirty-fifth year we have seen that he was a busy man at law, yet this is the year he produced The History of King Richard III, the last of the House of York, and like everything of his invention it was composed with care. He wrote both in Latin and English, yet curiously enough The History was never finished. It could scarcely have been because he thought it was without merit. It was too good for that. The spirit which drives an author and buoys his dream could not have deserted him with such abruptness. Either he lacked the leisure to complete this excellent work, or, perhaps, he felt the need of caution in dealing with matters that might offend his young sovereign. More's style in the Latin version has been likened to that of Tacitus, and it is generally acknowledged that in the vernacular it was the first and best history of its kind for many generations. He planned that it should be a history of his age. It was both a criticism of the structure of government and attack against the evils of tyrants. The eloquent prose was to give Shakespeare inspiration and material for his Richard 111, and the mood of its theme was to provide its own author with the spirit that was responsible for Utopia. The pitiable state of the common man, and the dire need for a new system of society, had long been the subject uppermost in the thoughts of More and his Humanist friends. The promise and person of the young Henry provided a bright hope, but in the fifth year of his reign there were already signs of the dark and brutal route that lay ahead.

79. WILLIAM TYNDALE (1484-1536), Born One Hundred Years After The Death Of Wycliffe,
He journeyed to London and presented his plan before cuthbert tunstall A bishop already mentioned, cuthbert tunstall, played a key role in this.
http://www.wayoflife.org/articles/williamtyndale.htm
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WILLIAM TYNDALE: THE FATHER OF OUR ENGLISH BIBLE
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80. EIPS - Tyndale - A Great Hero
cuthbert tunstall was at this time Bishop of London and had regarded the writingsof Erasmus (a Dutch writer) as very good and valuable.
http://www.ianpaisley.org/historical.asp?child_tyndale.htm

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