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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

81. Authorship Of The Elizabethan Homilies)
George Day (Chichester), cuthbert tunstall* (Durham), Thomas Goodrich (Ely), tunstall and Heath oversaw the Great Bible of Henry VIII (STC 2072);
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/ret/homilies/elizhom4.html
AUTHORSHIP
All 33 homilies were published unsigned because they derive their authority, not from any individual or even any group of bishops and chaplains, but from the Church of England itself and of course the living monarch. Some one person was responsible for writing or drafting each homily, yet we can be reasonably certain that all texts were revised, perhaps heavily, by several people. Cranmer's correspondence with Stephen Gairdner suggests that he collected contributions from others. Elizabeth's archbishop , Matthew Parker, would have certainly reviewed the texts. The queen herself took enough of an interest in the second volume to delay her final imprimatur Despite the impersonal nature of these compositions, there is a history of attributions. Ronald Bond concisely summarizes what is known about the first volume (1987: 26-28). John Bale attributed the whole, and Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, much of it ( Letters Other candidate contributors among the bishops are not hard to find: William Knight (Bath and Wells), Paul Bush* (Bristol), Robert Aldrich (Carlisle), John Bird (Chester), George Day (Chichester), Cuthbert Tunstall* (Durham), Thomas Goodrich (Ely), John Veysey (Exeter), John Wakeman or Wiche (Gloucester), John Skip or Skyppe (Hereford), Richard Sampson* (Coventry and Lichfield), John Longland* (Lincoln), William Repps or Rugge (Norwich), Robert King* (Oxford), John Chamber or Chambers (Peterborough), Henry Holbeach or Rands (Rochester), John Salcot or Capon (Salisbury), Henry Man (Sodor and Man), Nicholas Heath* (Worcester), and Edward Lee or Robert Holgate (York). Tunstall and Heath oversaw the Great Bible of Henry VIII (

82. The Bible In English
He attempted to gain the patronage of the cuthbert tunstall, Bishop ofLondon (14741559) for the production of a Bible, but was unsuccessful.
http://www.latin-mass-society.org/bibletranslation.htm
The Bible in English
Arthur Crumly As there are suggestions that there should be only one English translation of the Bible approved for public use in churches it is perhaps an appropriate time to view the history of how we got the Bible in English. The Earliest Translations The Bible was originally written in Hebrew (the Old Testament) and koine Greek (the New Testament) which were, of their day, the vernacular. Koine was the form of Greek spoken from the end of the Classical period until Byzantine times They were translated into Latin (also a vernacular) in the early Church. There may have been one or more Old Latin Versions. St Jerome seems to indicate that there was one single Old Latin Version which was variously amended in different places. The proper chants of the Mass are still in the Old Latin Version. The Scriptures were then retranslated by Saint Jerome in the fourth century. His version is known as the Vulgate (having been translated into the Vulgar tongue - the language of the people). The translation of the Holy Scriptures into our own tongue is not a new idea. It was being translated into English in Anglo-Saxon England. Both St Bede the Venerable and King Alfred the Great translated the Bible into Early English. On his deathbed, the last act of Saint Bede's life was to dictate, to a boy called, Wilbert a translation into Early English of St John's Gospel. He completed the translation, sang

83. History Of Diocese Of Hexham And Newcastle:Early Tudors
cuthbert tunstall, bishop of Durham (15301559) lived long enough to experiencemost of the changes we need to relate here. Trained as a civil servant,
http://www.rcdhn.org.uk/history/dio_history_y.htm
Local History of the Catholic Church in our Diocese
1 of 10 Catholicism in Northumberland and Durham Under the Earlier Tudors In the city of Durham alone 16 were hanged. From Northumberland Thomas Percy of Alnwick Castle was taken to London for execution, and at York the leader Robert Aske met his death in full view of the Yorkshire gentry. As a result, a mixture of fear, bewilderment and apathy kept the northern Catholics quiet for the next twenty years, despite the growing attack on church doctrine and the ousting of the Latin version of the bible by English translations. next main history page webmaster@rcdhn.org.uk

84. Speaking Volumes: 600 Years Of Cambridge University Library
cuthbert tunstall, De arte supputandi libri quattuor (London, 1522). This presentationcopy on vellum bears tunstall s gift inscription.
http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/exhibitions/volumes/medieval.html
The Medieval Library
Exhibition home
Library beginnings Medieval Library Filling the Library ... Opening times

A view of the Library in 1574.
The Schools Quadrangle, showing Rotherham's eastern front, with library above. From Matthew Parker's presentation copy to the University Chancellor, Lord Burleigh, of his Catalogus cancellariorum, 1574.
The Reformation saw the University Library, in common with all other English libraries, despoiled and ignored at turns. Part of its premises was reclaimed for lectures, 'since in its present condition it is useless', as books were borrowed and not returned, vandalised for their illuminations, or allowed to rot as representative of obsolete disciplines. By 1557, only 175 volumes remained of the approximately 600 it had boasted after the Tunstal benefaction.
Cuthbert Tunstall, De arte supputandi libri quattuor (London, 1522). This presentation copy on vellum bears Tunstall's gift inscription. The title-page border shown here is based on a design by Holbein.

85. God-of-small-things: Tuesday, January 18, 2005
pestiferous and most pernicious poison as cuthbert tunstall, the bishop ofLondon put itwith his English, instead of Latin version of the Bible.
http://god-of-small-things.blogspot.com/2005_01_18_god-of-small-things_archive.h
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What does this mean?
BlogThis!
god-of-small-things
The TNIV WarPart 2
Translating the Bible has always been risky business.
In 1428, John Wycliffe was declared a heretic for translating the Bible into English. His sentence? His body was to be burned, and his ashes scattered on the waters, far away from the consecrated ground of a church cemetery.
Lucky for him, he was dead - Wycliffe died of a stroke in 1384.
William Tyndale was less fortunatehe was still alive when he was burned at the stake in 1536 for the crime of spreading "pestiferous and most pernicious poison"as Cuthbert Tunstall, the bishop of London put itwith his English, instead of Latin version of the Bible.
In 1952, when the Revised Standard Version (RSV) was introduced, only the Bibles were burned. Translators were, however, accused of being communists and investigated by the U.S. House Un-American Activities Committee. The Air Force banned the RSV.
No books, or people, will be burned when the fight over the TNIV (

86. Index 1300-1541 'T' In Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae
Tunbridge (Tunebrigg), William, iv. 40. Tunstable, Thomas de, xi. 29.Tunstal (tunstall), cuthbert, i. 112; iii. 5, 47; v. 4;. vi. 38, 109; x. 14; xii. 39
http://www.history.ac.uk/fasti/fasti1300t.html
The national centre for history skip main menu 'Resources' menu related links site map ... About us Resources Partner sites Library Fasti > Index for 1300 - 1541: T
Index for 1300 - 1541: T
A B C D ... S T U V W Y ... Z
  • Tacham, see Thacham Talami, Balsamus, of Florence, v. 59 Talbot, Baldwin, ii. 4 Talbot, John (c. 1327), ii. 50 Talbot, John (d. 1550), i. 6, 26, 53, 54, 96; xii. 14, 35 Talbot, Richard, ii. 9, 46; vi. 51; vii. 5; xii. 45, 50 Talbot, Robert, viii. 71 Talbot, Thomas, ii. 44 Talbot, William (c. 1407-15), i. 33, 60 Talbot, William (d. 1498), i. 62; iii. 45; v. 54; vi. 53; vi. 53; vii. 21; xii. 26, 74 Talley, John, xi. 58 Talleyrand, Elias (Elie), de Prigord, i. 116; iv. 32; v. 8, 45; vi. 6, 25, 64, 71, 80; xii. 40 Talour (Barnby), Thomas, i. 121 Talour, see also Taylor Taminis, William de, i. 111 Tamworth, Christopher, i. 21, 91; xii. 17, 33 Taneto, see Thaneto Tanfield, Richard de, x. 62 Tanfield, Thomas, vi. 76, 81, 83 Tanfield, William de, vi. 110 Tangmere, see Apelderham Tanton, see Taunton Tapton, Hugh, i. 24, 109 Tapton, John, i. 73, 86; v. 39; xi. 41 Tapton, Thomas, vi. 57

87. About Balliol College: History - A Hundred Remarkable Past Alumni
1384; Simon Bredon, 14th century mathematician; William Gray, 15th century humanistbibliophile; cuthbert tunstall, Bishop of Durham, d.1559
http://www.balliol.ox.ac.uk/history/miscellany/alumni/index.asp

Front Page

News

Applying to Balliol

Official Information
...
PH Shaw Stewart

Remarkable Alumni
RM Hare

Snell Foundation

Deposits Appeal

Web Exhibitions
... SEARCH Balliol College U NIVERSITY of O XFORD Founded 1263 A Hundred Remarkable Dead Alumni Selection is not easy - it is a remarkable fact that about 1% of all those who appear in the British Dictionary of National Biography were Balliol-bred. And it is worth reflecting on Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, vv. 1-15, the traditional reading at Balliol Gaudies. It is a resonant passage, which begins "Let us now praise famous men, and our fathers that begat us", and waxes lyrical about various categories of greatness, before pointing out "And some there be, which have no memorial, who are perished as though they had not been, and become as though they had not been born: …….. But these were men of mercy, whose righteous deeds have not been forgotten". With that reservation about posting a list at all, one wonders what other small society could muster a variety of genius and leaders to compete with such as these: -
  • Walter de Burley, philosopher, d. about 1345

88. William Tyndale
This permission he sought from cuthbert tunstall, bishop of London, a scholarlyman and close friend of Erasmus. But tunstall, loyal to Rome and afraid of
http://www.prca.org/books/portraits/tyndale.htm
Chapter 40 William Tyndale: Father of the English Bible
Introduction We all have many Bibles in our homes: our own Bibles and our children's Bibles, as well as family Bibles used for family devotions. Most of us have the King James Version of the Bible, sometimes called the Authorized Version, prepared under the aegis of James I in 1611. It is a sad fact that our Bibles often lie unused, taken for granted, a somewhat peripheral part of our life. Yet behind our Bibles stands a story of great heroism, towering faith in God, and drops of martyr's blood. The story is that of William Tyndale, fathe r of the English Bible. Tyndale's Early Life William Tyndale was born sometime in the early 1490s on the Welsh border into the home of a well-to-do farmer. He went to Magdalen Hall, Oxford where he received his M.A. degree in 1515 and was ordained into the Roman Catholic clergy. In that same year he transferred to Cambridge University probably because he had heard that the Greek New Testament of Erasmus was available there, and he was interested in reading Scripture in its original language. One must understand the situation in England at this time. Henry VIII, husband of many wives, was on the throne. Dedicated Roman Catholic, but bitter enemy of the pope's rule in England, Henry persecuted Protestants on the one hand, but separated the church of England from papal control on the other hand. The church itself was rife with evil, wickedness in high places, and fornication of every sort. One of the chroniclers of the age characterized the priests as running from the houses of prostitutes to the altar to perform mass; incapable of understanding the Latin in which they mumbled their liturgies; superstitious and worshippers of such relics as a gown of the virgin Mary, a piece of the burning bush of Moses, straw from the manger at Bethlehem, and a complete skeleton of one of the babies murdered by Herod the Great; drunkards and gluttons whose wicked lives were supported by the blood, sweat and tears of the common working folk.

89. BSHM: Gazetteer -- S
cuthbert tunstall (14741559) was Dean of Salisbury Cathedral in the early Parr had studied under cuthbert tunstall at Cambridge, tunstall being a
http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/zingaz/S.html
The British Society for the History of Mathematics HOME About BSHM BSHM Council Join BSHM ... Search
BSHM Gazetteer S
Main Gazetteer A B C D ... Z Written by David Singmaster (zingmast@sbu.ac.uk ). Links to relevant external websites are being added occasionally to this gazetteer but the BSHM has no control over the availability or contents of these links. Please inform the BSHM Webster (A.Mann@gre.ac.uk) of any broken links. [When the gazetteer was edited for serial publication in the BSHM Newsletter, references were omitted since the bibliography was too substantial to be included. Publication on the web permits references to be included for material now being added to the website, but they are still absent from material originally prepared for the Newsletter - TM, August 2002]
  • Saffron Walden, Essex St Albans, Hertfordshire St. Andrews, Fife St. David's, Pembrokeshire ... Sedbergh, Yorkshire Sellafield, Cumbria - see Windscale, below Settle, North Yorkshire Severn Bridge Shalford, Surrey Sharow, North Yorkshire ... South Shields, Tyne and Wear South Trellech (or Trelleck), Monmouthshire - see Llandogo, above Spreyton, Devon
  • 90. BSHM: Gazetteer -- LONDON People S-Z
    cuthbert tunstall or Tonstall (14741559), Bishop of London in 1522, later ofDurham in 1529/30, was the author of the first arithmetic book by an
    http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/zingaz/LondonPeopleS.html
    The British Society for the History of Mathematics HOME About BSHM BSHM Council Join BSHM ... Search
    BSHM Gazetteer LONDON People S - Z
    Main Gazetteer A B C D ... Z Written by David Singmaster (zingmast@sbu.ac.uk ). Links to relevant external websites are being added occasionally to this gazetteer but the BSHM has no control over the availability or contents of these links. Please inform the BSHM Webster (A.Mann@gre.ac.uk) of any broken links. [When the gazetteer was edited for serial publication in the BSHM Newsletter, references were omitted since the bibliography was too substantial to be included. Publication on the web permits references to be included for material now being added to the website, but they are still absent from material originally prepared for the Newsletter - TM, August 2002] Because of its size, the London section of the Gazetteer is divided into eight pages: the main index page scientific institutions and societies the British Museum, British Library and Science Museum other institutions and places ; and mathematical people: A - C D - G H - M N - R and S - Z (this page). Inevitably these categories are somewhat arbitrary so

    91. Hoomes - Holmes
    7 tunstall, Richard cuthbert b.1845 Son of Adaline Margaret Allen 6 7 tunstall,Lelia Sophia b.1847 dau. of Adaline Margaret Allen 6 7 tunstall, Robert Byrd
    http://home.earthlink.net/~laginnis/holden.html
    Hoomes -> Holmes
    Holden

    b.ca. 1621 - d.ca. 1685

    born in England. Children-
    2 Hoomes, George, Sr. Dr. b.1680 d.1733
    2 Hoomes, John Waller
    2 Hoomes, Lucy Mary 2 Hoomes, George, Sr. Dr. b. 1680 d.1733 son of Major Thomas Hoomes 1
    Children-
    3 Hoomes, Christopher b.1712 m.1724 d.1794 Son of Dr. Geo. Hoomes 2
    3 Hoomes, Priscilla b.1702 m.1724 d.1794 dau. of Dr. George Hoomes m.Joseph Pollard
    3 Hoomes, Benjamin I b.1704 d.1785 Son of Dr. Geo. Hoomes 2 m.Elizabeth Claiborne 3 Hoomes, Joseph b.1708 d.1753 Son of Geo. Hoomes 2 m.Sussannah Waller 3 Hoomes, George, Jr. b.1709 m.1728 d.1753 Son of Dr. Geo. Hoomes 2 3 Hoomes, John b.1700 Son of Dr. Geo. Hoomes 2 Pollard b. 1704, Virg. - d.ca. 26 July 1795, Virg. Sarah Pollard m.(20 June 1743) Judge Edmund Pendleton b. 4 May 1725 - d. after 1815, Caroline Anne Pollard m. James Taylor b. 22 Feb. 1732 - d. after 1815, Caroline Elizabeth Pollard b. Oct. 1736 - d. after 1815 Pollard m.(1)(15 Jan. 1763) Sally Harding; m.(2)(ca. 1765) Rachel - b. 30 Sept. 1741, Lunenberg Co., Virg. - d. 1811, Shelby Co., Ky.

    92. CEECS-list Of Texts
    tunstall, cuthbert, 1119 words, (51) Waterton, Robert, 342 words, (3) Wingfield,Richard, 1677 words, (52). Original 2. 16879. (1520–1586). B ORIGINA2
    http://khnt.hit.uib.no/icame/manuals/ceecs/TEXT.HTM
    3. List of Texts Each entry is headed by Collection Name, followed by word count and the years covered by the collection and name of text file. That is followed by bibliographical information of the edition used. Last in each entry there is a list of writers, with word counts and letter numbers (or page numbers where the edition has no letter numbering) for the letters chosen. Letters edited by us show folio numbers; the full source for these texts is shown in the heading of each letter. Sample numbers are compatible with the whole CEEC: if there is a sample 1 but no others on this list, the other samples
    Collection word count (years) name of text file Basire 7068 words The correspondence of Isaac Basire, D.D. Archdeacon of Northumberland and prebendary of Durham, in the reigns of Charles I. and Charles II. with a memoir of his life . Ed. by Darnell, William Nicholas. London: John Murray. 1831.
    Basire, Frances, 4853 words , (p.107, p.111, p.132, p.136, p.138, p.145, p.203)
    Basire, Isaac Jr, 1044 words , (p.237, p.249)

    93. Enciclopedia Católica
    Translate this page Tunkeros tunstall, cuthbert Obispo inglés (1474-1559) tunstall, Thomas,Venerable Mártir inglés (murió en 1616) Tunsted, Simon
    http://www.enciclopediacatolica.com/ti.htm

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    94. Tertullian : The Durham MS (Lost)
    Leland reports that Bishop cuthbert tunstall (153059) found the Greek books ofhis predecessor Shirwood at Auckland Palace (Hughes p.116 note,
    http://www.tertullian.org/manuscripts_apologeticum/durham_lost.htm
    The Durham Tertullian MS (Lost)
    A manuscript of the Apologeticum arrived at Durham with its first Norman Bishop in 1081, and remained there to the time of the last medieval catalogue in 1416. It is no longer at Durham, so it's fate is unknown. The first words of the second folio are given in the catalogue; but these do not seem to be present in the text of the Apologeticum Various points could usefully be checked so I've highlighted these. 1095 : Carileph's List - MS. A. ii. 4 - (Botfield pp.117-8) The Benedictine Monastery of St. Cuthbert at Durham was founded after the Norman conquest. William of St.Calais (also known as William of St. Carileph, or Carilef), who had been Abbot of St. Vincent's in Normandy, became Lord Chief Justice of England and Bishop of Durham from 1081-1096. He built the current cathedral, disbanded the Congregation of St. Cuthbert and created a Benedictine Abbey. He also gave a set of 39 books to the library, plus liturgical works, 19 of which are still there. The 11th century list of these, from the mortuary taken on his death on 6th January 1095, has been preserved bound into one of his MSS, MS. A. ii. 4, 'Bibliorum pars posterior, as folio 1. [From where did he get his books?]

    95. A Short History Of Probability And Statistics: Literary Influences
    The ecclesiast and diplomat cuthbert tunstall (or Tonstall) (14741559) wrote DeArte Supputandi libri quattuor (about the art of arithmetic, in 4 books) in
    http://www.leidenuniv.nl/fsw/verduin/stathist/sh_liter.htm
    Load Home page + menu
    Last update 27 augustus 2003.
    Literary Stuff
    This page shows some examples of the influence of the concepts of probability and statistics, as can be gathered from literary texts. It could be considered a gross error to infer from this small sample that allusions to probability and statistics are in general found in the first part of a work of literary merit:).
  • Rabelais, F (1532) : book 1, chapt 23

  • The ecclesiast and diplomat Cuthbert Tunstall (or Tonstall) (1474-1559) wrote De Arte Supputandi libri quattuor (about the art of arithmetic, in 4 books) in 1522. It is not yet clear to me, what kind of arithmetic in relation to cards, Rabelais is refering to.
  • Rabelais, F (1532) : book 1, chapt 24

  • ...; or brought into use the antique play of tables, as Leonicus hath written of it... In playing they examined the passages of ancient authors wherein the said play is mentioned or any metaphor drawn from it.
    The Italian physician and humanist Nicollo Leoniceno (Nicolas Leonicus Thomaeus 1428-1524) wrote Sannutus, sive de ludo talario

    96. March 4, Every-Day Bool
    cuthbert tunstall, bishop of Durham, gave him a living, which he shortly afterwardsresigned, because he desired to travel, and could not hold it while
    http://www.uab.edu/english/hone/etexts/edb/day-pages/063-march04.html
    Every-Day Book index March 4. St. Casimir. St. Lucius, Pope, A.D. St. Adrian, Bishop, A.D. St. Casimir, marched before his beloved Poles in the air against the enemy, and as "he beat them before, so he beat them again." C HRONOLOGY the church. Those who hated his integrity and feared his talents, sought his blood by insnaring controversy. He avoided vain jangling, and beat his adversaries in solid argument. bishopric could more enrich him withal! besides that he is free from the great weight of cares." Gilpin annually visited the people of Ridsdale and Tindale, and was "little else than adored by that half barbarous and rustic people." When at Rothbury, in these parts, "there was a pestilent faction among some of them who were wont to resort to the church; the men being bloodily minded, practised a bloody manner of revenge, termed by them a deadly feud: below ; it may be added here, however, that afterwards, when he revisited these parts, any one who dreaded a deadly foe, found himself safer in Gilpin's presence than with armed guards. In his younger years, while on a ride to Oxford, Gilpin overtook a youth who was one while walking, and at another time running. He found that the lad came from Wales, knew Latin, had a smattering of Greek, and was bound for Oxford, with intent to be a scholar. "Wilt thou," said Gilpin, "be contented to go with me? I will provide for thee." The youth assented, Gilpin took him first to Oxford, afterwards to Houghton, where he improved him exceedingly in Greek and Hebrew, and sent him at last to Oxford. This youth was the learned Hugh Broughton; he is said to have requited this protection and care by something worse than inconstancy.

    97. [EMLS 1.2 (August 1995)] A Bibliography Of Thomas More's Utopia
    Gee, JA cuthbert tunstall s Copy of the First Edition of Utopia. Yale UniversityLibrary Gazette 7 (1933) 8788. On More s friendship with tunstall,
    http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/01-2/lakoutop.html
    A Bibliography of Thomas More's Utopia
    Romuald Ian Lakowski
    usercong@mtsg.ubc.ca

    Main Document: Lakowski, R. I. "A Bibliography of Thomas More's Utopia ." Early Modern Literary Studies http://purl.oclc.org/emls/01-2/lakomore.html
    Table of Contents
    Introduction
    Table of Abbreviations
    UTOPIA BIBLIOGRAPHY
    I. Editions and Translations ...
    Index of Names
    UTOPIA BIBLIOGRAPHY
    I. Editions and Translations
    I.a. Editions, Concordances and Bibliographies:
    Modern Editions of Utopia
    • Delcourt, M., ed. L'Utopie ou le traité de la meilleure forme de gouvernement. Les classiques de la pensée politique 13. Paris: E. Droz, 1936. Rpt. Geneva: Droz, 1983. [Rev.: A. Prévost, ("Une rétrospective: Le facsimilé de l' Utopie éditée par Marie Delcourt,") Moreana 85 (1985): 6782; J. Schlumberger, Nouvelle revue française 24 (Jan. 1936): 11617. Latin text. The reprint includes M. Delcourt's 1966 French translation. See also Logan, G. M., R. M. Adams, and C. H. Miller, eds.

    98. References | British History Online
    Register of cuthbert tunstall, bishop of Durham 153059 and James Pilkington,bishop of Durham 1561-76, ed. Gladys Hinde. Surtees Society, clxi, 1952.
    http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=32503

    99. Chester-le-Street And Washington History
    Gilpin, a member of an important Westmorland family, was the great nephew ofCuthbert tunstall, Bishop of Durham (15301559) and in 1552 this bishop
    http://www.thenortheast.fsnet.co.uk/Chester-le-StreetandWashington.htm
    North East England History Pages www.thenortheast.fsnet.co.uk About the Site The North East Map The Yorkshire Map Roots of the Region CHESTER-LE-STREET AND WASHINGTON Back to top of page North Durham - Chester-le-Street and Washington Above Penshaw Monument Read more about North East history in the Timeline
    FLIGHT FROM THE VIKINGS - THE BEGINNINGS OF A BISHOPRIC
    Back to top of page. Durham's Prince Bishops were the direct successors of the Anglo-Saxon Bishops of Lindisfarne. The story of the movement of their see from this Holy island , to the land between Tyne and Tees begins at the town of CHESTER LE STREET, half way between Durham and Newcastle upon Tyne . In 793 A.D the Vikings made their first attack upon the coast of Britain with a raid upon Lindisfarne. More raids were to follow. By the end of the following century the threat of further raids was such that the monks of Lindisfarne were forced to flee their island with the body of Saint Cuthbert and seek refuge on the mainland.

    100. Balliol College: History - A Balliol Gazetteer
    This Church is now the Museum of Garden History, but the memorial to BishopCuthbert tunstall, Benefactor, who was buried in it 1559, survives.
    http://www.balliol.ox.ac.uk/history/gazetteer/index.asp

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    ... SEARCH Balliol College U NIVERSITY of O XFORD Founded 1263 A Balliol Gazetteer Baruch S Blumberg, Master of Balliol 1989-1994, suggested soon after his installation that it might be of interest to pull together in an organised form some of the notes on places of Balliol interest which had been collected over the years. The original intention was to offer the result for publication in the Balliol College Annual Record, but it turned out far too long, and is now made available in this form. ABBOTSLEY Cambridgeshire. ADLESTROP Gloucestershire. ASSISI Hugh of Hartlepool, one of the two agents charged in 1282 by Dervorguilla with consolidating the College's foundation, and later Franciscan Provincial Minister, died and was buried there 1302: there is a massive incised grave-slab of marble, with an inscription and full-length effigy, on the floor of the middle Church of St Francis, under an archway between the Chapels of St Anthony and St Mary Magdalene. ASTON FLAMVILLE WITH BURBAGE Leicestershire.

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