
Lollardy - Wikipedia
Lollardy[a] was a proto-Protestant Christian religious movement that was active in England from the mid-14th century until the 16th-century English Reformation. It was initially led by John …
Lollard | English Religious Reformers & Medieval Heresy | Britannica
Lollard, in late medieval England, a follower, after about 1382, of John Wycliffe, a University of Oxford philosopher and theologian whose unorthodox religious and social doctrines in some …
The Lollard Bible and other medieval Biblical versions
2008年3月20日 · The Lollard Bible and other medieval Biblical versions by Deanesly, Margaret. Publication date 1920 Topics Bible, Bible, Bible, Lollards Publisher Cambridge University …
John Wycliffe and the Lollards - Harvard University
John Wycliffe (c.1330-1384), an Oxford professor, developed a number of doctrines – that the Bible is the supreme authority, that the clergy should hold no property, that there is no basis …
The Lollard Bible: And Other Medieval Biblical Versions
2002年10月14日 · TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1.) The problem of the middle-English Bible, and the aim of this study -- 2.) The prohibitions of vernacular Bible reading in France, Italy, and Spain - …
In this recent lecture, Professor Deanesly presents the Lollard Bible to us not as Coulton saw it, as a great act of charity that Christ's hungry might be fed, but rather as an instrument of …
The Lollard Bible | Blackfriars | Cambridge Core
In this recent lecture, Professor Deanesly presents the Lollard Bible to us not as Coulton saw it, as a great act of charity that Christ’s hungry might be fed, but rather as an instrument of …
The Flourishing of Lollardy in Late Medieval England
2024年5月26日 · Many key Lollard emphases — vernacular Bible reading, rejection of transubstantiation, emphasis on preaching — reappear in the 1500s. Wycliffe‘s writings …
The Lollard Bible And Other Medieval Biblical Versions
This study examines the extent of Bible reading in medieval England, and in particular the place of the Lollard translations. Miss Deanesly shows that the medieval church tolerated translation in …
The Significance of the Lollard Bible, by Margaret Deanesly
It may be called the ‘Lollard Bible’, because the Wycliffites at Oxford were called Lollards, at first by their enemies, and then generally, as a party name. Lollard was a foreign word, and the …