New Light on John Trevisa

Traditio ◽  
1962 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 289-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C. Fowler

John Trevisa, fourteenth-century scholar and translator, was born in Cornwall, studied at Oxford University, and served as vicar of Berkeley and chaplain to Thomas IV, Lord Berkeley, in Gloucestershire. He died sometime prior to May 21, 1402. The main facts of Trevisa's life and works were collected by the late Professor A. J. Perry of the University of Manitoba, who visited England in the summer of 1914, and reported the results of his research there in theIntroductionto his edition of Trevisa's minor works, published by the Early English Text Society in 1925.

2019 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 785-804 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID JASPER ◽  
JEREMY SMITH

Thomas Frederick Simmons (1815–84) combined his ecclesiastical duties and liturgical interests with editing the fourteenth-century Middle EnglishLay folks’ mass book(1879) for the Early English Text Society, with the aim of showing the continuity of the English Church from the medieval period through the Reformation. In the light of modern scholarship, this article recontextualises both medieval text and Simmons's own editorial practice, and shows how Simmons, as a second-generation Tractarian churchman, sought in this text – and others associated with it – evidence for the Church of England's Catholic underpinning in an imagined medieval English Church.


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