Difference between revisions of "Richard Cox ca.1500-1581"

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====Biographical Note====
 
====Biographical Note====
Son of [[family::Richard Cox]] of [[location::Whaddon, Buckinghamshire]]. Studied at [[education::Eton College|Eton]] and then from 1519 at [[education::King's College, Cambridge]], where he became [[occupation::fellow]] in 1522 and received his BA in 1523/4. [[occupation::canon|Junior canon]] of [[education::Cardinal College, Oxford]] 1525, MA 1526. [[occupation::headmaster|Headmaster]] of [[organisations::Eton College|Eton]] from 1529, where he gained a reputation for both humanist pedagogy and authoritarian discipline. He returned to [[location::Cambridge]] in 1535: BD 1535, DD 1537. He became a leading reforming theologian, and by the early 1540s he was [[occupation::chaplin]] to both [[crossreference::Thomas Cranmer 1489-1556|Thomas Cranmer]] and the King. Under Edward VI he was [[occupation::chancellor]] of the [[organisations::University of Oxford]], and under Mary I he fled to [[location::Frankfurt]]. Cox returned to England under Elizabeth I in 1559 where he became [[occupation::bishop|Bishop]] of [[location::Ely]]. He was forced to resigns see in 1580.
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Son of [[family::Richard Cox]] of [[location::Whaddon, Buckinghamshire]]. Studied at [[education::Eton College|Eton]] and then from 1519 at [[education::King's College, Cambridge]], where he became [[occupation::fellow]] in 1522 and received his BA in 1523/4. [[occupation::canon|Junior canon]] of [[education::Cardinal College, Oxford]] 1525, MA 1526. [[occupation::headmaster|Headmaster]] of [[organisations::Eton College|Eton]] from 1529, where he gained a reputation for both humanist pedagogy and authoritarian discipline. He returned to [[location::Cambridge]] in 1535: BD 1535, DD 1537. He became a leading reforming theologian, and by the early 1540s he was [[occupation::chaplin]] to both [[crossreference::Thomas Cranmer 1489-1556|Thomas Cranmer]] and the King. Under Edward VI he was [[occupation::chancellor]] of the [[organisations::University of Oxford]], and under Mary I he fled to [[location::Frankfurt]]. Cox returned to England under Elizabeth I in 1559 where he became [[occupation::bishop|Bishop]] of [[location::Ely]].
  
 
====Books====
 
====Books====

Latest revision as of 07:47, 23 November 2022

Richard COX ca.1500-1581

Biographical Note

Son of Richard Cox of Whaddon, Buckinghamshire. Studied at Eton and then from 1519 at King's College, Cambridge, where he became fellow in 1522 and received his BA in 1523/4. Junior canon of Cardinal College, Oxford 1525, MA 1526. Headmaster of Eton from 1529, where he gained a reputation for both humanist pedagogy and authoritarian discipline. He returned to Cambridge in 1535: BD 1535, DD 1537. He became a leading reforming theologian, and by the early 1540s he was chaplin to both Thomas Cranmer and the King. Under Edward VI he was chancellor of the University of Oxford, and under Mary I he fled to Frankfurt. Cox returned to England under Elizabeth I in 1559 where he became Bishop of Ely.

Books

Of his library, Heal says "The bishop's interesting inventory gives full details of his library, which was dominated by the writings of the fathers and by the controversial literature of the Reformation. The works of his friends in Switzerland, especially Bullinger and Gualter, had a prominent place on his shelves. In contrast, his earlier interests in humanist writing and teaching are barely reflected in his books". Cox's probate inventory (transcribed and edited as PLRE 1) includes ca.200 books.

Sources