, the antagonist of Dr. Caius in the antiquity of the universities,
, the antagonist of Dr. Caius
in the antiquity of the universities, was born, as Wood conjectures, in Lincolnshire, but, according to Blomefield,
was of a Yorkshire family. He was, however, educated at
University college, Oxford, where he entered about the
year 1522. In 1525, he was elected fellow of All Souls,
where he took his degrees in arts, and at that time was
esteemed an excellent Latin scholar, Grecian, and poet,
in 1534, he was unanimously chosen registrar of the university; but. in 1552, was deprived of this office for negligence. Soon after the accession of queen Elizabeth, he
was made prebendary of Salisbury. In 1561, he was
elected master of University college, to which he was
afterwards a considerable benefactor; and, in 1563, he
was instituted to the rectory of Tredington in Worcestershire. He died in his college, in 1572, and was buried in
the church of St. Peter’s in the East. He was well versed
in sacred and profane learning, but, according to Smith,
negligent and careless in some parts of his conduct. He
translated Erasmus’s “Paraphrase on St. Mark,
” by command of queen Catherine Parr, Lond. Assertio antiquitatis Oxoniensis academic,
” printed with
Dr. John Caius’s answer,