LOLLARDRY

lŏlˈyoordrē or Lollardy, medieval English movement for ecclesiastical reform, led by John Wyclif, whose "poor priests" spread his ideas about the countryside in the late 14th cent. The church in England was ridden with abuses, especially in the ownership and management of great ecclesiastical properties, and its apparent wealth stood in stark contrast to the miserable poverty of most of the common people. Wyclif's central doctrine of evangelical poverty was close to the actual conditions of the people and gave form to widespread discontent with the church. The Great Schism (1378) had also served to deepen the general disillusionment and to foster the belief, taught by Wyclif, that the church had surrendered its divine calling. The Bible, which a man could interpret for himself, was set up as the only reliable rule of faith and standard of holiness. Wyclif supplied his bands of preachers with portions of his translation of the Bible.

The most complete statement of the Lollard creed is in the document commonly known as the Conclusions, presented to Parliament in 1395. It denied transubstantiation; it condemned the use of sacramentals, images, prayers for the dead, and auricular confession; it spoke out against all war; and it attacked clerical celibacy and the chastity vows of nuns as unnatural. At its peak just before the turn of the century, Lollardry appealed to members of the middle and upper classes as well as to those of the lower; Oxford became an intellectual center of Lollardry.

Severe repressive measures began with the accession (1399) of Henry IV. The statute De haeretico comburendo [on the burning of the heretic] was passed by Parliament in 1401, but burnings at the stake were actually rare. Under persecution the Lollards tended to fanaticism, and a petty rebellion broke out among followers of Sir John Oldcastle. The rebellion was easily put down (1414), and Oldcastle was executed (1417). There was another uprising, again easily suppressed, in 1431, but stricter suppression drove the movement underground, where it survived until the 16th cent. The alarm of the clergy in England over the Lutheran doctrines was partly caused by a fear that Lollardry would be revived.

It is difficult to state how much Lollardry actually encouraged the English Reformation. Undoubtedly it weakened the hold of the church on the people, and the popular use of the Bible helped to stimulate the later movement. Finally, although Lollardry knew nothing of Martin Luther's doctrine of justification by faith, it did in effect proclaim the direct responsibility of the individual soul to God—the essential idea of the Reformation.

See J. Gairdner, Lollardy and the Reformation in England (4 vol., 1908–13; repr. 1968); J. A. F. Thomson, The Later Lollards, 1414–1520 (1965).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Lollardry  - 84 results

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...nearly expressed the political creed of Lollardry than did the principles of any other...country for fifty years, during which Lollardry and social rebellion became firmly identified...of the orthodox. 1 The wide spread of Lollardry among the poor was a symptom of a general...
...nearly expressed the political creed of Lollardry than did the principles of any other...country for fifty years, during which Lollardry and social rebellion became firmly identified...of the orthodox. 1 The wide spread of Lollardry among the poor was a symptom of a general...
...1530 . This raises the question whether Lollardry had, in Scotland, already joined forces...bishops responsible for stamping out Lollardry. A disciple of Johan Huss, Paul Craw...from Kyle in Ayrshire were accused of Lollardry before James IV, but escaped the fire...
...battered at the walls of Church privilege, Lollardry gnawed away in the dark at the foundations...condemned for basing his assault on Lollardry upon reason rather than upon ecclesiastical...fanatical subversives; and north of Trent Lollardry was almost universally despised--in...
...Oxford to Lutterworth, he took this task of preaching in that little parish for his entire work. Lollardry was spread in this way. But Lollardry turned more and more to political agitation. In general, in the long and disastrous period of corruption...
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journal articles on: Lollardry  - 3 results

 
 
...plays intended audience, the Jew is meant as a surrogate for a heretical branch of thought concerning the Eucharist (or Lollardry, in this case). The evidence that I offer attempts no emendation of Sofers theory other than to clarify that the stage...
...in discredit with the people. (Holinshed, 3:92) <br/ Cobhams disfiguring of the images is evidence of his heretical lollardry. The material evidence is brought first to his king, whereupon the sovereign passes it to the ecclesiastical authorities...
...The historical Oldcastle was not, of course, either Protestant or Puritan, but Foxe, Bale, and Holinshed present his Lollardry in such terms. Thomas, Lord Cromwell is a similar case. It largely follows Foxe in presenting a Protestant hero martyred...


 

magazine articles on: Lollardry  - 1 result

 
 
...Reformation, and fails to pick out the salient point, that by 1500 the Church had been battling for over a century against Lollardry. This was a form of early Protestantism which included an attack on abuses such as pilgrimages and pardons, and was quite...


 

newspaper articles on: Lollardry  - 1 result

 
 
...terms, he was a heretic. Despite its heretical nature, Lollardry found a ready audience in England. Its avowal of a more just...nonconformity. My guess is that those roots went back a long way. Lollardry was revived and re-born in the 1500s as the Protestant Reformation...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Lollardry  - 6 results

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LOLLARDRY lol yoordre or Lollardy, medieval English...just before the turn of the century, Lollardry appealed to members of the middle and...Oxford became an intellectual center of Lollardry. Severe repressive measures began with...
...typified in the teachings of John Wyclif (or Wycliffe; see also Lollardry , and the revolt led by Wat Tyler . Dynastic wars (see Roses...Renaissance came to England. Several factors the revival of Lollardry, anticlericalism, the influence of humanism, and burgeoning...
...have been several groups commonly called Protestant but historically preceding the rise of Protestantism (see Hussites ; Lollardry ; Waldenses ). Protestantism has largely been adopted by the peoples of NW Europe and their descendants, excepting the southern...
OLDCASTLE, SIR JOHN 1378? 1417, English leader of Lollardry . He married the heiress of Lord Cobham in 1408 and was known as "the good Lord Cobham." Under the rule of Henry IV he performed...
PURVEY, JOHN c.1354 c.1421, English scholar, who in support of the Lollardry movement completed the first thorough translation of the Bible into English. Becoming associated with John Wyclif at Oxford...
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