Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Arthur, Thomas (d.1532)

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
659308Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 02 — Arthur, Thomas (d.1532)1885Thompson Cooper

ARTHUR, THOMAS (d. 1532), divine and dramatist, a native of Norfolk, was educated at Cambridge, probably in Trinity Hall, and imbibed protestant opinions from his fellow-countryman, Thomas Bilney. He was admitted a fellow of St. John's College in February 1517-8, being then a master of arts, and in 1518 he occurs as principal of St. Mary's Hostel. In 1526 he and Bilney were charged with heresy, and compelled to take an oath abjuring Luther's opinions. In November 1527 they were brought as relapsed heretics before Cardinal Wolsey and other bishops in the chapter-house at Westminster. Both of them recanted and did penance, though Bilney afterwards had the courage of his opinions and suffered for them at the stake. Arthur died at Walsingham in 1532.

He wrote: 1. ‘Microcosmus,’ a tragedy. 2. ‘Mundus plumbeus,’ a tragedy. 3. ‘In quosdam Psalmos.’ 4. ‘Homeliæ Christianæ.’ 5. A translation of Erasmus, ‘De Milite Christiano.’

[Tanner's Bibl. Brit. ; Fox's Acts and Monuments; Cooper's Annals of Cambridge, i. 325; Baker's Hist. of St. John's Coll. Camb. ed. Mayor, i. 282; Cooper's Athenæ Cantab, i. 46.]

T. C.