The schools of medieval England . THE MANCHESTEK GUAMMAk SCHOOLAEASTEK , THE DRAGON OF IGNORANCE, 150. THE MANCHESTER GRAMMAR SCHfiOL LICKING HIS CUBS INTO SHAPE, 1508 MISERICORDS IN MANCHESTER COLLEGIATE CHURCH, NOW THECATHEDRAL HENRY VIII AND THE SCHOOLS 297 founded in 1420, as stalls, erected in the choir of the churchbetween 1506 and 1512, assigned to the Archididascalus andHypodidascalus, are strong evidence of the existence of theschool before that date. A chantry founded by Alexanderor Richard Bessike in 1506 for two priests, thone of thetwo to teach a free school, was i


The schools of medieval England . THE MANCHESTEK GUAMMAk SCHOOLAEASTEK , THE DRAGON OF IGNORANCE, 150. THE MANCHESTER GRAMMAR SCHfiOL LICKING HIS CUBS INTO SHAPE, 1508 MISERICORDS IN MANCHESTER COLLEGIATE CHURCH, NOW THECATHEDRAL HENRY VIII AND THE SCHOOLS 297 founded in 1420, as stalls, erected in the choir of the churchbetween 1506 and 1512, assigned to the Archididascalus andHypodidascalus, are strong evidence of the existence of theschool before that date. A chantry founded by Alexanderor Richard Bessike in 1506 for two priests, thone of thetwo to teach a free school, was its first separate Oldham, a Chancery official and pluralist cleric, after-wards Bishop of Exeter, gave corn-mills in 1515 to the wardenand fellows of the college by a Latin deed for the endowment ofa fit person, secular or regular, learned and able, to be school-master to teach and instruct grammar in the town of Man-chester, according to the form of grammar now learned andtaught in the school of the town of Banbury in the county ofOxford, which in English is called Stanbridge Grammar, anda


Size: 2047px × 1221px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecteducation, bookyear19