. The English Dominicans. ter-General of Bologna (1240) we read: Friar Bartholomew isto be deprived of his Bible on account of the infamous way hegot possessed of it, and he is to prepare himself for thediscipline and to submit to the penance imposed by the and patrons contributed to these students. In 1289Bishop Swinfield of Hereford makes a present of 205-. toRobert Bromyard, later the famous Dominican theologian,towards the various expenses of his graduating at II, through his Florentine bankers, the Bardi, gives£6 for Friar Arnold of Stradley to study in Paris i
. The English Dominicans. ter-General of Bologna (1240) we read: Friar Bartholomew isto be deprived of his Bible on account of the infamous way hegot possessed of it, and he is to prepare himself for thediscipline and to submit to the penance imposed by the and patrons contributed to these students. In 1289Bishop Swinfield of Hereford makes a present of 205-. toRobert Bromyard, later the famous Dominican theologian,towards the various expenses of his graduating at II, through his Florentine bankers, the Bardi, gives£6 for Friar Arnold of Stradley to study in Paris in 1323;and wills like the two following abound in the fifteenth andsixteenth centuries.^ In 1489 Alice Paddington, widow ofThomas Paddington, a London fishmonger, desires to beburied with the Ludgate Blackfriars and oon well-disposed Reliquaryy 1878, pp. 38, 80. ^ Roll of Household Expenses of Rich, of Swinfield^ Bishop of Hereford(Camden Society), vol. i, p. 145. 3 Rot. Exit. Scac. Pasch., 16 Ed. II, m. 10. r: Oi rnvmrntc ft x^Lm fupiM Sm mmmfi arc* .UAtxk ^\t^ ^k~-?k€y mHixiuCv vitiuiii DOMINICAN LECTURING IN UNIVERSITY By prriiussion of Curat jrs of British Museitiu (MS. Bora. ly, E. Ill) [To face p. 48 Ube StuMes 49 frere of the said Freyers prechours of London exercising- hislernyng in Oxford and in Cambrig-g-e in divinitie to sing (Mass)for my sowle and the sowles of my two late husbondes . .in the Universities of Oxford or Cambrigge by the space ofvj yeres next after my decesse.^ In 1510 Richard Crisp ofNorthampton, v yeres after my decesse bequeaths to thefour orders of friars there *to them that be students indivinitie in Oxford ij and in Cambridge other ij, every yere tohave xx^. apece till the some of xxli^. be spent, to pray formy sowle. In 1511 an English friar studying in Parisobtained leave from the Master-General to come home toraise the necessary funds and then to return to his uni-versity. No doubt the English Province had somehow failedto provid
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectdominicans, bookyear1