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Lollard
(redirected from Lollardy)

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Lollard

Follower of the English religious reformer John Wycliffe in the 14th century. The Lollards condemned the doctrine of the transubstantiation of the bread and wine of the Eucharist, advocated the diversion of ecclesiastical property to charitable uses, and denounced war and capital punishment. They were active from about 1377; after the passing of the statute De heretico comburendo (‘The Necessity of Burning Heretics’) in 1401 many Lollards were burned, and in 1414 they raised an unsuccessful revolt in London, known as Oldcastle's Rebellion.

The movement began at Oxford University, where Wycliffe taught, but thereafter included nonacademics, merchants, lesser clergy, and a few members of Richard II's court. Repression began in Henry IV's reign. After the failure of Oldcastle's rebellion the Lollards went underground; much of their policy was advocated by the early Protestants.



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Ghosh focuses on three historical moments to make his case that Lollardy not only brought sophisticated intellectual discourse into the "domain of the non-clerical and the vernacular" (210) but also "half won the battle of ideas" (212).
Poole's Falstaff-as-puritan argument, as well as the possible influence of the Marprelate tracts on Shakespeare's play, deserves to be debated with more knowledge than a historian can bring to the discussion (though historians and religious scholars would have some problems with Poole's placing Oldcastle and Lollardy along the same continuum as puritanism -- as if one was the natural predecessor of the other).
According to Zell, the reformation was met in Kent with popular support -- a fact which was due in part to a tradition of Lollardy and anti-clericalism as well as the county's proximity to seaports and traders bearing heretical ideas.
 
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