190 research outputs found

    663 From Cuthbert Tunstall.

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    572 From Cuthbert Tunstall.

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    571 From Cuthbert Tunstall to William Budaeus.

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    Tunstall and The Tudors: The Calculating Bishop

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    Meet Cuthbert Tunstall: bishop, scholar, diplomat, builder, and author of England’s first maths book. He might just be the most important man in Tudor England that you’ve never heard of.Cuthbert was Prince-Bishop of Durham from 1530 to 1559. He lived through a time of religious and political chaos as a sometime friend, sometime enemy of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I.Visit the exhibition to find out how he survived and thrived in this turbulent period using compromise, persuasion, a shrewd sense for danger and a little bit of luck.This online exhibition is based on a physical exhibition staged at Durham Castle in 2022 - 2023. Online exhibition link: https://stories.durham.ac.uk/tunstall

    Cuthbert Tunstall, humanist bishop and counsellor to Henry VIII: education and ecclesiastical patronage in Tudor England

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    Tunstall is an exemplar of a sixteenth-century humanist-educated scholar who, as bishop of London (1522--1530), took command of a vast patronage network and combined traditional aspects of good governance with the promotion of humanist scholars. Episcopal registers, university matriculation registers, probate wills and other printed sources unravel a complicated web of patronage under Tunstall. His policy of advancement was driven both by ideological and theological consideration as well as elements of personal affinity based on kinship, geography and friendship to ensure a loyal and effective administration. In short, Tunstall's patronage helped to elevate the careers of his clients to the highest levels of government, the church and the universities. Using the early career of Cuthbert Tunstall (c.1474--1559) as a lens, this study both demonstrates how humanist education and legal studies advanced the diplomatic and ecclesiastical careers of ambitious English clergymen and casts further light on how church patronage was used to promote Christian humanism in Tudor England. The common theme throughout this dissertation is to show how men used their learning to access patronage from the king or other influential patrons. The first three chapters underscore the importance of Tunstall's education, family and kinship in advancing his career. Tunstall's schooling at Oxford, Cambridge and Padua is also examined as it contributed to his rise at a Tudor court that was quick to notice and encourage an emerging English humanist culture. Tunstall's diplomatic and political success provided him opportunities for advancement to both ecclesiastic and secular office, as shown by his service to Henry VIII as a prominent counsellor and bishop for more than two decades. Tunstall's embassies to the Low Countries gained him diplomatic experience and deepened his relationships with famed humanists such as Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam, who played such a significant role in the promotion of Christian humanism in northern Europe. This study examines Tunstall's commitment and encouragement in England to advance Erasmus's educational belief in promoting the Christian humanist programme as a way to achieve a cultural synthesis between classical and Christian values, as well as to foster the idea of a respublica Christiana, a universal society based on a joint structure of religious and political authority that unified all Europeans.Ph.D

    St. Cuthbert, Ascet, Bishop and Saint of Anglo-Saxon Church

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    The author presents one of the best-known figures of northumbrian Church, in time of the transitional period from paganism to Christianity. On the base of two Lives of St. Cuthbert (The Anonymous life, Bede’s prose life) author describe life of Saint (childhood, youth, a monk, solitary life, a prior of Melrose and Lindisfarne, bishop of Northumbria). Finely author describes the spread of the cult of St. Cuthbert in Ireland, Scotland, North of England and Continent
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