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John Hooper (bishop)

John Roy Hooper (also Johan Hoper; c. 1495 – 9 February 1555) was an English churchman, Anglican Bishop of Gloucester, later of Worcester and Gloucester, a Protestant reformer and a Protestant martyr. A proponent of the English Reformation, he was executed for heresy by burning during the reign of Queen Mary I.


John Hooper
Bishop of Worcester and Gloucester
ChurchChurch of England
DioceseWorcester and Gloucester
In office1552–1554
PredecessorNicholas Heath
SuccessorNicholas Heath (restored)
Other post(s)Bishop of Gloucester (1551–1552)
Orders
Consecration8 March 1551
by Thomas Cranmer
Personal details
Died9 February 1555
Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England
NationalityEnglish
DenominationAnglican
SpouseAnne de Tscerlas
Children2
Alma materMerton College, Oxford

Early life edit

In 1538, a John Hooper appears among the names of the Black Friars at Gloucester, and also among the White Friars at Bristol, who surrendered their houses to the king. A John Hooper was likewise canon of Wormesley Priory in Herefordshire; but identification of any of these with the future bishop is doubtful. Rather, he appears to have been in 1538 rector of Liddington, Wiltshire, a benefice in Sir Thomas Arundell's gift, though he must have been a non-resident incumbent. The Greyfriars' Chronicle says that Hooper was "sometime a white monk"; and in the sentence pronounced against him by Stephen Gardiner he is described as "olim monachus de Cliva Ordinis Cisterciensis," i.e. of the Cistercian house of Cleeve Abbey in Somerset. On the other hand, he was not accused, like other married bishops who had been monks or friars, of infidelity to the vow of chastity; and his own letters to Heinrich Bullinger are curiously reticent on this part of his history. He speaks of himself as being the only son and heir of his father and fearing to be deprived of his inheritance, if he adopted the reformed religion.

Prior to 1546, Hooper had secured employment as steward in Arundell's household.[1] Hooper speaks of himself during this period as being "a courtier and living too much of a court life in the palace of our king"[2] but, he chanced upon some of Huldrych Zwingli's works and Bullinger's commentaries on St Paul's epistles, which elicited an evangelical conversion. After some correspondence with Bullinger on the lawfulness of complying, against his conscience, with the established religion, and following some trouble in England c. 1539–40, with Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester to whom Arundell had referred him out of concern for his new views, Hooper determined to secure what property he could and take refuge on the continent. In Paris for an unknown period of time, Hooper returned to England to serve Sir John St Loe, constable of Thornbury Castle, Gloucestershire, Arundell's nephew.

Life on the continent edit

Hooper found it necessary to leave for the continent again, probably in 1544, and he reached Strasbourg by 1546.[citation needed] He decided to permanently move to Zürich but he first returned to England to receive his inheritance, and he claims to have been twice imprisoned. In Strasbourg again, in early 1547, he married Anne de Tserclaes (or Tscerlas), a Fleming who with her sister had lived in the household of Jacques de Bourgogne, seigneur de Falais.[3] He proceeded by way of Basel to Zürich, where his Zwinglian convictions were confirmed by constant intercourse with Zwingli's successor, Heinrich Bullinger. He also made connections with Martin Bucer, Theodore Bibliander, Simon Grynaeus, and Konrad Pellikan. During this time Hooper published An Answer to my Lord of Wynchesters Booke Intytlyd a Detection of the Devyls Sophistry (1547), A Declaration of Christ and his Office (1547), and A Declaration of the Ten Holy Commandments (1548).

Chaplain at the centre of power edit

It was not until May 1549 that Hooper returned to England. There, he became the principal champion of Swiss Calvinism, against the Lutherans as well as the Catholics, and was appointed chaplain to Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, the Lord Protector. Hooper had a hand in the formation of the Zwinglian-inspired Dutch and French Stranger churches in Glastonbury and London. Hooper enjoyed at this time a friendship with Jan Łaski, and served as a witness for the prosecution in Bishop Bonner's trial in 1549.

Somerset's fall from power endangered Hooper's position, especially as he had taken a prominent part against Gardiner and Bonner, whose restoration to their sees was now anticipated. However, John Dudley, Earl of Warwick (subsequently Duke of Northumberland), who now dominated the council, continued Somerset's Protestant religious policies. Hooper now became Dudley's chaplain.

Vestments controversy edit

After a course of Lenten sermons before the king, he was offered the bishopric of Gloucester.[4] This led to the prolonged vestments controversy; in his sermons before the king and elsewhere Hooper had denounced the "Aaronic vestments" and the oath by the saints, prescribed in the new 1550 ordinal; and he refused to be consecrated according to its rites. Thomas Cranmer, Nicholas Ridley, Martin Bucer and others urged him to submit. Confinement to his house by order of the Council proved equally ineffectual, and it was not until he had spent some weeks in the Fleet prison[5] that the "father of nonconformity" consented to conform, and Hooper submitted to consecration with the legal ceremonies (8 March 1551).[6]

Bishop edit

 
Monument to Bishop Hooper at St. Mary's Square, Gloucester[7]

Though Hooper had a low view of the role of bishops in the church, he soon set about a visitation of his diocese, which revealed a condition of almost incredible ignorance among his clergy.[8] Following examinations of 311 clerics, 168 were not able to repeat the Ten Commandments, and 31 were unable to state in what part of the Scriptures they were to be found; there were 40 who could not tell where the Lord's Prayer was written, and 31 were ignorant of who authored it.[9]

Hooper issued an injunction to his clergy, stressing in Article 9 that they "were to teach the Parishioners the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer...word for word as they be written there...." and in Article 10, "that every parson... teach the Ten Commandments out of the twentieth chapter of Exodus, as they stand there, and no otherwise, not taking one word, letter or syllable from them..."[10] Apparently this standard was enforced through much of the visitation. Less than a year after Hooper had been installed in Gloucester, his Diocese was reduced to an archdeaconry and added to the Diocese of Worcester, of which Hooper was made bishop in succession to Nicholas Heath[11] [12] [13] on 20 May 1552.[14]

Hooper believed a bishop should observe a vow of poverty but resigned the profits of the See of Gloucester to the Crown.[15] As bishop, Hooper was also notable for his sense of social justice, and spoke eloquently of the distress caused by the economic crisis of the early 1550s. He wrote to William Cecil pleading for the council to take action on the price of essential goods, for "all things here be so dear that the most part of the people lack ... their little livings and poor cottages decay daily."[16]

Downfall and death edit

 
John Hooper's execution as depicted in Foxe's Book of Martyrs.

Upon Edward VI's death, Northumberland tried to supplant Mary Tudor with his own daughter-in-law, Jane Grey. Hooper opposed this plot but this did not improve his situation once Mary had become Queen.[17] As a representative of the radical wing of Protestantism, Hooper was the first bishop to be attacked. He was given sanctuary at Sutton Court, before being sent to the Fleet Prison on 1 September, first on a charge of debt.

After Edward VI's legislation on the church was repealed, Hooper was deprived of his bishopric as a married man on 19 March 1554.[18] He was kept in prison and, after the revival of the heresy acts in December 1554, he was condemned for heresy by Bishop Gardiner and degraded by Bishop Bonner on 29 January 1555. Hooper was sent to Gloucester, where he was burnt on 9 February.

Legacy edit

Hooper represented the radical wing of English Protestantism. While he expressed dissatisfaction with some of Calvin's earlier writings, he approved of the Consensus Tigurinus negotiated in 1549 between the Zwinglians and Calvinists of Switzerland. It was this form of religion that he laboured to spread in England and with others, such as Nicholas Ridley, Martin Bucer, and Pietro Martire Vermigli, he influence the changes in the 1552 edition of the Book of Common Prayer.[19][20][21] The subject had considerable influence on the Puritans of Elizabeth's reign, when many editions of Hooper's works were published. Two volumes of Hooper's writings are included in the Parker Society's publications and another edition appeared at Oxford in 1855. In 1550 he translated book 2 of Tertullian's "Ad Uxorem" (To his wife), which is the first English translation of any of Tertullian's works.

References edit

  1. ^ Ryle, John Charles (1868). John Hooper (Bishop and Martyr) His Times, Life, Death, and Opinions. London: William Hunt & Co. p. 21.
  2. ^ Euler, Carrie (2006). Couriers of the Gospel: England and Zurich, 1531-1558. Theologischer Verlag Zurich. pp. 78, 366. ISBN 3290173933.
  3. ^ "Hooper, Anne [née de Tscerlas]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/46906. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ Foxe (revised Crombie), John (1563). The History of Christian Martyrdom (1886 ed.). London: Virtue & Co. p. 335.
  5. ^ Opie, John (1968). "The Anglicizing of John Hooper". Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte - Archive for Reformation History. 59 (December): 150. doi:10.14315/arg-1968-jg07. S2CID 163310195.
  6. ^ Ryle, J C. John Hooper. p. 25.
  7. ^ Historic England. "Bishop Hooper's Monument (1245667)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  8. ^ The records of this visitation are printed in English Historical Review (January 1904), pp. 98–121. James Gairdner (at page 99) warned in his introductory remarks of his English translation of the 18th century abstract of the visitation that in some cases the meaning of the record is open to interpretation.
  9. ^ Nevinson, p. 151.
  10. ^ Frere and Kennedy, pp. 282-83; Nevinson, pp. 132-33.
  11. ^ "Hooper, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13706. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Pollard, Albert Frederick (1911). "Hooper, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). pp. 675–676.
  13. ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1891). "Hooper, John" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  14. ^ Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857, vol. 7, 1992, pp. 105–109
  15. ^ Prescott, H.F.M., Mary Tudor - the Spanish Tudor Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1952
  16. ^ Prescott, Mary Tudor
  17. ^ Morris, Christopher, The Tudors B.T. Batsford Ltd. London 1955
  18. ^ Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857, vol. 8, 1996, pp. 40–44
  19. ^ King, John N. (1982). English Reformation literature : the Tudor origins of the Protestant tradition. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 134n.8 & p. 135. ISBN 9780691065021.
  20. ^ Pill, David H. (1973). The English reformation, 1529-58. Series: London history studies. Towowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. pp. 148f. ISBN 0874711592.
  21. ^ Church of England. (1968). The first and second prayer books of Edward VI. Series: Everyman's library, 448. ISBN 9780460004480.

Further reading edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainPollard, Albert Frederick (1911). "Hooper, John". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). pp. 675–676.
  • Walter H. Frere and William M. Kennedy (eds). Visitation Articles and Injunctions of the Period of the Reformation, vols I-III, Alcuin Club Collections (London,1910), Longmans, Green and Co. vol. II, pp. 282–83
  • Gairdner, J. "Bishop Hooper's Examination of the Clergy, 1551, English Historical Review, XIX (1904), p. 99
  • Nevinson, Charles (ed.) The Later Writings of Bishop Hooper. The Parker Society, London (1852), pp 132-133, 151
  • Gough's General Index to Parker Soc. Pub I.
  • Strype's Works (General Index)
  • Foxe's Acts and Monuments, ed. Townsend; Acts of the Privy Council
  • Cal. State Papers, "Domestic" Series; Nichols's Lit. Remains of Edward VI.
  • Burnet, Collier, Dixon, Froude and Gairdner's histories; Pollard's Cranmer
  • Lee, Sidney, ed. (1891). "Hooper, John" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

External links edit

  • Works by John Hooper at Post-Reformation Digital Library
  • Hooper's translation of Tertullian, Ad Uxorem, book 2. This rare little volume (no other copy is known) is held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, and was transcribed for this site.
Church of England titles
Preceded by Bishop of Gloucester
1550–1552
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Bishop of Worcester Bishop of Worcester and Gloucester
1552–1554
Succeeded by
Nicholas Heath (restored)
as Bishop of Worcester

john, hooper, bishop, john, hooper, also, johan, hoper, 1495, february, 1555, english, churchman, anglican, bishop, gloucester, later, worcester, gloucester, protestant, reformer, protestant, martyr, proponent, english, reformation, executed, heresy, burning, . John Roy Hooper also Johan Hoper c 1495 9 February 1555 was an English churchman Anglican Bishop of Gloucester later of Worcester and Gloucester a Protestant reformer and a Protestant martyr A proponent of the English Reformation he was executed for heresy by burning during the reign of Queen Mary I The Right ReverendJohn HooperBishop of Worcester and GloucesterChurchChurch of EnglandDioceseWorcester and GloucesterIn office1552 1554PredecessorNicholas HeathSuccessorNicholas Heath restored Other post s Bishop of Gloucester 1551 1552 OrdersConsecration8 March 1551by Thomas CranmerPersonal detailsDied9 February 1555Gloucester Gloucestershire EnglandNationalityEnglishDenominationAnglicanSpouseAnne de TscerlasChildren2Alma materMerton College Oxford Contents 1 Early life 2 Life on the continent 3 Chaplain at the centre of power 4 Vestments controversy 5 Bishop 6 Downfall and death 7 Legacy 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1538 a John Hooper appears among the names of the Black Friars at Gloucester and also among the White Friars at Bristol who surrendered their houses to the king A John Hooper was likewise canon of Wormesley Priory in Herefordshire but identification of any of these with the future bishop is doubtful Rather he appears to have been in 1538 rector of Liddington Wiltshire a benefice in Sir Thomas Arundell s gift though he must have been a non resident incumbent The Greyfriars Chronicle says that Hooper was sometime a white monk and in the sentence pronounced against him by Stephen Gardiner he is described as olim monachus de Cliva Ordinis Cisterciensis i e of the Cistercian house of Cleeve Abbey in Somerset On the other hand he was not accused like other married bishops who had been monks or friars of infidelity to the vow of chastity and his own letters to Heinrich Bullinger are curiously reticent on this part of his history He speaks of himself as being the only son and heir of his father and fearing to be deprived of his inheritance if he adopted the reformed religion Prior to 1546 Hooper had secured employment as steward in Arundell s household 1 Hooper speaks of himself during this period as being a courtier and living too much of a court life in the palace of our king 2 but he chanced upon some of Huldrych Zwingli s works and Bullinger s commentaries on St Paul s epistles which elicited an evangelical conversion After some correspondence with Bullinger on the lawfulness of complying against his conscience with the established religion and following some trouble in England c 1539 40 with Stephen Gardiner bishop of Winchester to whom Arundell had referred him out of concern for his new views Hooper determined to secure what property he could and take refuge on the continent In Paris for an unknown period of time Hooper returned to England to serve Sir John St Loe constable of Thornbury Castle Gloucestershire Arundell s nephew Life on the continent editHooper found it necessary to leave for the continent again probably in 1544 and he reached Strasbourg by 1546 citation needed He decided to permanently move to Zurich but he first returned to England to receive his inheritance and he claims to have been twice imprisoned In Strasbourg again in early 1547 he married Anne de Tserclaes or Tscerlas a Fleming who with her sister had lived in the household of Jacques de Bourgogne seigneur de Falais 3 He proceeded by way of Basel to Zurich where his Zwinglian convictions were confirmed by constant intercourse with Zwingli s successor Heinrich Bullinger He also made connections with Martin Bucer Theodore Bibliander Simon Grynaeus and Konrad Pellikan During this time Hooper published An Answer to my Lord of Wynchesters Booke Intytlyd a Detection of the Devyls Sophistry 1547 A Declaration of Christ and his Office 1547 and A Declaration of the Ten Holy Commandments 1548 Chaplain at the centre of power editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message It was not until May 1549 that Hooper returned to England There he became the principal champion of Swiss Calvinism against the Lutherans as well as the Catholics and was appointed chaplain to Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset the Lord Protector Hooper had a hand in the formation of the Zwinglian inspired Dutch and French Stranger churches in Glastonbury and London Hooper enjoyed at this time a friendship with Jan Laski and served as a witness for the prosecution in Bishop Bonner s trial in 1549 Somerset s fall from power endangered Hooper s position especially as he had taken a prominent part against Gardiner and Bonner whose restoration to their sees was now anticipated However John Dudley Earl of Warwick subsequently Duke of Northumberland who now dominated the council continued Somerset s Protestant religious policies Hooper now became Dudley s chaplain Vestments controversy editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message After a course of Lenten sermons before the king he was offered the bishopric of Gloucester 4 This led to the prolonged vestments controversy in his sermons before the king and elsewhere Hooper had denounced the Aaronic vestments and the oath by the saints prescribed in the new 1550 ordinal and he refused to be consecrated according to its rites Thomas Cranmer Nicholas Ridley Martin Bucer and others urged him to submit Confinement to his house by order of the Council proved equally ineffectual and it was not until he had spent some weeks in the Fleet prison 5 that the father of nonconformity consented to conform and Hooper submitted to consecration with the legal ceremonies 8 March 1551 6 Bishop edit nbsp Monument to Bishop Hooper at St Mary s Square Gloucester 7 Though Hooper had a low view of the role of bishops in the church he soon set about a visitation of his diocese which revealed a condition of almost incredible ignorance among his clergy 8 Following examinations of 311 clerics 168 were not able to repeat the Ten Commandments and 31 were unable to state in what part of the Scriptures they were to be found there were 40 who could not tell where the Lord s Prayer was written and 31 were ignorant of who authored it 9 Hooper issued an injunction to his clergy stressing in Article 9 that they were to teach the Parishioners the Ten Commandments the Creed and the Lord s Prayer word for word as they be written there and in Article 10 that every parson teach the Ten Commandments out of the twentieth chapter of Exodus as they stand there and no otherwise not taking one word letter or syllable from them 10 Apparently this standard was enforced through much of the visitation Less than a year after Hooper had been installed in Gloucester his Diocese was reduced to an archdeaconry and added to the Diocese of Worcester of which Hooper was made bishop in succession to Nicholas Heath 11 12 13 on 20 May 1552 14 Hooper believed a bishop should observe a vow of poverty but resigned the profits of the See of Gloucester to the Crown 15 As bishop Hooper was also notable for his sense of social justice and spoke eloquently of the distress caused by the economic crisis of the early 1550s He wrote to William Cecil pleading for the council to take action on the price of essential goods for all things here be so dear that the most part of the people lack their little livings and poor cottages decay daily 16 Downfall and death edit nbsp John Hooper s execution as depicted in Foxe s Book of Martyrs Upon Edward VI s death Northumberland tried to supplant Mary Tudor with his own daughter in law Jane Grey Hooper opposed this plot but this did not improve his situation once Mary had become Queen 17 As a representative of the radical wing of Protestantism Hooper was the first bishop to be attacked He was given sanctuary at Sutton Court before being sent to the Fleet Prison on 1 September first on a charge of debt After Edward VI s legislation on the church was repealed Hooper was deprived of his bishopric as a married man on 19 March 1554 18 He was kept in prison and after the revival of the heresy acts in December 1554 he was condemned for heresy by Bishop Gardiner and degraded by Bishop Bonner on 29 January 1555 Hooper was sent to Gloucester where he was burnt on 9 February Legacy editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Hooper represented the radical wing of English Protestantism While he expressed dissatisfaction with some of Calvin s earlier writings he approved of the Consensus Tigurinus negotiated in 1549 between the Zwinglians and Calvinists of Switzerland It was this form of religion that he laboured to spread in England and with others such as Nicholas Ridley Martin Bucer and Pietro Martire Vermigli he influence the changes in the 1552 edition of the Book of Common Prayer 19 20 21 The subject had considerable influence on the Puritans of Elizabeth s reign when many editions of Hooper s works were published Two volumes of Hooper s writings are included in the Parker Society s publications and another edition appeared at Oxford in 1855 In 1550 he translated book 2 of Tertullian s Ad Uxorem To his wife which is the first English translation of any of Tertullian s works References edit Ryle John Charles 1868 John Hooper Bishop and Martyr His Times Life Death and Opinions London William Hunt amp Co p 21 Euler Carrie 2006 Couriers of the Gospel England and Zurich 1531 1558 Theologischer Verlag Zurich pp 78 366 ISBN 3290173933 Hooper Anne nee de Tscerlas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 46906 Subscription or UK public library membership required Foxe revised Crombie John 1563 The History of Christian Martyrdom 1886 ed London Virtue amp Co p 335 Opie John 1968 The Anglicizing of John Hooper Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte Archive for Reformation History 59 December 150 doi 10 14315 arg 1968 jg07 S2CID 163310195 Ryle J C John Hooper p 25 Historic England Bishop Hooper s Monument 1245667 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 April 2019 The records of this visitation are printed in English Historical Review January 1904 pp 98 121 James Gairdner at page 99 warned in his introductory remarks of his English translation of the 18th century abstract of the visitation that in some cases the meaning of the record is open to interpretation Nevinson p 151 Frere and Kennedy pp 282 83 Nevinson pp 132 33 Hooper John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13706 Subscription or UK public library membership required Pollard Albert Frederick 1911 Hooper John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed pp 675 676 Lee Sidney ed 1891 Hooper John Dictionary of National Biography Vol 27 London Smith Elder amp Co Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541 1857 vol 7 1992 pp 105 109 Prescott H F M Mary Tudor the Spanish Tudor Eyre and Spottiswoode 1952 Prescott Mary Tudor Morris Christopher The Tudors B T Batsford Ltd London 1955 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541 1857 vol 8 1996 pp 40 44 King John N 1982 English Reformation literature the Tudor origins of the Protestant tradition Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 134n 8 amp p 135 ISBN 9780691065021 Pill David H 1973 The English reformation 1529 58 Series London history studies Towowa New Jersey Rowman and Littlefield pp 148f ISBN 0874711592 Church of England 1968 The first and second prayer books of Edward VI Series Everyman s library 448 ISBN 9780460004480 Further reading edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Pollard Albert Frederick 1911 Hooper John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed pp 675 676 Walter H Frere and William M Kennedy eds Visitation Articles and Injunctions of the Period of the Reformation vols I III Alcuin Club Collections London 1910 Longmans Green and Co vol II pp 282 83 Gairdner J Bishop Hooper s Examination of the Clergy 1551 English Historical Review XIX 1904 p 99 Nevinson Charles ed The Later Writings of Bishop Hooper The Parker Society London 1852 pp 132 133 151 Gough s General Index to Parker Soc Pub I Strype s Works General Index Foxe s Acts and Monuments ed Townsend Acts of the Privy Council Cal State Papers Domestic Series Nichols s Lit Remains of Edward VI Burnet Collier Dixon Froude and Gairdner s histories Pollard s Cranmer Lee Sidney ed 1891 Hooper John Dictionary of National Biography Vol 27 London Smith Elder amp Co External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article John Hooper in Foxe s Book of Martyrs nbsp Christianity portalWorks by John Hooper at Post Reformation Digital Library Hooper s translation of Tertullian Ad Uxorem book 2 This rare little volume no other copy is known is held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford and was transcribed for this site Tudor woodcut of John Hooper s martyrdomChurch of England titlesPreceded byJohn Wakeman Bishop of Gloucester1550 1552 Succeeded byJames BrooksPreceded byNicholas Heathas Bishop of Worcester Bishop of Worcester and Gloucester1552 1554 Succeeded byNicholas Heath restored as Bishop of Worcester Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Hooper bishop amp oldid 1200011268, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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