Part 21 (2/2)

[47] Thomas More (1478-1535) This letter is the preface to the _Moriae Encomium_, published by Gilles Gour, August 1511

[48] The Greek 'laughing philosopher'

[49] John Colet (1466?-1519), Dean of St Paul's 1504, had founded St

Paul's School in the previous year (1510)

[50] Raffaele Riario (1461-1521), Leo X's most formidable rival in the election of 1513

[51] Francesco Alidosi of Imola, d 1511

[52] Robert Guibe(_c_ 1456-1513), Cardinal of St Anastasia and Bishop of Nantes (1507)

[53] Leo X

[54] Wolsey

[55] _Enchiridion militis Christiani_, printed in _Lucubratiunculae_, 1503

[56] A new and enlarged edition under the title _Adagiorum Chiliades_, printed by Aldus in 1508

[57] _De duplici copia verborum ac rerum commentarii duo_, Paris, Badius, 1512

[58] The Hebrew scholar, who adhered to the Reformation, 1523

[59] F Ximenes (1436-1517), confessor of Queen Isabella, Archbishop of Toledo, 1495, founded Alcala University, 1500; he proht medicine at Ferrara and made translations from Aristotle, Dio Cassius, Galen and Hippocrates

[61] (d 1525) Professor of Medicine at Naples, and from 1507 at Venice; physician to Aldus's household, where he met Erasmus

[62] (1466-1532), physician, astronomer and humanist; learned Greek with Erasmus in Paris He was physician to the Court of Francis I

[63] (1479-1537), Dean of the Medical Faculty at Paris, 1508-9, and Physician to Francis I

[64] (1467/8-1540), the Parisian humanist, whose _Annotationes in xxiv Pandectarum libros_ were published by Badius in 1508

[65] Ulrich Zasi or Zasius (1461-1535) Lector Ordinarius in Laws at Freiburg from 1506 until his death

[66] Henry Loriti of canton Glarus, usually known as Glareanus (1488-1563), had an academy at Basle where he took in thirty boarders

[67] Published at Basle, March 1519

[68] A translation of Galen's _Methodus medendi_, not printed until June 1519 Lupset supervised the printing

[69] This may be the _De pueris statim ac liberaliter instituendis_, composed in Italy More writes to Erasmus in 1516 (Allen 502) that he has received part of the MS from Lupset, but it was not published until 1529

[70] Luther's _Theses_, posted 31 October 1517 and printed shortly afterwards at Wittenberg

[71] The proposals for a crusade drawn up at Rome, 16 November 1517