John Alcock (bishop)
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John Alcock (c. 1430 - October 1, 1500), was an English churchman.
He was born at Beverley in Yorkshire and educated at Cambridge. In 1461 he was made dean of Westminster, and his subsequent promotion was rapid in both church and state. In the following year he was made Master of the Rolls, and in 1470 was sent as ambassador to the court of Castile. He was consecrated Bishop of Rochester in 1472 and was successively translated to the sees of Worcester (1476) and Ely (1486). He twice held the office of Lord Chancellor, and showed great ability in the negotiations with James III of Scotland. He died at Wisbech Castle.
Alcock was one of the leading pre-Reformation divines; he was a man of deep learning and also of great proficiency as an architect. Besides founding a charity at Beverley and a grammar school at Kingston upon Hull, he restored many churches and colleges; but his greatest achievement was the building of Jesus College, Cambridge, which he established on the site of the former convent of St Radegund.
Alcock's published writings, most of which are extremely rare, are: Mons Perfectionis, or the Hill of Perfection (London, 1497); Gallicontus Johannis Alcock episcopi Eliensis ad frates suos curatas in sinodo apud Barnwell (1498), a good specimen of early English printing and quaint illustrations; The Castle of Labour, translated from the French (1536), and various other tracts and homilies. See J. Bass Mullinger's History of the University of Cambridge, vol. i.
Preceded by Laurence Booth |
Lord Chancellor 1475 |
Succeeded by Thomas Rotherham |
Preceded by Thomas Rotherham |
Lord Chancellor 1485–1487 |
Succeeded by John Morton |
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
Categories: 1430 births | 1500 deaths | People from Beverley | Lord Chancellors of England | Deans of Westminster | Bishops of Ely | Bishops of Worcester | Bishops of Rochester | Founders of English schools and colleges | Tudor clergy | Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica