On this date in 1431, an Essex priest named Thomas Bagley — “a valiant disciple and adherent of Wicliffe,” which is to say a Lollard heretic — was put to the torch at St. Paul’s Cross, London, while the Archbishop of Canterbury denounced his heresies.
He was prey to a crackdown on his seditiously egalitarian sect launched in 1428 by the said archbishop, Henry Chicele. That outlawed movement still persisted despite the defeat of its most famous rebellion more than a decade before.
Lollards had a low opinion of both the perquisites and the ritual trappings of the institutional church, so Bagley “was accused of declaring that if in the sacrament a priest made bread into God, he made a God that can be eaten by rats and mice; that the pharisees of the day, the monks, and the nuns, and the friars and all the other privileged persons recognized by the church were limbs of Satan; and that auricular confession to the priest was the will not of God but of the devil. And others [other Lollards] held that any priest who took salary was excommunicate; and that boys could bless the bread as well as priests.”
Pressed by their persecutors, the Lollard movement mounted its last major armed rebellion weeks later, in May of 1431 — storming Abindgon Abbey and Salisbury Cathedral. The attacks came to nothing save the execution of its leadership.
For many years thereafter, until its remnants swept into the Reformation, Lollardy haunted English elites from the shadows and the underground — “a persistent, covert tradition of radical thinking” whose reach in the English population is unknowable. It was never again strong enough to mount a rising in its own name but surfaced martyrs here and there and might have contributed inspiration and simpatico to other challenges that shook the masters in the 15th century, like (speculatively) 1450’s Jack Cade rebellion out of Lollard-rich Kent.
On this day..
- 1653: Felim O'Neill
- 1931: Alfred Arthur Rouse, Blazing Car Murderer
- 1714: A Tyburn dozen
- 1992: Robyn Leroy Parks, botched lethal injection
- 1899: Cordelia Poirier and Samuel Parslow
- 1865: Amy Spain, liberation anticipation
- 1777: James Aitken, aka John the Painter, terrorist of the American Revolution
- 1762: Jean Calas, intolerably
- 2010: Jihan Mohammed Ali and Atef Rohyum Abd El Al Rohyum, lovers
- Themed Set: The Contemporary Middle East
- 1799: The defenders of Jaffa, at Napoleon's command
- 1615: St. John Ogilvie
- 1302: Dante Alighieri condemned