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See also: bishop of Exeter, See also: Bath and See also: Wells, Durham, and Winchester, See also: lord privy See also: seal, and founder of Corpus Christi See also: College, See also: Oxford, was See also: born about 1448 at Ropesley near See also: Grantham, See also: Lincolnshire
.
His parents belonged to the See also: yeoman class, and there is some obscurity about See also: Fox's early career
.
It is not known at what school he was educated, nor at what college, though the presumption is in favour of Magdalen, Oxford, whence he See also: drew so many members of his subsequent foundation, Corpus Christi
.
He also appears to have studied at Cambridge, but nothing definite is known of the first thiry-five years of his career
.
In 1484 he was in See also: Paris, whether merely for the See also: sake of learning or because he had rendered himself obnoxious to See also: Richard III. is a See also: matter of See also: speculation
.
At any See also: rate he was brought into contact with the See also: earl of See also: Richmond, who was then beginning his quest for the See also: English See also: throne, and was taken into his service
.
In See also: January 1485 Richard intervened to prevent Fox's See also: appointment to the vicarage of See also: Stepney on the ground that he was keeping See also: company with the " See also: great See also: rebel, See also: Henry ap Tuddor."
The important offices conferred on Fox immediately after the
See also: battle of See also: Bosworth imply that he had already seen more extensive See also: political service than can be traced in records
.
Doubt-less Henry VII. had every reason to See also: reward his companions in exile, and to See also: rule like See also: Ferdinand of
See also: Aragon by means of lawyers and churchmen rather than See also: trust nobles like those who had made the See also: Wars of the See also: Roses
.
But without an intimate knowledge of Fox's political experience and capacity he would hardly have made him his See also: principal secretary, and soon afterwards lord privy seal and bishop of Exeter (1487)
.
The ecclesiastical preferment was merely intended to provide a See also: salary not at Henry's expense; for Fox never saw either Exeter or the diocese of Bath and Wells to which he was translated in 1492
.
His activity was confined to political and especially See also: diplomatic channels; so long as See also: Morton lived, Fox was his subordinate, but after the archbishop's See also: death he was second to none in Henry's confidence, and he had an important share in all the diplomatic
See also: work of the reign
.
In 1487 he negotiated a treaty with See also: James resignation of the privy seal was
See also: Wolsey's See also: ill-advised attempt III. of Scotland, in 1491 he baptized the future Henry VIII.,
in 1492 he helped to conclude the treaty of Etaples, and in 1497 he was chief See also: commissioner in the negotiations for the famous commercial agreement with the See also: Netherlands which See also: Bacon seems to have been the first to
See also: call the See also: Magnus Intercursus
.
Meanwhile in 1494 Fox had been translated to Durham, not merely because it was a richer see than Bath and Wells but because of its political importance as a palatine earldom and its position with regard to theSee also: Borders and relations with Scotland
.
For these reasons rather than from any ecclesiastical scruples Fox visited and resided in his new diocese; and he occupied Norham See also: Castle, which he fortified and defended against a Scottish See also: raid in Perkin See also: Warbeck's interests (1497)
.
But his energies were principally devoted to pacific purposes
.
In that same See also: year he negotiated Perkin's retirement from the See also: court of James IV., and in 1498—1499 he completed the negotiations for that treaty of See also: marriage between the Scottish See also: king and Henry's daughter
See also: Margaret which led ultimately to the union of the two crowns 1603 and of the two kingdoms in 1707
.
The marriage itself did not take place until 1503, just a century before the accession of James I
.
This consummated Fox's work in the See also: north, and in 1501 he was once more translated to Winchester, then reputed the richest bishopric in See also: England
.
In that year he brought to a conclusion marriage negotiations not less momentous in their ultimate results, when See also: Prince Arthur was betrothed to See also: Catherine of Aragon
.
His last diplomatic achievement in the reign of Henry VII. was the See also: betrothal of the king's younger daughter Mary to the future emperor See also: Charles V
.
In 1500 he was elected chancellor of Cambridge University, an office not confined to
See also: noble lords until a much more democratic age, and in 1507 master of Pembroke See also: Hall in the same university
.
The Lady Margaret
See also: Beaufort made him one of her executors, and in this capacity as well as in that of chancellor, he had the .chief share with See also: Fisher in regulating the foundation of St See also: John's College and the Lady Margaret professorships and readerships
.
His
See also: financial work brought him a less enviable notoriety, though a curious freak of See also: history has deprived him of the See also: credit which is his due for " Morton's See also: fork." The invention of that ingenious dilemma for extorting contributions from poor and See also: rich alike is ascribed as a tradition to Morton by Bacon; but the See also: story is told in greater detail of Fox by See also: Erasmus, who says he had it from See also: Sir See also: Thomas More, a well-informed contemporary authority
.
It is in keeping with the somewhat malicious saying about Fox reported by Tyndale that he would sacrifice his
See also: father to save his king, which after all is not so damning as Wolsey's dying words
.
The accession of Henry VIII. made no immediate difference to Fox's position . If anything, the substitution of the careless pleasure-loving youth for Henry VII. increased the power of hisSee also: ministry, the personnel of which remained unaltered
.
The Venetian ambassador calls Fox " alter rex " and the See also: Spanish ambassador Carroz says that Henry VIII. trusted him more than any other adviser, although he also reports Henry's warning that the bishop of Winchester was, as his name implied, " a fox indeed." He was the chief of the ecclesiastical statesmen who belonged to the school of Morton, believed in frequent parliaments, and opposed the spirited See also: foreign policy which laymen like Surrey are supposed to have advocated
.
His colleagues were See also: Warham and Ruthal, but Warham and Fox differed on the question of Henry's marriage, Fox advising the completion of the match with Catherine while Warham expressed doubts as to its canonical validity
.
They also differed over the prerogatives of See also: Canterbury with regard to See also: probate and other questions of ecclesiastical jurisdiction
.
Wolsey's rapid rise in 1511 put an end to Fox's influence
.
The pacific policy of the first two years of Henry VIII.'s reign was succeeded by an adventurous foreign policy directed mainly against See also: France; and Fox complained that no one durst do anything in opposition to Wolsey's wishes
.
Gradually Warham and Fox retiree{ from the See also: government; the occasion of Fox's
to drive See also: Francis I. out of Milan by financing an expedition led by the emperor See also: Maximilian in 1516
.
Tunstall protested, Wolsey took Warham's place as chancellor, and Fox was succeeded by Ruthal, who, said the Venetian ambassador, " sang See also: treble to Wolsey's See also: bass." He See also: bore Wolsey no ill-will, and warmly congratulated him two years later when warlike adventures were abandoned at the See also: peace of See also: London
.
But in 1522 when war was again declared he emphatically refused to bear any See also: part of the responsibility, and in 1523 he opposed in convocation the financial demands which met with a more strenuous resistance in the See also: House of See also: Commons
.
He now devoted himself assiduously to his long-neglected episcopal duties
.
He expressed himself as being as anxious for the See also: reformation of the See also: clergy as Simeon for the coming of the See also: Messiah; but while he welcomed Wolsey's never-realized promises, he was too old to accomplish much himself in the way of remedying the clerical and especially the monastic depravity, licence and corruption he deplored
.
His sight failed during the last ten years of his See also: life, and there is no reason to doubt See also: Matthew See also: Parker's story that Wolsey suggested his retirement from his bishopric on a pension
.
Fox replied with some warmth, and Wolsey had to wait until Fox's death before he could add Winchester to his archbishopric of See also: York and his abbey of St Albans, and thus leave Durham vacant as he hoped for the illegitimate son on whom (aged 18) he had already conferred a deanery, four archdeaconries, five prebends and a chancellor-See also: ship
.
The See also: crown of Fox's career was his foundation of Corpus Christi College, which he established in 1515—1516
.
Originally he in-tended it as an Oxford house for the monks of St Swithin's, Winchester; but he is said to have been dissuaded by Bishop Oldham, who denounced the monks and foretold their fall
.
The scheme adopted breathed the spirit of the See also: Renaissance; See also: provision was made for the teaching of See also: Greek, Erasmus lauded the institution and See also: Pole was one of its earliest See also: fellows
.
The humanist See also: Vives was brought from See also: Italy to teach Latin, and the reader in See also: theology was instructed to follow the Greek and Latin Fathers rather than the scholastic commentaries
.
Fox also built and endowed See also: schools at Taunton and Grantham, and was a benefactor to numerous other institutions
.
He died at Wolvesey on the 5th of See also: October 1528; Corpus possesses several portraits and other See also: relics of its founder
.
See Letters and Papers of Henry VII. and Henry VIII., vols. i.-iv
.
; Spanish and Venetian Calendars of See also: State Papers; See also: Gairdner's Lollardy and the Reformation and See also: Church History 1485–1558;
See also: Pollard's Henry VIII
.
; Longman's Political History, vol. v.; other authorities cited in the article by Dr T
.
See also: Fowler (formerly president of Corpus) in the See also: Diet
.
Nat . Biog . (A . F . |
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