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PECOCK (or PEACOCK), REGINALD (c. 139...

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 33 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PECOCK (or PEACOCK), REGINALD (c. 1395-c. 1460)  ,
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English prelate and writer, was probably born in Wales, and was educated at Oriel College, Oxford . Having been ordained priest in 1421, he secured a mastership in
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London in 1431, and soon became prominent by his attacks upon the religious position of the
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Lollards . In 1444 he became bishop of St
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Asaph, and six years later bishop of
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Chichester . He was an adherent of the house of Lancaster and in 1454 became a member of the privy council . In attacking the Lollards Pecock put forward religious views far in advance of his age . He asserted that the Scriptures were not the only standard of right and wrong; he questioned some of the articles of the creed and the infallibility of the Church; he wished " bi deer witte drawe men into consente of trewe feith otherwise than bi fire and swerd or hangement " and in general he exalted the authority of reason . Owing to these views the archbishop of Canterbury,Thomas Bourchier, ordered his writings to be examined . This was done and he was found guilty of
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heresy . He was removed from the privy council and he only saved himself from a painful
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death by privately, and then publicly (at St Paul's
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Cross, Dec . 4, 1457), renouncing his opinions . Pecock, who has been called " the only
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great English theologian of the 15th century," was then forced to resign his bishopric, and was removed to Thorney Abbey in Cambridgeshire, where he doubtless remained until his death . The bishop's chief
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work is the famous Repressor of over-much weeting [blaming] of the Clergie, which was issued about 1455 .

In addition to its great importance in the

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history of the Lollard
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movement the Repressor has an exceptional
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interest as a model of the English of the time, Pecock being one of the first writers to use the vernacular . In thought and style alike it is the work of a man of learning and ability . A biography of the author is added to the edition of the Repressor published by C . Babington for the Rolls Series in 186o . Pecock's other writings include the
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Book or
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Rule of Christian Religion; the Donet, " an introduction to the chief truths of the Christian faith in the form of a
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dialogue between
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father and son "; and the Folewer to the Donet . The two last
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works are extant in
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manuscript . His Book of Faith has been edited from the manuscript in the library of Trinity College, Cambridge, by J . L . Morison (
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Glasgow, 1909) . See also John Lewis,
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Life of Pecock (1744; new ed., 182o) .

End of Article: PECOCK (or PEACOCK), REGINALD (c. 1395-c. 1460)
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