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RASTELL (or RASTALL), See also: English printer and author, was See also: born in See also: London towards the end of the 15th century
.
He is vaguely reported by Anthony a See also: Wood to have been " educated for a See also: time in grammaticals and philosophicals " at See also: Oxford
.
He became a member of Lincoln's See also: Inn, and practised successfully as a See also: barrister
.
He was also M.P. for Dunheved, See also: Cornwall, from 1529 to the time of his See also: death
.
He began his printing business some time before 1516, for in his preface to the undated See also: Liber Assisarum he announced the forthcoming publication of See also: Sir A
.
Fitzherbert's Abbreviamentum librorum legum Anglorum, dated 1516
.
Among the See also: works issued from the _ " sygne of the meremayd at Powlysgate," where he lived and worked from 1520 onwards, are The Mery Gestys of the Wydow Edyth (1525), and A Dyaloge of Syr See also: Thomas More (1529)
.
The last of his dated publications was Fabyl's Ghoste (1533), a poem
.
In 1530 he wrote, in defence of the
See also: Roman See also: doctrine of Purgatory, A New Boke of Purgatory (1530), dialogues on the subject between " Comyngs and Almayn a Christen See also: man, and one Gyngemyn a Turke." This was answered by See also: John Frith in A Disputation of Purgatorie
.
See also: Ras-tell replied with an See also: Apology against John Fryth, also answered by the latter
.
Rastell had married See also: Elizabeth,
See also: sister of Sir Thomas More, with whose Catholic See also: theology and See also: political views he was in sympathy
.
More had begun the controversy with John Frith, and Rastell joined him in attacking the See also: Protestant writer, who, says See also: Foxe (Actes and Monuments, ed
.
G . Townsend, vol. v. p . 9), did so " overthrow and confound " his adversariesthat he converted Rastell to his See also: side
.
Separated from his Catholic See also: friends, Rastell does not seem to have been fully trusted by the opposite party, for in a letter to See also: Cromwell, written probably in 1536, he says that he had spent his time in uphold See also: ing the See also: king's cause and opposing the
See also: pope, with the result that he had lost both his printing business and his legal practice, and was reduced to poverty
.
He was imprisoned in 1536, perhaps because he had written against the payment of See also: tithes
.
He probably died in prison, and his will, of which See also: Henry VIII. had originally been appointed an executor, was proved on the 18th of
See also: July 1536
.
He See also: left two sons: See also: William, noticed below, and John
.
The Jesuit, John Rastell (1532–1577), who has been frequently confounded with him, was no relation
.
Rastell's best-known
See also: work is The Pastyme of See also: People, the Chronycles of dyvers Realmys and most specially of the Realme of See also: England (1529), a See also: chronicle dealing with English See also: history from the earliest times to the reign of See also: Richard III., edited by T
.
F
.
See also: Dibdin in 1811
.
His Expositiones terminorum legum Angliae (in French, translated into English, 1527; reprinted 1629, 1636, 1641, &c., as See also: Les Termes de la Ley), and The See also: Abbreviation of Statutis (1519), of which fifteen See also: editions appeared before 1625, are the best known of his legal works
.
Rastell was also the author of a morality See also: play, A new Interlude and a Mery of the zizz Elements, written about 1519, which is no doubt the " large and ingenious See also: comedy " attributed to him by Wood
.
The unique copy in the See also: British Museum is incomplete, and contains neither the date nor the name of the author, identified with John Rastell on the authority of See also: Bale, who catalogues Nature Naturata among his works, adding a Latin version of the first See also: line of the piece
.
This interlude was printed in W
.
C
.
See also: Hazlitt's edition of See also: Dodsley's Old English Plays, by J
.
O
.
Halliwell-Phillipps for the Percy See also: Soc
.
(Early English See also: Poetry, vol
.
22, 1848), and by See also: Julius Fischer (Marburger Studien zur englischen Philologie, vol. v., 1903)
.
See also an article on " John Rastell and his Contemporaries " in Bibliographica, vol
.
II, 437 seq., by Mr
.
H
.
R . Plomer, who unearthed in the Record Office an account of aSee also: law-suit (1534–35) in connexion with Rastell's premises at the " Mermaid." For the books issued from his See also: press see a See also: catalogue by R
.
Proctor, in See also: Hand-Lists of English Printers (See also: Bibliographical Soc., 1896)
.
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