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Robert Wakefield

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Name
  
Robert Wakefield


Died
  
1537, London, United Kingdom

Education
  
University of Cambridge

Traffic (2000) - Robert Wakefield's Speech


Robert Wakefield (died 1537) was an English linguist and scholar.

Contents

Life

He studied at the University of Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1513-1514. He was awarded an M.A. at the University of Leuven in 1519; while in the Low Countries he taught Hebrew at Jeroen van Busleyden's Collegium Trilingue in Leuven. John Fisher was his patron, and in 1519 he also became Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. He was at the University of Tübingen in 1522, teaching as the successor of Johannes Reuchlin.

He taught Hebrew at Cambridge from 1524. His Oratio de utilitate trium linguarum (1524), the printed version by Wynkyn de Worde of his inaugural lecture, contained the first examples of Hebrew text, and Arabic, published in England. From 1530 he taught in Oxford.

He wrote in favour of Henry VIII's divorce, after being persuaded by Richard Pace to drop his support for Catherine of Aragon; in 1528 he issued a work putting the king’s case, and showing by its dedication that he now had Thomas Boleyn as patron. He became a canon of Christ Church, Oxford, in 1532.

Works

  • Robert Wakefield: On the Three Languages, 1524 (1989) edited and translated by G. Lloyd Jones from the Oratio de laudibus et utilitate trium linguarum
  • References

    Robert Wakefield Wikipedia