Sneha Girap (Editor)

Thomas Kingsmill (professor)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Thomas Kingsmill

Role
  
Professor



Education
  
Magdalen College, Oxford

Thomas kingsmill nz mens water polo thank you


Thomas Kingsmill (fl. 1565) was an English academic, Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford from 1570.

Contents

Life

He was the seventh son of Sir John Kingsmill of Fribock, Hampshire. Entering Magdalen College, Oxford, as a demy, he graduated B.A. in 1559, M.A. in 1564, and supplicated for the B.D. degree in 1572. He was probationer fellow from 1559 to 1568, natural philosophy lecturer in 1563, Hebrew lecturer in 1565, and junior dean of arts in 1567. On 15 December 1565, he was appointed public orator and orated for the visit of Elizabeth I of England to Oxford in 1566, when he gave a very long historical speech. On 2 November 1570, he was appointed Regius Professor of Hebrew. He suffered from mental illness for a time, and was obliged to take on Richard Hooker as a deputy in 1579.

Works

He wrote:

  • A Complaint against Securitie in these Perilous Times, London, 1602.
  • Classicum Poenitentiale (Tractatus de Scandalo, &c.), 2 pts. Oxford, 1605.
  • The Drunkards Warning: a Sermon, London, 1631.
  • References

    Thomas Kingsmill (professor) Wikipedia