John Bavant

John Bavant, D.D. (fl. 1550–1598), was an English Roman Catholic priest.

Life

Bavant was a native of Cheshire, and received his education at Oxford, where he graduated M.A. in 1552. He was one of the original fellows of St John's College, Oxford and the first Greek reader there. During his residence at Oxford he was tutor to two noted writers, Edmund Campion and Gregory Martin.[1]

Leaving England on the change of religion in 1558–9, he pursued his theological studies at Rheims and Rome, and was created D.D. In 1581 he was sent from Rheims to England, and he worked on the mission for a time, but was at last apprehended and kept a prisoner in Wisbech Castle, where it is supposed he died. On 13 June 1586, Robert Gray of Wisbech addressed to Secretary Francis Walsingham a petition praying for his release. In the end Bavant was set free.[1]

Bavant returned to Wisbech in 1595, to mediate in the "Wisbech Stirs". He was associated with the Jesuit side of the dispute, though not in the Order of Jesus.[2]

gollark: That's why salts are recommended (they're a bit of extra data you store along with the password and feed to the hash function when hashing it in the first place and comparing passwords with the hash).
gollark: The main attack on this is that you can, sometimes even using dedicated ASICs/FPGAs, run hashes *very fast* on a lot of possibilities and figure out what the original password was.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: The point is that for one hashed input you always have the same output, so you can compare values without storing what they originally were.
gollark: Encryption means you can encrypt something with a key then decrypt it with that key (symmetric encryption, anyway), hashing means that you irreversibly convert it to a different value.

References

  1. "Bavant, John" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  2. Wall, Sarah Elizabeth. "Bavant, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1725. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Bavant, John". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.



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