John Oxenbridge (priest)
John Oxenbridge LL.D. (died 25 July 1522) was a Canon of Windsor from 1509 to 1522.[1]
Family
He was the son of Robert Oxenbridge and Anne Lyvelode.[2]
Career
He was educated at the University of Valencia and graduated LL.B. in 1498 and LL.D by 1499.
He was appointed:
- Prebendary of Hampstead in Chichester Cathedral 1499
- Commissary and Sequestrator-General for the Bishop of Chichester in the Archdeaconry of Lewes 1498
- Vicar of Icklesham (resigned 1505)
- Vicar of Cullompton, Devon until 1522
- Vicar of Shillington, Bedfordshire 1505
- King's Clerk
He was appointed to the twelfth stall in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle in 1509, and held the stall until 1522. A chantry was built in the chapel in his memory under the fifth arch in the south aisle of the choir.[3] Over the door is a lion rampant, with escalope round him, with the rebus of the founder's name; an Ox, the letter N and a bridge.[4]
Notes
- Fasti Wyndesorienses, May 1950. S. L. Ollard. Published by the Dean and Canons of St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle
- Sussex Archaeological Collections. Sussex Archaeological Society. 1856
- Magna Britannia. Bedfordshire, Berkshire and Buckinghamshire. Samuel Lysons. 1813
- The Windsor Guide. C Knight. Windsor. 1804
gollark: I think the compiler does arbitrary precision stuff internally.
gollark: Why go around distinguishing libc and some other package?
gollark: Well, you said "no external libraries".
gollark: In the case of "no libraries at all" you'll reimplement *libc* and its syscalls.
gollark: You're writing a golfing language. You do not need the interpreter to be golfed.
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