Thomas Lisieux
Thomas Lisieux (died 1456) was a Canon of Windsor from 1435 to 1442[1] and Dean of St Paul’s from 1441 to 1456.
Career
He was appointed:
- Senior Proctor, Oxford 1426
- Rector of St Michael, Cornhill 1433 - 1447
- Prebendary of Rugmere in St Paul’s Cathedral 1436 - 1452
- Prebendary of Totenhall in St Paul’s Cathedral 1452 - 1456
- Dean of St Paul’s 1441 - 1456
- Prebendary of Henfield in Chichester Cathedral 1443
- Treasurer of the collegiate church of Abergelly, St David’s.
- Prebendary of Church of St. Mary Magdalene, Bridgnorth
- Keeper of the Privy Seal 1450 – 1456 [2]
He was appointed to the twelfth stall in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle in 1435, and held the stall until 1442.
Notes
- Fasti Wyndesorienses, May 1950. S. L. Ollard. Published by the Dean and Canons of St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle
- Handbook of British Chronology
gollark: > It is widely believed that the (computable) numbers √2, π, and e are normal, but a proof remains elusive.
gollark: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_number
gollark: It's not proven that they're equally distributed.
gollark: For an example of something which is infinite but does *not* contain all possible number strings, think about, I don't know, 0.010110111... (infinite sequence of zeroes and then an increasing number of ones). That doesn't contain all possible number strings because it only contains 0 and 1.
gollark: It actually hasn't been proven to contain any possible number string.
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