Thomas Cooper (bishop)
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox Christian leader Thomas Cooper (or Couper; Template:CircaTemplate:Snd29 April 1594) was an English bishop, lexicographer, theologian, and writer.<ref name="ODNB" /><ref>Template:Britannica</ref>
Life
Cooper was born in Oxford, England, where he was educated at Magdalen College. He became Master of Magdalen College School and afterwards practised as a physician in Oxford.<ref name=EB1911>{{#if: |
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Elizabeth I was greatly pleased with his Thesaurus, generally known as Cooper's Dictionary; and its author, who had been ordained about 1559, was made Dean of Christ Church, in 1567.<ref name=EB1911/> Two years later, on 27 June 1569, he became Dean of Gloucester; he was elected Bishop of Lincoln on 4 February 1571, consecrated a bishop on 24 February 1571, then translated to Winchester on 12 March 1584.<ref name="ODNB">Template:Cite ODNB</ref>
Cooper was a stout controversialist; he defended the practice and precept of the Church of England against the Roman Catholics on the one hand and against the Martin Marprelate writings and the Puritans on the other. He took some part, the exact extent of which is disputed, in the persecution of religious recusants in his diocese, and died at Winchester on 29 April 1594.<ref name=EB1911/>
Works
Cooper's literary career began in 1548, when he compiled, or rather edited, Bibliotheca Eliotae, a Latin dictionary by Sir Thomas Elyot. In 1549 he published a continuation of Thomas Lanquet's Chronicle of the World. This work, known as Cooper's Chronicle, covers the period from AD 17 to the time of its writing.<ref name=EB1911/> Following Robert Crowley's 1559 altered and updated version of the Chronicle which Cooper denounced, he issued an expanded and updated version in 1560 and 1565 that removed or altered most but not all of Crowley's changes and additions. In 1565 appeared the first edition of his greatest work, Thesaurus Linguae Romanae et Britannicae, and this was followed by three other editions.<ref name=EB1911/>
John Aubrey in "Brief lives", gave the following glimpse into the creation of this dictionary:
Dr. Edward Davenant told me that this learned man had a shrew to his wife, who was irreconcileably angrie with him for sitting-up late at night so, compileing his Dictionarie, (Thesaurus linguae Romanae et Britannicae, Londini, 1584; dedicated to Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, and Chancellor of Oxford). When he had halfe-donne it, she had the opportunity to gett into his studie, tooke all his paines out in her lap, and threw it into the fire, and burnt it. Well, for all that, that good man had so great a zeale for the advancement of learning, that he began it again, and went through with it to that perfection that he hath left it to us, a most usefull worke.<ref>Aubrey, John. "Brief Lives"</ref>
William Shakespeare is believed to have used Cooper's Thesaurus in the creation of his many poems and plays. (Evidence of this comes from a close statistical inspection of Shakespeare's word usage.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>)
Cooper's Admonition against Martin Marprelate was reprinted in 1847, and his Answer in Defence of the Truth against the Apology of Private Mass in 1850.<ref name=EB1911/> (This latter work was answered by the Jesuit controversialist Fr. John Rastell in 1565.)
Styles and titles
- Template:Circa–1559: Thomas Cooper Esq.
- 1559–1567: The Reverend Thomas Cooper
- 1567–1571: The Very Reverend Thomas Cooper
- 1571–1594: The Right Reverend Thomas Cooper
References
External links
- Pollux (Specify "Cooper, Thesaurus Linguae Romanae et brittanicae (experimental)")
Template:S-aca Template:Succession box Template:S-rel Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-end
Template:Bishops of Winchester
Template:Bishops of Lincoln Template:Deans of Gloucester Template:Deans of Christ Church
- Pages with broken file links
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1510s births
- 1594 deaths
- Clergy from Oxford
- People educated at Magdalen College School, Oxford
- Alumni of Magdalen College, Oxford
- Bishops of Lincoln
- Bishops of Winchester
- Deans of Christ Church, Oxford
- Deans of Gloucester
- 16th-century Church of England bishops
- 16th-century English writers
- 16th-century English male writers
- English theologians
- English lexicographers
- 16th-century English medical doctors
- Schoolteachers from Oxfordshire
- Vice-chancellors of the University of Oxford
- 16th-century English educators
- 16th-century Anglican theologians
- Year of birth uncertain