John Fowler (Catholic scholar)

John Fowler (b. Bristol, England, 1537; d. Namur, present-day Belgium, 13 Feb., 1578-9) was a Catholic scholar and printer.

Life

He studied at Winchester College from 1551 to 1553, when he proceeded to New College, Oxford where he remained till 1559. He became B.A. 23 February 1557 and M.A. in 1560, though Anthony Wood adds that he did not complete his degree by standing in comitia. On Elizabeth I's accession he was one of the fifteen Fellows of New College who left of their own accord or were ejected rather than take the Oath of Supremacy.[1] There is, indeed, no trace of any desire on his part to receive Holy orders and he subsequently married Alice Harris, daughter of Sir Thomas More's secretary.

On leaving Oxford he withdrew to Leuven (French: Louvain), where like other scholars of his time he turned his attention to the craft of printing. His intellectual attainments were such as to enable him to take high rank among the scholar-printers of that age. Thus Antony Wood says of him:

"He was well skilled in the Greek and Latin tongues, a tolerable poet and orator, and a theologian not to be contemned. So learned he was also in criticisms and other polite learning, that he might have passed for another Robert or Henry Stephens. He did diligently peruse the Theological Summa of St. Thomas of Aquin, and with a most excellent method did reduce them into a Compendium."

To have a printing press abroad in the hands of a competent English printer was a great gain to the Catholic cause, and Fowler devoted the rest of his life to this work, winning from Cardinal Allen the praise of being catholicissimus et doctissimus librorum impressor. The English Government kept an eye on his work, as we learn from the state papers,[2] where we read the evidence of one Henry Simpson at York in 1571, to the effect that Fowler printed all the English books in Leuven and that Dr. Harding's Welsh servant, William Smith, used to bring the works to the press. He seems to have had a press in Antwerp as well as in Leuven, for his Antwerp books range from 1565 to 1575, whereas his Louvain books are dated 1566, 1567 and 1568; while one of his publications, Gregory Martin's Treatise of Schism bears the impress, Douay, 1578.

Works

Original works or translations for which he was personally responsible include:

The translation of the Epistle of Orosius (Antwerp, 1565), ascribed to him by Wood and John Pitts, was really made by Richard Shacklock. Pitts states that he wrote in English a work Ad Ducissam Feriae confessionis forma; Fowler also edited Sir Thomas More's Dialogue of Comfort against Tribulation (Antwerp, 1573).

Notes

  1. Hastings Rashdall, History of New College, 114. The Catholic Encyclopedia states that this disposes of the charge circulated by Acworth in his answer to Sander, called "De visibili Romanarchia", to the effect that Fowler took the oath to enable him to retain the living of Wonston in Hampshire.
  2. Domestic, Eliz. 1566-1579

References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "John Fowler". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton. 

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