The Tudor Society

4 July – The awful ends of John Frith and Andrew Hewet

On this day in Tudor history, 4th July 1533, two men were burnt at the stake at Smithfield for heresy: reformer and theologian John Frith, for his belief that Purgatory didn't exist and that his views on the sacrament, and tailor's apprentice Andrew Hewt for his belief regarding the sacrament.

In today's talk, Claire Ridgway, founder of the Tudor Society, explains just what was 'wrong' with these men's beliefs and how these men were betrayed, as well as sharing contemporary sources about these men's courageous ends.

Link for further reading about Frith and Hewet - https://www.exclassics.com/foxe/foxe179.htm, and you can read Frith's work online in a three-volume series of the works of Tyndale and Frith - see https://archive.org/details/The_Works_of_the_English_Reformers/page/n9, https://archive.org/details/worksenglishref02russgoog/page/n9 and https://archive.org/details/worksenglishref04russgoog/page/n7. You can also read "A boke made by Iohn Fryth prysoner in the Tower of London : answerynge vnto M. Mores letter, which he wrote agaynst the fyrste lytle treatyse that Iohn Fryth made concernynge the sacramente of the body and bloode of Christ" at https://archive.org/details/bokemadebyiohnfr00frit/page/n8

Also on this day in history:

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