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William of Nottingham, OFM ((ラテン語:Guilelmus de Nottingham) or ''ラテン語:Nothingham''; 1330 1336) was an English Franciscan monk who served as seventeenth Minister Provincial of England (–1330). __NOTOC__ ==Life== From 1312 to 1314, William served as the 39th reader ((ラテン語:lector)) at the Franciscan college at Oxford. He later succeeded Richard of Conington, becoming as the 17th Minister Provincial of England〔.〕 (–1330). He attended the Franciscan General Chapter in 1322 and had royal permission to travel abroad in 1324 and 1325. In 1330, he was ordered by Pope John XXII to extradict the friars Peter de Saxlingham, John de Hequinton, Henry de Costeseye, and Thomas de Helmedon, all arrested at Cambridge on charges of heresy. He died at Leicester sometime between 1330〔 and 1336 and was buried in the same Greyfriars cemetery that later held Richard III.〔.〕 For a time, it was thought that his body may have been the one discovered in a double stone-and-lead coffin near Richard III's remains,〔.〕〔.〕 but continued investigation established that tomb belonged to an as-yet-unknown elderly woman instead.〔.〕 He was succeeded as Minister Provincial by Roger of Denemed.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「William of Nottingham II」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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