Home | School | Academics | Culture | Sports | Staff | Email
|
by Hans Holbein. |
THE FACTS ABOUT THOMAS MORE
|
|
Thomas More was born on February 7, 1478 in London, England about the time that printed books were beginning to replace handwritten manuscripts. |
|
|
He began school at age 7, receiving a classical education, studying Latin (the spoken and written language of the educated), music and ï public speaking with a little English and mathematics. (Studies began at 6:00 a.m.) |
|
|
At age 12, instead of moving to Eton, a middle school, he became a page, such as we have in our House of Commons in Ottawa, serving the Archbishop of Canterbury and Lord Chancellor of England, learning the customs of the influential. |
|
|
At age 14, the usual age, he entered Oxford University on scholarship. |
|
|
At age 16, he began his seven year study of law. As there were few books, students attended court each day and were required to remember the rulings of judges. Mock trials where students played assigned roles and re-tried the cases of the day occurred each afternoon. |
|
|
Throughout his life, Thomas More attended Mass and prayed each day. |
|
|
More married at age 26. He and his wife had four children, three daughters and a son. (His wife died in childbirth at age 22). Thomas was a major proponent of education for women; his eldest daughter, Margaret became one of the most learned women in England at this time. |
|
|
He was a successful and well-respected lawyer representing many London merchants. |
|
|
In 1509, at age 31, he became a member of Parliament for the section of London known as Westminster. |
|
|
His work impressed the king who began to use More as a diplomat ---to negotiate treaties with other nations, and asked him to serve as a judge to settle property disputes. |
| Thomas had a good sense of humour, was able to make witty replies, although his comments were often made in an apparently serious tone that made it difficult for some to tell "whether he spoke in earnest or in jest". | |
|
More was also a scholar, an influential writer who had numerous articles and books published; his most famous book is Utopia, a book about "no-place", a mythical island nation striving to create a virtuous society, an ideal republic.
|
|
|
In 1517, at age 39, he became a royal counsellor to King Henry VIII, entering public service full-time, giving up the private practice of law.
|
|
|
More was a major critic of Martin Luther and an opponent of the Protestant Reformation that Luther began; he helped Henry with his reply to Luther that earned for the King from the Pope the title "Defender of Faith". Moreıs own publication, "Response to Luther" was read throughout Europe.
|
|
|
In 1523, at age 45, he was elected Speaker of the Parliament, and knighted for his service to the King. of his own death, should inspire us all to be Christ-like in our daily lives. |
|
|
More was a charitable man: feeding the poor, up to a hundred a day during one food shortage, refusing to layoff farm workers at his country house even when they were no longer required, establishing a home for the destitute.
|
|
|
In 1529, at age 51, he was chosen by the King to be Lord Chancellor, a position comparable to Prime Minister. He was regarded as "an up-right and learned man", "the greatest administrator of his generation". Despite his powerful position he was modest and unpretentious, with little regard for fashion.
|
|
|
While Protestant Reformers believed in prayer, personal interpretation of the Bible, and salvation through faith in God, Thomas More as a Catholic believed in good works, the teaching of the Church, and the sacraments. He believed strongly in the authority of the Pope, as did King Henry in his early years.
|
|
|
In 1532, at age 54, at the height of his power, More resigned as Lord Chancellor, on a matter of conscience, to be "in the service of God".
|
|
|
The new Lord Chancellor got Parliament to pass King Henryıs Act of Succession. This legislation annulled the Kingıs marriage to his queen of eighteen years, Catherine of Aragon, established his new wife, Anne Boleyn as Queen, established Anneıs children as royal heirs, and ended the authority of the Pope in England. Henry made himself Head of the Church in England because this made him more powerful than the Church itself and because the Pope had refused to grant his annulment.
|
|
|
Henry was not content just to pass this legislation; he required that each important person in the kingdom swear that he or she agreed with this.
|
|
|
In 1534, when Thomas More refused to swear that Henry was the true, Supreme Head of the Church in England, he was imprisoned in the Tower of London. He entered via Traitorıs Gate. More spent more than a year in his cold, damp cell, attending Mass each day as he was allowed, praying that he would be courageous enough. He would not deny everything he believed. He would not agree that the sacraments, the teachings of the Church, the authority of the Pope should all be abandoned.
|
|
|
More feared the tortures promised. Traitors were usually hung until unconscious, revived so they could watch their intestines and heart taken out of their chest, then beheaded so that their head could be placed on a pole on London Bridge as a warning to others. He worried about his family when his property was confiscated. Still he would not speak angrily about those who imprisoned him.
|
|
|
In 1535, at age 57, when he still refused the Oath of Succession, he was taken to Tower Hill and beheaded. Just before his death he stated that he was still "the Kingıs good servant, but Godıs first". He became the first English layman to be beatified as a martyr for the Faith.
|
|
| In 1935, the Church made him a Saint. St. Thomas More was chosen as the patron saint for our school community because he was a highly principled person in difficult times. He was not one to change what he believed because of pressure to do so. He was not concerned with popular opinion. His religious conviction, his willingness to do what was right in the face |
| TOP |
Home | School | Academics | Culture | Sports | Staff | Email