Anthony Brookby
{{Short description|English Franciscan theologian and Catholic martyr}}
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Anthony Brookby (Brorbey) (executed 19 July 1537) was an English Franciscan theologian. He offended Henry VIII, and became a Catholic martyr.
Brookby was a lecturer in theology at Magdalen College, Oxford. He was versed in Greek and Hebrew, and enjoyed a reputation as an eloquent preacher. In a sermon of Brookby's, he attacked the king's actions and mode of living.
He was arrested, put to the rack, and tortured in order to make him retract what he had said. Disabled as a result of his tortures, Brookby was cared for by a pious woman for a fortnight. By the command of the king, an executioner strangled him to death, with the Franciscan cord which he wore around his waist.{{CathEncy|wstitle=Anthony Brookby}}
The year of his death has been questioned, with the Victoria County History for Kent placing the event in 1534.{{cite book| url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=38219 | title=Friaries: The observant friars of Greenwich | pages=194–198 | work=A History of the County of Kent | volume=2 | publisher=Victoria County History | location=London | year=1926 }}
References
{{Reflist}}
- Mary Jean Stone, Faithful unto Death (London, 1892), iv, 76;
- Anthony Parkinson, Coll. Anglo-Minor. (London, 1726), 239;
- Thaddeus, The Franciscans in England (London, 1898), III, 17;
- Danielle, Martirio e Morte d'alcuni Frati di San Francesco, III, 16.
;Attribution
- {{Catholic|wstitle=Anthony Brookby}}
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Category:Year of birth unknown
Category:16th-century English educators
Category:People associated with Magdalen College, Oxford
Category:Academics of the University of Oxford
Category:16th-century English Roman Catholic theologians
Category:English torture victims
Category:People executed under Henry VIII
Category:Executed English people