Vox Piscis

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Revision as of 22:12, 6 October 2024 by imported>Liu1126 (Adding local short description: "1627 book by John Frith", overriding Wikidata description "book by John Frith")
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Vox Piscis

Vox Piscis, or The Book-Fish, Template:Not a typo three treatises which were found in the belly of a cod-fish in Cambridge market, on Midsummer Eve last is a book published in 1627 with a very unusual origin.

The original text of the work was found in the belly of a fish. On June 23, 1626, scholar and theologian Dr. Joseph Mede (or Mead) of Christ's College, Cambridge, was walking through Cambridge's market, when a fishwife found a small thin book (size sextodecimo) wrapped in sailcloth inside the stomach of a codfish caught at King's Lynn.

These texts were attributed to Protestant reformer John Frith, who was imprisoned in a fish-cellar in Oxford and later burned at the stake. The texts were published as a book the next year with a preface written by Thomas Goad. The texts have also been attributed to Richard Tracy of Stanbury Manor, Gloucestershire.

It is not known how the original book came to be inside the fish.

Contents

  • Preface
  • "Praeparatio Crucem or Of the Preparation to the Cross"
  • "A Lettre which was Written to the Faithfull Followers of Christes Gospell"
  • "A Mirror, or, Glasse to know thyselfe"

References

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External links

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