Thomas Brinton Explained

Type:Bishop
Thomas Brinton
Bishop of Rochester
Religion:Catholic
Appointed:31 January 1373
Term End:4 May 1389
Predecessor:Thomas Trilleck
Successor:William Bottlesham
Consecration:6 February 1373
Death Date:4 May 1389

Thomas Brinton was a medieval Bishop of Rochester.

Brinton was nominated on 31 January 1373 and consecrated on 6 February 1373. He died on 4 May 1389.[1]

A certain sermon of his, catalogued as Sermon 69 in collections of his work, was preached in 1376 during the meeting of the Good Parliament. He mentions an imagined parliament of rats and mice (referring to the fable of belling the cat), and this image is generally considered to have inspired the similar image in the prologue of Piers Plowman.[2]

References

Notes and References

  1. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 267
  2. Dodd, Gwilym. A parliament full of rats? Piers Plowman and the Good Parliament of 1376. Historical Research 79:203, 2006.