01951nam 2200397 n 450 99639106030331620221108102638.0(CKB)1000000000665782(EEBO)2240861704(UnM)99843742(EXLCZ)99100000000066578219910730d1550 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|A sermon no lesse frutefull then famous[electronic resource] made in the yeare of oure lord god m.CCC.lxxxviii. In these our later dayes moost necessarye to be knowen. Neyther addynge to nor diminishynge fro. Saue the olde and rude englishe therof mended here [and] there[Printed at London [By R. Grafton] by Rycharde Kele[ca. 1550]][94] pImprint from colophon; printer's name and suggested publication date from STC.The Emmanuel College copy has the last quartersheet (F⁴) in duplicate, folded and bound as a halfsheet; i.e. one set is on leaves 1,4,5,8, the other on leaves 2,3,6,7. This suggests some form of halfsheet imposition--STC.On Luke xvi.2.Signatures: A-F (-F8, blank?).Reproduction of the original in the Emmanuel College (University of Cambridge) Library.Attributed in several 15th-century MS. sources to Thomas Wimbledon. John Foxe, and editions of the sermon from 1582 onwards, also attribute it to an R. Wimbeldon, which has been expanded without apparent justification to Robert or Richard Wimbledon (Halkett & Laing).eebo-0048Sermons, English (Middle)Sermons, English (Middle)Wimbledon Thomas1002841Wimbeldon R.Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996391060303316A sermon no lesse frutefull then famous2395272UNISA