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  1. John Ball (c. 1338 – 15 July 1381) was an English priest who took a prominent part in the Peasants' Revolt of 1381. Although he is often associated with John Wycliffe and the Lollard movement , Ball was actively preaching "articles contrary to the faith of the church" at least a decade before Wycliffe started attracting attention.

  2. After the rebellion collapsed, Ball was tried and hanged at St. Albans. Knowledge of his career comes almost entirely from prejudiced chroniclers. Jean Froissart calls him the mad priest of Kent. Ball is the subject of William Morris’s romance A Dream of John Ball

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Given online by the Australian National University on April 1, 2022. Abstract: John Ball was the most famous priest and theological voice of the so-called “Peasants’ Revolt” in England, 1381. We have letters attributed to him which appear to have been sent to rebels and we have his preaching presented in medieval chronicles.

  4. 約翰·麥克勞德·鮑爾爵士FRS FRSE (Sir John Macleod Ball,1948年5月19日 — ),是英國數學家,曾任牛津大學 塞德利安自然哲學教授 ( 英語 : Sedleian Professor of Natural Philosophy )。他於2003年至2006年擔任國際數學聯盟主席和牛津大學王后學院

  5. In a stolen glimpse of medieval egalitarianism stands the figure of John Ball. A fourteenth century survivor of the Black Death, rural Essex son turned priest become revolutionary leader, Ball rouses us directly through his words… words which inspired the people who would later be defamed as the ‘rustics’ of the Peasants’ Revolt.

  6. 2021年1月15日 · Despite the claims in the chronicles that Ball was released from prison in Maidstone and was active at Blackheath, there is the possibility he was the same ‘John Ball’ sprung from prison in Bishop’s Stortford on 11 June and therefore not active around London and

  7. On Thursday 13 June 1381—the feast of Corpus Christi—rebels from the south east arrived in London and swelled their ranks with Londoners and newly released prisoners. Though there were exceptions, it seems that the rebels were generally disciplined and deliberately selected political, economic, legal, and ecclesiastical targets.