Notes.
i "Believe, and thou hast eaten." Words often used by the early "heretics," who were debarred from partaking of the feast of Holy Communion.
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A group of young scholars and their friends in Oxford adopt reforming religious ideas and confront university and church authority. Their gatherings, debates, song, and private counsel lead to public punishments: book burnings, arrests, imprisonments, recantations, and deaths, with some submitting under pressure while a few remain resolute. Episodes of campus life and festival scenes alternate with trials, flight, and imprisonment, showing how persuasion, clemency, and isolation shape individual decisions. The work explores conscience, communal loyalty, and the painful moral choices faced by those pushing for religious change amid institutional resistance.
i "Believe, and thou hast eaten." Words often used by the early "heretics," who were debarred from partaking of the feast of Holy Communion.