[1] Thomas Walden so called of the towne where he was borne, but his fathers surname was Netter, a white frier of London, and the thrée and twentith pro|uinciall gouernour of his order, a man vndoubted|lie learned, and thoroughlie furnished with cunning of the schooles, but a sore enimie to them that profes|sed the doctrine of Wickliffe, writing sundrie great volumes and treatises against them, he died at Rone in Normandie, the second of Nouember, in the yeare one thousand foure hundred and thirtie; Richard Ullerston, borne in Lancashire, wrote di|uerse treatises of diuinitie; Peter Clearke, a stu|dent in Oxenford, and a defendor of Wickliffes doc|trine, wherevpon when he feared persecution here in England, he fled into Boheme, but yet at length he was apprehended by the imperialists, and died for it, as some write, Fabian and Caxton. but in what order, is not expressed.