John Palsgrave

When she married Louis XII of France, he accompanied her to Paris, but by 1516 he had moved to Louvain;[2] Sir Thomas More wrote to Erasmus to recommend him to study law and classics there.

[3] In 1525, he was appointed tutor to Henry's illegitimate son Henry Fitzroy;[4] the programme of studies was ambitious, following lines suggested by More, Stephen Gardiner and Thomas Elyot, and including music, visual aids and the company of William Parr and the younger brothers of the boy's mother Elizabeth Blount.

[5] He was succeeded in the post by Richard Croke in 1526, for reasons that may include the hostility of Thomas Wolsey, who had earlier refused to appoint Palsgrave as Archdeacon of Derby.

[6] His past connections meant that Palsgrave was called in by the Duke of Suffolk to write a pamphlet derogatory of Wolsey's career, in 1529.

He composed L'esclarcissement de la langue francoyse (printed in 1530 in London and dedicated to Henry VIII).