Laurence (or Lawrence) Nowell (c. 1516–1576) was an English churchman, who became Archdeacon of Derby and then Dean of Lichfield.
[2] He was almost certainly the Laurence Nowell appointed master at the grammar school at Sutton Coldfield in Warwickshire in 1546, who, following a dispute with the town's corporation, left the post in 1550, and who in November 1550 was ordained a deacon by Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London.
[1][3][4] Having strong Protestant views, Nowell fled England when Queen Mary took the throne, eventually joining his brother Alexander in Frankfurt.
Their biographies were confused by Anthony Wood in his Historia et antiquitates Universitatis Oxoniensis (1674) and Athenae Oxonienses (1691),[6] and the error persisted through later studies, including the Dictionary of National Biography (1895), and into the twentieth century.
In 1974, however, Retha Warnicke's analysis of a 1571 court case made it clear that there were two different Laurence Nowells,[7] and their biographies have since been partially disentangled.