Henry de Costesey or Cossey (Norfolk) is reckoned among the Oxford Franciscans by Bale and others, but without evidence. He was forty-sixth Master of the Minorites at Cambridge (c. 1336)[1472], and is said to have died at Babwell[1473].
Commentarius super Apocalypsim. Inc. ‘Apocalypsis Jhesu Christi quam.... Dividitur enim iste liber sicut alii libri in prohemium et tractatum.’
MSS. Bodl.: 2004 =
. B. 3. 18, now Bodley 57. Laud. Misc. 85, fol. 67 b (sec. xiv).
Cambridge:—Pembroke Coll. 175.
Comment. super Psalterium. Inc. ‘Aperiam in psalterio.’
MS. formerly in the Franciscan library, London[1474]: quoted in MS. Bodl. Laud. Misc. 213, f. 192 (sec. xv).
John de Hentham was a Minorite in the Oxford Convent in 1340, when he acted as attorney for the warden[1475].
Hugh de Willoughby or Wylluby, S.T.P., was the Chancellor of the University in 1334. He held the prebend of Barnby, in the diocese of York, in 1338. It is not known when he became a Franciscan; but it was no doubt in his declining years[1476].