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'''Richard Pate''', born [[1516]] in [[Cheltenham]], was a landowner and [[Member of Parliament]] for [[Gloucester]]. He was a nephew of [[Richard Pate, Bishop of Worcester]]. An alumnus of [[Corpus Christi College, Oxford]], he endowed that institution with property, on the condition that use some of the money to found and maintain a school in Cheltenham. This school was founded in [[1574]] and still exists as [[Pate's Grammar School]]. Pate also left property in [[Oxford]] to Corpus Christi. He died in [[1588]] and is buried in [[Gloucester Cathedral]]. On his tomb is inscribed ''Patebit tum quod latuit'' meaning, ''what is hidden will be revealed''. This is also the motto of Pate's Grammar School and the Old Patesians Rugby Football Club.
'''Richard Pate''', born [[1516]] in [[Cheltenham]], was a landowner and [[Member of Parliament]] for [[Gloucester]]. He was a nephew of [[Richard Pate, Bishop of Worcester]]. An alumnus of [[Corpus Christi College, Oxford]], he endowed that institution with property, on the condition that use some of the money to found and maintain a school in Cheltenham. This school was founded in [[1574]] and still exists as [[Pate's Grammar School]]. Pate also left property in [[Oxford]] to Corpus Christi. He died in [[1588]] and is buried in [[Gloucester Cathedral]]. On his tomb is inscribed ''Patebit tum quod latuit'' meaning, ''what is hidden will be revealed''. This is also the motto of Pate's Grammar School and the [[Old Patesians Rugby Football Club]].


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 23:35, 20 February 2006

Richard Pate, born 1516 in Cheltenham, was a landowner and Member of Parliament for Gloucester. He was a nephew of Richard Pate, Bishop of Worcester. An alumnus of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, he endowed that institution with property, on the condition that use some of the money to found and maintain a school in Cheltenham. This school was founded in 1574 and still exists as Pate's Grammar School. Pate also left property in Oxford to Corpus Christi. He died in 1588 and is buried in Gloucester Cathedral. On his tomb is inscribed Patebit tum quod latuit meaning, what is hidden will be revealed. This is also the motto of Pate's Grammar School and the Old Patesians Rugby Football Club.

See also


Reference