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  1. John Ball, English Legend. Resources for understanding the priest of the English uprising of 1381 and his reception, from the fourteenth century to the present. The website is run by James Crossley. For more information, please visit the About page

  2. John Ball (died July 15, 1381, St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Eng.) was one of the leaders of the Peasants’ Revolt in England. A sometime priest at York and at Colchester, Ball was excommunicated about 1366 for inflammatory sermons advocating a classless society, but he continued to preach in open marketplaces and elsewhere.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. John Ball (c. 1338 – 15 July 1381) was an English priest who took a prominent part in the Peasants' Revolt of 1381. Although he is often associated with John Wycliffe and the Lollard movement, Ball was actively preaching "articles contrary to the faith of the church" at least a decade before Wycliffe started attracting attention.

  4. 27 janv. 2010 · Title: John Ball — Primitivist: The Peasants’ Revolt and the State of Nature. Author: John Connor. Topics: anarcho-primitivism , Green Anarchist , history , religion , United Kingdom. Date: 1999. Source: Retrieved on January 27, 2010 from green-anarchy.wikidot.com. Notes: from Green Anarchist #57–58, Autumn 1999. John Connor.

  5. ‘When Adam delved and Eve span, Who then was the gentleman?’. In his famous statement delivered during a sermon at Blackheath to the assembled mass of the Peasants Revolt - Ball is the first person we can name in European history to have directly question the legitimacy of social and economic hierarchy.