Henry Medwall (born September 1461, Southwark, London, Eng.—died after 1501) was an author remembered for his Fulgens and Lucrece, the first known secular play in English.
Medwall was educated at Eton College and the University of Cambridge and participated in dramatic performances there. After 1485 he worked as a lawyer and administrator in London, eventually entering the employ of Cardinal John Morton, archbishop of Canterbury. In 1492–1501 he held a sinecure, the rectory of Balynghem in the English marches of Calais, France. His career ended with Morton’s death in 1500, and nothing is known of him after 1501.
Medwall’s dramatic works were written for the entertainment of Morton and his guests. A morality play, Nature, a good example of the allegorical type of early drama, displays Medwall’s talent for realistic dialogue and his skill as a versifier. Fulgens and Lucrece is a debate on the origins of true nobility, enlivened by the interruptions of household servants.