https://www.bookowners.online/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=EleanorSwire&feedformat=atomBook Owners Online - User contributions [en-gb]2024-03-29T01:06:12ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.33.0https://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Thomas_Travers_ca.1619-1717&diff=19405Thomas Travers ca.1619-17172021-04-15T14:51:53Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Thomas name::TRAVERS ca.date of birth::1619-date of death::1717 */</p>
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===[[name::Thomas]] [[name::TRAVERS]] ca.[[date of birth::1619]]-[[date of death::1717]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
[[occupation::Rector]] of St. Columb Major, Cornwall (1652-1662) and sometime [[occupation::lecturer]] at St. Andrew, Plymouth. Travers was educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he matriculated in 1637 and subsequently graduated B.A. 1640/1, M.A. 1644, then appointed Fellow. He was ejected from his position at St. Columb after its previous occupant, John Beauford, was restored to the role from which he had himself been ejected ten years prior. Travers is thought to have married the niece of [[crossreference::John Robartes]], 2nd Baron Robartes (later 1st Earl of Radnor) , with whom Travers was closely associated.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Travers donated a copy of Samuel Bochart’s Geographiæ sacræ pars prior Phaleg (1646) to the library at [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.11r.<br />
*Travers, S. Smith, [[https://archive.org/details/pedigreewithbiog00trav/page/89/mode/2up?q=Columb Pedigree, with biographical sketches, of the Devonshire family of Travers: descended from Walter Travers of Nottingham, Goldsmith / now reprinted by Richard J. Hone, with a supplement from materials collected by him and arranged by Frederick B. Falkiner]], 1898.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Travers, Thomas}}<br />
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[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=John_Glascocke_ca.1621-1661&diff=19404John Glascocke ca.1621-16612021-04-15T14:50:44Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::John name::GLASCOCKE ca.date of birth::1621-date of death::1661 */</p>
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===[[name::John]] [[name::GLASCOCKE]] ca.[[date of birth::1621]]-[[date of death::1661]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
English [[occupation::clergyman]] and [[occupation::Fellow]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he obtained his B.A. in 1643 and M.A. in 1646. Glascocke was a distant relative of the diarist, [[family::Samuel Pepys]]: his mother, Mary, was the sister of Pepys’ great-aunt, [[family::Judith Pepys]], wife of [[family::Sir Richard Pepys]] (Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, 1654-9). Glascocke was appointed [[occupation::Rector]] of [[location::Little Canfield, Essex]], in 1649, a position he held until his death in 1661.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Glascocke donated three volumes of works by the English theologian, William Perkins (1558-1602) to the library at [[beneficiary::Magdalene College]]. The inscription on title page reads: "Ex dono Mori Johannis Glascocke quondam huis Coll. Socij."<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.11v.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Glascocke, John}}<br />
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[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Richard_Maden_ca.1593-1691&diff=19403Richard Maden ca.1593-16912021-04-15T14:49:19Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Richard name::MADEN ca.date of birth::1593-date of death::1691 */</p>
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===[[name::Richard]] [[name::MADEN]] ca.[[date of birth::1593]]-[[date of death::1691]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
English [[occupation::clergyman]] and [[occupation::Fellow]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he obtained his B.A. in 1614/5, M.A. in 1618 and B.D. in 1625. He was ordained at [[location::Peterborough]] in 1619. Between 1629 and 1632, Maden was [[occupation::Vicar]] of [[organisations::St. Peter’s, Colchester]]. He subsequently became [[occupation::Rector]] of [[organisations::St Mildred Poultry]], a position from which he was ejected in 1638.<br />
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====Books====<br />
<br />
A significant number of books belonging to Richard Maden can be found within the collections of [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]]. Maden is recorded in the College’s donors’ register (MS F.4.33) as having donated some of the volumes, but other volumes listed under the names of his contemporaries also bear evidence of having been owned by him – for example, in the form of the inscription “Rich. Maden” which appears on the title page.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.10r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Maden, Richard}}<br />
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[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=John_Wood&diff=19402John Wood2021-04-15T14:46:15Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::John name::WOOD ca.date of birth::1621-date of death::1692 */</p>
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===[[name::John]] [[name::WOOD]] ca.[[date of birth::1621]]-[[date of death::1692]]===<br />
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====Biographical Note====<br />
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English [[occupation::clergyman]] and [[occupation::Fellow]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College]], until his ejection from the Fellowship in 1662 in consequence to the introduction of the 1662 Act of Uniformity.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
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Wood donated a small number of books to the library at [[beneficiary::Magdalene College]].<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
The title page of a commentary on the book of Ecclesiastes held at Magdalene College is inscribed with the name “John Wood”.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12r.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Wood, John}}<br />
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[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=James_Duport_1606-1679&diff=19401James Duport 1606-16792021-04-15T14:36:39Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
===[[name::James]] [[name::DUPORT]] [[date of birth::1606]]-[[date of death::1679]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Born in [[place of birth::Cambridge]], son of [[family::John Duport]], [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Jesus College, Cambridge|Jesus College]]. BA [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge]] 1627, [[occupation::fellow]] 1627, MA 1630, BD 1637, DD 1660. [[occupation::Regius professor]] of Greek at [[organisations:: University of Cambridge|Cambridge]] 1639; [[occupation::prebendary]] of [[organisations::Lincoln Cathedral|Lincoln]] 1641 (ejected 1643). [[occupation::Lady Margaret preacher]] at [[organisations:: University of Cambridge|Cambridge]], 1646. He remained in [[location::Cambridge]], at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]], during the 1640s and 50s; there is some doubt as to whether he was formally ejected from any positions for his royalist sympathies but he became [[occupation::vice-master]] of the [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|College]] in 1655. As an active [[occupation::tutor]] for many years, he compiled a set of guidelines for Cambridge students, which has been valued for the analysis it offers of the contemporary curriculum. Fully restored to his preferments in 1660, he was made [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] in 1664, and [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], and [[occupation::rector]] of [[location::Boxworth, Cambridgeshire]], in 1668; he was [[occupation::vice-chancellor]] 1669-70.<br />
<br />
Duport was an accomplished [[occupation::poet]] in the classical languages, publishing a verse paraphrase of the Book of Job in [[language::Greek]] and [[language::Latin]] in [[date of publication::1637]] ([[book title::''Threnothriambos'']]), with similar volumes on the books of Solomon and the Psalms issued in [[date of publication::1646]] and [[date of publication::1666]]. His [[book title::''Homeri poetarum … gnomologia'']] (Homeric aphorisms illustrated through biblical and classical references) appeared in [[date of publication::1660]], and a book of poems, [[book title::''Musae subsecivae'']], in [[date of publication::1676]].<br />
<br />
====Books==== <br />
Duport’s views on the value of libraries are evident from one of his [[date of publication::1676]] poems, [[book title::‘In bibliothecam bene instructam’]], as well as from his benefactions. He was an important supporter of the initiative to build the new(Wren) library at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] in the 1670s, and was instrumental in the revival of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral Library]] in 1672. When he died, he had books in all his three residences, at [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] and [[location::Boxworth]], which were separately bestowed according to the directions in his will. His books at [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]] (the largest collection, ca.2100 volumes) were [[bequest::given]] to [[beneficiary::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity College]]; the books at [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] were [[bequest::given]] to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], and the books at [[location::Boxworth]] to his [[beneficiary::nephews]] [[family::Joshua Bunting]] and [[family::John Breton]]. A few specific books were identified for personal bequests, including a Bible given to a [[beneficiary::nephew's wife]]. He also left [[monetary value::£100]] to [[beneficiary::University of Cambridge]] and [[monetary value::£50]] to [[beneficiary::Jesus College, Cambridge|Jesus]], for the purchase of books, and [[monetary value::£100]] towards the new Library project at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]].<br />
<br />
====Sources==== <br />
<div id="sourcelist"><br />
*Cunich, P. et al, ''History of Magdalene College, Cambridge 1428-1988, 1994''. <br />
*Hall, J. ''Peterborough Cathedral Library: a catalogue'', 1986.<br />
*McKitterick, D. ''The making of the Wren Library'', 1995. <br />
*Oates, J. ''Cambridge University Library a history'', 1986. <br />
*Oates, J.C.T ''Cambridge University Library: a history''. Cambridge, 1986., 428-9.<br />
*O'Day, Rosemary. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/8301 "Duport, James (1606–1679), dean of Peterborough and college head."] ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Duport, James}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:Libraries Bequeathed to Institutions]]<br />
[[Category:Heads of Colleges]]<br />
[[Category:Canons]]<br />
[[Category:Vice-Chancellors]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=James_Duport_1606-1679&diff=19400James Duport 1606-16792021-04-15T14:35:42Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
===[[name::James]] [[name::DUPORT]] [[date of birth::1606]]-[[date of death::1679]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Born in [[place of birth::Cambridge]], son of [[family::John Duport]], [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Jesus College, Cambridge|Jesus College]]. BA [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge]] 1627, [[occupation::fellow]] 1627, MA 1630, BD 1637, DD 1660. [[occupation::Regius professor]] of Greek at [[organisations:: University of Cambridge|Cambridge]] 1639; [[occupation::prebendary]] of [[organisations::Lincoln Cathedral|Lincoln]] 1641 (ejected 1643). [[occupation::Lady Margaret preacher]] at [[organisations:: University of Cambridge|Cambridge]], 1646. He remained in [[location::Cambridge]], at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]], during the 1640s and 50s; there is some doubt as to whether he was formally ejected from any positions for his royalist sympathies but he became [[occupation::vice-master]] of the [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|College]] in 1655. As an active [[occupation::tutor]] for many years, he compiled a set of guidelines for Cambridge students, which has been valued for the analysis it offers of the contemporary curriculum. Fully restored to his preferments in 1660, he was made [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] in 1664, and [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], and [[occupation::rector]] of [[location::Boxworth, Cambridgeshire]], in 1668; he was [[occupation::vice-chancellor]] 1669-70.<br />
<br />
Duport was an accomplished [[occupation::poet]] in the classical languages, publishing a verse paraphrase of the Book of Job in [[language::Greek]] and [[language::Latin]] in [[date of publication::1637]] ([[book title::''Threnothriambos'']]), with similar volumes on the books of Solomon and the Psalms issued in [[date of publication::1646]] and [[date of publication::1666]]. His [[book title::''Homeri poetarum … gnomologia'']] (Homeric aphorisms illustrated through biblical and classical references) appeared in [[date of publication::1660]], and a book of poems, [[book title::''Musae subsecivae'']], in [[date of publication::1676]].<br />
<br />
====Books==== <br />
Duport’s views on the value of libraries are evident from one of his [[date of publication::1676]] poems, [[book title::‘In bibliothecam bene instructam’]], as well as from his benefactions. He was an important supporter of the initiative to build the new(Wren) library at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] in the 1670s, and was instrumental in the revival of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral Library]] in 1672. When he died, he had books in all his three residences, at [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] and [[location::Boxworth]], which were separately bestowed according to the directions in his will. His books at [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]] (the largest collection, ca.2100 volumes) were [[bequest::given]] to [[beneficiary::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity College]]; the books at [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] were [[bequest::given]] to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], and the books at [[location::Boxworth]] to his [[beneficiary::nephews]] [[family::Joshua Bunting]] and [[family::John Breton]]. A few specific books were identified for personal bequests, including a Bible given to a [[beneficiary::nephew's wife]]. He also left [[monetary value::£100]] to [[beneficiary::University of Cambridge, and £50 to [[beneficiary::Jesus College, Cambridge|Jesus]], for the purchase of books, and [[monetary value::£100]] towards the new Library project at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]].<br />
<br />
====Sources==== <br />
<div id="sourcelist"><br />
*Cunich, P. et al, ''History of Magdalene College, Cambridge 1428-1988, 1994''. <br />
*Hall, J. ''Peterborough Cathedral Library: a catalogue'', 1986.<br />
*McKitterick, D. ''The making of the Wren Library'', 1995. <br />
*Oates, J. ''Cambridge University Library a history'', 1986. <br />
*Oates, J.C.T ''Cambridge University Library: a history''. Cambridge, 1986., 428-9.<br />
*O'Day, Rosemary. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/8301 "Duport, James (1606–1679), dean of Peterborough and college head."] ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Duport, James}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:Libraries Bequeathed to Institutions]]<br />
[[Category:Heads of Colleges]]<br />
[[Category:Canons]]<br />
[[Category:Vice-Chancellors]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=James_Duport_1606-1679&diff=19399James Duport 1606-16792021-04-15T14:35:23Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
===[[name::James]] [[name::DUPORT]] [[date of birth::1606]]-[[date of death::1679]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Born in [[place of birth::Cambridge]], son of [[family::John Duport]], [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Jesus College, Cambridge|Jesus College]]. BA [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge]] 1627, [[occupation::fellow]] 1627, MA 1630, BD 1637, DD 1660. [[occupation::Regius professor]] of Greek at [[organisations:: University of Cambridge|Cambridge]] 1639; [[occupation::prebendary]] of [[organisations::Lincoln Cathedral|Lincoln]] 1641 (ejected 1643). [[occupation::Lady Margaret preacher]] at [[organisations:: University of Cambridge|Cambridge]], 1646. He remained in [[location::Cambridge]], at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]], during the 1640s and 50s; there is some doubt as to whether he was formally ejected from any positions for his royalist sympathies but he became [[occupation::vice-master]] of the [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|College]] in 1655. As an active [[occupation::tutor]] for many years, he compiled a set of guidelines for Cambridge students, which has been valued for the analysis it offers of the contemporary curriculum. Fully restored to his preferments in 1660, he was made [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] in 1664, and [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], and [[occupation::rector]] of [[location::Boxworth, Cambridgeshire]], in 1668; he was [[occupation::vice-chancellor]] 1669-70.<br />
<br />
Duport was an accomplished [[occupation::poet]] in the classical languages, publishing a verse paraphrase of the Book of Job in [[language::Greek]] and [[language::Latin]] in [[date of publication::1637]] ([[book title::''Threnothriambos'']]), with similar volumes on the books of Solomon and the Psalms issued in [[date of publication::1646]] and [[date of publication::1666]]. His [[book title::''Homeri poetarum … gnomologia'']] (Homeric aphorisms illustrated through biblical and classical references) appeared in [[date of publication::1660]], and a book of poems, [[book title::''Musae subsecivae'']], in [[date of publication::1676]].<br />
<br />
====Books==== <br />
Duport’s views on the value of libraries are evident from one of his [[date of publication::1676]] poems, [[book title::‘In bibliothecam bene instructam’]], as well as from his benefactions. He was an important supporter of the initiative to build the new(Wren) library at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] in the 1670s, and was instrumental in the revival of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral Library]] in 1672. When he died, he had books in all his three residences, at [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] and [[location::Boxworth]], which were separately bestowed according to the directions in his will. His books at [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]] (the largest collection, ca.2100 volumes) were [[bequest::given]] to [[beneficiary::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity College]]; the books at [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] were [[bequest::given]] to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], and the books at [[location::Boxworth]] to his [[beneficiary::nephews]] [[family::Joshua Bunting]] and [[family::John Breton]]. A few specific books were identified for personal bequests, including a Bible given to a [[beneficiary::nephew's wife]]. He also left [[monetary value::£100]] to [[beneficiary::University of Cambridge, and [[monetary value:: £50]] to [[beneficiary::Jesus College, Cambridge|Jesus]], for the purchase of books, and [[monetary value::£100]] towards the new Library project at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]].<br />
<br />
====Sources==== <br />
<div id="sourcelist"><br />
*Cunich, P. et al, ''History of Magdalene College, Cambridge 1428-1988, 1994''. <br />
*Hall, J. ''Peterborough Cathedral Library: a catalogue'', 1986.<br />
*McKitterick, D. ''The making of the Wren Library'', 1995. <br />
*Oates, J. ''Cambridge University Library a history'', 1986. <br />
*Oates, J.C.T ''Cambridge University Library: a history''. Cambridge, 1986., 428-9.<br />
*O'Day, Rosemary. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/8301 "Duport, James (1606–1679), dean of Peterborough and college head."] ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Duport, James}}<br />
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[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:Libraries Bequeathed to Institutions]]<br />
[[Category:Heads of Colleges]]<br />
[[Category:Canons]]<br />
[[Category:Vice-Chancellors]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=William_Herris_ca.1585-1622&diff=19334William Herris ca.1585-16222021-04-09T09:45:01Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::William name::HERRIS or name::HARRIS ca.date of birth::1585-date of death::1622 */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
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===[[name::William]] [[name::HERRIS]] or [[name::HARRIS]] ca.[[date of birth::1585]]-[[date of death::1622]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
Son of [[family::Sir William Herris]] of [[location::Cricksea, Essex]]. Educated at [[education::Pembroke College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated Fellow-Commoner in 1608 and graduated B.A. 1612. Subsequently admitted to [[organisations::Lincoln's Inn]] in February 1613. <br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
A small number of books bearing the armorial stamp of Herris are held in the collections of several Cambridge Colleges, including those St. John's, Emmanuel, Magdalene and Pembroke. The details of these can be found on the British Armorial Bindings database. The two-volume works of Salvian at Magdalene College entered the collections via Richard Parry (c.1694-1792), who is listed as the donor in the College's donors' register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Books are marked with gilt armorial stamps on lower and upper boards, bearing the initials "W.H." and "P.H." i.e. Pembroke Hall.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*British Armorial Bindings database [https://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/stamps/IHER012_s1 "William Herris (1585-1622)"]<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Herris, William}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=William_Herris_ca.1585-1622&diff=19333William Herris ca.1585-16222021-04-09T09:44:40Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::William]] [[name::HERRIS]] or [[name::HARRIS]] ca.[[date of birth::1585]]-[[date of death::1622]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
Son of [[family::Sir William Herris]] of [[location::Cricksea, Essex]]. Educated at [[education::Pembroke College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated Fellow-Commoner in 1608 and graduated B.A. 1612. Subsequently admitted to [[organisations::Lincoln's Inn]] in February 1613. <br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
A small number of books bearing the armorial stamp of Herris are held in the collections of several Cambridge Colleges, including those St. John's, Emmanuel, Magdalene and Pembroke. The details of these can be found on the British Armorial Bindings database. The two-volume works of Salvian at Magdalene College entered the collections via Richard Parry (c.1694-1792), who is listed as the donor in the College's donors' register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Books are marked with gilt armorial stamps on lower and upper boards, bearing the initials "W.H." and "P.H." i.e. Pembroke Hall.<br />
<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*British Armorial Bindings database [https://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/stamps/IHER012_s1 "William Herris (1585-1622)"]<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Herris, William}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Harris&diff=19331Harris2021-04-09T09:35:41Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Harris to William Herris</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[William Herris]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=William_Herris_ca.1585-1622&diff=19330William Herris ca.1585-16222021-04-09T09:35:40Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Harris to William Herris</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::William]] [[name::HERRIS]] or [[name::HARRIS]] ca.[[date of birth::1585]]-[[date of death::1622]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
Son of [[family::Sir William Herris]] of [[location::Cricksea, Essex]]. Educated at [[education::Pembroke College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated Fellow-Commoner in 1608 and graduated B.A. 1612. Subsequently admitted to [[organisations::Lincoln's Inn]] in February 1613. <br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
A small number of books bearing the armorial stamp of Herris are held in the collections of several Cambridge Colleges, including those St. John's, Emmanuel, Magdalene and Pembroke. The details of these can be found on the British Armorial Bindings database.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Books are marked with gilt armorial stamps on lower and upper boards, bearing the initials "W.H." and "P.H." i.e. Pembroke Hall.<br />
<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*British Armorial Bindings database [https://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/stamps/IHER012_s1 "William Herris (1585-1622)"]<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Herris, William}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=William_Herris_ca.1585-1622&diff=19329William Herris ca.1585-16222021-04-09T09:35:03Z<p>EleanorSwire: Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===name::William name::HERRIS or name::HARRIS ca.date of birth::1585-date of death::1622=== ====Biographical Note==== Son of family::Sir W..."</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::William]] [[name::HERRIS]] or [[name::HARRIS]] ca.[[date of birth::1585]]-[[date of death::1622]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
Son of [[family::Sir William Herris]] of [[location::Cricksea, Essex]]. Educated at [[education::Pembroke College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated Fellow-Commoner in 1608 and graduated B.A. 1612. Subsequently admitted to [[organisations::Lincoln's Inn]] in February 1613. <br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
A small number of books bearing the armorial stamp of Herris are held in the collections of several Cambridge Colleges, including those St. John's, Emmanuel, Magdalene and Pembroke. The details of these can be found on the British Armorial Bindings database.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Books are marked with gilt armorial stamps on lower and upper boards, bearing the initials "W.H." and "P.H." i.e. Pembroke Hall.<br />
<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*British Armorial Bindings database [https://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/stamps/IHER012_s1 "William Herris (1585-1622)"]<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Herris, William}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=James_Palmer_ca.1581-1660&diff=19328James Palmer ca.1581-16602021-04-09T08:39:16Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::James name::PALMER ca.date of birth::1581-date of death::1660 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::James]] [[name::PALMER]] ca.[[date of birth::1581]]-[[date of death::1660]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The son of [[family::Henry Palmer]], James Palmer was born in the parish of [[organisations::St. Margaret's Westminster]] and baptized there in 1581. He was educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], and graduated B.A. in 1602, M.A. 1605, proceeding later to B.D. in 1613. He was ordained deacon and priest in the diocese of Peterborough in May 1605. In 1615, Palmer was appointed [[occupation::vicar]] of [[organisations::St Bride, Fleet Street]]. He died in January 1660 and was buried at St. Margaret's Westminster.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Palmer bequeathed a collection of books to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Knighton, C.S. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/21190 “James Palmer (bap. 1581, d. 1660), clergman”], Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.7r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Palmer, James}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=James_Palmer_ca.1581-1660&diff=19326James Palmer ca.1581-16602021-04-09T08:35:05Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Palmer, James to James Palmer</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::James]] [[name::PALMER]] ca.[[date of birth::1581]]-[[date of death::1660]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The son of Henry Palmer, James Palmer was born in the parish of St. Margaret's Westminster and baptized there in 1581. He was educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and graduated B.A. in 1602, M.A. 1605, proceeding later to B.D. in 1613. He was ordained deacon and priest in the diocese of Peterborough in May 1605. In 1615, Palmer was appointed vicar of St Bride, Fleet Street. He died in January 1660 and was buried at St. Margaret's Westminster.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Palmer bequeathed a collection of books to Magdalene College, Cambridge.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Knighton, C.S. “James Palmer (bap. 1581, d. 1660), clergman”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.7r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Palmer, James}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Palmer,_James&diff=19327Palmer, James2021-04-09T08:35:05Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Palmer, James to James Palmer</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[James Palmer]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=James_Palmer_ca.1581-1660&diff=19325James Palmer ca.1581-16602021-04-09T08:34:33Z<p>EleanorSwire: Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===name::James name::PALMER ca.date of birth::1581-date of death::1660=== ====Biographical Note==== The son of Henry Palmer, James Palmer was bo..."</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::James]] [[name::PALMER]] ca.[[date of birth::1581]]-[[date of death::1660]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The son of Henry Palmer, James Palmer was born in the parish of St. Margaret's Westminster and baptized there in 1581. He was educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and graduated B.A. in 1602, M.A. 1605, proceeding later to B.D. in 1613. He was ordained deacon and priest in the diocese of Peterborough in May 1605. In 1615, Palmer was appointed vicar of St Bride, Fleet Street. He died in January 1660 and was buried at St. Margaret's Westminster.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Palmer bequeathed a collection of books to Magdalene College, Cambridge.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Knighton, C.S. “James Palmer (bap. 1581, d. 1660), clergman”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.7r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Palmer, James}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19324Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:12:44Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of [[family::Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset]], Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at [[education::Magdalen College, Oxford]], 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from [[education::Gloucester Hall, Oxford]], in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an [[occupation::advocate]] of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as [[occupation::Chancellor]] of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at [[organisations::Christ Church, Newgate]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty [[subject::law]] books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], by [[crossreference::Barnabas Goche]], Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19323Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:12:16Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of [[family::Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset]], Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at [[education::Magdalen College, Oxford]], 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from [[education::Gloucester Hall, Oxford]], in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an [[occupation::advocate]] of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as [[occupation::Chancellor]] of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at [[organisations::Christ Church, Newgate]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty [[subject::law]] books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]], by [[crossreference::Barnabas Goche]], Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Barnabas_Goche_d.1626&diff=19322Barnabas Goche d.16262021-04-09T07:11:35Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
===[[name::Barnabas]] [[name::GOCHE]] or [[name::GOOCH]] d.[[date of death::1626]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Born at [[place of birth::Alvingham, Lincolnshire]], son of [[family::Barnaby Goche]], [[occupation::poet]] and [[occupation::civil servant]]. BA [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]] 1587, MA 1590, LLD 1604; [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]] 1604-26, [[occupation::Vice-Chancellor]] of the [[organisations::University of Cambridge|University]] 1611-12. [[occupation::MP]] for the [[organisations::University of Cambridge]] 1620-2 and 1624-5, and for [[location::Truro]] 1620. [[occupation::Chancellor]] of [[location::Worcester]] and [[location::Exeter]] Cathedrals. <br />
<br />
====Books==== <br />
Goche [[bequest::bequeathed]] “all my [[subject::law]] books which I have in my study at [[location::London]]” to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]], and the [[subject::law]] books in his study at [[location::Exeter]] to his [[beneficiary::son in law]]. The residue of his estate was left to his wife. The size of his collection is not known. A list of more than a hundred books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College]] is recorded in the College's seventeenth-century donors' register, MS. F.4.33, though not all items recorded are extant within the collection. A number of the books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]] contain the signature of [[crossreference::Bartholomew Jessop]].<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id="sourcelist"><br />
*Goche's Will, Cambridge University Library Vice-Chancellor's Court Wills, vol.3 fo.147r-148r.<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge MS. F.4.33, f.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. ''Alumni Cantabrigienses''. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Goche, Barnabas}}<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:Vice-Chancellors]]<br />
[[Category:Members of Parliament]]<br />
[[Category:Heads of Colleges]]<br />
[[Category:Libraries Bequeathed to Institutions]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19321Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:09:47Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Bartholomew name::JESSOP or name::JESOP ca.date of birth::1565-date of death::1620 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of [[family::Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset]], Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at [[education::Magdalen College, Oxford]], 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from [[education::Gloucester Hall, Oxford]], in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an [[occupation::advocate]] of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as [[occupation::Chancellor]] of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at [[organisations::Christ Church, Newgate]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty [[subject::law]] books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], by [[crossreference::Barnabas Goche]], Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19320Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:09:17Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Bartholomew name::JESSOP or name::JESOP ca.date of birth::1565-date of death::1620 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of [[family::Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset]], Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at [[education::Magdalen College, Oxford]], 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from [[education::Gloucester Hall, Oxford]], in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an [[occupation::advocate]] of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as [[occupation::Chancellor]] of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at [[organisations::Christ Church, Newgate]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty [[subject::law]] books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], by [[crossreference::Barnabas Gooch]], Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19319Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:06:01Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Bartholomew name::JESSOP or name::JESOP ca.date of birth::1565-date of death::1620 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of [[family::Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset]], Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at [[education::Magdalen College, Oxford]], 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from [[education::Gloucester Hall, Oxford]], in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an [[occupation::advocate]] of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as [[occupation::Chancellor]] of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at [[organisations::Christ Church, Newgate]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty law books given to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], by Barnabas Gooch, Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Academics]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jessop,_Bartholomew&diff=19318Jessop, Bartholomew2021-04-09T07:00:27Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Jessop, Bartholomew to Bartholomew Jessop</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Bartholomew Jessop]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19317Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:00:26Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Jessop, Bartholomew to Bartholomew Jessop</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset, Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at Magdalen College, Oxford, 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from Gloucester Hall, Oxford, in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an advocate of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as Chancellor of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at Christ Church, Newgate.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty law books given to Magdalene College, Cambridge, by Barnabas Gooch, Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Lawyers]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19315Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T07:00:03Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Jessop to Jessop, Bartholomew</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset, Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at Magdalen College, Oxford, 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from Gloucester Hall, Oxford, in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an advocate of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as Chancellor of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at Christ Church, Newgate.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty law books given to Magdalene College, Cambridge, by Barnabas Gooch, Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Lawyers]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jessop&diff=19316Jessop2021-04-09T07:00:03Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Jessop to Jessop, Bartholomew</p>
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<div>#REDIRECT [[Jessop, Bartholomew]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Bartholomew_Jessop_ca.1565-1620&diff=19314Bartholomew Jessop ca.1565-16202021-04-09T06:59:35Z<p>EleanorSwire: Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===name::Bartholomew name::JESSOP or name::JESOP ca.date of birth::1565-date of death::1620=== ====Biographical Note==== The fourth son of W..."</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Bartholomew]] [[name::JESSOP]] or [[name::JESOP]] ca.[[date of birth::1565]]-[[date of death::1620]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
The fourth son of Walter of Chelcombe, Dorset, Bartholomew Jessop was a chorister at Magdalen College, Oxford, 1575-81. He obtained a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1580-1; B.C.L. from Gloucester Hall, Oxford, in 1588; and D.C.L. from Magdalen College in 1599. In 1607, he was incorporated at Cambridge. Jessop is recorded as an advocate of the Doctors' Commons in 1601 and as Chancellor of Sarum. He died in 1620 and is buried at Christ Church, Newgate.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
<br />
Approximately forty law books given to Magdalene College, Cambridge, by Barnabas Gooch, Master of Magdalene College, 1604-1626, contain the signature of Bartholomew Jessop, suggesting a possible connection between the two men.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
<br />
Jessop's name is usually inscribed on the title page or upper endpapers of books as "B Jesop" or "Bartholomew Jesopi magdalen". The inscription sometimes includes a date, the earliest of which is 1592 and the latest, 1606.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.8r-9r.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jessop, Bartholomew}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Lawyers]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19255Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T13:38:37Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Sources */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of [[family::William Gunton]] of [[location::Peterborough]], Simon Gunton was an English [[occupation::clergyman]], [[occupation::antiquary]] and [[occupation::author]] of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became [[occupation::vicar]] of [[location::Pytchley, Northamptonshire]]. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at [[location::Peterborough]], to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of [[occupation::rector]] at [[location::Fiskerton, Lincolnshire]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts and printed works to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
The upper endpaper verso of Fasciculus temporum (MS F.4.16) contains manuscript notes by Simon Gunton and at the head of leaf [a1]r, in manuscript: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/11753 “Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”], Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
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<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19254Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T13:37:22Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Sources */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of [[family::William Gunton]] of [[location::Peterborough]], Simon Gunton was an English [[occupation::clergyman]], [[occupation::antiquary]] and [[occupation::author]] of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became [[occupation::vicar]] of [[location::Pytchley, Northamptonshire]]. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at [[location::Peterborough]], to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of [[occupation::rector]] at [[location::Fiskerton, Lincolnshire]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts and printed works to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
The upper endpaper verso of Fasciculus temporum (MS F.4.16) contains manuscript notes by Simon Gunton and at the head of leaf [a1]r, in manuscript: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. [[https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/11753“Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”]], Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19253Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T13:36:54Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Sources */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of [[family::William Gunton]] of [[location::Peterborough]], Simon Gunton was an English [[occupation::clergyman]], [[occupation::antiquary]] and [[occupation::author]] of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became [[occupation::vicar]] of [[location::Pytchley, Northamptonshire]]. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at [[location::Peterborough]], to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of [[occupation::rector]] at [[location::Fiskerton, Lincolnshire]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts and printed works to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
The upper endpaper verso of Fasciculus temporum (MS F.4.16) contains manuscript notes by Simon Gunton and at the head of leaf [a1]r, in manuscript: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. [[https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/11753 “Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”]], Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19252Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T13:28:32Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Simon name::GUNTON date of birth::1609-date of death::1676 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of [[family::William Gunton]] of [[location::Peterborough]], Simon Gunton was an English [[occupation::clergyman]], [[occupation::antiquary]] and [[occupation::author]] of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became [[occupation::vicar]] of [[location::Pytchley, Northamptonshire]]. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at [[location::Peterborough]], to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of [[occupation::rector]] at [[location::Fiskerton, Lincolnshire]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts and printed works to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
The upper endpaper verso of Fasciculus temporum (MS F.4.16) contains manuscript notes by Simon Gunton and at the head of leaf [a1]r, in manuscript: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. “Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19250Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T10:15:06Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Gunton to Simon Gunton</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of William Gunton of Peterborough, Simon Gunton was an English clergyman, antiquary and author of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became vicar of Pytchley, Northamptonshire. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at Peterborough, to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of rector at Fiskerton, Lincolnshire.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts to Magdalene College, Cambridge<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
MS notes by Simon Gunton [presented by Simon Gunton in 1676]. On the same leaf, a stags head watermark (Briquet 15544). At head of leaf [a1]r, in ms: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. “Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Gunton&diff=19251Gunton2021-04-02T10:15:06Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Gunton to Simon Gunton</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Simon Gunton]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19249Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T10:14:53Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Simon name::GUNTON date of birth::1609-date of death::1676 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of William Gunton of Peterborough, Simon Gunton was an English clergyman, antiquary and author of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became vicar of Pytchley, Northamptonshire. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at Peterborough, to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of rector at Fiskerton, Lincolnshire.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts to Magdalene College, Cambridge<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
MS notes by Simon Gunton [presented by Simon Gunton in 1676]. On the same leaf, a stags head watermark (Briquet 15544). At head of leaf [a1]r, in ms: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. “Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Simon_Gunton_1609-1676&diff=19248Simon Gunton 1609-16762021-04-02T10:13:37Z<p>EleanorSwire: Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===name::Simon name::GUNTON date of birth::1609-date of death::1676=== ====Biographical Note==== The son of William Gunton of Peterborough, Simon..."</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Simon]] [[name::GUNTON]] [[date of birth::1609]]-[[date of death::1676]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
The son of William Gunton of Peterborough, Simon Gunton was an English clergyman, antiquary and author of The History of the Church of Peterburgh, published posthumously in 1686 with revisions and supplements by Simon Patrick. Educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, from which he graduated 1630–1, proceeding M.A. in 1634, Gunton became vicar of Pytchley, Northamptonshire. Following the Restoration in 1660, he took possession of his prebend at Peterborough, to which he was first collated without effect in 1646. He resigned in 1666 in order to take up the position of rector at Fiskerton, Lincolnshire.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Gunton donated a small collection of manuscripts to Magdalene College, Cambridge<br />
<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings====<br />
MS notes by Simon Gunton [presented by Simon Gunton in 1676]. On the same leaf, a stags head watermark (Briquet 15544). At head of leaf [a1]r, in ms: "Simon Gunton".<br />
<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*James, M.R. A descriptive catalogue of the manuscripts in the college library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1909.<br />
*Sheils, W.J. “Simon Gunton (bap. 1609, d. 1676), clergyman”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gunton, Simon}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jacob_Challoner_ca.1599-1627&diff=19246Jacob Challoner ca.1599-16272021-04-02T10:01:52Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Jacob Chaloner to Jacob Challoner</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Jacob]] [[name::CHALLONER]] or [[name::CHALONER]] ca.[[date of birth::1599]]-[[date of death::1627]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family:: Richard Challoner, of Sussex]]. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated in 1617 and graduated B.A. 1619/20, M.A. 1623. Challoner was subsequently ordained as a [[occupation::deacon]] and [[occupation::priest]] in [[location::London]] before his death c.1627.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Challoner donated a collection of roughly 20 books to the library at [[beneficiary:: Magdalene College, Cambridge]], the details of which are recorded in a listed entry included in a seventeenth-century register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.9v.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Challoner, Jacob}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jacob_Chaloner&diff=19247Jacob Chaloner2021-04-02T10:01:52Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Jacob Chaloner to Jacob Challoner</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Jacob Challoner]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jacob_Challoner_ca.1599-1627&diff=19244Jacob Challoner ca.1599-16272021-04-02T09:39:00Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Chaloner to Jacob Chaloner</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Jacob]] [[name::CHALLONER]] or [[name::CHALONER]] ca.[[date of birth::1599]]-[[date of death::1627]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family:: Richard Challoner, of Sussex]]. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated in 1617 and graduated B.A. 1619/20, M.A. 1623. Challoner was subsequently ordained as a [[occupation::deacon]] and [[occupation::priest]] in [[location::London]] before his death c.1627.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Challoner donated a collection of roughly 20 books to the library at [[beneficiary:: Magdalene College, Cambridge]], the details of which are recorded in a listed entry included in a seventeenth-century register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.9v.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Challoner, Jacob}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Chaloner&diff=19245Chaloner2021-04-02T09:39:00Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Chaloner to Jacob Chaloner</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Jacob Chaloner]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jacob_Challoner_ca.1599-1627&diff=19243Jacob Challoner ca.1599-16272021-04-02T09:38:40Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Jacob name::CHALLONER or name::CHALONER ca.date of birth::1599-date of death::1627 */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Jacob]] [[name::CHALLONER]] or [[name::CHALONER]] ca.[[date of birth::1599]]-[[date of death::1627]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family:: Richard Challoner, of Sussex]]. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated in 1617 and graduated B.A. 1619/20, M.A. 1623. Challoner was subsequently ordained as a [[occupation::deacon]] and [[occupation::priest]] in [[location::London]] before his death c.1627.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Challoner donated a collection of roughly 20 books to the library at [[beneficiary:: Magdalene College, Cambridge]], the details of which are recorded in a listed entry included in a seventeenth-century register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.9v.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Challoner, Jacob}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jacob_Challoner_ca.1599-1627&diff=19242Jacob Challoner ca.1599-16272021-04-02T09:38:10Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Biographical Note */</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Jacob]] [[name::CHALLONER]] or [[name::CHALONER]] ca.[[date of birth::1599]]-[[date of death::1627]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family:: Richard Challoner, of Sussex]]. Educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated in 1617 and graduated B.A. 1619/20, M.A. 1623. Challoner was subsequently ordained as a [[occupation::deacon]] and [[occupation::priest]] in [[location::London]] before his death c.1627.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Challoner donated a collection of roughly 20 books to the library at [[beneficiary:: Magdalene College, Cambridge]], the details of which are recorded in a listed entry included in a seventeenth-century register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.9v.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Challoner, Jacob}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Jacob_Challoner_ca.1599-1627&diff=19241Jacob Challoner ca.1599-16272021-04-02T09:36:58Z<p>EleanorSwire: Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===name::Jacob name::CHALLONER or name::CHALONER ca.date of birth::1599-date of death::1627=== ====Biographical Note==== Son of family:: Ri..."</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Jacob]] [[name::CHALLONER]] or [[name::CHALONER]] ca.[[date of birth::1599]]-[[date of death::1627]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family:: Richard Challoner, of Sussex]], Jacob Challoner was educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], where he matriculated in 1617 and graduated B.A. 1619/20, M.A. 1623. He was ordained as a [[occupation::deacon]] and [[occupation::priest]] in [[location::London]].<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Challoner donated a collection of roughly 20 books to the library at [[beneficiary:: Magdalene College, Cambridge]], the details of which are recorded in a listed entry included in a seventeenth-century register (MS. F.4.33).<br />
<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.9v.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
<br />
<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Challoner, Jacob}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=John_Whincop&diff=19235John Whincop2021-04-02T09:05:50Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Whincop to John Whincop</p>
<hr />
<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::John]] [[name::Whincop]] d.[[date of death::1647]]===<br />
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====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family::Thomas Whincop]] of Beverley, East Riding of Yorkshire and brother of [[family::Samuel Whincop]], vicar of Cheshunt, Hertfordshire. Whincop was educated at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge]], from whence he matriculated in 1618 and graduated in 1621-2. He is the author of several books, including Gods call to weeping and mourning (1645), and held a position at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London between 1642 and 1643. <br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Whincop donated a copy of Henry Briggs’ Arithmetica logarithmica (1624) to the library at [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]]. The manuscript inscription on title page reads: "Joh: [?] pr: 10 6..[the rest deleted]".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*Wilson, John Frederick, Pulpit in Parliament: Puritanism during the English Civil Wars, 1640-1648, Princeton University Press, 2015: p.123.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Whincop, John}}<br />
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[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Whincop&diff=19236Whincop2021-04-02T09:05:50Z<p>EleanorSwire: EleanorSwire moved page Whincop to John Whincop</p>
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<div>#REDIRECT [[John Whincop]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=John_Whincop&diff=19234John Whincop2021-04-02T09:05:21Z<p>EleanorSwire: Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===name::John name::Whincop d.date of death::1647=== ====Biographical Note==== Son of family::Thomas Whincop of Beverley, East Riding of Yorkshir..."</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::John]] [[name::Whincop]] d.[[date of death::1647]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Son of [[family::Thomas Whincop]] of Beverley, East Riding of Yorkshire and brother of [[family::Samuel Whincop]], vicar of Cheshunt, Hertfordshire. Whincop was educated at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge]], from whence he matriculated in 1618 and graduated in 1621-2. He is the author of several books, including Gods call to weeping and mourning (1645), and held a position at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London between 1642 and 1643. <br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Whincop donated a copy of Henry Briggs’ Arithmetica logarithmica (1624) to the library at [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]]. The manuscript inscription on title page reads: "Joh: [?] pr: 10 6..[the rest deleted]".<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.12v.<br />
*Wilson, John Frederick, Pulpit in Parliament: Puritanism during the English Civil Wars, 1640-1648, Princeton University Press, 2015: p.123.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Whincop, John}}<br />
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[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Thomas_Neville_ca.1548-1615&diff=19233Thomas Neville ca.1548-16152021-04-02T08:33:14Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Sources */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
===[[name::Thomas]] [[name::NEVILLE]] ca.[[date of birth::1548]]-[[date of death::1615]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Born in [[place of birth::Canterbury]], son of [[family::Richard Neville]], of [[location::South Leverton, Nottinghamshire]]. BA [[education::Pembroke College, Cambridge]] 1569, [[occupation::fellow]] 1570, MA 1572, DD 1589. [[occupation::Senior proctor]] of the [[education::University of Cambridge|University]] 1580, [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]] 1582, [[occupation::prebendary]] of [[organisations::Ely Cathedral|Ely]] 1587 and [[occupation::rector]] of [[location::Doddington-cum-March]] in the [[location::Isle of Ely]]. [[occupation::Vice-chancellor]] of [[organisations::University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]] 1588, [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] 1590, [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge]] 1593, [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]] 1597. <br />
<br />
At both [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] and [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]], Neville enhanced the musical establishment, and at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] he invested both energy and large sums of his own money in the buildings, improving the Great Court and building the quadrangle behind it known since as Neville’s Court. Theologically he was a firm Calvinist, a supporter of [[associates::John Whitgift|Whitgift]], and involved in opposing the questioning of Calvinist doctrine in Cambridge in the 1590s.<br />
<br />
====Books==== <br />
[[File:NevilleThomas1.jpg| thumb | 200px |Armorial stamp of Thomas Neville (British Armorial Bindings) ]]<br />
[[File:NevilleThomas2.jpg| thumb | 200px |Armorial stamp of Thomas Neville (British Armorial Bindings)]]<br />
Neville is remembered both as a benefactor at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] and as a pillager at [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]]. He assembled a significant collection of medieval [[format::manuscript|manuscripts]], which he [[bequest::gave]] to [[beneficiary::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] in 1611-12; of the 126 [[format::manuscript|manuscripts]], 24 had been removed by him from the Cathedral Library at [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]]. They comprised a mixture of material of [[language::English]] monastic provenance, two-thirds [[subject::theology|theological]] and the remainder including [[subject::history|chronicles]], [[subject::literature]] and [[subject::science]]. At the same time, he [[bequest::gave]] the College 94 printed books, mostly [[subject::theology|theological]]. We do not know how many books remained in his possession after these gifts; in his will, he [[bequest::bequeathed]] all the books in his study at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] to his relative [[beneficiary::Edward Neville]], [[occupation::fellow]] of [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] (d.[[date of death::1616]]). He also [[bequest::gave]] [at least one] [[format::manuscript]] to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]], in addition to a collection of more than 50 printed volumes. Examples: Trinity, Cambridge mss B.4.6, B.4.7, B.5.1 and many others; Cambridge UL E.14.47-48; Magdalene, Cambridge MS 3.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings==== <br />
Neville used a series of armorial stamps.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id="sourcelist"><br />
*[https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D907286 Will of Thomas Neville, The National Archives PROB 11/126/276].<br />
*[https://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/stamp-owners/NEV002 British Armorial Bindings]. <br />
*Collinson, P. et al (eds), ''History of Canterbury Cathedral'', 1995.<br />
*Gaskell, R. ''Trinity College Library: the first 150 years'', 1980.<br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS. F.4.33, F.6v.<br />
*Mullinger, J. B., and Stanford Lehmberg. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/19965 "Neville <nowiki>[Nevile]</nowiki>, Thomas (c. 1548–1615), college head and dean of Canterbury."] ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''. <br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Neville, Thomas}}<br />
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[[Category:Armorial Stamps]]<br />
[[Category:Canons]]<br />
[[Category:Deans]]<br />
[[Category:Vice-Chancellors]]<br />
[[Category:Libraries Bequeathed to Institutions]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Thomas_Neville_ca.1548-1615&diff=19232Thomas Neville ca.1548-16152021-04-02T08:32:06Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Thomas name::NEVILLE ca.date of birth::1548-date of death::1615 */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
===[[name::Thomas]] [[name::NEVILLE]] ca.[[date of birth::1548]]-[[date of death::1615]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
Born in [[place of birth::Canterbury]], son of [[family::Richard Neville]], of [[location::South Leverton, Nottinghamshire]]. BA [[education::Pembroke College, Cambridge]] 1569, [[occupation::fellow]] 1570, MA 1572, DD 1589. [[occupation::Senior proctor]] of the [[education::University of Cambridge|University]] 1580, [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]] 1582, [[occupation::prebendary]] of [[organisations::Ely Cathedral|Ely]] 1587 and [[occupation::rector]] of [[location::Doddington-cum-March]] in the [[location::Isle of Ely]]. [[occupation::Vice-chancellor]] of [[organisations::University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]] 1588, [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Peterborough Cathedral|Peterborough]] 1590, [[occupation::Master]] of [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge]] 1593, [[occupation::dean|Dean]] of [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]] 1597. <br />
<br />
At both [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] and [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]], Neville enhanced the musical establishment, and at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] he invested both energy and large sums of his own money in the buildings, improving the Great Court and building the quadrangle behind it known since as Neville’s Court. Theologically he was a firm Calvinist, a supporter of [[associates::John Whitgift|Whitgift]], and involved in opposing the questioning of Calvinist doctrine in Cambridge in the 1590s.<br />
<br />
====Books==== <br />
[[File:NevilleThomas1.jpg| thumb | 200px |Armorial stamp of Thomas Neville (British Armorial Bindings) ]]<br />
[[File:NevilleThomas2.jpg| thumb | 200px |Armorial stamp of Thomas Neville (British Armorial Bindings)]]<br />
Neville is remembered both as a benefactor at [[organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] and as a pillager at [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]]. He assembled a significant collection of medieval [[format::manuscript|manuscripts]], which he [[bequest::gave]] to [[beneficiary::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] in 1611-12; of the 126 [[format::manuscript|manuscripts]], 24 had been removed by him from the Cathedral Library at [[organisations::Canterbury Cathedral|Canterbury]]. They comprised a mixture of material of [[language::English]] monastic provenance, two-thirds [[subject::theology|theological]] and the remainder including [[subject::history|chronicles]], [[subject::literature]] and [[subject::science]]. At the same time, he [[bequest::gave]] the College 94 printed books, mostly [[subject::theology|theological]]. We do not know how many books remained in his possession after these gifts; in his will, he [[bequest::bequeathed]] all the books in his study at [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] to his relative [[beneficiary::Edward Neville]], [[occupation::fellow]] of [[education::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] (d.[[date of death::1616]]). He also [[bequest::gave]] [at least one] [[format::manuscript]] to [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene College]], in addition to a collection of more than 50 printed volumes. Examples: Trinity, Cambridge mss B.4.6, B.4.7, B.5.1 and many others; Cambridge UL E.14.47-48; Magdalene, Cambridge MS 3.<br />
<br />
====Characteristic Markings==== <br />
Neville used a series of armorial stamps.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id="sourcelist"><br />
*[https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D907286 Will of Thomas Neville, The National Archives PROB 11/126/276].<br />
*[https://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/stamp-owners/NEV002 British Armorial Bindings]. <br />
*Collinson, P. et al (eds), ''History of Canterbury Cathedral'', 1995.<br />
*Gaskell, R. ''Trinity College Library: the first 150 years'', 1980.<br />
*Mullinger, J. B., and Stanford Lehmberg. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/19965 "Neville <nowiki>[Nevile]</nowiki>, Thomas (c. 1548–1615), college head and dean of Canterbury."] ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''. <br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Neville, Thomas}}<br />
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[[Category:Armorial Stamps]]<br />
[[Category:Canons]]<br />
[[Category:Deans]]<br />
[[Category:Vice-Chancellors]]<br />
[[Category:Libraries Bequeathed to Institutions]]<br />
[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Thomas_Travers_ca.1619-1717&diff=19231Thomas Travers ca.1619-17172021-04-02T08:25:24Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Books */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
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===[[name::Thomas]] [[name::TRAVERS]] ca.[[date of birth::1619]]-[[date of death::1717]]===<br />
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====Biographical Note====<br />
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[[occupation::Rector]] of St. Columb Major, Cornwall (1652-1662) and sometime [[occupation::lecturer]] at St. Andrew, Plymouth. Travers was educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he matriculated in 1637 and subsequently graduated B.A. 1640/1, M.A. 1644, then appointed Fellow. He was ejected from his position at St. Columb after its previous occupant, John Beauford, was restored to the role from which he had himself been ejected ten years prior. Travers is thought to have married the niece of [[crossreference::John Robartes]], 2nd Baron Robartes (later 1st Earl of Radnor) , with whom Travers was closely associated.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Travers donated a copy of Samuel Bochart’s Geographiæ sacræ pars prior Phaleg (1646) to the library at [[beneficiary::Magdalene College, Cambridge]].<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.11r.<br />
*Travers, S. Smith, [[https://archive.org/details/pedigreewithbiog00trav/page/89/mode/2up?q=Columb Pedigree, with biographical sketches, of the Devonshire family of Travers: descended from Walter Travers of Nottingham, Goldsmith / now reprinted by Richard J. Hone, with a supplement from materials collected by him and arranged by Frederick B. Falkiner]], 1898.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
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[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Thomas_Travers_ca.1619-1717&diff=19230Thomas Travers ca.1619-17172021-04-02T08:23:44Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* Sources */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Thomas]] [[name::TRAVERS]] ca.[[date of birth::1619]]-[[date of death::1717]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
[[occupation::Rector]] of St. Columb Major, Cornwall (1652-1662) and sometime [[occupation::lecturer]] at St. Andrew, Plymouth. Travers was educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he matriculated in 1637 and subsequently graduated B.A. 1640/1, M.A. 1644, then appointed Fellow. He was ejected from his position at St. Columb after its previous occupant, John Beauford, was restored to the role from which he had himself been ejected ten years prior. Travers is thought to have married the niece of [[crossreference::John Robartes]], 2nd Baron Robartes (later 1st Earl of Radnor) , with whom Travers was closely associated.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Travers donated a copy of Samuel Bochart’s Geographiæ sacræ pars prior Phaleg (1646) to the library at Magdalene College, Cambridge.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.11r.<br />
*Travers, S. Smith, [[https://archive.org/details/pedigreewithbiog00trav/page/89/mode/2up?q=Columb Pedigree, with biographical sketches, of the Devonshire family of Travers: descended from Walter Travers of Nottingham, Goldsmith / now reprinted by Richard J. Hone, with a supplement from materials collected by him and arranged by Frederick B. Falkiner]], 1898.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Travers, Thomas}}<br />
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[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwirehttps://www.bookowners.online/index.php?title=Thomas_Travers_ca.1619-1717&diff=19229Thomas Travers ca.1619-17172021-04-02T08:21:23Z<p>EleanorSwire: /* name::Thomas name::TRAVERS ca.date of birth::1619-date of death::1717 */</p>
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<div>__NOTITLE__<br />
<br />
===[[name::Thomas]] [[name::TRAVERS]] ca.[[date of birth::1619]]-[[date of death::1717]]===<br />
<br />
====Biographical Note====<br />
<br />
[[occupation::Rector]] of St. Columb Major, Cornwall (1652-1662) and sometime [[occupation::lecturer]] at St. Andrew, Plymouth. Travers was educated at [[education::Magdalene College, Cambridge]], from which he matriculated in 1637 and subsequently graduated B.A. 1640/1, M.A. 1644, then appointed Fellow. He was ejected from his position at St. Columb after its previous occupant, John Beauford, was restored to the role from which he had himself been ejected ten years prior. Travers is thought to have married the niece of [[crossreference::John Robartes]], 2nd Baron Robartes (later 1st Earl of Radnor) , with whom Travers was closely associated.<br />
<br />
====Books====<br />
Travers donated a copy of Samuel Bochart’s Geographiæ sacræ pars prior Phaleg (1646) to the library at Magdalene College, Cambridge.<br />
<br />
====Sources====<br />
<div id=”sourcelist”><br />
*Magdalene College, Cambridge, MS F.4.33, F.11r.<br />
*Travers, S. Smith, Pedigree, with biographical sketches, of the Devonshire family of Travers: descended from Walter Travers of Nottingham, Goldsmith / now reprinted by Richard J. Hone, with a supplement from materials collected by him and arranged by Frederick B. Falkiner, 1898.<br />
*Venn, J. & J. A. Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge, 1922.<br />
</div><br />
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Travers, Thomas}}<br />
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[[Category:Clergy]]<br />
[[Category:All Owners]]</div>EleanorSwire