Difference between revisions of "John Sinclair ca.1510-1566"
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===[[name::John]] [[name::SINCLAIR]], [[personal title::Bishop of Brechin]] ca.[[date of birth::1510]]-[[date of death::1566]]=== | ===[[name::John]] [[name::SINCLAIR]], [[personal title::Bishop of Brechin]] ca.[[date of birth::1510]]-[[date of death::1566]]=== | ||
====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== | ||
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Over thirty volumes of Sinclair’s library survive, many of which demonstrate his interest in [[subject::Catholic reformers]] and [[subject::theology]], as well as Canon and Civil [[subject::Law]]. | Over thirty volumes of Sinclair’s library survive, many of which demonstrate his interest in [[subject::Catholic reformers]] and [[subject::theology]], as well as Canon and Civil [[subject::Law]]. | ||
− | Sinclair owned a copy of the [https://discovered.ed.ac.uk/permalink/44UOE_INST/7g3mt6/alma9923931021002466 Articles of Faith] of Leuven University (Antwerp, 1555) drawn up by the Dutch theologian and Catholic Reformer Ruard Tapper (1487-1559), as well as the dogmatic work [https://encore.st-andrews.ac.uk/iii/encore/record/C__Rb1325377 ''Demonstrationum | + | Sinclair owned a copy of the [https://discovered.ed.ac.uk/permalink/44UOE_INST/7g3mt6/alma9923931021002466 Articles of Faith] of Leuven University (Antwerp, 1555) drawn up by the Dutch theologian and Catholic Reformer Ruard Tapper (1487-1559), as well as the dogmatic work [https://encore.st-andrews.ac.uk/iii/encore/record/C__Rb1325377 ''Demonstrationum Religionis Christianae''] (Antwerp, 1557) by Bishop of Antwerp, Franciscus Sonnius (1506-1576). Works by the Catholic theologians Denis the Carthusian (1402–1471) and Antoninus of Florence (1389-1459) are also present. Legal texts acquired by Sinclair include [https://abdn.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/44ABE_INST/1jd70l9/alma990008557690205941 ''Consiliorum''] (Lyon, 1544) by Pier Filippo Corneo (1419/20-1492), an Italian jurist and scholar of both civil and canon law; and works by Nicolas Bohier (1469–1539), the French lawyer, and president of the Bordeaux Parliament. It is not clear when his library was dispersed, and surviving volumes are distributed across many Scottish Universities. |
====Characteristic Markings==== | ====Characteristic Markings==== |
Latest revision as of 06:38, 24 August 2022
John SINCLAIR, Bishop of Brechin ca.1510-1566
Biographical Note
The fourth son of Sir Oliver Sinclair of Roslin, Edinburghshire (d. 1513), and his second wife Isabella Livingstone, and younger brother to Henry Sinclair 1507/8-1565. He graduated from St Andrews in 1527, and received an Arts degree from the University of Paris in 1531. On his return to Scotland in 1537, he was incorporated at St Andrews as licentiate in civil law, before lecturing in canon law at King’s College, Aberdeen, while also holding various roles within the Church. He was admitted as a senator of the College of Justice and as an ordinary Lord of Session in 1540. In 1548, he was appointed Dean of Restalrig. Sinclair fled to France when Restalrig was condemned as a monument of idolatry in 1560. While there he acquired a doctorate in civil and canon law from the University of Paris. Following the death of his brother Henry, he returned to Scotland, where he succeeded Henry as President of the College of Justice. He officiated the marriage of Mary Queen of Scots and Lord Darnley, and was subsequently nominated by the monarch to the Bishopric of Brechin. While he received papal provision in September 1565, it is doubtful Sinclair was ever consecrated. He died in Edinburgh.
Books
Over thirty volumes of Sinclair’s library survive, many of which demonstrate his interest in Catholic reformers and theology, as well as Canon and Civil Law. Sinclair owned a copy of the Articles of Faith of Leuven University (Antwerp, 1555) drawn up by the Dutch theologian and Catholic Reformer Ruard Tapper (1487-1559), as well as the dogmatic work Demonstrationum Religionis Christianae (Antwerp, 1557) by Bishop of Antwerp, Franciscus Sonnius (1506-1576). Works by the Catholic theologians Denis the Carthusian (1402–1471) and Antoninus of Florence (1389-1459) are also present. Legal texts acquired by Sinclair include Consiliorum (Lyon, 1544) by Pier Filippo Corneo (1419/20-1492), an Italian jurist and scholar of both civil and canon law; and works by Nicolas Bohier (1469–1539), the French lawyer, and president of the Bordeaux Parliament. It is not clear when his library was dispersed, and surviving volumes are distributed across many Scottish Universities.
Characteristic Markings
Sinclair commonly inscribed his books with his name and his title as Dean of Restalrig, examples of which are “J. Syncler decanus a restalrig” and “liber magistri joannis sinclerii decani de restalrig”
Sources
- Aberdeen University Library Provenance Database.
- Durkan, J. & Ross, A. Early Scottish Libraries (Glasgow: John S. Burns, 1961)
- Murray, Athol. "Sinclair, John (c. 1510–1566), lawyer and jurist." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography