Difference between revisions of "John Spelman 1594-1643"

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(Created page with "===personal Title::Sir name::John name::SPELMAN date of Birth::1594-date of Death::1643=== ====Biographical Note==== Son of family::Sir Henry Spelman....")
 
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====Biographical Note====
 
====Biographical Note====
Son of [[family::Sir Henry Spelman]].  
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Born in Hunstanton, Norfolk, and son of [[family::Sir Henry Spelman]].  
  
====Books==== 
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admitted at Gray's Inn on 16 February 1608 and entered Trinity College, Cambridge, the following year.
Various ms lists of Henry’s books and mss survive, made at various points in the 17th century. Many of his books, together with those of later members of the family, went to Swaffham parish library via the bequest of his son Clement (judge, baron of the exchequer); others were auctioned in London, 28.11.1709, 23.1.1710 (joint sale, with one other).
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ODNB.  Sears Jayne, 156, 171-2. Perkin, 364-6.  W. Rix, The pride of Swaffham (1950).  H. Cronne, The study and use of charters in the seventeenth century: Sir Henry Spelman and Sir William Dugdale, in L. Fox (ed), English historical scholarship, 1956, 73-91.  A. J. Collins, The Blackborough chartulary and the library of Sir Henry Spelman, Brit Mus Q 11 (1937), 63-5. M. C. Lyons, A catalogue, history and analysis of Swaffham Parish Library, Loughborough MA thesis, 1986. Alston, Inventory.
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MP for the City of Worcester
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He also published, from manuscripts in his father's library, Psalterium Davidis Latino-Saxonicum vetus (1640).
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he published four tracts which eloquently express moderate royalist political and religious attitudes, and which constitute his principal claim to fame.
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====Books====

Revision as of 03:48, 16 December 2019

Sir John SPELMAN 1594-1643

Biographical Note

Born in Hunstanton, Norfolk, and son of Sir Henry Spelman.

admitted at Gray's Inn on 16 February 1608 and entered Trinity College, Cambridge, the following year.

MP for the City of Worcester

He also published, from manuscripts in his father's library, Psalterium Davidis Latino-Saxonicum vetus (1640).

he published four tracts which eloquently express moderate royalist political and religious attitudes, and which constitute his principal claim to fame.

Books