- John Lesley
infobox bishopbiog
name = John Lesley
religion=Roman Catholic Church
See =Diocese of Ross
Title =Bishop of Ross
Period = 1567–1592
consecration = 1567
Predecessor = Henry Sinclair
Successor =David Lindsay
post =Archdeacon of Moray (1565–7);Commendator of Lindores (1566–8)| ordination =
bishops = None
date of birth = birth date|1527|9|29|mf=y
place of birth =Kingussie
date of death =
place of death =Guirtenburg (Belgium ),May 31 ,1596 John Lesley, or Leslie, (
September 29 ,1527 –May 31 ,1596 ), ScottishRoman Catholic bishop and historian, was born in 1527. His father was Gavin Lesley, rector ofKingussie ,Badenoch .He was educated at the
University of Aberdeen , where he took the degree of M.A. In 1538 he obtained a dispensation permitting him to hold abenefice , notwithstanding his being a natural son, and in June 1546 he was made anacolyte in the cathedral church ofAberdeen , of which he was afterwards appointed a canon andprebendary .He also studied at
Poitiers , atToulouse and atParis , where he was made doctor of laws in 1553. In 1558 he took orders and was appointed Official of Aberdeen, and inducted into the parsonage and prebend ofOyne . At theReformation Lesley became a champion of Catholicism. He was present at the disputation held inEdinburgh in 1561, when Knox andWillox were his antagonists. He was one of the commissioners sent the same year to bring over the young Queen Mary to take the government of Scotland. He returned in her train, and was appointed a privy councillor and professor of canon law in King's College, Aberdeen, and in 1565 one of the senators of the college of justice. Shortly afterwards he was made abbot of Lindores, and in 1565 bishop ofRoss , the election to the see being confirmed in the following year. He was one of the sixteen commissioners appointed to revise the laws of Scotland, and the volume of the "Actis and Constitutiounis of the Realme of Scotland from the Reigne of James I" known as theBlack Acts was, chiefly owing to his care, printed in 1566.Fact|date=February 2008The bishop was one of the most steadfast friends of Queen Mary. After the failure of the royal cause, and while Mary was a captive in
England , Lesley (who had gone to her atBolton ) continued to exert himself on her behalf. He was one of the commissioners at the conference atYork in 1568. He appeared as her ambassador at the court of Elizabeth to complain of the injustice done to her, and when he found he was not listened to he laid plans for her escape. He also projected a marriage for her with theDuke of Norfolk , which ended in the execution of that nobleman. For this he was put under the charge of the bishop ofLondon , and then of the bishop ofEly (inHolborn ), and afterwards imprisoned in theTower of London . During his confinement he collected materials for his history of Scotland, by which his name is now chiefly known. In 1571 he presented the latter portion of this work, written in Scots, to Queen Mary to amuse her in her captivity. He also wrote for her use his "Piae Consolahones", and the queen devoted some of the hours of her captivity to translating a portion of it into French verse.In 1573 he was liberated from prison, but was banished from England. For two years he attempted unsuccessfully to obtain the assistance of Continental princes in favor of Queen Mary. While at
Rome in 1578 he published hisLatin history "De Origine, Moribus, et Rebus Gestis Scotorum".In 1579 he went to
France and was made suifragan and vicar-general of thearchbishopric of Rouen . While visiting hisdiocese , however, he was thrown into prison, and had to pay 3000pistole s to prevent his being given up to Elizabeth. During the remainder of the reign of Henry III he lived unmolested, but on the accession of the Protestant Henry IV he again fell into trouble. In 1590 he was thrown into prison, and had to purchase his freedom at the same expense as before. In 1593 he was madebishop of Coutances ,Normandy , and had licence to hold thebishopric of Ross until he should obtain peaceable possession of the former see. He retired to anAugustinian monastery nearBrussels , where he died on31 May 1596 .The chief works of Lesley are as follows: "A Defence of the Honor of Marie, Queene of Scotland, by Eusebius Dicaeophile" (London, 1569), reprinted, with alterations, at Liege in 1571, under the title, "A Treatise concerning the Defence of the Ilonoztr of Marie, Queene of Scotland, made by Morgan Philip pes, Bachelar of Divinitie, Piae afflicts animi consoleiones, ad Mariam Scot. Reg." (Paris, 1574); "De origine, moribus, ac rebus gestis Scotiae libri decem" (Rome, 1578; sucd 1675); "De illustriun feminarum in repubtica administranda authoritate libellus" (
Reims , 1580; a Latin version of a tract on "The Lawfulness of the Regiment of Women" (cf. Knox's pamphlet); "De titulo et jure Mariae Scot. Reg., quo regni Angliae successioneoi sibi juste vindicat" (Reims, 1580; translated in 1584).The
history of Scotland from 1436 to 1561 owes much, in its earlier chapters, to the accounts ofHector Boece (q.v.) andJohn Mair (q.v.), though no small portion of the topographical matter is first-hand. In the later sections he gives an independent account (from the Catholic point of view) which is a valuable supplement and a corrective in many details, to the works of Buchanan andKnox . A Scots version of the history was written in 1596 byJames Dairymple of theScottish Cloister at Regensburg . It has been printed for theScottish Text Society (2 vols., 1888-1895) under the editorship of the Rev. E. G. Cody, O.S.B. A slight sketch by Lesley of Scottish history from 1562 to 1571 has been translated byForbes-Leith in his "Narrative of Scottish Catholics" (1885), from the original manuscript now in the Vatican.References
*1911|article=John Lesley|url=http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/John_Lesley
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