- John Taylor (1480–1534)
John Taylor (c. 1480 – 1534) was
Master of the Rolls of theCourt of Chancery from 1527 to 1534, following a successful career as a priest and civil servant. Taylor would have been notable just for the circumstances of his birth; he was the firstborn of healthy triplets who all survived to adulthood, which was virtually unheard of in the 1400s.King Henry VII met John and his brothers Rowland and Nathaniel in their childhood, and undertook to educate the three boys if they came to manhood; this informal act, and others like it, later inspired Queen Victoria's Royal Bounty for Triplets which continued until the reign of Elizabeth II. There is note in the Royal
Privy Purse expenses of 1498 "for the wages of the King’s Scoler John Taillor at Oxenford." [ [http://www.barton-under-needwood.org.uk/jtaylor.html Notable Bartonians: John Taylor (circa 1480 to 1534)] ]John and Susan Rowland were the parents of
Rowland Taylor , a prominent Protestant martyr. John Taylor died in 1534, the year Rowland received hisDoctor of Laws degree fromCambridge .During his lifetime, Taylor donated money towards the building of St. James Church in
Barton-under-Needwood ,Staffordshire , the village where he grew up. Construction began in 1517 and was completed in 1533. TheJohn Taylor High School , a specialty science school founded in Barton-under-Needwood in 1957, was named in his honor. [ [http://www.johntaylor.staffs.sch.uk/school_pages/50th_anniversary/50th_home.htm John Taylor High School] ]Career highlights
In 1503, Taylor was ordained Rector at Bishop's Hatfield, and then became Rector of
Sutton Coldfield in 1504. He served as one of the Royal Chaplains at Henry VII’s funeral,April 21 ,1509 , and was afterwards appointed by King Henry VIII as the King’s Clerk and Chaplain -- he was later one of the commissioners to decide if Henry VIII's marriage toCatherine of Aragon was valid. In 1511, he was made Clerk to the Parliament.Taylor was appointed as Archdeacon of
Derby in 1515, then as Royal Ambassador to Burgundy and France and Prolocutor of Convocation. In 1516, he was appointed Archdeacon ofBuckingham , and was conferred the degrees of Doctor of Civil Law and Doctor of Canon Law at Cambridge in 1520. He was one of ten chaplains present at theField of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. In 1528 he became Archdeacon of Halifax.From 1527 to 1534 he was
Master of the Rolls of theCourt of Chancery -- the presiding officer of the Civil Division of theCourt of Appeal . This position was the third most senior judicial position in England (afterLord Chancellor andLord Chief Justice ).References
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