John Lesley (or Leslie) (29 September 1527This birth date is quoted by A. Laing's book (p. 125). It would only make John Lesley 68 at the time of his death though, whereas his epitaph states that he was 70. C. Leslie of Balquhain's annals (p. 402) place his birth in 1526 without any further precision. – 31 May 1596) was a Scottish Catholic bishop and historian. His father was Gavin Lesley, rector of Kingussie, Badenoch.
He also studied at Poitiers, at Toulouse and at Paris, 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 of Oyne. At the Reformation Lesley became a champion of Catholicism. He was present at the disputation held in Edinburgh in 1561, when John Knox and John Willock were his antagonists. He was one of the commissioners sent the same year to bring over the young Mary, Queen of Scots, 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 Abbey, and in 1565 bishop of Ross, the election to the Holy See being confirmed in the following year. He was present at Holyrood Palace during the murder of David Rizzio.Henry Ellis, Original Letters, series 1 vol. 2 (London, 1824), p. 212.
Lesley 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 known as the Black Acts was, chiefly owing to his care, printed in 1566.
Elizabeth I had Lesley arrested in the autumn of 1569, partly to satisfy Regent Moray. He was put under the charge of Edwin Sandys, bishop of London.James Anderson, Collections Relating to the History Of Mary Queen of Scotland, vol. 3, p. 84. Lesley was questioned at Hampton Court and then sent to visit Mary, Queen of Scots, at Chatsworth House and Sheffield Castle.James Anderson, Collections Relating to the History Of Mary Queen of Scotland, vol. 3, pp. 95, 111. Lesley was again arrested at the discovery of the Ridolfi plot in May 1571 and sent to house arrest with Richard Cox, bishop of Ely.James Anderson, Collections Relating to the History Of Mary Queen of Scotland, vol. 3, p. 167. Lesley was held at Ely Place in Holborn, and then visited the bishop's houses at Fenstanton, and Somersham.Charles E. Dawes, "Somersham notes", Fenland Notes and Queries, 2 (Peterborough, 1894), pp. 84–85.Margaret J. Beckett, "Counsellor, Conspirator, Polemicist, Historian: John Lesley, Bishop of Ross", Scottish Church History, 39:1 (June 2009), p. 7. Lesley was allowed five servants in Huntingdonshire and accompanied by Ninian Winzet. He was able ride and practice archery. As investigations into the activities of the Duke of Norfolk continued, Richard Cox sent Lesley's papers to London on 22 September. Lesley was brought back to London on 29 October 1571 to the house of the mayor Sir William Allen, and then imprisoned in the Tower of London."Diary of John Lesley", Bannatyne Miscellany, 3 (Edinburgh, 1855), pp. 121–156: James Anderson, Collections Relating to the History Of Mary Queen of Scotland, vol. 3, pp. 167–168, 188–189, 196: William K. Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland, 3 (Edinburgh, 1903), pp. 690–691, 706 nos. 929, 954, 955.
During his confinement, Lesley 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 language, to Queen Mary to amuse her in her captivity. He also wrote for her use his Piae Consolationes, and the queen devoted some of the hours of her captivity to translating a portion of it into French language 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 his Latin history De Origine, Moribus, et Rebus Gestis Scotorum. In October 1578 he had an audience with Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor, and their discussions included making a double portrait of Mary and James VI. Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 5 (1907), 324.
In 1579 he went to France and was made suffragan and vicar-general of the archbishopric of Rouen. While visiting his diocese, however, he was thrown into prison, and had to pay 3000 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 made bishop of Coutances, Normandy, and had licence to hold the bishopric of Ross until he should obtain peaceable possession of the former see. He retired to the Augustinians Grimbergen Abbey near Brussels, where he died on 31 May 1596.
The following year, his nephew and heir, also called John Lesley, dedicated an epitaph to commemorate the first anniversary of his death. The stone is still visible today, set in the north wall of the choir in the St Servatius basilica. Here is the text of the inscription and its translation:
" To God, the best, the greatest. John Lesley, bishop of Ross, Scot, of the renowned Lesley family, well versed in all sorts of science, speaker for the king of France François II, counsellor to Mary ... queen of Scots, defender most constant of the catholic faith, after huge toils for the ancestral faith, in particular after having been brought back in the kingdom of Scotland after the defence in England of Mary, queen of Scots, after having accomplished many things worthy of the highest praise, died quietly in Brussels on the eve of the calends of June (= May 31) in the year 1596, aged 70.
Not to remain ungrateful to his dear uncle, John Lesley his nephew, his sad heir, had (this stone) installed and for the anniversary itself established ... in this monastery of Grenbergen on the eve of the calends of June for it to be celebrated.
We know the place and the day of our birth, but we ignore those of our grave.
1597"
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