John Taylor (1480-1534)
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For other persons named John Taylor, see John Taylor (disambiguation).
John Taylor (c. 1480 – 1534) was Master of the Rolls from 1527 to 1534. 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. He went on to a successful career as a priest and civil servant, culminating in a post as Master of the Rolls from 1527 to 1534. John Taylor and Susan Rowland were the parents of Rowland Taylor, prominent Protestant martyr (d. 1555).
[edit] Career highlights
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- In 1503 he was ordained Rector at Bishop's Hatfield.
- In 1504 he became Rector of Sutton Coldfield.
- One of the Royal Chaplains at Henry VII’s funeral, April 21, 1509.
- Appointed by King Henry VIII as the King’s Clerk and Chaplain in 1509.
- In 1511 was made Clerk to the Parliament.
- Appointed Archdeacon of Derby in 1515.
- Appointed Royal Ambassador to Burgundy and France and Prolocutor of Convocation.
- In 1516 was appointed Archdeacon of Buckingham.
- Conferred the degrees of Doctor of Civil Law and Doctor of Canon Law at Cambridge in 1520.
- From 1527 - 1534 he was Master of the Rolls of the Court of Chancery. This position was the third most senior judicial position in England; Lord Chancellor being first and Lord Chief Justice being second.
- The Master of the Rolls is the presiding officer of the Civil Division of the Court of Appeal.
- Was appointed as one of the commissioners to decide if King Henry VIII's marriage to Catherine of Aragon was valid.
- In 1528 appointed Archdeacon of Halifax.
- John Taylor died in 1534, when his son Rowland was 24 years old, the year his son Rowland received the L.L.D. from Cambridge.