Page:English Law and the Renaissance.djvu/75

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
Note 33
63

Thomas Thirlby (afterwards bishop of Ely) of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, 'graduated bachelor of the civil law in 1521 … and proceeded doctor of the civil law in 1528 and doctor of the canon law in 1530.' Richard Sampson (afterwards bishop of Lichfield) of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, 'proceeded B.C.L. in 1505. Then he went for six years to Paris and Sens and returning proceeded D.C.L. in 1513.' John Clerk (afterwards bishop of Bath and Wells, Master of the Rolls), 'B.A. of Cambridge 1499 and M.A. 1502, studied law and received the doctor's degree at Bologna.' Richard Layton (afterwards dean of York) 'was educated at Cambridge, where he proceeded B.C.L. in 1522 and afterwards LL.D.' Thomas Legh of King's College(?), Cambridge, 'proceeded B.C.L. in 1527 and D.C.L. in 1531.' Instances of legal degrees obtained in foreign universities are not very uncommon. John Taylor, Master of the Rolls in 1527, 'graduated doctor of law at some foreign university, being incorporated at Cambridge in 1520 and at Oxford in 1522.' James Denton, dean of Lichfield, proceeded B.A. in 1489 and M.A. in 1492 at Cambridge. 'He subsequently studied canon law at Valencia in which faculty he became a doctor of the university there.' (For an earlier instance, that of Thomas Alcock of Bologna, see Grace Book A, Luard Memorial, p. 209. There are other instances in Boase, Register of the University of Oxford; consult index under Padua, Bologna, Paris, Orleans, Bourges, Louvain.)