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Jean du Tillet (bishop)

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Jean du Tillet
ChurchRoman Catholic
Diocese
Personal details
Died1570
NationalityFrench

Jean du Tillet (Angoulême c.1500/9? – 18 December 1570) was a French Catholic bishop.

Life

The son of a mayor and captain of Angoulême under Francis I, he was appointed bishop of Saint-Brieuc in 1553. Although a Gallican,[1] he took part in the Council of Trent, where he encouraged Gentian Hervet to undertake a Latin translation of Photius' Syntagma together with Balsamon's interpretation from a manuscript which had recently come into his possession. Tillet also in 1553 obtained in Rome a Hebrew version of St. Matthew's Gospel.[2][3]

In 1564 he became bishop of Meaux, the fifteenth known Jean to hold that see. In 1568 he published an edition of works of Lucifer of Caralis against emperor Constantius II.

He had a brother also named Jean du Tillet, with whom he collaborated in scholarship. Another brother, Louis, curé of Claix and archdeacon of Angoulême, gave shelter to Jean Calvin, then followed him to Germany; he was very disappointed by what he saw and Jean brought him back to France.[4][5]

He owned the only known manuscript of the Annales Tiliani, which bear his name. It is now lost. He also owned a manuscript of the Libri Carolini, which he was the first to publish in 1549.[6]

Works

  • Du symbole des Apostres et des douze articles de la foy (1566)[7]
  • Réponse d'un évêque aux ministres des églises nouvelles (Paris, 1566);
  • Traité de l'antiquité et solennité de la messe (Paris, 1567);
  • Avis à Messieurs les gentilhommes séduits par les piperies des églises nouvelles (Advice to the gentlemen seduced by the fallacies of the new churches) (Paris, 1567);
  • Parallelae de vitis ac moribus paparum cum proecipuis ethnicis (1610) (in Latin).[4]

Misattributed works

References

  1. ^ Donald R. Kelley (1966), "Jean Du Tillet, Archivist and Antiquary", The Journal of Modern History 38(4): 337–354. JSTOR 1876679
  2. ^ Hegg, T., A brief history of the Du Tillet Matthew Archived 2013-05-13 at the Wayback Machine, 2004
  3. ^ Howard, G. (1986). "The Textual Nature of an Old Hebrew Version of Matthew". Journal of Biblical Literature. 105 (1): 49–63. doi:10.2307/3261110. JSTOR 3261110.
  4. ^ a b c Pierre Larousse (Gallica digitization)
  5. ^ On the relationships between (Bishop) Jean, his brother Louis and Jean Calvin, see Alexandre César Crottet's Preface (especially p. 9 ff.) to his Correspondance française de Calvin avec Louis du Tillet, chanoine d'Angoulême et curé de Claix at Google Books, 1850
  6. ^ C. H. Turner, Jean du Tillet: A Neglected Scholar of the Sixteenth Century (Clarendon Press, 1905), p. 54.
  7. ^ "Sudoc|028080327".

Further reading