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Sir Daniel Dun (c 1545–1617)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2014
Abstract
- Type
- Notable Ecclesiastical Lawyers: V
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- Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2014
References
1 Thieme, H, ‘Le rôle des Doctores legum dans la Société allemande du XVIe siècle’, in Individu et sociétè à la Renaissance (Brussels, 1967), pp 159–169Google Scholar. The same point is made in an only slightly different context by Franklin, R, ‘Sir Richard Steward and the crisis of the Caroline regime’, in Green, S and Horden, P (eds), All Souls under the Ancien Régime (Oxford, 2007), p 39Google Scholar.
2 R Houlbrooke, ‘Dun [Donne], Sir Daniel (1544/5–1617)’, in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, available at <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1817>, accessed 20 December 2013. See also Levack, B, The civil lawyers in England 1603–1641: a political study (Oxford, 1973), pp 226–227Google Scholar.
3 Calendar of Patent Rolls, Elizabeth I, vol 8, nos 705–706; see MacCulloch, D, ‘Bondmen under the Tudors’, in Cross, C, Loades, D and Scarisbrick, J (eds), Law and Government under the Tudors (Cambridge, 1988), p 92Google Scholar.
4 See All Souls College, Oxford, MS Statuta collegii Omnium Animarum, folio 178, where he was listed as a jurist of London.
5 Wood, A, History and Antiquities of the Colleges and Halls in the University of Oxford, ed Gutch, J (Oxford, 1786), vol 4, p 284Google Scholar.
6 Its most recent edition is Bray, G (ed), Tudor Church Reform: the Henrician Canons of 1535 and the Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum, Church of England Record Society 8 (Woodbridge, 2004), pp 166–743Google Scholar.
7 Taken from Helmholz, R (ed), Three Civilian Notebooks 1580–1640, Selden Society 127 (London, 2010)Google Scholar, no 8, at p 15.
8 Probably Repetitiones in iure civili variae (Lyon, 1553); see Lipenus, M, Bibliotheca realis iuridica (Leipzig, 1757), vol 2, pp 264–265Google Scholar, where these authors are listed under this title.
9 For examples of these alleged failings, see ‘Statuta omnia et singula’, Lambeth Palace Library (LPL), MS 1748 (1590), said to be in Dun's hand, and with Dun's signature at the bottom of folio 1; and LPL, MS Reg Whitgift (1602), folio 135 (letter from the queen dealing with common complaints).
10 Wilkins, D (ed), Concilia Magnae Britanniae et Hiberniae, 446–1718 (London, 1737), vol 4, pp 328–335Google Scholar (1587), 352–356 (1597), 417–424 (1605).
11 Worcester Record Office, MS 794.093/2470, ‘Collectanea B’, folio 16.
12 See Clarke v Blage (1615), Acts of the Privy Council 1615–1616 (London, 1925) pp 215–216Google Scholar.
13 All Souls College, Oxford, MS 226, folios 210–217.
14 Baker, J, English Legal Mansucripts, vol 2 (covering Lincoln's Inn, the Bodleian Library and Gray's Inn) (Zug and London, 1978), p 150Google Scholar.
15 Bruistone v Baker (1615), 1 Rolle 315, 81 Eng Rep 511.
16 Ibid: ‘Sir Daniel dit que il fuit pluis sawcie, et dit que s'il nollet issint faire, il voilet luy committer & throw the prohibition after him’.
17 Ibid: ‘et puis il commit le dit Greene al prison’.
18 Case of the Spanish Ambassador (1614), Acts of the Privy Council 1615–1616, pp 74–75.
19 Eg, Penson v Cartwright (1614), 2 Bulst 207, 80 Eng Rep 1071; Petition of Beale, Yates, et al (1616), Acts of the Privy Council, pp 611–614.