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See also: born in See also: Renfrew, and was probably educated at the university of See also: Glasgow
.
He was ordained See also: priest in 1540, and in 1552 was appointed master of the grammar school of Linlithgow, from which See also: town he was later " expellit and schott out " by the partisans of Dean Patrick Kinlochy, " preacher " there
.
He had also enjoyed the office of Provost of the Collegiate See also: Church of St Michael in that town
.
He retired to
See also: Edinburgh, where the return of See also: Queen Mary had given See also: heart to the Catholics
.
There he took See also: part in the pamphlet war which then raged, and entered into conflict with Knox and other leading reformers
.
He appears to have acted for a See also: time as See also: confessor to the queen
.
In See also: July 1562, when engaged in the printing of his Last Blast, he narrowly escaped the vengeance of his opponents, who had by that time gained the upper See also: hand in the capital, and he fled, on the 3rd of See also: September, with the See also: nuncio See also: Gouda to See also: Louvain
.
He reached See also: Paris in 1565 and became a member of the " See also: German Nation " of the university
.
At Queen Mary's See also: request he joined See also: Bishop See also: Leslie on his See also: embassy to Queen See also: Elizabeth in 1571, and remained with the bishop after his removal by Elizabeth's orders to
See also: ward at Fenny Staunton,
See also: Huntingdonshire
.
When further suspicion See also: fell on Leslie and he was committed to the Tower, See also: Winzet was permitted to return to Paris
.
There he continued his studies, and in 1574 See also: left for See also: Douai, where in the following See also: year he became a licentiate
.
He was in resid%ce at See also: Rome from 1575 to 1577, and was then appointed by See also: Pope
See also: Gregory XIII. See also: abbot of the
See also: Benedictine monastery of St See also: James,
See also: Regensburg
.
There he died on the 21st of September 1592 . Winzet's See also: works are almost entirely controversial
.
He justified his See also: literary activity on the See also: side of Catholicism on the See also: double plea of See also: conscience and the inability of the bishops and theologians to supply the necessary arguments ( hies' Tractate, ed
.
S.T.S., i. p. so)
.
"We may nawayis langer contene vs," he writes, " hot expresse on al sydis as we think, referring See also: Jur iugement to the haly Catholik See also: Kirk." In his first See also: work, Certaine Tractates (three in number), printed in T562, he rates his See also: fellow See also: clergy for negligence and sin, invites replies from Knox regarding his authority as See also: minister and his share in the new ecclesiastical constitution, and protests against the interference with Catholic burgesses by the magistrates of Edinburgh
.
The Last Blast, which was interrupted in publication, is an onslaught on heretics and a falsely ordained clergy
.
In his See also: Bake of Four Scoir Thee Questions (1563), addressed to the " Calviniane Precheouris," in which he treats of church See also: doctrine, sacraments, priesthood, obedience to rulers, See also: free-will and other matters, he is dogmatic rather than polemical
.
He translated the Commonitorium of Vincentius Lirinensis (1563), and wrote, in Latin, a Flagellum sectarionum and a Velitatio in Georgium Buchananum (1582)
.
Winzet's vernacular writings have been edited by J
.
Hewison for the S.T.S
.
(2 vols., 1888, 1890)
.
The Tractates were printed, with a preface by See also: David See also: Laing, by the See also: Maitland See also: Club (1835)
.
For Winzet's career see Zeigelbauer, Historia rei literariae O.S.B. iii., See also: Mackenzie, Lives, iii., and the Introduction to S.T.S., edit
.
U.S
.
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