Roger Taverner
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Roger Taverner (Abt.1507-1582)[1] of Upminster, Essex was an English administrator and Member of Parliament for Newport, Cornwall.[2]
Life
Taverner was the eldest of Richard Taverner's younger brothers. He was a surveyor[3] and writer,[4] said by Anthony Wood in Athenae Oxonienses to have studied at Cambridge but not graduated, though university records do not confirm this.[5]
Probably in the 1540s he became deputy to Sir Francis Jobson as surveyor for the Court of Augmentations, and later he was employed (also as deputy surveyor) by the exchequer until 1573 (we have surviving various reports by him on crown woods, in British Library, Lansdowne MSS. 43, 56, 62). He was elected to Parliament in 1555 as a member for Newport-juxta-Launceston, Cornwall (possibly at Jobson's instigation). He was also a writer of tracts on economic issues, such as 'Remedies ... of derth of victualles' (Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, MS 376 – dedicated to Queen Elizabeth), a similar work sent to her two years previously (mentioned in the previous work's dedication), and – unprinted, but more influential – his 'Arte of surveyinge' of 1565.
With his wife—a member of the Hulcote family—he had three sons, one of whom, John, Wood reports became a surveyor.
References
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Notes
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- Pages with script errors
- Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the ODNB
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- English surveyors
- 1582 deaths
- Year of birth unknown
- English civil servants
- English MPs 1555
- Members of the pre-1707 English Parliament for constituencies in Cornwall
- People from Upminster
- Year of birth uncertain