John Sherwood (or Shirwood; died 1494) was an English churchman and diplomat.
Life
Sherwood was the son of the common clerk John Shirwod of
York and his first wife, Agnes.[1] He graduated M.A. at
University College, Oxford in 1450.[2] He learned Greek from the scribe Emmanuel of Constantinople, in 1455; for which he was later commended in a letter from
Richard III of England to
Pope Innocent VIII.[3][4] He was a papal lawyer, and then a diplomat, when he became the first permanent English ambassador, resident from 1479 in Rome.[3][5] He built up a noted classical library, and gained the support of
George Neville,
Archbishop of York.[6]
Sherwood was
Archdeacon of Richmond in 1465[7] and later became
Bishop of Durham, in 1484.[2] He was nominated on 29 March 1484, with Richard III on the throne, and probably was consecrated on 26 May 1484. Despite knowing of the
Princes in the Tower, through their physician, he did nothing for them.[8] He visited Rome twice more as ambassador: in 1487, with
Thomas Linacre and
William Tilly of Selling; and in 1492-3, when he died there.[9]
Allen, P.S., "Bishop Shirwood of Durham and his library", English Historical Review 25 (1910), 445–56.
Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
ISBN0-521-56350-X.
Harris, Jonathan, "Greek scribes in England: the evidence of episcopal registers", in Through the Looking Glass: Byzantium through British Eyes, ed. Robin Cormack and Elizabeth Jeffreys (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000), pp. 121–6.
ISBN978-0-86078-667-2