John Trevor (died 1410)

{{Short description|Welsh bishop}}

{{for|the first Bishop of St Asaph of this name|John Trevor (died 1357)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=April 2017}}

John Trevor ({{langx|cy|Ieuan Trefor}}; died 10 April 1410), or John Trevaur, was Bishop of St. Asaph in Wales before becoming nominal Bishop of St Andrews in Scotland. His original name was Ieuan, which he later anglicised to John and took on the surname Trevor. Trevor's brother Adda was married to the sister of Owain Glyndŵr, who appointed him as an ambassador to the French court.

Ieuan was provided to the see of St Asaph on 21 October 1394. He served as Richard II's diplomatic envoy to Scotland in 1395. In 1404 he supported the cause of Owain Glyndŵr and when the rising failed he was banished to Scotland.Haycock, Marged, "Early Welsh Poets Look North", in Woolf, Alex (ed.) (2013), Beyond the Gododdin: Dark Age Scotland in Medieval Wales, University of St. Andrews, pp. 7 - 39, {{isbn|978-0-9512573-8-8}} He was translated to St Andrews in 1408. As Bishop of St. Andrews, he was an anti-Bishop and never took possession of the see. This situation was the product of the Western Schism, in which the Scots supported the Avignon Popes, and so only candidates of the Avignon Popes could take possession of the see.

He died in Rome.

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912)

{{s-start}}

{{s-rel}}

{{succession box | title=Bishop of St. Asaph | before=Alexander Bache| after=David| years=1394–1408}}

{{succession box | title=Anti-Bishop of St. Andrews | before=Thomas de Arundel| after=-| years=1408–1410}}

{{s-end}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Trevor, John Ii}}

Category:1410 deaths

Category:Bishops of St Andrews

Category:Bishops of St Asaph

Category:Year of birth unknown

Category:15th-century Scottish Roman Catholic bishops

Category:14th-century Scottish Roman Catholic priests

{{Scotland-reli-bio-stub}}

{{UK-RC-bishop-stub}}