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Inglis, Esther, c 1570-1624 (Scottish calligrapher)

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: c 1570 - 1624

Biography

Esther Inglis (c.1570-1624) was a Franco-Scottish Huguenot calligrapher, writer, and artist, associated with the court of King James VI/I. She was the daughter of French parents, Nicolas Langlois and Marie Presot, who emigrated as refugees from Dieppe to Britain, shortly after 1570, to escape religious persecution. “Inglis” is an Anglicism of her family name, “Langlois” or “Anglois”, which Esther adopted in her work from 1606. Marie Presot was herself a calligrapher, who taught Esther how to write, while Nicolas Langlois was a schoolmaster. The family eventually settled in Edinburgh, where Esther was to spend most of her life and career. Esther Inglis was a prolific and exceptionally skilled scribe; a corpus of over 62 manuscripts survives worldwide, and she produced these books as gifts which were often presented to prospective patrons. Many of her manuscripts include dedications which show that they were intended for recipients including English and Scottish royals (Elizabeth I, James VI/I, and Prince Henry), members of European royal families, and Scottish nobility. Inglis married a Scotsman, Bartholomew Kello, in 1596. Inglis’ manuscripts are often miniature, and might contain up to forty different scripts within the same book, from letters just one millimetre high, to elaborate alphabets which she copies from the manuals of sixteenth-century writing-masters. Some of Inglis’ manuscripts have embroidered covers; some imitate the appearance of printed books; some are illuminated in styles which are associated with earlier traditions of manuscript-making. The texts of Inglis’ manuscripts are all religious, copying either the words of the Geneva Bible, or works of devotional prose or verse. Inglis included self-portraits in many of her manuscripts, which usually show her in the act of writing; she presents herself as being guided in her craft by her Protestant belief. Within her lifetime, Inglis was praised by writers including Andrew Melville, and by contemporary scribes who saw her manuscripts. The Inglis manuscripts now held at Edinburgh University Library were formerly owned by David Laing (1793-1878), who was Inglis’ first collector.

Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:

La.III.75: Esther Inglis, "A Treatise of Preparation to the Holy Supper and of our only Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ", 1608 (dated)

 Item
Identifier: La.III.75
Scope and Contents The manuscript contains a prose religious treatise, copied by Esther Inglis as a gift for Sir David Murray of Gorthy (1567-1629), her friend and companion to the Prince Henry. Sir David Murray was the recipient of three of Inglis’ manuscripts, with this being the first; the others are a Book of Psalms prepared in 1612 (now Wormsley Library, Oxfordshire, BM 1851), and a miniature illuminated manuscript of the Quatrains of Guy du Faur (now British Library, MS...
Dates: 1608 (dated)
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La.III.440: Esther Inglis, "Livret traittant de la grandeur de Dieu et de la cognoissance qu’on peut avoir de luy par ses oeuvres", 1592

 Item
Identifier: La.III.440
Scope and Contents This manuscript is a decorative copy of Pierre Du Val’s De la grandeur de Dieu et de la cognoissance qu’on peut avoir de luy par ses oeuvres, first published at Paris in 1553. Written by Esther Inglis in 1592, when she was around 22 years old, it forms part of a group of manuscripts produced between 1586 and 1592 which show her early experiments calligraphy and print imitation. The other manuscripts in this group are now British Library, MS Sloane 987 (...
Dates: 1592