Clement Cor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clement Cor was a Scottish merchant based in Edinburgh.

Doorways at Advocate's Close carved with Clement Cor's initials

His father, Andrew Cor, was a merchant in Edinburgh.

Cor's house, partly built in 1590, survives in Edinburgh's Advocate's Close.

In September 1596, with the physician Gilbert Moncreiff and kirk minister Robert Bruce he interviewed a woman from Nokwalter in Perth, Christian Stewart, who was accused of causing the death of Patrick Ruthven by witchcraft. She confessed she had obtained a cloth from Isobel Stewart to bewitch Patrick Ruthven, and repeated this confession to the king and Sir George Home at Linlithgow Palace. She was found guilty of witchcraft and burnt on Edinburgh's Castlehill.[1]

Clement Cor moved to St Andrews and died there.

Marriage and children[]

Clement Cor married Helen Bellenden. Their children included:

  • Margaret Cor, who married Alexander Livingstone
  • Isobel Cor, who married Robert Lumsden in 1588.[2]
  • Bessie Cor
  • Janet Cor

References[]

  1. ^ Robert Pitcairn, Ancient Criminal Trials (Edinburgh, 1833), pp. 399-400.
  2. ^ Aonghas MacCoinnich, Plantation and Civility in the North Atlantic World (Brill, 2015), p. 142.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""