David Kinloch (1560–1617) was a Scottish physician and poet.
Kinloch was imprisoned by the Spanish Inquisition.[1]
In Scotland, Kinloch was appointed a physician to the king on 21 March 1597. James VI signed a lengthy Latin testimonial referring to Kinloch's kinship to Ramsay and Lindsay of Edzell families.[2]
Kinloch married Grizzel Hay, the heiress of the lands of Gourdie. He owned the estate of Aberbothrie in Alyth.
His portrait, dated 1614, is displayed at Ninewells Hospital, Dundee.[3]
Kinloch published a medical treatise in Latin verse, De hominis procreatione, anatome, ac morbis internis (Paris, 1596).
References
edit- ^ Adam Yagüi-Beltrán & Laura Adam, 'The imprisonment of David Kinloch, 1588-1594: an analysis of newly discovered documents in the archives of the Spanish Inquisition', Innes Review, 53:1 (June 2002), pp. 1-39.
- ^ (G. R. Kinloch), Reliquiæ Antiquæ Scoticæ (Edinburgh, 1848), pp. 76-8.
- ^ Tayside Medical History Museum Art Collection - The Kinloch Portrait