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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Georges de Selve (1508 – 12 April 1541) was a French scholar, diplomat and ecclesiastic.
Georges de Selve | |
---|---|
Bishop of Lavaur | |
In office 1526–1540 | |
Ambassador to Republic of Venice, Austria, the Pope, England, Germany and Spain | |
In office April 1540 – 12 April 1541 | |
Monarch | King Francis I of France |
Personal details | |
Born | 1508 |
Died | April 12, 1541 32–33) | (aged
Parent |
|
Relatives | Odet de Selve |
Occupation | Scholar, diplomat and ecclesiastic |
He was the son of Jean de Selve, a jurist and Parlement president, and brother of Odet de Selve. Three other brothers served as diplomats.[1]
Georges de Selve was Bishop of Lavaur from 1526 (at age 18) to 1540. He was sent by King Francis I of France as ambassador to the Republic of Venice, Austria (in April 1540), to the Pope in Rome, to England, Germany and Spain.
He is the figure of the right in a picture by Hans Holbein the Younger, The Ambassadors, and Jean de Dinteville is the other one, which hangs in the National Gallery, London.[2] De Selve was just 25 when Holbein painted him and he is wearing the vestments of a clergyman, who represent the interests of the Catholic Church, since he had just been appointed Bishop of Lavaur in France.[3]
He wrote on theology, studied with and was a patron of Eli Levita from 1534,[4] and was commissioned by the king to make translations.
He died on 12 April 1541 at the age of 33 and is interred at Lavaur Cathedral.[5]
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