St John's College MS N.22 (James 546)
William Heberden, Lectures on poisons. English, 1749.
St John's College MS N.21 (James 525)
Notes relating to Lady Margaret Beaufort and her family. English, Latin and some French, c.1750.
St John's College N.15 (James 394)
John Sergeant, Autobiography. English, 1700
St John's College N.14 (James 393)
William Stanley, Notes on Ecclesiastical history. Latin and English, late seventeenth century
St John's College M.9 (James 392)
Treatise against Brownists. English, c. 1590
St John's College M.8 (James 391)
Catholic Confession. Greek, seventeenth century
'Omologia thV orqodoxon pistewV upo twn graikwn poihqhsomenh prostagmati tou agiwtatou Kuriou hmwn Kuriou Grhgoriou Papa ig. ekdoqeisa
'(inscription on fo. 2r). Presumably this is the confession required from those attending Gregory XIII's Greek College at Rome.
St John's College M.7 (James 390)
Confessio Saxonica. Latin, sixteenth century
St John's College M.6 (James 389)
Franciscus Titelman on Job. Latin, 1534
Franciscus Titelman, 'Exposito in Iob, 1534' (fo. iiv). Perhaps the Paraphrastica elucidato in librum D. Iob (Paris, 1550) - there is a copy in Emmanuel College. The colophon on fo. 146v reads: 'Explicit exposito Fratris Francisci Titelmanni hassellensis in librum Job compilata et conscripta per me Fratrem Jodocum anthonium Sol a traiecto veteri van oltricht in conventu Minorum Iovanii anno domini 1534 finis in die Sancte Clare.'
St John's College M.5 (James 388)
Treatise on the Seven Sacraments. Latin, c. 1600
An incomplete treatise on the seven Catholic Sacraments, concluding at fo. 327v: 'Finis Patris Santarelli'. No date, but c. 1600. It is defective at the start. The contents are:
St John’s College M.4 (James 387)
Arguments against a treatise of Stephen Gardiner. Latin, sixteenth century
‘Reprobatio nugalium responsionum Marci Antonii Constantii ad obiectiones orthodoxorum’ (fo. 2r). At fo. 117r: ‘Reliqua sequu’ in proximo Libro’. There is a preface at fo. 1r, which begins: ‘Hinc omnium primum mira profecto papistarum impudentia est; quod Catholicorum nomen solis sibi vendicant’. An incomplete list of contents is at fo. iir. Marcus Antonius Constantius was a pseudonym of Stephen Gardiner (1483-1555), Bishop of Winchester.