'''Matthieu Coignet''' (c. 1514 – 1586) was a French lawyer, ambassador, landowner, and author. Thanks to an early English translation, some English-language sources give his name as '''Martyn Cognet'''.
==Life== By 1549 Coignet was an advocate in the ''Parlement'' of Paris, a high appellate court. He was also Master of Requests to the French Queen, Catherine de' Medici, and in 1559 was appointed as procurator general of the ''Parlement'' of Savoy. On 22 February 1580 he was noted as a member of the ''Conseil du Roi'', a sometime ambassador to Schwyz and the Grisons, Master of Requests, and lord (''seigneur'') of La Tuillerie-les-Dampmartin and of part of Bregi-en-Mulcian.<ref name=gdh>Louis Moréri, ''Le grand dictionnaire historique, ou le melange curieux de l'histoire sacrée et profane'' (Vol. 6 of 19th edition, Paris, 1744), [https://books.google.com/books?id=oC_L0EmaEKkC&pg=PA774 p. 774]</ref>
He died in 1586, aged 72.<ref name=gdh/>
==Publications== La Croix du Maine notes in his ''Les Bibliotheques françoises'' that by 1583 Coignet had published two books, ''Instruction aux Princes de garder la foi promise'' and ''La Philosophie Chretienne''.<ref name=gdh/> His work was translated into English by Edward Hoby and published in 1586 under the title ''Politique discourses on trueth and lying'', with an introduction by Thomas Digges. Hoby gives the original author's name as "Sir Martyn Cognet".<ref>Lily B. Campbell, ''Shakespeare's Histories: Mirrors of Elizabethan Policy'', p. 90</ref>
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Coignet, Matthieu}} Category:1510s births Category:1586 deaths Category:16th-century French diplomats Category:Ambassadors of France to Switzerland Category:Political office-holders in the ancien régime Category:16th-century French lawyers