Born 5 August 1635, he was eldest son of James Martine (1615–1684), a minister of the
Church of Scotland in
Fifeshire; his mother—his father's first wife—was Janet Robinson, who died 13 September 1644, and his grandfather was Dr. George Martine, principal of
St. Salvator's College, St. Andrews. Martine became commissary clerk of St. Andrews in August 1666, and held the office until August 1690. Then he was deprived as a
Jacobite non-juror, refusing to pledge himself to
William III and
Mary II. Martine was secretary and companion to Archbishop
James Sharp, who died in 1679. He succeeded his father in land at St. Andrews, in 1696, and died 26 August 1712. ==Works==