English Travellers Of The Renaissance By Clare Howard












































































































 -  It was to Germany that
Edward's circle of Protestant politicians, schoolmasters, and chaplains
felt most drawn - to the country where - Page 17
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It Was To Germany That Edward's Circle Of Protestant Politicians, Schoolmasters, And Chaplains Felt Most Drawn - To The Country Where

The tides of the Reformation were running high, and men were in a ferment over things of the spirit; to

The country of Sturm and Bucer, and Fagius and Ursinus - the doctrinalists and educators so revered by Cambridge. Cranmer, who gathered under his roof as many German savants as could survive in the climate of England,[35] kept the current of understanding and sympathy flowing between Cambridge and Germany, and since Cambridge, not Oxford, dominated the scholarly and political world of Edward the Sixth, from that time on Germany, in the minds of the St John's men, such as Burleigh, Ascham and Hoby, was the place where one might meet the best learned of the day.

We have perhaps said enough to indicate roughly the sources of the Renaissance fashion for travel which gave rise to the essays we are about to discuss. The scholar's desire to specialize at a foreign university, in Greek, in medicine, or in law; the courtier's ambition to acquire modern languages, study foreign governments, and generally fit himself for the service of the State, were dignified aims which in men of character produced very happy results. It was natural that others should follow their example. In Elizabethan times the vogue of travelling to become a "compleat person" was fully established. And though in mean and trivial men the ideal took on such odd shapes and produced such dubious results that in every generation there were critics who questioned the benefits of travel, the ideal persisted. There was always something, certainly, to be learned abroad, for men of every calibre.

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