English Travellers Of The Renaissance By Clare Howard












































































































 -  Thomas, Arte of Rhetoric, 24

    Windebanke, Sir Thomas, 145

    Wingfield,
      Sir Richard, 12
      Sir Robert, 12

    Winsor, Sir Edward, 49 - Page 47
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Thomas, Arte Of Rhetoric, 24

Windebanke, Sir Thomas, 145

Wingfield, Sir Richard, 12 Sir Robert, 12

Winsor, Sir Edward, 49

Winter, Thomas, 11

Women, 28, 34, 55

Wood, Anthony a, ix, 124

Worde, Wynkin de, 4

Wotton, Sir Edward, 10, 127 Sir Henry, 41, 78-80, 95-98, 155 Sir Nicholas, 12

Wyatt, Sir Thomas, 12

Zouche, Edward la, Eleventh Baron Zouche of Harringworth, 38, 60, 87

Zwingerus, Theodor, 24, 26; Methodus Apodemica, 24, 33

* * * * *

FOOTNOTES

Footnote 1: Ben Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, Act i. Sc. I.

Footnote 2: Ellis, Original Letters, 2nd Series, i. 110, note.

Footnote 3: Ellis, Original Letters, 2nd Series, i. 110, note.

Footnote 4: In c. 1498, 1515, and 1524.

Footnote 5: Itineraries of William Wey. Printed for the Roxburghe Club from the original MS. in the Bodleian Library, 1857, pp. 153-154.

Footnote 6: Familiarium Colloquiorum Opus. Basileae, 1542. De utilitate colloquiorum, ad lectorem.

Footnote 7: Ibid. De votis tentere susceptis, fol. 15.

Footnote 8: Ibid. Ad lectorem.

Footnote 9: Lord Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors, i. 95.

Footnote 10: G. Cavendish, Life of Wolsey. Kelmscott Press, 1893.

Footnote 11: Opera (MDCCIII.), Tom. iii., Ep. xcii. (Annae Bersalae, Principi Verianae).

Footnote 12: "Quid caelum, quos agros, quas bibliothecas, quas ambulationes, quam mellitas eruditorum hominum confabulationes, quot mundi lumina ... reliquerim." Ep. cxxxvi.

Footnote 13: Ep. mclxxv.

Footnote 14: Opera (MDCCIII.) Tom. ix. 1137.

Footnote 15: Ep. ccclxiii.

Footnote 16: Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., vol. iv., Part I., No. 4.

Footnote 17: Richard Pace, De Fructu qui ex Doctrina Percipitur (1517), p. 27.

Footnote 18: Ellis, Original Letters, 2nd Series, vol. i. 65. Archbishop Cranmer to Henry VIII.

Footnote 19: Becatelli, Vita Reginaldi Poli. Latin version of Andreas Dudithius, Venetiis, 1558.

Footnote 20: MS. Cotton, Nero, B. f. 118.

Footnote 21: Ellis, Original Letters, 2nd Series, vol. i. 54.

Footnote 22: Wood's Athenae Oxonienses, ed. Bliss.

Footnote 23: Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., vol. ix., No. 101.

Footnote 24: J.S. Brewer, Reign of Henry VIII., vol. i. 117-147.

Footnote 25: Bapst, Edmond, Deux Gentilshommes-Poetes de la cour de Henry VIII., Paris, 1891, pp. 26, 60.

Footnote 26: Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., vol. ii., Part I., No. 2149.

Footnote 27: Ibid., vol. xi., No. 60; vol. xv., No. 581.

Footnote 28: D. Lloyd, State Worthies, vol. i. 105.

Footnote 29: Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., vol. v. p. 751.

Footnote 30: Camden, History of England.

Footnote 31: In the First Boke of the Introduction of Knowledge, 1547.

Footnote 32: Hall's Life of Henry VIII., ed. Whibley, 1904, vol. i. 175.

Footnote 33: The Travels and Life of Sir Thomas Hoby, ed. Powell, 1902, pp. 18, 37.

Footnote 34: Ascham's Works, ed. Giles, vol. i., Part II., p. 265.

Footnote 35: I refer to the death of Bucer and P. Fagius. Strype (Life of Cranmer, p. 282) says that when they arrived in England in the month of April they "very soon fell sick: which gave a very unhappy stop to their studies. Fagius on the fifth of November came to Cambridge, and ten days afterwards died."

Footnote 36: Taming of the Shrew, Act I. Sc. ii.

Footnote 37: Coryat's Crudities, ed. 1905, p. 17.

Footnote 38: Ed. 1591, p. 91.

Footnote 39: Works, ed. Grossart, ix. 139. In which the father of Philador, among many other admonitions, forestalls Sir Henry Wotton's famous advice to Milton on the traveller's need of holding his tongue: "Be, Philador, in secrecy like the Arabick-tree, that yields no gumme but in the darke night."

Footnote 40: Joecher, Gelehrten-Lexicon, 1751, and Zedler's Universal-Lexicon.

Footnote 41: Clarendon Press ed. 1909, p. 29.

Footnote 42: G. Gratarolus, De Regimine Iter Agentium, Some insight into the trials of travel in the sixteenth century may be gained by the sections on how to endure hunger and thirst, how to restore the appetite, make up lost sleep, ward off fever, avoid vermin, take care of sore feet, thaw frozen limbs, and so forth.

Footnote 43: Methodus Apodemica, Basel, 1577, fol. B, verso.

Footnote 44: Paul Hentzner, whose travels were reprinted by Horace Walpole, was a Hofmeister of this sort. The letter of dedication which he prefixed to his Itinerary in 1612 is a section, verbatim, of Pyrckmair's De Arte Apodemica.

Footnote 45: De Arte Apodemica, Ingolstadii, 1577, fols. 5-6.

Footnote 46: Hercules Prodicius, seu principis juventutis vita et peregrinatio, pp. 131-137

Footnote 47: Joecher, Gelebrten-Lexicon, under Zwinger.

Footnote 48: Zwinger, Methodus Apodemica, fol. B, verso.

Footnote 49: Ad. Ph. Lanoyum, fol. 106, in Justi Lipsii Epistole Selecta, Parisiis, 1610.

Footnote 50: A Direction for Travailers, London, 1592.

Footnote 51: "Methodus describendi regiones, urbes, et arces, et quid singulis locis praecipue in peregrinationibus homines nobiles ac docti animadvertere observare et annotare debeant." Meier was a Danish geographer and historian, 1528-1603.

Footnote 52: G. Loysii Curiovoitlandi Pervigilium Mercurii. Curiae Variscorum, 1598. (Nos. 17, 20, 23, 27.)

Footnote 53: Op. cit., No. 109.

Footnote 54: Translated by Thomas Coryat in his Crudities, 1611. He must have picked up the oration in his tour of Germany; but nothing which appears to be the original is given among the forty-six works of Hermann Kirchner, Professor of History and Poetry at Marburg, as cited by Joecher, though the other "Oratio de Germaniae perlustratione omnibus aliis peregrinationibus anteferenda," also translated by Coryat, is there listed.

Footnote 55: Turler, The Traveiler, p. 12.

Footnote 56: Kirchner in Coryat's Crudities, vol. i. 131.

Footnote 57: Turler, op. cit., p. 48.

Footnote 58: Lipsius, Turler, Kirchner.

Footnote 59: Turler, The Traveiler, p. 47.

Footnote 60: Turler, op. cit., p. 107.

Footnote 61: Methodus Apodemica, p. 26.

Footnote 62: An Essay of the Meanes how to make our Travailes in forraine Countries the more profitable and honourable. London, 1606.

Footnote 63: London, 1578.

Footnote 64: Sidney, Letter to his brother, 1580.

Footnote 65: Profitable Instructions. Written c. 1595. Printed 1633.

Footnote 66: Profitable Instructions, 1595, Harl. MS. 6265, printed in Spedding's Letters and Life of Bacon, vol.

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