Synopses & Reviews
William Camden (1551-1623) was one of the most notable historians of the Elizabethan period; his works include Britannia the first description of Britain county by county. A herald by profession, he moved in the literary and political circles of London in an age when history and the study of the past interacted with present politics, and was well-connected with many leading figures of the time; his involvement with the precursor of what is now the Society of Antiquaries of London is of especial importance. This book provides the first major analytical biography of Camden's life and career since that of Thomas Smith in 1691. It offers a comprehensive analysis of Camden's life and of the context in which he lived, including in its great scope a wide range of aspects of English and European learned culture during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries; and examines the nature of his extraordinary impact on writers both of his own and later generations. WYMAN H. HERENDEEN is Professor and Department Chair in the Department of English at the University of Houston, Texas.
Synopsis
'William Camden: A Life In Context' provides the first major analytical biography of Camden, his life, his career as educator, herald, antiquarian, and author, since Thomas Smith's Latin biography in 1691. Camden's place in early-modern British intellectual history is legend. He authored two monuments to Elizabethan and British cultural identity, was the schoolmate of Philip Sidney, praised by Edmund Spenser, mentor and teacher of Ben Jonson and Robert Cotton, and friend of British and international scholars such as John Selden and Jacques De Thou. He was a major presence in the intellectual community of British and Continental scholars, and a poet and historian among poets and historians. 'William Camden: A Life In Context' attempts to understand the nature of his extraordinary impact on his own and subsequent generations of writers in different fields. Recognized as it is, Camden's place within the larger intellectual and cultural history of the English Renaissance has not been examined. 'The Britannia, the Annals of Elizabeth', and his antiquarian activities have attracted the attention of historians and some literary scholars, but his lesser work has been neglected, as has his shaping influence on the institutions where he worked. As Headmaster at Westminster he was an influential educator and member of the Westminster Chapter under the auspices of William Cecil; as Clarenceux King of Arms, he was a major presence in Tudor and Stuart court culture. Although history has cast him as politically disengaged, Camden lived, worked, and wrote in a politically charged world. 'William Camden: A Life In Context' attempts to locate Camden within this transformational period, and to understand what influences shaped his mind and work. WYMAN H. HERENDEEN is Professor and Department Chair in the Department of English at the University of Houston, Texas.
Synopsis
A comprehensive analysis of the life of William Camden (1581-1623), historian, herald, and leading literary figure of the Elizabethan period and of the context in which he lived.
William Camden 1551-1623] was one of the most notable historians of the Elizabethan period; his works include Britannia the first description of Britain county by county. A herald by profession, he moved in the literary and political circles of London in an age when history and the study of the past interacted with present politics, and was well-connected with many leading figures of the time; his involvement with the precursor of what is now the Society of Antiquaries of London is of especial importance.
This book provides the first major analytical biography of Camden's life and career since that of Thomas Smith in 1691. It offers a comprehensive analysis of Camden's life and of the context in which he lived, including in its great scope a wide range of aspects of English and European learned culture during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries; and examines the nature of his extraordinary impact on writers both of his own and later generations.
WYMAN H. HERENDEEN is Professor and Department Chair in the Department of English at the University of Houston, Texas.