A
translation
of the whole work was made by B.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v03
, Literary Pamphlets, 1897.
Carew, Richard. The Excellency of The English Tongue. First printed by
Camden in Remains. Reprinted from MS by Smith, G. Gregory.
Caxton, W. Collected Prefaces in A. W. Pollard's Fifteenth Century Prose
and Verse (enlarged from Arber's English Garner). 1903.
Chapman, George. Prefaces to the two instalments of his Homer, printed
in 1598. Reprinted in Chapman's Works, 3 vols, 1875; and in Smith,
G. Gregory.
Daniel, Samuel. A Defence of Rhyme. n. d. Reprinted in Grosart's Works
of Daniel, 4 vols, 1885-96; in Haslewood; in Smith, G. Gregory; and in
Rhys, E. , Literary Pamphlets, 1897.
Drayton, Michael. Note ‘To the Reader' in The Barons' Wars. 1603.
Gascoigne, George. Notes of Instruction. In Posies of George Gascoigne.
1575. Reprinted by Arber with others of Gascoigne's Works, 1868;
Smith, G. Gregory, op. cit. Ed. Cunliffe, J. W. Cambridge, 1907.
Gosson, Stephen. The School of Abuse. 1579. Reprinted by Arber, Birming-
ham, 1868.
Harington, Sir John. Orlando Furioso. 1591. Preface reprinted in Smith,
G. Gregory.
Harvey, Gabriel. Letters, as below under Spenser. Four Letters touching
Robert Greene. 1592. Pierce's Supererogation. 1593. A New Letter of
Notable Contents. 1593. Works. Ed. Grosart, A. B. 3 vols. Privately
printed, 1884. Extracts in Smith, G. Gregory.
E. K. (Kirke, Edmund). Introduction and notes to Shepheards Calender.
1579. In nearly all edd. of Spenser: also in Smith, G. Gregory.
Lodge, Thomas. Defence of Poetry etc. 1579. Reprinted in Works of T. L. ,
ed. Gosse, E. , Hunterian Club, Glasgow, 1872-82; in Elizabethan and
Jacobean Pamphlets, 1892; and in Smith, G. Gregory.
Meres, Francis. Palladis Tamia. 1598. Sections reprinted in Arber's
English Garner, in Smith, G. Gregory, etc.
Mirror for Magistrates, A. 1559. See bibliography to chap. ix, ante.
Nashe, Thomas. Preface to Sidney's Astrophel and Stella. 1591. Strange
News or Four Letters Confuted. 1592. Extracts in Smith, G. Gregory.
[See also the epistle addressed to the gentlemen students of both
universities, prefixed to Greene's Menaphon. ]
Puttenham ? , George? or Richard ? . The Arte of English Poesie. Con-
triued into three Bookes: The first of Poets and Poesie, the second of
Proportion, the third of Ornament. At London Printed by Richard Field,
9
## p. 527 (#549) ############################################
Chapter XIV
527
I
dwelling in the black-Friers, neere Ludgate. 1589. Reprinted in
Haslewood and Smith, G. Gregory, and by Arber, Birmingham, 1869.
Sidney, Sir Philip. In 1595 appeared two editions of the same work
differing chiefly in the titles, The Defence of Poesy, printed for
W. Ponsonby, and An Apologie for Poetrie. Written by the right noble,
vertuous, and learned, Sir Phillip Sidney, Knight. Odi profanum vulgus,
et arceo. At London, Printed for Henry Olney, and are to be sold at his
shop in Paules Churchyard, at the signe of the George neere to Cheap-
gate. The treatise was added to Arcadia in 1598. It has in modern
times been reprinted by Arber, E. , Birmingham, 1868; by Shuckburgh, E. ,
Cambridge, 1891 ff. ; by Cook, A. S. , Boston, U. S. A. (1901); by Rhys, E. ,
in Literary Pamphlets, 1897; by J. Churton Collins, Oxford, 1907; and
by Smith, G. Gregory.
Spenser, E. , in Two and Three Letters, in two publications, 1580, between
himself and Harvey. Reprinted in several editions of Spenser; in Grosart's
Works of Harvey, vol. 1 (Huth Library, 1884); and, so far as concerns
criticism, in Smith, G. Gregory.
Stanyhurst, Richard. The First Four Books of Virgil's Aeneis. Leyden,
1582. Reprinted by Arber, English Scholar's Library, 1880; extracts
from Dedication and Preface in Smith, G. Gregory.
Webbe, William. A Discourse of English Poetrie. Together with the
Author's judgment, touching the reformation of our English Verse. 1586.
Reprinted in Haslewood and in Smith, G. Gregory, and by Arber, 1870 ff.
Whetstone, George. Promos and Cassandra. 1578. Dedication in Smith,
G. Gregory.
Wilson, Thomas. The Art of Rhetoric. 1551 or 1553; 1562.
HISTORY, ETC.
Gayley, C. M. and Scott, F. N. An Introduction to the Methods and
Materials of Literary Criticism. Boston, 1901.
Saintsbury, G. History of Criticism. Vol. 11, bk iv, chap. v. Edinburgh and
London, 1902.
Schelling, F. E. Poetio and Verse Criticism of the reign of Elizabeth. Pub.
Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1891.
Spingarn, J. E. A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance.
Part III. New York and London, 1899.
Rhys, E. The Prelude to Poetry. The English Poets in the Defence and
Praise of their own art. 1894(? ).
Wylic, L. J. Studies in the Evolution of English Criticism. Boston, 1894.
CHAPTER XV
CHRONICLERS AND ANTIQUARIES
WILLIAM CAMDEN.
Britannia, sive Florentissimorum Regnorum Angliae, Scotiae, Hiberniae et
Insularum adjacentium ex interna antiquitate Chorographica Descriptio,
Authore Guilielmo Camdeno 1586.
This work was published in English under the title: Britain, or a Choro-
graphicall Description of the Most flourishing Kingdomes England, Scotland,
& Ireland, & the Islands adjoyning, out of the depth of Antiquitie: Beau-
tified with Mappes of The Severall Shires of England: Written first in Latine
## p. 528 (#550) ############################################
528
Bibliography
by William Camden, Clarenceux K. of A. Translated newly into English by
Philemon Holland Doctor in Physick. 1610. Another edition was published
in 1637. Britannia was translated also by Edmund Gibson (1695) and
R. Gough (1789).
Remains concerning Britain. 1604. Rptd by John Russell Smith, 1870.
Rerum Anglicarum et Hibernicarum Annales, regnante Elizibetha. The first
part of this work, as far as 1588, was published in 1615, and was translated
into English from the French by Abraham Darcie, under the title: An-
nales, The True and Royall History of the famous Empresse Elizabeth,
Queene of England France & Ireland &c. True Faith's defendresse of
Divine renoune & happy Memory 1625. The second part was published
in 1627 and translated by Thomas Browne of Christchurch: Tomus Alter
et Idem. 1629.
A translation of the whole work was made by B. Norton,
Gent. in 1639, and several times reprinted.
[Glover, Robert (1544-88). A great herald, whose labours were of immense
assistance to his successors, and who is worthy of remembrance by the
side of Camden. See especially Thomas Milles's Catalogue of Honor, or
Treasury of True Nobility, 1610. ]
Authorities.
6
Bolton, E. Hypercritica (1618), and rptd. in J. E. Spingarn's Critical Essays
of the Seventeenth Century (1908) contains comments upon Camden,
Speed, Stow and the other writers of chronicles. The author notes the
many 'vast vulgar Tomes, procured for the most part by the husbandry
of Printers, & not by appointment of the Prince or Authority of the
Common-weal.
Brooke, Ralph. A Discoverie of Certain Errores published in Print in the
much commended Britannia 1594. Very Prejudiciall to the Discentes
& Successions of the auncient Nobilitie of this Realme, 1596.
Fuller, T. Holy and Profane State. Cambridge, 1642.
Wood, A. à. Athenae Oxonienses. Ed. Bliss, P. 1820.
RICHARD CAREW.
Survey of Cornwall. 1602.
GEORGE CAVENDISH.
The Negotiations of Thomas Woolsey, the Great Cardinal of England. 1641.
This was the first edition, and imperfect.
The Life and Death of Thomas Woolsey. 1667. A second and more accurate
edition. Ed. Singer, S. W. 1815, 1827. Kelmscott Press ed. 1893, ed.
Ellis, F. S. , rev. 1899, together with Churchyard's Tragedy of Cardina)
Wolsey from A Mirror for Magistrates.
See also. Who wrote Cavendish's Life of Wolsey? ' by Hunter, J. 1814
JOAN FOXE.
Rerum in ecclesia gestarum, quae postremis et periculosis his temporibus
evenerunt, maximarumque per Europam persecutionum, ac Sanctorum
Dei Martyrum, caeterarumque rerum si quae insignioris exempli sint,
digesti per Regna & nationes Commentarii. Basileae, per Nicolaum
Brylingerum, et Joannem Operinum. 1559.
Actes and Monuments of these latter and perilous dayes, touching matters
of the Church, wherein are comprehended and described the great
## p. 529 (#551) ############################################
Chapter XV
529
persecutions & horrible troubles, that have bene wrought & practised
by the Romishe Prelates, speciallye in this Realme of England, &
Scotlande, from the yeare of our Lorde a thousande, unto the tyme
nowe present. Gathered and collected according to the true copies &
wrytinges certificatorie as wel of the parties themselves that suffered,
which wer the doers thereof, by John Foxe. Imprinted at London by
John Day, dwellyng over Aldersgate. 1563. Other editions 1570, 1576,
1583, 1596-7, 1618, 1632 and 1641.
Acts and Monuments. Ed. Cattley, S. R. , with a preface by Townsend, George.
8 vols. 1836-41. Ed. Pratt, J. 8 vols. 1877.
Authorities.
Foxe's Life. Attributed to his son and prefixed to the edition of 1641.
Fuller, Thomas. Church History of Britain. 1655.
Maitland, S. R. Six Letters on Foxe's Acts and Monuments. 1873.
Remarks on Cattley's defence of his edition. 1842.
Anthony à Wood's Athenae Oxonienses. 1691. Ed. Bliss, P. 1820.
RICHARD GRAFTON.
An Abridgement of the Chronicles of England, gathered by Richard Grafton,
Citizen of London. 1563.
A Manuell of the Chronicles of Englande from the Creacion of the Worlde to
this Yere of our Lorde 1566.
A Chronicle at large, & meere history of the affayres of Englande, and
Kinges of the same, deduced from the creation of the Worlde, unto the
first habitation of thys islande. 1569. Rptd by Sir H. Ellis in 1809.
EDWARD HALL.
The Union of the two noble and illustrate famelies of Lancastre & Yorke
beeyng long in continual discension for the croune of this noble realme,
with all the actes done in bothe of the tymes of the Princes, both of the
one linage and of the other, beginnyng at the tyme of king Henry the
fowerth, the first aucthor of this devision, and so successively proceadyng
to the reigne of the high and prudent prince king Henry the eight, the
undubitate flower and very heire of both the sayd linages.
Tanner, in his Bibliotheca Britannica, says that the first edition of Hall's
Chronicle was printed by Berthelet in 1542. If this be so, no perfect copy of
the edition has survived. Some fragments, in copies belonging to the Univer-
sity of Cambridge and to the Grenville Collection in the British Museum,
are imagined to be of this first edition.
The first known edition is that of 1548, printed by Grafton from the
author's notes. The text may be accepted as authentic. For as much as
a dead man is the author thereof, says Grafton, 'I thought it my duty to
suffer his work to be his own, & have altered nothing therein. ' Another
edition was printed in 1550, and, in 1809, the book was edited neither exactly
por completely by Sir Henry Ellis. See The Lives of the Kings, Henry VIII,
ed. Whibley, C. , 2 vols. 1904.
Authorities.
Ames, J. Typographical Antiquities. 1785. Ed. Dibdin, T. F. 1810-19.
Tanner, T. Bibliotheca Britannica. 1748.
Ward, A. W. Introduction to Henry VI. University Press Shakespeare.
New York, 1907.
SIR John HAYWARD.
The First Part of the Life & raigne of King Henrie the IIII. Extending
to the end of the first yeare of his raigne. Written by J. H. 1599.
E, L, IIL
34
## p. 530 (#552) ############################################
530
Bibliography
The Lives of the III Normans, Kings of England:
William the first.
William the second.
Henrie the first.
Written by J. H. 1613.
The Life & Raigne of King Edward the Sixt. Written by Sir John
Hayward, Knight, Doctor of Law. 1630. A second edition of this work
(1636) includes the begining of the Raigne of Queene Elizabeth. '
Annals of the First Four Years of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth by Sir John
Hayward, Knt. D. C. L. Edited from a MS in the Harleian Collection by
John Bruce, Esq. , F. S. A. Camden Society. 1840. This contains unpub-
lished matter together with a brief biography of Sir J. Hayward.
RAPHAEL HOLINSHED.
The firste volume of the Chronicles of England, Scotlande, & Irelande.
Conteyning, the description & Chronicles of England from the first
inhabiting unto the Conquest. The description & Chronicles of Scot-
land, from the first originall of the Scottes nation, till the yeare of our
Lorde 1571. The description & Chronicles of Irelande, likewise from
the firste originall of that nation untill the yeare 1547. Faithfully
gathered & set forth by Raphaell Holinshed. At London. Imprinted
for John Harrison. 1578.
The first & second volumes of Chronicles, comprising
1. The description & historie of England,
2. The description & historie of Ireland,
3. The description & historie of Scotland:
first collected & published by Raphaell Holinshed, William Harrison,
& others: Now newlie augmented & continued (with manifold matters
of singular note & worthie memorie) to the yeare 1586. By John Hooker
aliàs Vowell gent. & others. With convenient Tables at the end of these
volumes. 1587. Bptd in 6 vols. in 1807.
Authorities.
Boswell-Stone, W. G. Shakespeare's Holinshed: the Chronicle & the
Historical Plays compared. 1907.
Courtenay, Thomas Peregrine. Commentaries on Historical Plays of
Shakspeare. 1840.
Furnivall, F. J. Harrison's description of England in Shakspere's youth.
The II & III books. New Shakspere Society. 1877-81.
WILLIAM LAMBARDE.
A Perambulation of Kent. Collected & written (for the most Part) in the
Yeare 1570 . . . and now increased, etc. , 1576. This is the first county
history.
THOMAS LANQUET.
Epitome of Cronicles Continued by Bishop Cooper. 1549 ff.
JOHN LELAND.
Itinerary first published by Thomas Hearne in 1710-12. A second edition is
dated 1744-5, a third edition 1770. The work has been lately edited by
Lucy Toulmin Smith (1906–7). Much use was made of Leland's manu-
script by late topographers, especially by William Burton in his Com-
mentary on Antoninus his Itinerary or Journies of the Roman Empire,
so far as it concerneth Britain (1658).
Carew, Richard. The Excellency of The English Tongue. First printed by
Camden in Remains. Reprinted from MS by Smith, G. Gregory.
Caxton, W. Collected Prefaces in A. W. Pollard's Fifteenth Century Prose
and Verse (enlarged from Arber's English Garner). 1903.
Chapman, George. Prefaces to the two instalments of his Homer, printed
in 1598. Reprinted in Chapman's Works, 3 vols, 1875; and in Smith,
G. Gregory.
Daniel, Samuel. A Defence of Rhyme. n. d. Reprinted in Grosart's Works
of Daniel, 4 vols, 1885-96; in Haslewood; in Smith, G. Gregory; and in
Rhys, E. , Literary Pamphlets, 1897.
Drayton, Michael. Note ‘To the Reader' in The Barons' Wars. 1603.
Gascoigne, George. Notes of Instruction. In Posies of George Gascoigne.
1575. Reprinted by Arber with others of Gascoigne's Works, 1868;
Smith, G. Gregory, op. cit. Ed. Cunliffe, J. W. Cambridge, 1907.
Gosson, Stephen. The School of Abuse. 1579. Reprinted by Arber, Birming-
ham, 1868.
Harington, Sir John. Orlando Furioso. 1591. Preface reprinted in Smith,
G. Gregory.
Harvey, Gabriel. Letters, as below under Spenser. Four Letters touching
Robert Greene. 1592. Pierce's Supererogation. 1593. A New Letter of
Notable Contents. 1593. Works. Ed. Grosart, A. B. 3 vols. Privately
printed, 1884. Extracts in Smith, G. Gregory.
E. K. (Kirke, Edmund). Introduction and notes to Shepheards Calender.
1579. In nearly all edd. of Spenser: also in Smith, G. Gregory.
Lodge, Thomas. Defence of Poetry etc. 1579. Reprinted in Works of T. L. ,
ed. Gosse, E. , Hunterian Club, Glasgow, 1872-82; in Elizabethan and
Jacobean Pamphlets, 1892; and in Smith, G. Gregory.
Meres, Francis. Palladis Tamia. 1598. Sections reprinted in Arber's
English Garner, in Smith, G. Gregory, etc.
Mirror for Magistrates, A. 1559. See bibliography to chap. ix, ante.
Nashe, Thomas. Preface to Sidney's Astrophel and Stella. 1591. Strange
News or Four Letters Confuted. 1592. Extracts in Smith, G. Gregory.
[See also the epistle addressed to the gentlemen students of both
universities, prefixed to Greene's Menaphon. ]
Puttenham ? , George? or Richard ? . The Arte of English Poesie. Con-
triued into three Bookes: The first of Poets and Poesie, the second of
Proportion, the third of Ornament. At London Printed by Richard Field,
9
## p. 527 (#549) ############################################
Chapter XIV
527
I
dwelling in the black-Friers, neere Ludgate. 1589. Reprinted in
Haslewood and Smith, G. Gregory, and by Arber, Birmingham, 1869.
Sidney, Sir Philip. In 1595 appeared two editions of the same work
differing chiefly in the titles, The Defence of Poesy, printed for
W. Ponsonby, and An Apologie for Poetrie. Written by the right noble,
vertuous, and learned, Sir Phillip Sidney, Knight. Odi profanum vulgus,
et arceo. At London, Printed for Henry Olney, and are to be sold at his
shop in Paules Churchyard, at the signe of the George neere to Cheap-
gate. The treatise was added to Arcadia in 1598. It has in modern
times been reprinted by Arber, E. , Birmingham, 1868; by Shuckburgh, E. ,
Cambridge, 1891 ff. ; by Cook, A. S. , Boston, U. S. A. (1901); by Rhys, E. ,
in Literary Pamphlets, 1897; by J. Churton Collins, Oxford, 1907; and
by Smith, G. Gregory.
Spenser, E. , in Two and Three Letters, in two publications, 1580, between
himself and Harvey. Reprinted in several editions of Spenser; in Grosart's
Works of Harvey, vol. 1 (Huth Library, 1884); and, so far as concerns
criticism, in Smith, G. Gregory.
Stanyhurst, Richard. The First Four Books of Virgil's Aeneis. Leyden,
1582. Reprinted by Arber, English Scholar's Library, 1880; extracts
from Dedication and Preface in Smith, G. Gregory.
Webbe, William. A Discourse of English Poetrie. Together with the
Author's judgment, touching the reformation of our English Verse. 1586.
Reprinted in Haslewood and in Smith, G. Gregory, and by Arber, 1870 ff.
Whetstone, George. Promos and Cassandra. 1578. Dedication in Smith,
G. Gregory.
Wilson, Thomas. The Art of Rhetoric. 1551 or 1553; 1562.
HISTORY, ETC.
Gayley, C. M. and Scott, F. N. An Introduction to the Methods and
Materials of Literary Criticism. Boston, 1901.
Saintsbury, G. History of Criticism. Vol. 11, bk iv, chap. v. Edinburgh and
London, 1902.
Schelling, F. E. Poetio and Verse Criticism of the reign of Elizabeth. Pub.
Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1891.
Spingarn, J. E. A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance.
Part III. New York and London, 1899.
Rhys, E. The Prelude to Poetry. The English Poets in the Defence and
Praise of their own art. 1894(? ).
Wylic, L. J. Studies in the Evolution of English Criticism. Boston, 1894.
CHAPTER XV
CHRONICLERS AND ANTIQUARIES
WILLIAM CAMDEN.
Britannia, sive Florentissimorum Regnorum Angliae, Scotiae, Hiberniae et
Insularum adjacentium ex interna antiquitate Chorographica Descriptio,
Authore Guilielmo Camdeno 1586.
This work was published in English under the title: Britain, or a Choro-
graphicall Description of the Most flourishing Kingdomes England, Scotland,
& Ireland, & the Islands adjoyning, out of the depth of Antiquitie: Beau-
tified with Mappes of The Severall Shires of England: Written first in Latine
## p. 528 (#550) ############################################
528
Bibliography
by William Camden, Clarenceux K. of A. Translated newly into English by
Philemon Holland Doctor in Physick. 1610. Another edition was published
in 1637. Britannia was translated also by Edmund Gibson (1695) and
R. Gough (1789).
Remains concerning Britain. 1604. Rptd by John Russell Smith, 1870.
Rerum Anglicarum et Hibernicarum Annales, regnante Elizibetha. The first
part of this work, as far as 1588, was published in 1615, and was translated
into English from the French by Abraham Darcie, under the title: An-
nales, The True and Royall History of the famous Empresse Elizabeth,
Queene of England France & Ireland &c. True Faith's defendresse of
Divine renoune & happy Memory 1625. The second part was published
in 1627 and translated by Thomas Browne of Christchurch: Tomus Alter
et Idem. 1629.
A translation of the whole work was made by B. Norton,
Gent. in 1639, and several times reprinted.
[Glover, Robert (1544-88). A great herald, whose labours were of immense
assistance to his successors, and who is worthy of remembrance by the
side of Camden. See especially Thomas Milles's Catalogue of Honor, or
Treasury of True Nobility, 1610. ]
Authorities.
6
Bolton, E. Hypercritica (1618), and rptd. in J. E. Spingarn's Critical Essays
of the Seventeenth Century (1908) contains comments upon Camden,
Speed, Stow and the other writers of chronicles. The author notes the
many 'vast vulgar Tomes, procured for the most part by the husbandry
of Printers, & not by appointment of the Prince or Authority of the
Common-weal.
Brooke, Ralph. A Discoverie of Certain Errores published in Print in the
much commended Britannia 1594. Very Prejudiciall to the Discentes
& Successions of the auncient Nobilitie of this Realme, 1596.
Fuller, T. Holy and Profane State. Cambridge, 1642.
Wood, A. à. Athenae Oxonienses. Ed. Bliss, P. 1820.
RICHARD CAREW.
Survey of Cornwall. 1602.
GEORGE CAVENDISH.
The Negotiations of Thomas Woolsey, the Great Cardinal of England. 1641.
This was the first edition, and imperfect.
The Life and Death of Thomas Woolsey. 1667. A second and more accurate
edition. Ed. Singer, S. W. 1815, 1827. Kelmscott Press ed. 1893, ed.
Ellis, F. S. , rev. 1899, together with Churchyard's Tragedy of Cardina)
Wolsey from A Mirror for Magistrates.
See also. Who wrote Cavendish's Life of Wolsey? ' by Hunter, J. 1814
JOAN FOXE.
Rerum in ecclesia gestarum, quae postremis et periculosis his temporibus
evenerunt, maximarumque per Europam persecutionum, ac Sanctorum
Dei Martyrum, caeterarumque rerum si quae insignioris exempli sint,
digesti per Regna & nationes Commentarii. Basileae, per Nicolaum
Brylingerum, et Joannem Operinum. 1559.
Actes and Monuments of these latter and perilous dayes, touching matters
of the Church, wherein are comprehended and described the great
## p. 529 (#551) ############################################
Chapter XV
529
persecutions & horrible troubles, that have bene wrought & practised
by the Romishe Prelates, speciallye in this Realme of England, &
Scotlande, from the yeare of our Lorde a thousande, unto the tyme
nowe present. Gathered and collected according to the true copies &
wrytinges certificatorie as wel of the parties themselves that suffered,
which wer the doers thereof, by John Foxe. Imprinted at London by
John Day, dwellyng over Aldersgate. 1563. Other editions 1570, 1576,
1583, 1596-7, 1618, 1632 and 1641.
Acts and Monuments. Ed. Cattley, S. R. , with a preface by Townsend, George.
8 vols. 1836-41. Ed. Pratt, J. 8 vols. 1877.
Authorities.
Foxe's Life. Attributed to his son and prefixed to the edition of 1641.
Fuller, Thomas. Church History of Britain. 1655.
Maitland, S. R. Six Letters on Foxe's Acts and Monuments. 1873.
Remarks on Cattley's defence of his edition. 1842.
Anthony à Wood's Athenae Oxonienses. 1691. Ed. Bliss, P. 1820.
RICHARD GRAFTON.
An Abridgement of the Chronicles of England, gathered by Richard Grafton,
Citizen of London. 1563.
A Manuell of the Chronicles of Englande from the Creacion of the Worlde to
this Yere of our Lorde 1566.
A Chronicle at large, & meere history of the affayres of Englande, and
Kinges of the same, deduced from the creation of the Worlde, unto the
first habitation of thys islande. 1569. Rptd by Sir H. Ellis in 1809.
EDWARD HALL.
The Union of the two noble and illustrate famelies of Lancastre & Yorke
beeyng long in continual discension for the croune of this noble realme,
with all the actes done in bothe of the tymes of the Princes, both of the
one linage and of the other, beginnyng at the tyme of king Henry the
fowerth, the first aucthor of this devision, and so successively proceadyng
to the reigne of the high and prudent prince king Henry the eight, the
undubitate flower and very heire of both the sayd linages.
Tanner, in his Bibliotheca Britannica, says that the first edition of Hall's
Chronicle was printed by Berthelet in 1542. If this be so, no perfect copy of
the edition has survived. Some fragments, in copies belonging to the Univer-
sity of Cambridge and to the Grenville Collection in the British Museum,
are imagined to be of this first edition.
The first known edition is that of 1548, printed by Grafton from the
author's notes. The text may be accepted as authentic. For as much as
a dead man is the author thereof, says Grafton, 'I thought it my duty to
suffer his work to be his own, & have altered nothing therein. ' Another
edition was printed in 1550, and, in 1809, the book was edited neither exactly
por completely by Sir Henry Ellis. See The Lives of the Kings, Henry VIII,
ed. Whibley, C. , 2 vols. 1904.
Authorities.
Ames, J. Typographical Antiquities. 1785. Ed. Dibdin, T. F. 1810-19.
Tanner, T. Bibliotheca Britannica. 1748.
Ward, A. W. Introduction to Henry VI. University Press Shakespeare.
New York, 1907.
SIR John HAYWARD.
The First Part of the Life & raigne of King Henrie the IIII. Extending
to the end of the first yeare of his raigne. Written by J. H. 1599.
E, L, IIL
34
## p. 530 (#552) ############################################
530
Bibliography
The Lives of the III Normans, Kings of England:
William the first.
William the second.
Henrie the first.
Written by J. H. 1613.
The Life & Raigne of King Edward the Sixt. Written by Sir John
Hayward, Knight, Doctor of Law. 1630. A second edition of this work
(1636) includes the begining of the Raigne of Queene Elizabeth. '
Annals of the First Four Years of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth by Sir John
Hayward, Knt. D. C. L. Edited from a MS in the Harleian Collection by
John Bruce, Esq. , F. S. A. Camden Society. 1840. This contains unpub-
lished matter together with a brief biography of Sir J. Hayward.
RAPHAEL HOLINSHED.
The firste volume of the Chronicles of England, Scotlande, & Irelande.
Conteyning, the description & Chronicles of England from the first
inhabiting unto the Conquest. The description & Chronicles of Scot-
land, from the first originall of the Scottes nation, till the yeare of our
Lorde 1571. The description & Chronicles of Irelande, likewise from
the firste originall of that nation untill the yeare 1547. Faithfully
gathered & set forth by Raphaell Holinshed. At London. Imprinted
for John Harrison. 1578.
The first & second volumes of Chronicles, comprising
1. The description & historie of England,
2. The description & historie of Ireland,
3. The description & historie of Scotland:
first collected & published by Raphaell Holinshed, William Harrison,
& others: Now newlie augmented & continued (with manifold matters
of singular note & worthie memorie) to the yeare 1586. By John Hooker
aliàs Vowell gent. & others. With convenient Tables at the end of these
volumes. 1587. Bptd in 6 vols. in 1807.
Authorities.
Boswell-Stone, W. G. Shakespeare's Holinshed: the Chronicle & the
Historical Plays compared. 1907.
Courtenay, Thomas Peregrine. Commentaries on Historical Plays of
Shakspeare. 1840.
Furnivall, F. J. Harrison's description of England in Shakspere's youth.
The II & III books. New Shakspere Society. 1877-81.
WILLIAM LAMBARDE.
A Perambulation of Kent. Collected & written (for the most Part) in the
Yeare 1570 . . . and now increased, etc. , 1576. This is the first county
history.
THOMAS LANQUET.
Epitome of Cronicles Continued by Bishop Cooper. 1549 ff.
JOHN LELAND.
Itinerary first published by Thomas Hearne in 1710-12. A second edition is
dated 1744-5, a third edition 1770. The work has been lately edited by
Lucy Toulmin Smith (1906–7). Much use was made of Leland's manu-
script by late topographers, especially by William Burton in his Com-
mentary on Antoninus his Itinerary or Journies of the Roman Empire,
so far as it concerneth Britain (1658).
