Puttenham may refer to George Puttenham 1529 1590 , English literary critic HMS Puttenham HMS Puttenham , a Ham class minesweeper Puttenham, Hertfordshire , England, United Kingdom Puttenham, Surrey , England, United Kingdom See also Puttenham Common disambig Category Surnames ... more details
Infobox UK place country England latitude 51.82298 longitude 0.71298 official name Puttenham population shire district Dacorum shire county Hertfordshire region East of England constituency westminster South West Hertfordshire UK Parliament constituency South West Hertfordshire post town Tring postcode district HP23 postcode area HP dial code 01296 os grid reference SP888146 static image File Puttenham Church of Our Lady geograph.org.uk 606853.jpg 240px static image caption small Church of Our Lady, Puttenham small Puttenham is a small village in north west Hertfordshire , England . It is in the Tring Rural parish. Until April 1, 1964 Puttenham was a Civil Parish in its own right. At the time of the merger with Tring Rural it had a population of 107 http www.visionofbritain.org.uk relationships.jsp?u id 10059598 . It was recorded as Puteham in the Domesday Book . http www.raincliffe.n yorks.sch.uk homework History year 207 Doomsday 20Web 20Bits 20 20collection village of puttenham and the dom.htm Puttenham is one of the 51 Thankful Villages in England and Wales that suffered no fatalities during the Great War of 1914 to 1918. Category Villages in Hertfordshire Category Thankful Villages Category Dacorum Hertfordshire geo stub pl Puttenham Hertfordshire ... more details
infobox UK place country England official name Puttenham map type Surrey static image Image puttenham priory.jpg 250px static image caption Puttenham Priory population population ref 2,508 ref http neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk dissemination LeadKeyFigures.do?a 7&b 5942993&c GU3 1AR&d 14&e 16&g 490441&i 1001x1003x1004&m 0&enc 1 Census data ref shire district Guildford shire county Surrey region South ... 51.2220 longitude 0.6640 Puttenham is a village in Surrey , England just south of the Hog s Back which is the chalk ridge of the North Downs . Puttenham is to the south of the A31 road A31 which runs ... and Compton, Surrey Compton . Puttenham lies on the dividing line between the chalk downs to the north and greensand to the south. To the west of the village is Puttenham & Crooksbury Commons Puttenham Common . Puttenham was referred to in the Domesday Book of 1086 and was called Reddesolham . Its ... m2 of meadow , woodland worth 4 hog swine hog s. It rendered 2. The houses of Puttenham mainly line ... century it was destroyed by fire but was restored in the 20th century. ref http www.g0sjh.com Puttenham ..., but the building has earlier origins. ref http www.thegoodintentpub.co.uk puttenham.htm Puttenham in Surrey Puttenham village landmarks places of interest ref Puttenham Priory Puttenham Priory is a large ... www.g0sjh.com Puttenham History puttenham priory.htm Puttenham Priory ref Puttenham Golf Club Puttenham ... land on Puttenham Heath and measures convert 6220 yd with a par of 71 from the white tees. The course ... backcloth of colour for the attractive sections of heather and many types of wild flowers. Puttenham in literature The village features in Brave New World by Aldous Huxley Puttenham was a modest little ... Village voice Not even the A3 can tarnish the magic of Puttenham http www.thegoodmoveguide.com Locations ... Puttenham One Place Study Category Villages in Surrey Category Guildford Category Civil parishes in Surrey Guildford nl Puttenham pl Puttenham Surrey ... more details
George Puttenham 1529 1590 is the reputed English people English author of The Arte of English Poesie 1589 . Family George was the second son of Robert Puttenham of Sherfield on Loddon in Hampshire and his ... cite journal last1 May first1 Stephen W last2 first2 year 2008 title George Puttenham s Lewd and Illicit ... ref name Art They had at least one daughter. ref name Lewd ref name Art Private life George Puttenham ... Lewd ref When Puttenham was forty three, he also had his servant kidnap a seventeen year old girl in London and bring her to his farm at Upton Grey near Sherfield. Puttenham raped her, then kept her ..., and the name of Puttenham is first definitely associated with it in the Hypercritica of Edmund ... evidence beyond Bolton s ascription to identify the author with George or Richard Puttenham, the sons of Robert Puttenham and his wife Margaret, the sister of Thomas Elyot Sir Thomas Elyot .... Clement Danes , London, on July 2, 1601. George Puttenham is said to have been implicated in a plot ... relations. His will is dated September 1, 1590. Richard Puttenham is known to have spent much of his ... of his uncle, Sir Thomas Elyot s estates, Richard Puttenham was proved in an inquisition held ... . Influence of Puttenham According to George Puttenham, presumptive author of The Arte of English Poesie ... to Puttenham s Arte . Book I, Of Poets and Poesie, contains a remarkably credible history of poetry ... under a pseudonym . In Book II, Of Proportion Poetical, Puttenham compares metrical form to arithmetical ... band 65 and enterlacement 70 , is of primary concern to Puttenham. He views English as having solely ... ... 134 . From page 136 to 225, Puttenham lists and analyzes figures of speech. His book concludes ... W. May, George Puttenham s Lewd and Illicit Career, Texas Studies in Literature and Language 2008. Frank ... UP, 2007. Walter Nash, George Puttenham, The Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 281 British ... links gutenberg author id George Puttenham name George Puttenham Steven W. May, http www.oxforddnb.com ... more details
Scilly Isles Treasure Hunting.html The HMS Association Treasure Wreck, Scilly Isles ref HMS Puttenham ... Further reading Blackman, R.V.B. ed. Jane s Fighting Ships 1953 External links A picture of HMS Puttenham ... in 1978 Pictures of Eleftheria ex HMS Puttenham http www.tca2000.co.uk 2 9 04 20small.jpg before and http ... br Ham Class IMS DEFAULTSORT Puttenham Category Ham class minesweepers Category Royal Navy ship ... more details
For the airport, see London Gatwick Airport . This village is not near this airport Image gatwickvillagewaverley.jpg 250px thumb right Part of the village Gatwick is a small village in Surrey , England in the borough of Waverley, Surrey Waverley . It lies to near the villages of Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham , Charleshill , Elstead and Peper Harrow . The village lies close to the Puttenham & Crooksbury Commons . Surrey geo stub coord 51.1924 0.6919 display title region GB type city source GNS enwiki Category Villages in Surrey pl Gatwick Surrey ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Tring Rural is a civil parish in Hertfordshire , England . It is composed of the villages of Long Marston, Hertfordshire Long Marston , Wilstone , Puttenham, Hertfordshire Puttenham , and the hamlets of Gubblecote and Astrope. It is largely situated the north of the town of Tring . Tring itself is not part of the parish. Tring Rural came into existence as an entity on December 31, 1894 when it became separate from Tring Tring Civil Parish , although at that time it was smaller than at present as it did not include Puttenham. The present boundaries were established April 1, 1964, when Puttenham Civil Parish was abolished. Coord 51 49 40 N 0 42 00 W display title Lost settlements in the United Kingdom Category Geography of Hertfordshire Category Civil parishes in Hertfordshire Category Tring Hertfordshire geo stub ... more details
National Cycle Route 22 NCR22 runs from Banstead to Brockenhurst in the New Forest via Dorking , Guildford , Farnham , Petersfield , Havant , Portsmouth , Ryde , Yarmouth, Isle of Wight Yarmouth and Lymington . Due to the route going over the Isle of Wight , ferry connections are required from Portsmouth to Ryde, and again from Yarmouth to Lymington. ref name Route 22 cite web url http www.sustrans.org.uk default.asp?sID 1099056191265 title Sustrans Route 22 publisher www.sustrans.org.uk accessdate 2009 01 26 ref Route Banstead to Dorking Banstead Redhill, Surrey Redhill Dorking Expand section date January 2009 Dorking to Guildford Dorking Guildford Expand section date January 2009 Guildford to Farnham Guildford Farnham Expand section date January 2009 There is a busy one way system in central Guildford, which takes the route over the River Wey . The route passes some small statues commemorating Lewis Carroll , a son of Guildford, as it goes over the River Wey . The statues are down on the west bank of the river, and are very small. The route soon goes onto a quieter road Grid reference SU993493 , with a steep uphill which goes past the burial place of Lewis Carroll . Guildford has a statue for Through the Looking Glass in a small garden to the east of Guildford Castle . About 1  km out of Guildford, the route moves onto a Bridleway at Henley Fort, then touches the A31 briefly before heading south. The route passes near Watts Gallery , where there are some tea rooms, and then heads west through Puttenham. One can follow the B3000 to this point, or use a bridleway. At Puttenham, there are some opportunities for refreshment in the form of two pubs, one is a Harvester. From Puttenham, the route follows Seale Lane, which runs just south of the Hogs Back the A31 . The road undulates. The road passes through Seale, where there is a craft centre. At SU895479, one take go northwest toward the Hogs Back Brewery 1  km or continue directly west. The northern road has a ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Year nav topic 1529 literature Events New books Hans Luft A Proper Dialogue Between A Gentleman and a Husbandman Philipp Melanchthon Commentary on the Colossians with foreword by Martin Luther Births February 23 Onofrio Panvinio , Augustinian historian d. 1568 June 7 tienne Pasquier , poet and author d. 1615 December 11 Fulvio Orsini , humanist historian d. 1600 date unknown George Puttenham , critic d. 1590 Deaths February 2 Baldassare Castiglione , poet and author b. 1478 June 21 John Skelton , poet b. c. 1460 date unknown Richard Pynson , printer b. 1448 Paulus Aemilius Veronensis , historian b. c. 1455 DEFAULTSORT 1529 In Literature Category 1529 books fr 1529 en litt rature mk 1529 ... more details
Charleshill is a village in Surrey , England . It lies to the west of Elstead and to the east of Tilford in the borough of Waverley, Surrey Waverley . The village lies to the south of Puttenham & Crooksbury Commons Crooksbury Common and near the River Wey . The local public house is called The Donkey. It was originally converted from two small cottages into a public house in 1850, and at that time was owned by Farnham United Brewery and originally called The Half way House. During that time it acquired the nickname of The Donkey , as before the days of motor traffic, donkeys were kept tethered outside the Inn to help the horses and carts up the hill. In 1947, the name was officially changed. ref http www.donkeytilford.co.uk pdfs DonkeyHistory.pdf History and the Donkeys ref References Reflist coord 51.191 0.724 type city region GB SRY display title Category Villages in Surrey Category Waverley, Surrey Surrey geo stub pl Charleshill ... more details
Infobox person name Norah Baring image Norah Baring.jpg caption Norah Baring, 1938 birth date 26 November 1905 birth place London , ENG ref http ftvdb.bfi.org.uk sift individual 21046 BFI biodata ref death date 8 February 1985 death place Surrey , ENG othername occupation Actress yearsactive 1928 in film 1928 1934 in film 1934 Norah Baring 26 November 1905 8 February 1985 , born Norah Minnie Baker , ref Cite web url http www.freebmd.org.uk cgi information.pl?cite Fwnajd8JOl969fBzcO0TYQ&scan 1 title Index entry accessdate February 20 2011 work FreeBMD publisher ONS ref was an England English film actress most famous for portraying Diana Baring in the Alfred Hitchcock thriller Murder 1930 . She is also known for playing the female lead in Anthony Asquith s silent thriller A Cottage on Dartmoor 1929 . Originally she studied art before succumbing to the footlights and soon became well known to London theatre goers. Selected filmography Underground 1928 film Underground 1928 Parisiskor 1928 The Celestial City 1929 The Runaway Princess 1929 A Cottage on Dartmoor 1929 Murder 1930 Should a Doctor Tell? 1930 Two Worlds 1930 At the Villa Rose 1930 film At the Villa Rose 1930 Should a Doctor Tell? 1931 The Lyons Mail 1931 Strange Evidence 1933 The House of Trent 1933 Little Stranger 1934 References Reflist External links IMDB name id 0054689 name Norah Baring Use dmy dates date September 2010 Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata Persondata NAME Baring, Norah ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION English actress DATE OF BIRTH 26 November 1905 PLACE OF BIRTH Acton, London Acton , London , England DATE OF DEATH 8 February 1985 PLACE OF DEATH Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham , Surrey , England DEFAULTSORT Baring, Norah Category 1905 births Category 1985 deaths Category English film actors England film actor stub de Norah Baring sv Norah Baring ... more details
Orphan date March 2011 Expert subject date March 2011 Edward Ferrers died 1564 , is described by Wood as a distinguished dramatist of the reign of Edward VI of England Edward VI . Wood suggests, without advancing any proof, that he was educated at Oxford. His name does not appear on the register. We know that one Edward Ferrers of Baddesley Clinton , Warwickshire, died 11 August 1564. He was the son of Henry Ferrers d. 1526 , married in 1548 Bridget, daughter of William, lord Windsor, and was father of Henry Ferrers. the antiquary. He was buried in Tarbick Church, Worcestershire ref Dugdale, Warwickshire, 1730, ii. 971 3 ref . Another Edward Ferrers was one of the band of gentlemen pensioners at Elizabeth I of England Elizabeth s court on 1 June 1565, when he was assessed in a subsidy roll as owner of forty shillings worth of land in the parish of St. Dunstan and ward of Farringdon, London. But there is no evidence that either of these men was a dramatist. Wood was clearly misled by the mistakes of Puttenham in his Arte of English Poesie, 1589, and of Meres in his Palladis Tamia, 1598, who both attributed to an Edward Ferrers or Ferris literary work which should have been placed to the credit of George Ferrers . Ritson, while correcting Wood s chief errors, nevertheless maintained that there was probably a dramatist named Edward Ferrers as well as the poet George Ferrers but Puttenham and Meres are clearly guilty of misprinting Edward for George Ferrers, and there is no evidence outside their testimony to show that Edward Ferrers as an author had any existence. References reflist DNB wstitle Ferrers, Edward Use dmy dates date March 2011 Persondata name Ferrers, Edward alternative names short description date of birth place of birth date of death 1564 place of death DEFAULTSORT Ferrers, Edward Category Year of birth missing Category 1564 deaths Category 16th century English people Category People of the Tudor period Category Alumni of the University of Oxford Categor ... more details
Christopher Urswick 1448? 1522 ref Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ref was a priest and confessor of Lady Margaret Beaufort Margaret Beaufort . He was Rector of Puttenham , Hampshire , and later Dean of Windsor . Urswick is thought to have acted as a go between in the plotting to place her son Henry VII of England on the throne. Amongst his more important positions, Urswick was Rector of Hackney parish the Parish of Hackney , where he ordered rebuilt the medieval parish church in the early 16th century of which St Augustine s Tower Hackney St Augustine s Tower is the only remnant. He also built a new parish house Urswick House, now demolished , where he lived for a time and remains commemorated in Urswick Road in nearby Homerton . He appears as a minor character in William Shakespeare Shakespeare s Richard III play Richard III . References reflist Further reading cite DNB wstitle Urswick, Christopher last Pollard first Albert Frederick volume 58 no icon 1 UK reli bio stub RC clergy stub DEFAULTSORT Urswick, Christopher Category 1440s births Category 1522 deaths Category Deans of Windsor Deans of Windsor Category Deans of York Category English Roman Catholic priests Category Clergy of the Tudor period Category 15th century English people Category 16th century English people la Christophorus Urswick ... more details
No footnotes date June 2010 Sir Richard Elyot , serjeant at law SL died 1522 was an England English landowner and judge. He held large estates in Wiltshire and in 1503 became serjeant at law and Law Officers of the Crown Other persons Attorney General to the Queen consort , Elizabeth of York . Soon afterwards he was commissioned to act as Justice of Assize on the western circuit, becoming in 1513 judge of the Court of Common Pleas England Court of Common Pleas . His first marriage was with Alice, daughter of Sir Thomas De La Mare of Aldermaston Court Aldermaston House in Berkshire and widow of Thomas D Abridgecourt of Stratfield Saye House in Hampshire . The marriage brought him a son and two daughters. The son Thomas Elyot became a well known diplomat and author and one of his daughters was the mother of supposed literary writer George Puttenham . Richard later married Elizabeth, widow of Richard Fettiplace of East Shefford and daughter and heiress of William Bessels of Besselsleigh . References 1911 DEFAULTSORT Elyot, Richard Category 1522 deaths Category English judges Category People from Wiltshire Category Serjeants at law Category People of the Tudor period Category Justices of the Common Pleas UK law bio stub ... more details
Seale and Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham , was incorporated in its course. In order to avoid the A31 ... of Wanborough, Surrey Wanborough , Seale, Surrey Seale originally Farnham and Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham , which were each in the different Hundred county subdivision hundreds of Woking , Farnham ... offs to Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham and Seale, Surrey Seale . It is popular with lorry drivers ... more details
Arthur Stewart Eve , Order of the British Empire CBE , Royal Society FRS , Royal Society of Canada FRSC 22 November 1862 &ndash 24 March 1948 was an England English physicist who worked in Canada . Born in Silsoe , Bedfordshire , the son of John Richard and Frederica Somers Eve, Eve was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge . ref Venn id EV881AS name Eve, Arthur Stewart ref He was an assistant master 1896 1902 and bursar 1897 1902 at Marlborough College . In 1903, he came to Canada and was appointed a lecturer at McGill University . He was made an assistant professor in 1904, Associate Professor in 1905 and was appointed the Macdonald Professor in 1912. He later was the Director of Physics. ref name QC cite web url http faculty.marianopolis.edu c.belanger quebechistory encyclopedia ArthurStewartEve.html title Arthur Stewart Eve work The Quebec History Encyclopedia ref A colleague of Ernest Rutherford , he wrote a work about him Rutherford being the life and letters of the Rt. Hon. Lord Rutherford, O.M. in 1939. He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1918. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1910 and of the Royal Society in 1917. He was president of the Royal Society of Canada from 1929 to 1930. ref name QC He died in Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham , Surrey in 1948. References reflist External links worldcat id lccn no93 836 start box s npo pro s bef before Camille Roy literary critic Camille Roy s ttl title President of the Royal Society of Canada years 1929 1930 s aft after Charles Camsell s end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Eve, Arthur ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 22 November 1862 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 24 March 1948 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Eve, Arthur Category 1862 births Category 1948 deaths Category Alumni of Pembroke College, Cambridge Category Commanders of the Order of the British Empire Category English physicists Category Fellows of the Royal Society Category Fello ... more details
infobox UK place country England official name Upton Grey latitude 51.228564 longitude 1.0007845 population population ref shire district Basingstoke and Deane shire county Hampshire region South East England constituency westminster North East Hampshire UK Parliament constituency North East Hampshire post town Basingstoke postcode area RG postcode district RG25 2 dial code 01256 os grid reference SU6986748182 website Upton Grey is a village in Hampshire , England . History Roman times The village is on the line of an ancient Roman road , the Chichester to Silchester Way . Norman times The Grey derives from the years when the village was owned by the de Grey family and was used to differentiate the village from the many other Uptons. Elizabethan times The Manor House dates from Elizabethan times when the Matthew family lived there. The famous Elizabethan poet, George Puttenham , lived at Herriard House but also had a farm at Upton Grey. It was there that he kept his seventeen year old sex slave whom he had kidnapped in London. Eventually she was released when Puttenham s long suffering wife discovered her existence. ref name Lewd cite journal last1 May first1 Stephen W last2 first2 year 2008 title George Puttenham s Lewd and Illicit Career journal Texas Studies in Literature and Language publisher University of Texas Press volume 50 issue 2 pages url http www.britannica.com bps additionalcontent 18 32819294 George Puttenhams Lewd and Illicit Career ref Buildings Manor House Charles Holme purchased several houses and a great deal of the surrounding land in Upton Grey. The Old Manor House, which he rented to tenants for the rest of his life, was in fragile condition. Holme then commissioned a local architect Ernest Newton to refurbish it, keeping many of the original timbers. Today s Edwardian decoration encloses oak rooms, a 16th century staircase and original roof timbers. Newton s house was finished in 1907. Gertrude Jekyll created a Gertrude Jekyll s Garden, Upton ... more details
infobox UK place country England latitude 51.1975 longitude 0.6541 official name Shackleford map type Surrey static image Image shackleford1.jpg 250px static image caption The centre of Shackleford population 744 population ref ref http neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk dissemination LeadTableView.do?a 7&b 800074&c GU8 6AX&d 16&e 15&g 490447&i 1001x1003x1004&m 0&enc 1&dsFamilyId 779 Census data ref shire district Guildford shire county Surrey region South East England constituency westminster Guildford post town Godalming postcode district GU8 postcode area GU dial code 01483 os grid reference SU941451 Start of article Shackleford is a village in Surrey , England lying to the west of the A3 road A3 between Guildford and Petersfield, Hampshire Petersfield . Neighbouring villages include Puttenham, Surrey Puttenham , Peper Harrow and Eashing . The village does not appear in the Domesday survey of the eleventh century. The name first appears as Sakelesford in 1220 with many variants appearing down the centuries. The derivation of the Shackle part of the name is uncertain and the subject of speculation. A possible formation is from the Old English verb sceacan to shake suggesting loose movement, perhaps the shaky or loose bottom of the ford itself. ref J. E. B. Gover, A. Mawer, F. M. Stenton with A. Bonner The Place names of Surrey English Place Name Society Volume XI Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0904889222 pp199 200 ref The name may derive from a ford perhaps over a marshy area or swamp belonging to a man with the name shackle or perhaps a ford secured by chains. Others have speculated that the name derives from the Old English word scacol, meaning tongue of land. Citation needed date August 2009 Whatever the derivation, by the 14th century villagers began taking the place name as a surname, when there is known to have been a William de Shackleford who lived in the area. ref A family of Shackleford, or Shackelford, emigrated from Old Alresford , Hampshire to Virgi ... more details
Thankful Villages also known as Blessed Villages ref http www.mearns.org stcyrus pdf stcyrus1007.pdf St Cyrus an example of the use of Blessed Villages ref are settlements in both England and Wales from which all their then members of the armed forces survived World War I . The term Thankful Village was popularised by the writer Arthur Mee in the 1930s. In Enchanted Land 1936 , the introductory volume to The King s England series of guides, he wrote that a Thankful Village was one which had lost no men in the Great War because all those who left to serve came home again. His initial list identified 32 villages. In their November 2010 update to their Thankful Village website, ref name TV cite web last Norman Thorpe, Rod Morris and Tom Morgan title The Thankful Villages url http www.hellfirecorner.co.uk thankful.htm publisher Hellfire corner accessdate 18 November 2010 ref Norman Thorpe, Tom Morgan and Rod Morris have identified 52 Civil parish parishes in England and Wales from which all soldiers returned. col begin col 3 Buckinghamshire Stoke Hammond Cardiganshire Llanfihangel y Creuddyn Cornwall Herodsfoot Cumberland Ousby Derbyshire Bradbourne Dorset Langton Herring Durham Hunstanworth Essex Strethall Glamorgan Colwinston Gloucestershire Coln Rogers Little Sodbury Upper Slaughter Herefordshire Knill Middleton on the Hill Pipe Aston col 3 Hertfordshire Puttenham, Hertfordshire Puttenham Kent Knowlton, Kent Knowlton Lancashire Arkholme Nether Kellet Leicestershire Saxby, Leicestershire Saxby East Norton Lincolnshire Bigby, Lincolnshire Bigby Flixborough High Toynton Minting Northamptonshire East Carlton Woodend, Northamptonshire Woodend Northumberland Meldon, Northumberland Meldon Nottinghamshire Cromwell, Nottinghamshire Cromwell Maplebeck Wigsley Wysall Pembrokeshire Herbrandston col 3 Rutland Teigh Shropshire Harley, Shropshire Harley Somerset Aisholt Chantry, Somerset Chantry Chelwood Holywell Lake Rodney Stoke Shapwick, Somerset Shapwick Stocklinch Tellisford W ... more details
Primary sources date May 2008 Surya Vahni Priya Capildeo born 1973 is a Trinidad and Tobago Trinidadian writer, and a member of the extended Capildeo family which has produced notable Trinidad ian politicians and writers including V. S. Naipaul . Born in 1973 in Port of Spain , she has lived in the United Kingdom since 1991. Capildeo read English at Christ Church, Oxford . She was subsequently awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to pursue graduate work in Old Norse and translation theory, also at Christ Church. She intermitted from a Research Fellowship at Girton College, Cambridge in 2000 4 in order to spend time in Trinidad and Jamaica. This produced No Traveller Returns Salt, 2003 http www.saltpublishing.com , a book length poem sequence, and One Scattered Skeleton , a non fiction book on the palimpsestic nature of place, memory, and language which takes its title from a poem by the Guyanese poet Martin Carter and moves between the U.K., the Caribbean, and Iceland. Extracts from One Scattered Skeleton have appeared in London City of Disappearances ed. Iain Sinclair , Stand Magazine , The Arts Journal Guyana and The Caribbean Review of Books . Person Animal Figure , a three character series of dramatic monologues, was published by Jeremy Noel Tod s Landfill Press in 2005 http www.landfillpress.co.uk . The Undraining Sea completed 2005 , a third poetry collection, is forthcoming in 2009 from Nathan Hamilton s Norwich based Eggbox Press. It is a three section book that actively engages with William Carlos Williams s Paterson . To follow from Eggbox in 2009 or 2010 is Dark and Unaccustomed Words completed 2008 , which takes its title from George Puttenham s sixteenth century Arte of Poesie . This was Puttenham s critical term for arcane or foreign imports into English. The poems in Capildeo s fourth book do not overtly theorize about poetry but rather seek to demonstrate, for example, the feeling and scope of certain parts of speech prepositions, adjectives , forms, voices, ... more details
family. Notable residents The Elizabethan poet, George Puttenham , lived at Herriard House ... George Puttenham s Lewd and Illicit Career journal Texas Studies in Literature and Language publisher ... more details
File Palladis Tamia 1598.jpg thumb Palladis Tamis 1598 title page Palladis Tamia , subtitled Wits Treasury , is a 1598 book written by the minister Francis Meres . It purports to be A Comparative Discourse of our English Poets, with the Greek, Latin, and Italian Poets , and is important in English literary history as the first critical account of the poems and early plays of William Shakespeare. Palladis Tamia contains moral and critical reflections borrowed from various sources, and included sections on books, on philosophy, on music and painting, as well as the famous Comparative Discourse of our English poets with the Greeke, Latin, and Italian poets that enumerates the English poets from Geoffrey Chaucer to Meres own day, and compares each with a classical author. While Meres is considerably indebted to George Puttenham George Puttenham s The Arte of English Poesie 1589 , the section extends the catalogue of poets and contains many first notices of Meres s contemporaries. In that section Meres lists a dozen Shakespearean plays, identified by him as six comedies and six tragedies Comedy Two Gentlemen of Verona, Comedy of Errors, Love s Labours Lost, Love Labours Won, Midsummer s Night Dream , and Merchant of Venice Tragedy Richard II, Richard III, Henry the IV, King John, Titus Andronicus , and Romeo and Juliet , establishing their composition before 1598. This has sometimes been taken to indicate that only those Shakespeare plays had been written by 1598. However, there is no way of knowing how complete Meres knowledge of the published plays actually was, or whether he even intended to produce a comprehensive list of all the plays at the very least, it is generally agreed that Meres neglects all three parts of the Henry VI trilogy which most scholars believe were written by 1591, seven years before Palladis Tamia . Image Palladis Tamia, Wits Treasury Francis Meres Love labours won excerpt 1598.jpg thumb 220px left Excerpt from Palladis Tamia 1598 listing 12 of S ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Year nav topic 1586 literature Events New books John Knox Historie of the Reformatioun of Religioun within the Realms of Scotland John Lyly Pappe with an hatchet, alias a figge for my Godsonne Jer nimo Os rio De rebus Emmanuelis George Puttenham attr. The Arte of English Poesie Luis Barahona de Soto Primera parte de la Ang lica George Whetstone English Myrror New drama Christopher Marlowe & Thomas Nashe Dido, Queen of Carthage estimated date of writing Poetry See 1586 in poetry Births February 24 Matthias Faber , German religious writer d. 1653 ?April John Ford dramatist John Ford , dramatist d. c. 1640 date unknown Francisco de Moncada , Spanish diplomat, soldier and historian d. 1635 Lady Mary Wroth , poet d. c. 1651 Deaths April 8 Martin Chemnitz , Lutheran theologian b. 1522 June 1 Mart n de Azpilcueta , Spanish theologian b. 1491 June 28 Primo Trubar , author of the first printed book in the Slovenian language b. 1508 August 1 Richard Maitland , Scottish poet b. 1496 September 20 Chidiock Tichborne , poet executed for suspected involvement in the Babington Plot b. 1558 October 17 Sir Philip Sidney , poet of wounds received at the Battle of Zutphen b. 1554 date unknown Antonio Agust n y Albanell , Humanist historian b. 1516 Birbal , Indian poet and wit b. 1528 Giulio Cesare Brancaccio , Italian writer and entertainer b. 1515 Surdas , Hindu devotional poet b. 1479 DEFAULTSORT 1586 In Literature Category 1586 books fr 1586 en litt rature ... more details