Difference between revisions of "Francis Thynne 1545?-1608"
(→Books) |
|||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
====Books==== | ====Books==== | ||
Thynne was an active acquirer of books and manuscripts and he accumulated a large library (including Chaucer [[format::manuscripts]] inherited from his father). "He spent his life in libraries and his study" (''ODNB''), and as a member of the Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries he was associated with many of the other members of that group, including [[crossreference::William Camden 1551-1623|William Camden]], Sir [[crossreference::Robert Cotton 1571-1631|Robert Cotton]], William Lambarde and John Stow. He transcribed and edited numerous texts from manuscript sources, which were variously published after his death. He left extensive manuscript and printed collections which were dispersed after his death and items will be found today in research libraries around the world. | Thynne was an active acquirer of books and manuscripts and he accumulated a large library (including Chaucer [[format::manuscripts]] inherited from his father). "He spent his life in libraries and his study" (''ODNB''), and as a member of the Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries he was associated with many of the other members of that group, including [[crossreference::William Camden 1551-1623|William Camden]], Sir [[crossreference::Robert Cotton 1571-1631|Robert Cotton]], William Lambarde and John Stow. He transcribed and edited numerous texts from manuscript sources, which were variously published after his death. He left extensive manuscript and printed collections which were dispersed after his death and items will be found today in research libraries around the world. | ||
+ | [[file:ThynneFrancis.jpg|thumb|886px|Thynne's inscription, from the Middle Temple Library]] | ||
+ | ====Characteristic Markings==== | ||
+ | A copy of Dionysius the Carthusian, ''Elucidissima in Divi Pauli ... epistolas'', 1535, has Thynne's inscription at the head of the titlepage dated 1585, and his motto at the foot, "Optimu[m] non nasci promimu[m] quam citissime mori". | ||
====Sources==== | ====Sources==== |
Revision as of 03:50, 25 February 2024
Francis THYNNE 1545?-1608
Biographical Note
Born at Erith, Kent, son of William Thynne, known for his editing of Chaucer. He was admitted at Lincoln's Inn in 1561, but seems not to have stayed long; it is not clear whether he developed a legal practice as an attorney. He lived much of his life in straitened circumstances, with support from wealthier members of his family (particularly Sir John Thynne of Longleat House). He was appointed Lancaster Herald in 1602.
Books
Thynne was an active acquirer of books and manuscripts and he accumulated a large library (including Chaucer manuscripts inherited from his father). "He spent his life in libraries and his study" (ODNB), and as a member of the Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries he was associated with many of the other members of that group, including William Camden, Sir Robert Cotton, William Lambarde and John Stow. He transcribed and edited numerous texts from manuscript sources, which were variously published after his death. He left extensive manuscript and printed collections which were dispersed after his death and items will be found today in research libraries around the world.
Characteristic Markings
A copy of Dionysius the Carthusian, Elucidissima in Divi Pauli ... epistolas, 1535, has Thynne's inscription at the head of the titlepage dated 1585, and his motto at the foot, "Optimu[m] non nasci promimu[m] quam citissime mori".
Sources
- Knafla, Louis A. "Thynne, Francis (1545?–1608), herald and antiquary." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Information from Renae Satterley.