List of contributors
Preface
Introduction
(Lucy R. Nicholas, KCL, UK)
Texts
1 Academic Freedom on Trial in Tudor Times
Stephen Gardiner (1483–1555), letter to John Cheke, 15 May 1542
(Micha Lazarus, University of Cambridge, UK)
2 Why Tudor Cambridge Needs Greek
Richard Croke (1489–1558), Orationes duae (Aaron Kachuk, University
of Cambridge, UK, and Benedick C.F. McDougall)
3 A Professor in Scottish Politics
Andrew Melville (1545–1622), Stephaniskion (Stephen J. Harrison,
University of Oxford, UK)
4 A Distinct Mode of Pastoral in Elizabethan Cambridge
Giles Fletcher the Elder (c. 1546–1611), Ecloga Daphnis (Sharon van
Dijk, University of Birmingham, UK)
5 Greek and Latin poetry from Cambridge on sixteenth-century
questions of faith
Act and Tripos verses from the 1580s and the 1590s (William M.
Barton, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Neo-Latin Studies,
Austria)
6 Happy New Year in Jacobean Oxford: Metamorphosing Ovid into
Student Comedy
Philip Parsons (1594–1653), Atalanta (Elizabeth Sandis, Institute
for English Studies, UK)
7 European Networks and the Reformation of the University of
Edinburgh
Astronomical disputations from the graduating class of 1612–16.
Lecturer: William King (David McOmish, University of Glasgow,
UK)
8 A Prevaricator Speech from Caroline Cambridge
James Duport (1606–1679), Aurum potest produci per artem chymicam
(Tommi Alho, University, Finland)
9 An Irish Panegyric on Henry Cromwell Caesar Williamson (c.
1611–1675), Panegyris in Excellentissimum Dominum, Dominum Henricum
Cromwellum (Jason Harris, University College Cork, Ireland)
10 Herrings, Linen and Cheese: Celebrating the Treaty of
Westminster in 1654
The Musarum Oxoniensium Elaiophoria (Oxford) and the Oliva Pacis
(Cambridge) (Caroline Spearing, University of Exeter, UK)
11 Political Poetry from late Stuart Cambridge
Cambridge Poems on the Peace of 1697 (David Money, University of
Cambridge, UK)
Notes
Bibliography
Index
An anthology of extracts focusing on early modern Latin writings produced in a British university setting, encompassing institutions in England, Ireland and Scotland (c. 1500–1800).
Gesine Manuwald is Professor of Latin at University
College London, UK, and President of the Society for Neo-Latin
Studies (SNLS). She has published a number of articles on early
modern Latin literature and edited the collected volume Neo-Latin
Poetry in the British Isles (2012) with Luke Houghton. She is a
co-editor of the first two anthologies in the series.
Lucy Nicholas is Lecturer in Latin and Ancient Greek at The
Warburg Institute in London, UK. She has published on Roger Ascham
and written on other early modern Latin authors, including Thomas
More, Thomas Nashe and Walter Haddon. She is also a co-editor of
the first two anthologies in the series.
An excellent introduction to the volume as a whole lucidly
describes the development of universities in early modern Britain.
The material collected examines these important institutions
through the lens of the languages – Latin, and to a lesser extent,
Greek – in which they functioned, revealing the vital role
universities played in public and political life.
*Elisabeth Dutton, Professor of Medieval English, University of
Fribourg, Switzerland*
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