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Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland

Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland (née Tanfield; 1585–1639) was an English poet, dramatist, translator, and historian. She is the first woman known to have written and published an original play in English: The Tragedy of Mariam. From an early age, she was recognized by her contemporaries as an accomplished scholar.

Lady Falkland
portrait c. 1620
Born1585 (1585)
Burford Priory, Oxfordshire, England
Died1639 (aged 53–54)
London, England
OccupationPoet, translator, dramatist
Period1598–1639
Notable worksThe Tragedy of Mariam
SpouseHenry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland
RelativesLawrence Tanfield (father); Elizabeth Symondes (mother)

Biography

Early life

Elizabeth Tanfield was born in 1585 or 1586 at Burford Priory in Oxfordshire, the only child of Sir Lawrence Tanfield and his wife Elizabeth Symondes of Norfolk.[1] Her father was a lawyer, who eventually became a judge and Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer. Her parents were highly supportive of their daughter's love for reading and learning, which was so great that her mother forbade the servants from giving Elizabeth candles to read by at night.

Elizabeth's parents employed a French instructor for her when she was five years old. Five weeks later, she was speaking fluently. After excelling in French, she insisted on learning Spanish, Italian, Latin, Hebrew, and Transylvanian on her own, without an instructor.[2] Her accomplishment as a scholar was stressed by Michael Drayton[3] and by John Davies of Hereford[4] in works they dedicated to her.

Her father arranged her marriage at the age of 15 to Sir Henry Cary, later Viscount Falkland, who married her because she was an heiress. When she finally moved into her husband's home, her mother-in-law informed Cary that she was forbidden to read, so she instead chose to write poetry in her spare time.

 
Probably Elizabeth Cary by William Larkin

It was not until seven years after they were married that Lord and Lady Falkland had children; they would go on to have a total of eleven: Catherine (1609–1625), Lucius (who later became the second Viscount Falkland; 1610–1643), Lorenzo (1613–1642), Anne (c.1614–1671),[5] Edward (1616–1616), Elizabeth (1617–1683), Lucy (1619–1650), Victoria (1620–1692), Mary (1621–1693), Henry (born 1622), and Patrick (1623–1657).

In 1622 her husband was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland and Elizabeth Cary joined him in Dublin. There she socialized with prominent local Catholics and patronized Catholic writers. This may have contributed to her conversion to Catholicism,[1] though the death in childbirth of Cary's eldest daughter, Catherine, was said to have precipitated Cary's formal conversion:[6] Catherine reported an apparition of the Virgin Mary while on her deathbed. This apparent sighting deeply moved Cary and furthered her mission to convert her surviving children, as Catherine had died a Protestant. Eventually, four of her daughters — Anne, Elizabeth, Lucy, and Mary — became Benedictine nuns and her son Henry joined the priesthood.[5]

Later years

By 1625 Elizabeth Cary had been disinherited by her father, just before he died, for using part of her jointure to meet expenses. The money that was initially meant for her went instead to her eldest son, Lucius, who was strapped with debt. The disinheritance came after Cary had tried to aid her husband as he struggled to pay for his lands in Ireland. In 1626 she returned from Ireland and publicly announced her conversion to Catholicism, which resulted in Henry Cary's attempting to divorce her. He was unsuccessful, but he managed to deny her access to their children. Despite several orders of the Privy Council, he refused her maintenance in an apparent effort to force her to recant. She was banished court in November 1626 for attending mass with Henrietta Maria without permission.[7] In 1627 her residence was Cote House in Oxford.[8]

Henry Cary died in 1633 and Cary sought to regain custody of her children. She was questioned in the Star Chamber for kidnapping her sons — she had previously, and more easily, regained custody of her daughters — but although she was threatened with imprisonment there is no record of any punishment. In 1634 Elizabeth, Mary, Lucy, and Anne Cary were converted to the Catholic faith by John Fursdon, who was their mother's confessor. Edward Barrett reported this to King Charles I and the King agreed that the four girls be removed from their mother's house and taken to Great Tew,[5] an estate inherited by her son Lucius Cary, who was then Viscount Falkland.[9]

In 1639, Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, died in London. She was buried in Henrietta Maria's Chapel in Somerset House.[10]

Writing

According to the biography by her daughter Lucy Cary, Elizabeth Cary saw poetry as the highest literary form. Many of her poems have been lost, but her dedication to the form is clear in her plays. Her first or possibly second play, The Tragedy of Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry (1613),[11] was written in iambic pentameter. Change in pattern and rhyme scheme indicate multiple sonnets embedded throughout the play. The Tragedy of Mariam was the first original English play to be published by a woman.[12]

Elizabeth Cary then wrote The History of the Life, Reign, and Death of Edward II (1626/1627), which was a political fable based on historical events. It was not published until 1680, decades after her death.[12] The text uses the story of King Edward II and his powerful favourites, Gaveston and Spencer, as an analogy for King Charles, who in the 1620s was in conflict with Parliament about the power granted to the Duke of Buckingham. Cary was in constant contact with Buckingham and his family. Writing The History may have been her way to cope with having to rely constantly on the Buckinghams. She focuses on the idea of favouritism throughout the piece and how it can lead to disastrous outcomes. Other than the Tragedy of Mariam and the History, much of Falkland's original work has been lost, including most of her poetry.[12] Despite only a fraction of her oeuvre having survived, however, her work has generated "a veritable critical industry" since the 1990s.[13]

Works

  • The mirror of the world, a translation of Abraham Ortelius's Le mirroir du monde (1598)
  • The Tragedy of Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry (pub. 1613)
  • Reply of the most Illustrious Cardinal of Perron (1630)
  • The History of the Life, Reign and Death of Edward II, or The History of the most Unfortunate Prince, King Edward II (published 1680)

References

  1. ^ a b Cary, Elizabeth; Wray, Ramona (2012). The tragedy of Mariam, the fair queen of Jewry (New ed.). London: Arden Shakespeare. ISBN 9781904271598. OCLC 798312313.
  2. ^ Cary, Elizabeth, Barry Weller, and Margaret W. Ferguson. The Tragedy of Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry / Her Life / by One of Her Daughters; Edited by Barry Weller and Margaret W. Ferguson. Berkeley: University of California, 1994. Print.
  3. ^ Drayton, Michael (1597). England's Heroical Epistles, written in imitation of the style and manner of Ovid's Epistles with annotations of the chronicle history. London: S. Smethwick. pp. 43v.
  4. ^ Davies, John (1612). The Muses Sacrifice. London: T.S. for George Norton. pp. 3v.
  5. ^ a b c Heather Wolfe, "Cary, Anne (bap. 1614, d. 1671)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, May 2014 accessed 7 April 2017.
  6. ^ G. Fullerton, The Life of Elisabeth Lady Falkland, 1585-1639 (London, 1883), pp. 48-53: The Lady Falkland, Her Life (London, 1861), p. 18.
  7. ^ Thomas Birch & Robert Folkestone Williams, Court and times of Charles I, vol. 1 (London. 1848), p. 170
  8. ^ A. P. Baggs, Eleanor Chance, Christina Colvin, C. J. Day, Nesta Selwyn and S. C. Townley, 'Aston and Cote: Nonconformity', A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 13, Bampton Hundred (Part One), eds. Alan Crossley and C. R. J. Currie. London: Victoria County History, 1996. 77–78. British History Online Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  9. ^ Lucius Cary, Viscount Falkland, BCW project, Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  10. ^ "Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland, writer, Translator & Catholic Recusant." The Twickenham Museum, the history centre for Twickenham Whitton, Teddington, and the Hamptons. The Twickenham Museum , n. d. Web. 12 March 2014.
  11. ^ Simon Barker, Hilary Hinds (eds.), The Routledge Anthology of Renaissance Drama, Routledge, Abingdon (2003), p. 194: "Cary seems to have written an earlier play, now lost, set in Sicily and dedicated to her husband (hence the reference to 'my first' in l. 13 [of the dedication to Mariam]".
  12. ^ a b c Stephanie Hodgson-Wright, "http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/4835 Cary, Elizabeth, Viscountess Falkland (1585–1639)]", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. Oxford: OUP, 2004. 15 November 2006.
  13. ^ Wray, Ramona. "Performing The Tragedy of Mariam and Constructing Stage History." Early Theatre 18(2) December 2015. DOI:10.12745/et.18.2.2542

Further reading

  • Blain, Virginia, et al., eds., "Cary, Anne (c. 1615–71) or Mary (c. 1622–93)"; "Falkland, Elizabeth Cary." The Feminist Companion to Literature in English. New Haven and London: Yale UP, 1990. 186 and 354
  • Buck, Claire, ed., "Cary, Elizabeth Tanfield, Lady Falkland." The Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature. Prentice Hall, 1992. 397
  • Greer, Germaine, et al., eds., "Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland", Kissing the Rod: An Anthology of Seventeenth-Century Women's Verse. Farrar Straus Giroux, 1988. 54–55
  • Henderson, Thomas Finlayson (1887). "Cary, Henry (d.1633)" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 9. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 241–242. — Contains an online biography on Lady Falkland at the end of her husband's biography.
  • Hodgson-Wright, Stephanie (May 2014) [2004]. "Cary, Elizabeth, Viscountess Falkland (1585–1639)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4835. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Shapiro, Arlene Iris, "Elizabeth Cary: Her Life, Letters, And Art, Dissertation (Ph.D.)-State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1984
  • Verzella, Massimo, "Hid as worthless rite". Scrittura femminile nell'Inghilterra di re Giacomo: Elizabeth Cary e Mary Wroth, Roma, Aracne, 2007
  • Verzella, Massimo, "The Renaissance Englishwoman's Entry into Print: Authorizing Strategies", The Atlantic Critical Review, III, 3 (July–September 2004), pp. 1–19
  • Cary, Elizabeth, Barry Weller, and Margaret W. Ferguson, The Tragedy of Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry / Her Life / by One of Her Daughters; Edited by Barry Weller and Margaret W. Ferguson. Berkeley: University of California, 1994. Print
  • "Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland, Writer, Translator & Catholic Recusant." The Twickenham Museum, the history centre for Twickenham Whitton, Teddington, and the Hamptons. The Twickenham Museum, n. d. Web. 12 March 2014
  • F., E., Henry Cary, and Edward Fannant. The History of the Life, Reign, and Death of Edward II., King of England, with the Rise and Fall of His Great Favourites, Gaveston and the Spencers. Written by E. F. in the Year 1627, etc. London: J. C. for Charles Harper, 1680. Print
  • Freeman, Peter. "The Unhidden Faith of Lady Falkland." Crisis Magazine, a Voice for the Faithful Catholic Laity. Crisis Magazine, 23 June 2011. Web. 12 March 2014
  • Wolfe, Heather. The Literary Career and Legacy of Elizabeth Cary, 1613–1680. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Ebook

External links

  • Works by or about Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland at Internet Archive
  • Works by Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

elizabeth, cary, viscountess, falkland, née, tanfield, 1585, 1639, english, poet, dramatist, translator, historian, first, woman, known, have, written, published, original, play, english, tragedy, mariam, from, early, recognized, contemporaries, accomplished, . Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland nee Tanfield 1585 1639 was an English poet dramatist translator and historian She is the first woman known to have written and published an original play in English The Tragedy of Mariam From an early age she was recognized by her contemporaries as an accomplished scholar Lady Falklandportrait c 1620Born1585 1585 Burford Priory Oxfordshire EnglandDied1639 aged 53 54 London EnglandOccupationPoet translator dramatistPeriod1598 1639Notable worksThe Tragedy of MariamSpouseHenry Cary 1st Viscount FalklandRelativesLawrence Tanfield father Elizabeth Symondes mother Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Later years 2 Writing 3 Works 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Elizabeth Tanfield was born in 1585 or 1586 at Burford Priory in Oxfordshire the only child of Sir Lawrence Tanfield and his wife Elizabeth Symondes of Norfolk 1 Her father was a lawyer who eventually became a judge and Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer Her parents were highly supportive of their daughter s love for reading and learning which was so great that her mother forbade the servants from giving Elizabeth candles to read by at night Elizabeth s parents employed a French instructor for her when she was five years old Five weeks later she was speaking fluently After excelling in French she insisted on learning Spanish Italian Latin Hebrew and Transylvanian on her own without an instructor 2 Her accomplishment as a scholar was stressed by Michael Drayton 3 and by John Davies of Hereford 4 in works they dedicated to her Her father arranged her marriage at the age of 15 to Sir Henry Cary later Viscount Falkland who married her because she was an heiress When she finally moved into her husband s home her mother in law informed Cary that she was forbidden to read so she instead chose to write poetry in her spare time Probably Elizabeth Cary by William Larkin It was not until seven years after they were married that Lord and Lady Falkland had children they would go on to have a total of eleven Catherine 1609 1625 Lucius who later became the second Viscount Falkland 1610 1643 Lorenzo 1613 1642 Anne c 1614 1671 5 Edward 1616 1616 Elizabeth 1617 1683 Lucy 1619 1650 Victoria 1620 1692 Mary 1621 1693 Henry born 1622 and Patrick 1623 1657 In 1622 her husband was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland and Elizabeth Cary joined him in Dublin There she socialized with prominent local Catholics and patronized Catholic writers This may have contributed to her conversion to Catholicism 1 though the death in childbirth of Cary s eldest daughter Catherine was said to have precipitated Cary s formal conversion 6 Catherine reported an apparition of the Virgin Mary while on her deathbed This apparent sighting deeply moved Cary and furthered her mission to convert her surviving children as Catherine had died a Protestant Eventually four of her daughters Anne Elizabeth Lucy and Mary became Benedictine nuns and her son Henry joined the priesthood 5 Later years Edit By 1625 Elizabeth Cary had been disinherited by her father just before he died for using part of her jointure to meet expenses The money that was initially meant for her went instead to her eldest son Lucius who was strapped with debt The disinheritance came after Cary had tried to aid her husband as he struggled to pay for his lands in Ireland In 1626 she returned from Ireland and publicly announced her conversion to Catholicism which resulted in Henry Cary s attempting to divorce her He was unsuccessful but he managed to deny her access to their children Despite several orders of the Privy Council he refused her maintenance in an apparent effort to force her to recant She was banished court in November 1626 for attending mass with Henrietta Maria without permission 7 In 1627 her residence was Cote House in Oxford 8 Henry Cary died in 1633 and Cary sought to regain custody of her children She was questioned in the Star Chamber for kidnapping her sons she had previously and more easily regained custody of her daughters but although she was threatened with imprisonment there is no record of any punishment In 1634 Elizabeth Mary Lucy and Anne Cary were converted to the Catholic faith by John Fursdon who was their mother s confessor Edward Barrett reported this to King Charles I and the King agreed that the four girls be removed from their mother s house and taken to Great Tew 5 an estate inherited by her son Lucius Cary who was then Viscount Falkland 9 In 1639 Elizabeth Cary Lady Falkland died in London She was buried in Henrietta Maria s Chapel in Somerset House 10 Writing EditAccording to the biography by her daughter Lucy Cary Elizabeth Cary saw poetry as the highest literary form Many of her poems have been lost but her dedication to the form is clear in her plays Her first or possibly second play The Tragedy of Mariam the Fair Queen of Jewry 1613 11 was written in iambic pentameter Change in pattern and rhyme scheme indicate multiple sonnets embedded throughout the play The Tragedy of Mariam was the first original English play to be published by a woman 12 Elizabeth Cary then wrote The History of the Life Reign and Death of Edward II 1626 1627 which was a political fable based on historical events It was not published until 1680 decades after her death 12 The text uses the story of King Edward II and his powerful favourites Gaveston and Spencer as an analogy for King Charles who in the 1620s was in conflict with Parliament about the power granted to the Duke of Buckingham Cary was in constant contact with Buckingham and his family Writing The History may have been her way to cope with having to rely constantly on the Buckinghams She focuses on the idea of favouritism throughout the piece and how it can lead to disastrous outcomes Other than the Tragedy of Mariam and the History much of Falkland s original work has been lost including most of her poetry 12 Despite only a fraction of her oeuvre having survived however her work has generated a veritable critical industry since the 1990s 13 Works EditThe mirror of the world a translation of Abraham Ortelius s Le mirroir du monde 1598 The Tragedy of Mariam the Fair Queen of Jewry pub 1613 Reply of the most Illustrious Cardinal of Perron 1630 The History of the Life Reign and Death of Edward II or The History of the most Unfortunate Prince King Edward II published 1680 References Edit a b Cary Elizabeth Wray Ramona 2012 The tragedy of Mariam the fair queen of Jewry New ed London Arden Shakespeare ISBN 9781904271598 OCLC 798312313 Cary Elizabeth Barry Weller and Margaret W Ferguson The Tragedy of Mariam the Fair Queen of Jewry Her Life by One of Her Daughters Edited by Barry Weller and Margaret W Ferguson Berkeley University of California 1994 Print Drayton Michael 1597 England s Heroical Epistles written in imitation of the style and manner of Ovid s Epistles with annotations of the chronicle history London S Smethwick pp 43v Davies John 1612 The Muses Sacrifice London T S for George Norton pp 3v a b c Heather Wolfe Cary Anne bap 1614 d 1671 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press May 2014 accessed 7 April 2017 G Fullerton The Life of Elisabeth Lady Falkland 1585 1639 London 1883 pp 48 53 The Lady Falkland Her Life London 1861 p 18 Thomas Birch amp Robert Folkestone Williams Court and times of Charles I vol 1 London 1848 p 170 A P Baggs Eleanor Chance Christina Colvin C J Day Nesta Selwyn and S C Townley Aston and Cote Nonconformity A History of the County of Oxford Volume 13 Bampton Hundred Part One eds Alan Crossley and C R J Currie London Victoria County History 1996 77 78 British History Online Retrieved 2 August 2021 Lucius Cary Viscount Falkland BCW project Retrieved 7 April 2017 Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland writer Translator amp Catholic Recusant The Twickenham Museum the history centre for Twickenham Whitton Teddington and the Hamptons The Twickenham Museum n d Web 12 March 2014 Simon Barker Hilary Hinds eds The Routledge Anthology of Renaissance Drama Routledge Abingdon 2003 p 194 Cary seems to have written an earlier play now lost set in Sicily and dedicated to her husband hence the reference to my first in l 13 of the dedication to Mariam a b c Stephanie Hodgson Wright http www oxforddnb com view article 4835 Cary Elizabeth Viscountess Falkland 1585 1639 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ed H C G Matthew and Brian Harrison Oxford OUP 2004 15 November 2006 Wray Ramona Performing The Tragedy of Mariam and Constructing Stage History Early Theatre 18 2 December 2015 DOI 10 12745 et 18 2 2542Further reading EditBlain Virginia et al eds Cary Anne c 1615 71 or Mary c 1622 93 Falkland Elizabeth Cary The Feminist Companion to Literature in English New Haven and London Yale UP 1990 186 and 354 Buck Claire ed Cary Elizabeth Tanfield Lady Falkland The Bloomsbury Guide to Women s Literature Prentice Hall 1992 397 Greer Germaine et al eds Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland Kissing the Rod An Anthology of Seventeenth Century Women s Verse Farrar Straus Giroux 1988 54 55 Henderson Thomas Finlayson 1887 Cary Henry d 1633 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 9 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 241 242 Contains an online biography on Lady Falkland at the end of her husband s biography Hodgson Wright Stephanie May 2014 2004 Cary Elizabeth Viscountess Falkland 1585 1639 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4835 Subscription or UK public library membership required Shapiro Arlene Iris Elizabeth Cary Her Life Letters And Art Dissertation Ph D State University of New York at Stony Brook 1984 Verzella Massimo Hid as worthless rite Scrittura femminile nell Inghilterra di re Giacomo Elizabeth Cary e Mary Wroth Roma Aracne 2007 Verzella Massimo The Renaissance Englishwoman s Entry into Print Authorizing Strategies The Atlantic Critical Review III 3 July September 2004 pp 1 19 Cary Elizabeth Barry Weller and Margaret W Ferguson The Tragedy of Mariam the Fair Queen of Jewry Her Life by One of Her Daughters Edited by Barry Weller and Margaret W Ferguson Berkeley University of California 1994 Print Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland Writer Translator amp Catholic Recusant The Twickenham Museum the history centre for Twickenham Whitton Teddington and the Hamptons The Twickenham Museum n d Web 12 March 2014 F E Henry Cary and Edward Fannant The History of the Life Reign and Death of Edward II King of England with the Rise and Fall of His Great Favourites Gaveston and the Spencers Written by E F in the Year 1627 etc London J C for Charles Harper 1680 Print Freeman Peter The Unhidden Faith of Lady Falkland Crisis Magazine a Voice for the Faithful Catholic Laity Crisis Magazine 23 June 2011 Web 12 March 2014 Wolfe Heather The Literary Career and Legacy of Elizabeth Cary 1613 1680 New York Palgrave Macmillan 2006 EbookExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland Works by or about Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland at Internet Archive Works by Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland amp oldid 1129740024, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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