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Proposals for an English Academy

During the early part of the 17th century, and persisting in some form into the early 18th century, there were a number of proposals for an English Academy: some form of learned institution, conceived as having royal backing and a leading role in the intellectual life of the nation.[1] Definite calls for an English Academy came in 1617, based on the Italian model dating back to the 16th century; they were followed up later, after the 1635 founding of the French Académie, by John Dryden (1664), John Evelyn (1665), and Daniel Defoe (1697).[2][3]

Historical overview Edit

The proposals for an English Academy were initially and typically characterised by an antiquarian interest, for example in heraldry and medieval history. They represented a conservative wing in the larger discussion, and in different ways they informed approaches to the idea of a learned society as an active educational and regulatory body. In fact no such Academy would be set up, though discussion of the perceived need for one continued into the eighteenth century.[4] The development of ideas on the language-regulation function of a putative English Academy was studied initially by Hermann Martin Flasdieck.[5] Flasdieck distinguished three phases: first private initiatives up to the middle of the 17th century; then the Restoration period in which the Royal Society and its membership took an interest; and a later period in which proposals to mirror the French Académie met with serious opposition.[6]

Nothing much came directly of such proposals, typically for an "academy royal" or court academy; but they formed part of a wider debate including the role of the universities, and the foundation of new institutions such as the successive Gresham College, Chelsea College, Durham College, and the Royal Society, which had very different fates, as well as the pansophic projects that failed to get off the drawing board.

Elizabethan proposals Edit

In the early 1570s Humphrey Gilbert published The erection of an achademy in London, concerned with the education of wards and the younger sons of gentlemen. The proposed course included subjects seen as practical, as well as classical studies.[7] This conception already had a generation of history behind it: in the reign of Henry VIII Nicholas Bacon (with Robert Carey and Thomas Denton) had reported on a project to create a new inn of court, conceived along the lines of a humanist academy. Bacon had then taken the idea further and combined it with legal experience of wardship, and in a paper of 1561 made a recommendation to the queen.[8]

The home and library of John Dee at Mortlake from 1570 to the early 1580s has been identified as a prototype 'academy'. His circle included Thomas Hariot and Walter Raleigh, and was closely linked to that around Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland. These groups with Gresham College comprised the centre of English scientific life at the period.[9]

The Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries Edit

The College (or Society) of Antiquaries met from around 1586 to around 1607.[10] The membership comprised successful lawyers, members of the College of Heralds, wealthy collectors of old manuscripts and a few professional archivists. They met in London during each law term unless plague intervened.[11] Using the notebook of one member, Francis Tate, Wright dates 22 meetings from 1590 to 1601. Thereafter, meetings became less regular, not only owing to plague but also to the suspicions of the government of James I after 1603.

Two subjects for discussion were agreed in advance of meetings and every member was expected to contribute.[12] They aimed to ‘construct a detailed and credible account of the origins and development of the English people.’[13] Some, influenced by William Camden’s Britannia, tackled the broad historical picture from pre-Roman times; some specialised in common law developments from the twelfth century. However, others began a serious study of the early-medieval origins of English culture and identity. In so doing, they made considerable use of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts in both Old English and Latin to supplement still thin published sources.

A large number of the contributions to their discussions were published by Thomas Hearne in the eighteenth century and these give several indications of how the antiquaries worked. For example, on 24 November 1599, the Society chose to discuss the antiquity, etymology and variety of English terms used to measure land. Arthur Agard (or Agarde), the Society’s most respected member, was hesitant:

Although I must confess that in this proposition I have more travelled than in any of the former, for that it concerneth me more to understand the right thereof, especially in that sundry have resorted to me thereabouts to know whether I have in my custody any records that avouch the same in certainty; yet so it fareth with me, that in perusing as well those abbreviations I have noted out of Domesday and other records …, as also those notes I have quoted out of ancient registers and books which have fallen into my hands within these xxx. years, I have found the diversity of measurement so variable and different in every … place in the realm, as I was in a mammering ….[14]

Society members consulted Agard for advice on what material might be available. He had been deputy chamberlain of the exchequer since 1570, responsible for what would be a 40-year project to compile inventories of the four treasuries at Westminster, which contained both royal and abbey records.[15]

The Society was eventually closed down owing to the disapproval of James I. Those involved included:

Robert Bruce Cotton and others petitioned Elizabeth I to establish a national library and academy, having in mind an institution for antiquarian study.[33] The Society paid attention to the succession to Elizabeth, and then the Jacobean debate on the Union, with union tracts written by Cotton and another member, John Dodderidge, papers read on names for "Britain" in 1604, and Walter Cope, a member and M.P., involved in the parliamentary debate.[34]

Jacobean proposals Edit

Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales revived by his patronage Humphrey Gilbert's proposal. He combined that concept with the French model of Antoine de Pluvinel's riding academy, which included varied studies. The project was intended to cover mathematics and languages as well as equestrian skills, but was cut short by the Prince's death.[35]

The suppression of the Society of Antiquaries having left a hiatus in intellectual life, at least as far as antiquarian interests were concerned, Edmund Bolton brought forward a plan for a royal academy (his "academ roial"). In 1617 a list of 27 names was put forward: it included Sir John Hayward,[36] and Henry Ferrers.[37] A similar list in 1624 included Sir William Segar.[38] Bolton proposed a complex structure, an outer ring of membership (listing 84), and a role in censorship of publications outside theology, all supported by a subsidy. He gained some support from George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, who put forward a plan (attributed to Prince Henry) in the 1621 Parliament;[39] but nothing came of it. The end of the reign put an end to the plan.

Salomon's House, the proposal or model from Francis Bacon's New Atlantis for an institution of natural philosophy, dates also from this period at the end of the reign of James I. It is an orderly and royally authorised institute for research.[40] Bacon's follower Thomas Bushell was later rumoured to be intending to set up an actual institution, in London, or Wells in Somerset.[41]

Kynaston's academy Edit

The foundation in 1635 of the Académie française coincided closely with Francis Kynaston's setting up of an actual educational institution, his Musaeum Minervae, in his own home in Covent Garden. The king gave money, and the academy admitted young gentlemen only, on exclusive grounds. The tutors were hand-picked by Kynaston. The new institution was satirised, though mildly, by Richard Brome's play The New Academy (dated to 1636).[42]

Kynaston gave his own house in Bedford Street, Covent Garden, for the college, with ambitions to move into Chelsea College. He furnished it with books, manuscripts, musical and mathematical instruments, paintings, and statues, at his own expense. He was himself the regent, and his friends Edward May, Michael Mason, Thomas Hunt, Nicholas Fiske, John Spiedal (Spidall), and Walter Salter were professors in various areas. According to the Constitutions published by Kynaston in 1636, only the nobility and gentry were to be admitted to the college, the object of which was to prepare candidates for a Grand Tour.[43] The full course was to occupy seven years; no gentleman was ‘to exercise himself at once about more than two particular sciences, arts, or qualities, whereof one shall be intellectual, the other corporall.’ The regent taught the following subjects: heraldry, a practical knowledge of deeds and the principles and processes of common law, antiquities, coins, husbandry. Music, dancing and behaviour, riding, sculpture, and writing also formed important parts of the curriculum.[44]

The academy idea was still in the air in the years before the First English Civil War, and Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel brought forward a proposal during the Short Parliament. Samuel Hartlib spoke of a pilot scheme he had run.[45] In the years 1648–1650 Balthazar Gerbier revived the idea of an academy on Kynaston's lines in a series of pamphlets.[46] Peter Chamberlen the third suggested an academy to oversee public welfare, as part of his reforming scheme.[47]

After the Restoration of 1660 Edit

Around 1660 John Evelyn and Robert Boyle were interested once more in the idea of an academy.[48] Evelyn's experience abroad included a meeting of the Umoristi, an academy in Rome devoted to verse and linguistic matters. Language now became aspect of the "English Academy" issue that continued to resonate with English literati, and was floated by small groups from time to time; and Evelyn himself was a constant advocate of attention to it.[49] Evelyn sent Boyle a plan, costed at something over £1000, in a letter from in September 1659; in 1660 Bengt Skytte, a follower of Comenius, brought up a pansophic version of the concept with Boyle and others, on a similar scale.[50] These ideas were overtaken by Boyle's involvement in the 1660 committee of 12 which led shortly to the formation of the Royal Society.

Abraham Cowley in 1661 conspicuously and in detail advocated a "philosophical college" near central London, that would function as an innovating educational institution, in his Proposition for the Advancement of Experimental Philosophy.[48] One supporter of an English Academy to regulate the language was Thomas Sprat of the Royal Society, founded in 1662.[51] A group actually met in Gray's Inn in 1665 to plan an academy, as was recalled later by Evelyn: Cowley and Sprat were involved, with George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, Matthew Clifford, Cyril Wyche, John Dryden, and others.[52] After only a little progress, London was subject to the Great Plague,

Wentworth Dillon, 4th Earl of Roscommon set up, around 1682, a literary society that attracted the name 'academy'. It involved Dryden, other participants being George Savile, Marquess of Halifax, Richard Maitland, Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset, Lord Cavendish, Sir Charles Scarborough, and Heneage Finch. Their linguistic interests extended mainly to issues of translation. This group was documented by Knightly Chetwood, Roscommon's friend.[53]

Giovanni Torriano, in his The Italian Reviv'd, equated some English clubs of the Restoration period with groups who in France or Italy would be called "academies".[54]

Later proposals Edit

At the beginning of the reign of William III and Mary II a proposed Royal Academies Company was a lottery scheme.[55] Lewis Maidwell (1650–1716) had some initial success in promoting his school in King Street, London as chartered by William III, with a modernised curriculum. He proposed a tax on publications to support it, but was opposed in Parliament and met with serious resistance from the universities.[56][57] At the same period Daniel Defoe in his Essay upon Projects had a section on academies.[58]

Jonathan Swift in his Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue,[59] advocated an academy for regulating the English language. In the form of a call for a "national dictionary" to regulate the English language, on the French model, this conception had much support from Augustan men of letters: Defoe, Joseph Addison (The Spectator 135 in 1711) and Alexander Pope. At the end of Queen Anne's reign some royal backing was again possible, but that ended with the change of monarch in 1714.[60]

The whole idea later met stern opposition, however, from the lexicographer Samuel Johnson, invoking "English liberty" against the prescription involved: he predicted disobedience of an academy supposed to set usage.[61] Matthew Arnold, in an 1862 essay The Literary Influence of Academies, was positive in assessing the French and Italian cultural academies; but marks an endpoint in the tradition.[62] In Culture and Anarchy Arnold denied that he supported setting up an English Academy, guying the likely membership as establishment figures.[63]

During his 1780 diplomatic mission to Amsterdam, statesman, and later President of the United States, John Adams advocated for an official English Academy as part of the federal government in a letter to the Second Continental Congress.[64] The proposal was later rejected by the Continental Congress due to concerns of individual liberty, and marked one of the earliest instances of the government’s consideration of linguistic diversity.[65]

References Edit

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  41. ^ Darley, Gillian (2006). John Evelyn: Living for Ingenuity. Yale University Press. p. 156. ISBN 9780300112276.
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  43. ^ Sutton, Dana F. (5 October 1999). "Introduction". Kynaston's Troilus and Cressida. The Philological Museum.
  44. ^ "Kynaston, Francis" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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  50. ^ Michael Cyril William Hunter, Establishing the New Science: the experience of the early Royal Society (1989), p. 157; Google Books.
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  52. ^ Katsuhiro Engetsu, Dryden and the Modes of Restoration Sociability, p. 185, in Steven N. Zwicker (editor), The Cambridge Companion to John Dryden (2004).
  53. ^ Gillespie, Stuart. "Dillon, Wentworth". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7667. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  54. ^ Frances Yates, An Italian in Restoration England, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes Vol. 6, (1943), pp. 216–220
  55. ^ Walter Bagehot (1873). Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market. Scribner, Armstrong & Company. p. 135.
  56. ^ Sheppard, F. H. W., ed. (1963). "Kingly and Carnaby Street Area". Survey of London: volumes 31 and 32: St James Westminster, Part 2. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
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  58. ^ Daniel Defoe (1 June 2004). Essay Upon Projects. Kessinger Publishing. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-4191-1823-4.
  59. ^ Jonathan Swift (1712). A Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue: In a Letter to the Most Honourable Robert, Earl of Oxford and Mortimer, Lord High Treasurer of Great Britain. Benj. Tooke.
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  64. ^ Adams, John (5 September 1780). "Proposal for an American Language Academy". Letter to Samuel Huntington (Connecticut politician). Retrieved 25 September 2019.
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Further reading Edit

  • Isaac D'Israeli, An English Academy of Literature
  • Freeman, Edmund (July 1924). "A Proposal for an English Academy in 1660". The Modern Language Review. 19 (3): 291–300. doi:10.2307/3714671. JSTOR 3714671.
  • Lee, Patricia-Ann (Autumn 1970). "Some English Academies: An Experiment in the Education of Renaissance Gentlemen". History of Education Quarterly. 10 (3): 273–286. doi:10.2307/367524. JSTOR 367524. S2CID 144193442.

proposals, english, academy, during, early, part, 17th, century, persisting, some, form, into, early, 18th, century, there, were, number, proposals, english, academy, some, form, learned, institution, conceived, having, royal, backing, leading, role, intellect. During the early part of the 17th century and persisting in some form into the early 18th century there were a number of proposals for an English Academy some form of learned institution conceived as having royal backing and a leading role in the intellectual life of the nation 1 Definite calls for an English Academy came in 1617 based on the Italian model dating back to the 16th century they were followed up later after the 1635 founding of the French Academie by John Dryden 1664 John Evelyn 1665 and Daniel Defoe 1697 2 3 Contents 1 Historical overview 2 Elizabethan proposals 2 1 The Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries 3 Jacobean proposals 4 Kynaston s academy 5 After the Restoration of 1660 6 Later proposals 7 References 8 Further readingHistorical overview EditThe proposals for an English Academy were initially and typically characterised by an antiquarian interest for example in heraldry and medieval history They represented a conservative wing in the larger discussion and in different ways they informed approaches to the idea of a learned society as an active educational and regulatory body In fact no such Academy would be set up though discussion of the perceived need for one continued into the eighteenth century 4 The development of ideas on the language regulation function of a putative English Academy was studied initially by Hermann Martin Flasdieck 5 Flasdieck distinguished three phases first private initiatives up to the middle of the 17th century then the Restoration period in which the Royal Society and its membership took an interest and a later period in which proposals to mirror the French Academie met with serious opposition 6 Nothing much came directly of such proposals typically for an academy royal or court academy but they formed part of a wider debate including the role of the universities and the foundation of new institutions such as the successive Gresham College Chelsea College Durham College and the Royal Society which had very different fates as well as the pansophic projects that failed to get off the drawing board Elizabethan proposals EditIn the early 1570s Humphrey Gilbert published The erection of an achademy in London concerned with the education of wards and the younger sons of gentlemen The proposed course included subjects seen as practical as well as classical studies 7 This conception already had a generation of history behind it in the reign of Henry VIII Nicholas Bacon with Robert Carey and Thomas Denton had reported on a project to create a new inn of court conceived along the lines of a humanist academy Bacon had then taken the idea further and combined it with legal experience of wardship and in a paper of 1561 made a recommendation to the queen 8 The home and library of John Dee at Mortlake from 1570 to the early 1580s has been identified as a prototype academy His circle included Thomas Hariot and Walter Raleigh and was closely linked to that around Henry Percy 9th Earl of Northumberland These groups with Gresham College comprised the centre of English scientific life at the period 9 The Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries Edit The College or Society of Antiquaries met from around 1586 to around 1607 10 The membership comprised successful lawyers members of the College of Heralds wealthy collectors of old manuscripts and a few professional archivists They met in London during each law term unless plague intervened 11 Using the notebook of one member Francis Tate Wright dates 22 meetings from 1590 to 1601 Thereafter meetings became less regular not only owing to plague but also to the suspicions of the government of James I after 1603 Two subjects for discussion were agreed in advance of meetings and every member was expected to contribute 12 They aimed to construct a detailed and credible account of the origins and development of the English people 13 Some influenced by William Camden s Britannia tackled the broad historical picture from pre Roman times some specialised in common law developments from the twelfth century However others began a serious study of the early medieval origins of English culture and identity In so doing they made considerable use of Anglo Saxon manuscripts in both Old English and Latin to supplement still thin published sources A large number of the contributions to their discussions were published by Thomas Hearne in the eighteenth century and these give several indications of how the antiquaries worked For example on 24 November 1599 the Society chose to discuss the antiquity etymology and variety of English terms used to measure land Arthur Agard or Agarde the Society s most respected member was hesitant Although I must confess that in this proposition I have more travelled than in any of the former for that it concerneth me more to understand the right thereof especially in that sundry have resorted to me thereabouts to know whether I have in my custody any records that avouch the same in certainty yet so it fareth with me that in perusing as well those abbreviations I have noted out of Domesday and other records as also those notes I have quoted out of ancient registers and books which have fallen into my hands within these xxx years I have found the diversity of measurement so variable and different in every place in the realm as I was in a mammering 14 Society members consulted Agard for advice on what material might be available He had been deputy chamberlain of the exchequer since 1570 responsible for what would be a 40 year project to compile inventories of the four treasuries at Westminster which contained both royal and abbey records 15 The Society was eventually closed down owing to the disapproval of James I Those involved included Arthur Agard 1535 6 1615 15 Benedict Barnham 16 Robert Beale 17 Edward Brerewood 18 Hugh Broughton 19 William Camden 20 Richard Carew 21 Sir Robert Cotton 22 William Hakewill 23 Michael Heneage 24 William Lambarde 25 James Ley 26 William Patten 27 John Stow 28 James Strangman 29 Thomas Talbot 30 Francis Tate 31 Francis Thynne 32 Robert Bruce Cotton and others petitioned Elizabeth I to establish a national library and academy having in mind an institution for antiquarian study 33 The Society paid attention to the succession to Elizabeth and then the Jacobean debate on the Union with union tracts written by Cotton and another member John Dodderidge papers read on names for Britain in 1604 and Walter Cope a member and M P involved in the parliamentary debate 34 Jacobean proposals EditHenry Frederick Prince of Wales revived by his patronage Humphrey Gilbert s proposal He combined that concept with the French model of Antoine de Pluvinel s riding academy which included varied studies The project was intended to cover mathematics and languages as well as equestrian skills but was cut short by the Prince s death 35 The suppression of the Society of Antiquaries having left a hiatus in intellectual life at least as far as antiquarian interests were concerned Edmund Bolton brought forward a plan for a royal academy his academ roial In 1617 a list of 27 names was put forward it included Sir John Hayward 36 and Henry Ferrers 37 A similar list in 1624 included Sir William Segar 38 Bolton proposed a complex structure an outer ring of membership listing 84 and a role in censorship of publications outside theology all supported by a subsidy He gained some support from George Villiers 1st Duke of Buckingham who put forward a plan attributed to Prince Henry in the 1621 Parliament 39 but nothing came of it The end of the reign put an end to the plan Salomon s House the proposal or model from Francis Bacon s New Atlantis for an institution of natural philosophy dates also from this period at the end of the reign of James I It is an orderly and royally authorised institute for research 40 Bacon s follower Thomas Bushell was later rumoured to be intending to set up an actual institution in London or Wells in Somerset 41 Kynaston s academy EditThe foundation in 1635 of the Academie francaise coincided closely with Francis Kynaston s setting up of an actual educational institution his Musaeum Minervae in his own home in Covent Garden The king gave money and the academy admitted young gentlemen only on exclusive grounds The tutors were hand picked by Kynaston The new institution was satirised though mildly by Richard Brome s play The New Academy dated to 1636 42 Kynaston gave his own house in Bedford Street Covent Garden for the college with ambitions to move into Chelsea College He furnished it with books manuscripts musical and mathematical instruments paintings and statues at his own expense He was himself the regent and his friends Edward May Michael Mason Thomas Hunt Nicholas Fiske John Spiedal Spidall and Walter Salter were professors in various areas According to the Constitutions published by Kynaston in 1636 only the nobility and gentry were to be admitted to the college the object of which was to prepare candidates for a Grand Tour 43 The full course was to occupy seven years no gentleman was to exercise himself at once about more than two particular sciences arts or qualities whereof one shall be intellectual the other corporall The regent taught the following subjects heraldry a practical knowledge of deeds and the principles and processes of common law antiquities coins husbandry Music dancing and behaviour riding sculpture and writing also formed important parts of the curriculum 44 The academy idea was still in the air in the years before the First English Civil War and Thomas Howard 21st Earl of Arundel brought forward a proposal during the Short Parliament Samuel Hartlib spoke of a pilot scheme he had run 45 In the years 1648 1650 Balthazar Gerbier revived the idea of an academy on Kynaston s lines in a series of pamphlets 46 Peter Chamberlen the third suggested an academy to oversee public welfare as part of his reforming scheme 47 After the Restoration of 1660 EditAround 1660 John Evelyn and Robert Boyle were interested once more in the idea of an academy 48 Evelyn s experience abroad included a meeting of the Umoristi an academy in Rome devoted to verse and linguistic matters Language now became aspect of the English Academy issue that continued to resonate with English literati and was floated by small groups from time to time and Evelyn himself was a constant advocate of attention to it 49 Evelyn sent Boyle a plan costed at something over 1000 in a letter from in September 1659 in 1660 Bengt Skytte a follower of Comenius brought up a pansophic version of the concept with Boyle and others on a similar scale 50 These ideas were overtaken by Boyle s involvement in the 1660 committee of 12 which led shortly to the formation of the Royal Society Abraham Cowley in 1661 conspicuously and in detail advocated a philosophical college near central London that would function as an innovating educational institution in his Proposition for the Advancement of Experimental Philosophy 48 One supporter of an English Academy to regulate the language was Thomas Sprat of the Royal Society founded in 1662 51 A group actually met in Gray s Inn in 1665 to plan an academy as was recalled later by Evelyn Cowley and Sprat were involved with George Villiers 2nd Duke of Buckingham Matthew Clifford Cyril Wyche John Dryden and others 52 After only a little progress London was subject to the Great Plague Wentworth Dillon 4th Earl of Roscommon set up around 1682 a literary society that attracted the name academy It involved Dryden other participants being George Savile Marquess of Halifax Richard Maitland Charles Sackville 6th Earl of Dorset Lord Cavendish Sir Charles Scarborough and Heneage Finch Their linguistic interests extended mainly to issues of translation This group was documented by Knightly Chetwood Roscommon s friend 53 Giovanni Torriano in his The Italian Reviv d equated some English clubs of the Restoration period with groups who in France or Italy would be called academies 54 Later proposals EditAt the beginning of the reign of William III and Mary II a proposed Royal Academies Company was a lottery scheme 55 Lewis Maidwell 1650 1716 had some initial success in promoting his school in King Street London as chartered by William III with a modernised curriculum He proposed a tax on publications to support it but was opposed in Parliament and met with serious resistance from the universities 56 57 At the same period Daniel Defoe in his Essay upon Projects had a section on academies 58 Jonathan Swift in his Proposal for Correcting Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue 59 advocated an academy for regulating the English language In the form of a call for a national dictionary to regulate the English language on the French model this conception had much support from Augustan men of letters Defoe Joseph Addison The Spectator 135 in 1711 and Alexander Pope At the end of Queen Anne s reign some royal backing was again possible but that ended with the change of monarch in 1714 60 The whole idea later met stern opposition however from the lexicographer Samuel Johnson invoking English liberty against the prescription involved he predicted disobedience of an academy supposed to set usage 61 Matthew Arnold in an 1862 essay The Literary Influence of Academies was positive in assessing the French and Italian cultural academies but marks an endpoint in the tradition 62 In Culture and Anarchy Arnold denied that he supported setting up an English Academy guying the likely membership as establishment figures 63 During his 1780 diplomatic mission to Amsterdam statesman and later President of the United States John Adams advocated for an official English Academy as part of the federal government in a letter to the Second Continental Congress 64 The proposal was later rejected by the Continental Congress due to concerns of individual liberty and marked one of the earliest instances of the government s consideration of linguistic diversity 65 References Edit Albert Croll Baugh Thomas Cable A History of the English Language 1993 pp 259 265 Merriam Webster s Dictionary of English Usage 1995 p 7a Gilman E Ward ed 1989 A Brief History of English Usage Webster s Dictionary of English Usage Springfield Mass Merriam Webster Inc Publishers pp 7a 11a Archived from the original on 1 December 2008 Retrieved 18 April 2009 L Academie Francaise Der Gedanke einer englischen Sprachakademie in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart 1928 p 9 of PDF Rapple Rory Gilbert Sir Humphrey Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10690 Subscription or UK public library membership required Tittler Robert Bacon Sir Nicholas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1002 Subscription or UK public library membership required Peter J French John Dee p 60 and pp 171 2 Christina DeCoursey Society of Antiquaries act 1586 1607 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford 2004 oxforddnb com view article 72906 C Wright The Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries and the formation of the Cottonian Library in Francis Wormald amp C Wright eds The English Library Before 1700 London 1958 185 M Stuckey this Society tendeth Elite Prosopography in Elizabethan Legal History Prosopon 1 2006 1 58 Ovenden Richard 2006 The libraries of the antiquaries c 1580 1640 and the idea of a national collection In Leedham Green E Webber T eds The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland Vol 1 To 1640 Cambridge pp 529 530 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link John Niles The Idea of Anglo Saxon England 1066 1901 Remembering Forgetting Deciphering and Renewing the Past Chichester 2015 78 Agard 1773 Written 1599 Dimensions of the Land of England In Hearne Thomas ed A collection of curious discourses written by eminent antiquaries upon several heads in our English antiquities Vol i London p 43 a b Martin G H Agard Arthur Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 206 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bendall Sarah Barnham Benedict Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1488 Subscription or UK public library membership required Beale Robert Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 McConnell Anita Brerewood Edward Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3335 Subscription or UK public library membership required G Lloyd Jones Broughton Hugh 1549 1612 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn May 2013 accessed 7 Dec 2016 Herendeen Wyman H Camden William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4431 Subscription or UK public library membership required Mendyk S Carew Richard Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4635 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stuart Handley Cotton Sir Robert Bruce first baronet 1571 1631 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online ed May 2011 accessed 5 Dec 2016 Doyle Sheila Hakewill William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 11891 Subscription or UK public library membership required Alsop J D Heneage Michael Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12919 Subscription or UK public library membership required J D Alsop Lambarde William 1536 1601 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2008 accessed 7 Dec 2016 Wilfrid Prest Ley James first earl of Marlborough 1550 1629 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn May 2009 accessed 7 Dec 2016 Sherlock Peter Patten William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or UK public library membership required Barrett L Beer Stow John 1524 5 1605 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 12 Jan 2017 Martin G H Strangman James Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 69727 Subscription or UK public library membership required Mortimer Ian Talbot Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 26942 Subscription or UK public library membership required DeCoursey Society of Antiquaries Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford 2004 oxforddnb com view article 72906 Knafla Louis A Thynne Francis Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 27420 Subscription or UK public library membership required Woolf D R Spring 1987 Erudition and the Idea of History in Renaissance England PDF Renaissance Quarterly 40 1 32 doi 10 2307 2861833 JSTOR 2861833 S2CID 164042832 Bruce R Galloway Brian P Levack eds 1985 The Jacobean Union Six tracts of 1604 Clark Constable for the Scottish History Society pp lxv lxvi ISBN 0 906 245 06 0 Strong Roy 2000 Henry Prince of Wales and England s Lost Renaissance Pimlico p 161 ISBN 9780712665094 Manning John J Haward Sir John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12794 Subscription or UK public library membership required Broadway Jan Ferrers Henry Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 9362 Subscription or UK public library membership required Adolph Anthony R J S Segar Sir William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25033 Subscription or UK public library membership required Christopher Hill Intellectual Origins of the English Revolution 1991 p 216 Simon Wortham Censorship and the Institution of Knowledge in Bacon s New Atlantis pp 185 6 in Bronwen Price editor Francis Bacon s New Atlantis 2002 Darley Gillian 2006 John Evelyn Living for Ingenuity Yale University Press p 156 ISBN 9780300112276 Leslie Michael 2010 The New Academy or The New Exchange Critical Introduction Richard Brome Online University of London Sutton Dana F 5 October 1999 Introduction Kynaston s Troilus and Cressida The Philological Museum Kynaston Francis Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Adamson John William 1921 Pioneers of Modern Education 1600 1700 Cambridge University Press p 182 Gerbier Balthazar Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Robert Appelbaum 4 April 2002 Literature and Utopian Politics in Seventeenth Century England Cambridge University Press p 148 ISBN 978 1 139 43286 3 a b 9 Educational Projects after the Restoration Cowley s Proposition XV Education Vol 9 From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift The Cambridge History of English and American Literature An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes 1907 21 Stoye John 1989 English Travellers Abroad 1604 1667 Yale University Press p 155 ISBN 9780300041804 Michael Cyril William Hunter Establishing the New Science the experience of the early Royal Society 1989 p 157 Google Books Morgan John Sprat Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 26173 Subscription or UK public library membership required Katsuhiro Engetsu Dryden and the Modes of Restoration Sociability p 185 in Steven N Zwicker editor The Cambridge Companion to John Dryden 2004 Gillespie Stuart Dillon Wentworth Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 7667 Subscription or UK public library membership required Frances Yates An Italian in Restoration England Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes Vol 6 1943 pp 216 220 Walter Bagehot 1873 Lombard Street A Description of the Money Market Scribner Armstrong amp Company p 135 Sheppard F H W ed 1963 Kingly and Carnaby Street Area Survey of London volumes 31 and 32 St James Westminster Part 2 Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 14 September 2014 13 Cavils of Swift and Defoe XV Education Vol 9 From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift The Cambridge History of English and American Literature An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes 1907 21 Retrieved 14 September 2014 Daniel Defoe 1 June 2004 Essay Upon Projects Kessinger Publishing p 83 ISBN 978 1 4191 1823 4 Jonathan Swift 1712 A Proposal for Correcting Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue In a Letter to the Most Honourable Robert Earl of Oxford and Mortimer Lord High Treasurer of Great Britain Benj Tooke C M Millward Mary Hayes 1 January 2011 A Biography of the English Language Cengage Learning p 237 ISBN 978 0 495 90641 4 Martin Peter 2008 Samuel Johnson A Biography Harvard University Press p 197 ISBN 9780674031609 William K Wimsatt Jr and Cleanth Brooks Literary Criticism A Short History 1957 p 441 Arnold Matthew 1993 Collini Stefan ed Arnold Culture and Anarchy and other writings Cambridge University Press p 191 ISBN 9780521377966 Adams John 5 September 1780 Proposal for an American Language Academy Letter to Samuel Huntington Connecticut politician Retrieved 25 September 2019 Heath Shirley Brice 4 April 1977 A National Language Academy Debate in the New Nation International Journal of the Sociology of Language 11 9 43 Retrieved 25 September 2019 Further reading EditIsaac D Israeli An English Academy of Literature Freeman Edmund July 1924 A Proposal for an English Academy in 1660 The Modern Language Review 19 3 291 300 doi 10 2307 3714671 JSTOR 3714671 Lee Patricia Ann Autumn 1970 Some English Academies An Experiment in the Education of Renaissance Gentlemen History of Education Quarterly 10 3 273 286 doi 10 2307 367524 JSTOR 367524 S2CID 144193442 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proposals for an English Academy amp oldid 1159823353, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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