fbpx
Wikipedia

Thomas Roe

Sir Thomas Roe (c. 1581 – 6 November 1644) was an English diplomat of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods. Roe's voyages ranged from Central America to India; as ambassador, he represented England in the Mughal Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and the Holy Roman Empire. He sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1614 and 1644. Roe was an accomplished scholar and a patron of learning.

Sir Thomas Roe
Bornc. 1581
Low Leyton near Wanstead in Essex
Died6 November 1644 (aged 62–63)
SpouseLady Eleanor Beeston
Parent(s)Sir Robert Rowe
Elinor Jermy

Life Edit

 
Sir Thomas standing before the Great Moghul, c. 1908

Roe was born at Low Leyton near Wanstead in Essex, the son of Sir Robert Rowe of Gloucestershire and Cranford, Middlesex, and his wife Elinor Jermy, daughter of Robert Jermy of Worstead, Norfolk. He matriculated at Magdalen College, Oxford, on 6 July 1593, at the age of twelve. In 1597 he entered Middle Temple[1] and became esquire of the body to Queen Elizabeth I of England. He was knighted by James I on 23 July 1604, and became friendly with Henry, Prince of Wales, and also with Henry's sister Elizabeth, afterwards briefly Queen of Bohemia, with whom he maintained a correspondence and whose cause he championed.

Sir Thomas Roe died in 1644 at the age of about 63.[1] He was buried in the parish church of St. Mary in Woodford, London.

Family Edit

Roe married Eleanor, Lady Beeston, the young widowed daughter of Sir Thomas Cave of Stanford-on-Avon, Northamptonshire in 1614, just weeks before embarking for India.[2] Eleanor did not go to India, but did accompany Roe on the subsequent embassy to Constantinople. The couple were childless and adopted Jane Rupa, an orphaned girl introduced by Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia.[3] When Eleanor died in 1675 she was buried alongside him in the parish church of St. Mary, Woodford.[4]

Career Edit

Amazon explorer Edit

In 1610, Roe was sent by Prince Henry on a mission to the West Indies, during which he visited Guiana and the Amazon River. He tried to reach the Lake Parime location of the fabled El Dorado, that was represented in the map of Thomas Harriot in 1596. However, he failed then, and in two subsequent expeditions, to discover the gold he was seeking.

Ambassador to the Mughal Empire Edit

 
Jahangir investing a courtier with a robe of honour watched by Sir Thomas Roe, English ambassador to the court of Jahangir at Agra from 1615 to 1618, and others

In 1614, Roe was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Tamworth.[1]

The East India Company persuaded King James to send Roe as a royal envoy to the Agra court of the Great Mughal Emperor, Jahangir.[5] Roe resided at Agra for three years, until 1619. At the Mughal court, Roe allegedly became a favourite of Jahangir and may have been his drinking partner; certainly he arrived with gifts of "many crates of red wine"[5]: 16  and explained to him "What beere was? How made?"[5]: 17 

The immediate result of the mission was to obtain permission and protection for an East India Company factory at Surat. While no major trading privileges were conceded by Jahingir, "Roe's mission was the beginning of a Mughal-Company relationship that would develop into something approaching a partnership and see the EIC gradually drawn into the Mughal nexus".[5]: 19 

While Roe's detailed journals[6] are a valuable source of information on Jahangir's reign, the Emperor did not return the favour, with no mention of Roe in his own voluminous diaries.[5]: 19 

Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Edit

In 1621, Roe was elected MP for Cirencester.[1]

Roe received diplomatic credentials to the Ottoman Empire on 6 September, arriving at Constantinople in December. In this role, he obtained an extension of the privileges of the English merchants. He concluded a treaty with Algiers in 1624, by which he secured the liberation of several hundred English captives. He also gained the support, by an English subsidy, of the Transylvanian Prince Gabriel Bethlen for the European Protestant alliance and the cause of the Palatinate.

Through his friendship with the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Cyril Lucaris, the famous Codex Alexandrinus was presented to James I,[7] and Roe himself collected several valuable manuscripts which he subsequently presented to the Bodleian Library. 29 Greek and other manuscripts, including an original copy of the synodal epistles of the council of Basle, he presented in 1628 to the Bodleian Library, after his letters of appointment had been revoked on 26 October 1627.[8] But Roe did not leave the Porte until June 1628. A collection of 242 coins was given by his widow, at his desire, to the Bodleian Library after his death. He also searched for Greek marbles on behalf of the Duke of Buckingham and the second Earl of Arundel.[9]

Diplomat in the Thirty Years War Edit

In 1629, Roe was successful in another mission undertaken, to arrange a peace between Sweden and Poland. In so doing, he enabled Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden to intervene decisively in the Thirty Years War on the side of the Protestant German princes. Roe also negotiated treaties with Danzig and Denmark.[10] A gold medal was struck in his honour on his return home in 1630 after attending the Diet of Regensburg.

Edit

In 1631, he sponsored the Arctic exploration of Luke Fox. Roes Welcome Sound was named in his honor.[11]

English statesman and envoy Edit

In January 1637, Roe was appointed Chancellor of the Order of the Garter, with a pension of £1200 a year.

In June 1640, Roe was made a privy councillor. In November of that year he was elected MP for Oxford University in the Long Parliament. He was appointed as England's ambassador to the Holy Roman Empire from 1641 to 1642.[12] He took part in the peace conferences at Hamburg, Regensburg and Vienna, and used his influence to obtain the restoration of the Palatinate, the emperor declaring that he had "scarce ever met with an ambassador till now."

Works Edit

Sir Thomas Roe Travels to India
 
A plan of travel to India
 
Sir Thomas Roe meets Great Mughal
 
The Great Mughal Court
A Dutch account of Sir Thomas Roe's travel to Jahangir's court
  • The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mogul, 1615–1619, as narrated in his journal and correspondence

His Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mogul, 1615-1619, as narrated in his journal and correspondence, several times printed, has been re-edited, with an introduction by William Foster, for the Hakluyt Society (1899). This is a valuable contribution to the history of India in the early 17th century.

  • Negotiations in his Embassy to the Ottoman Porte, 1621–28, vol. i

Vol. i. was published in 1740, but the work was not continued. Other correspondence, consisting of letters relating to his mission to Gustavus Adolphus, was edited by SR Gardiner for the Camden Society Miscellany (1875), vol. vii., and his correspondence with Lord Carew in 1615 and 1617 by Sir F. Maclean for the same society in 1860.

  • True and Faithful Relation ... concerning the Death of Sultan Osman ... (1622)

Several of his manuscripts are in the British Museum collections. Roe published a True and Faithful Relation ... concerning the Death of Sultan Osman ..., 1622; a translation from Paolo Sarpi,

  • Discourse upon the Resolution taken in the Valteline (1628); and in 1613 Dr T Wright published Quatuor Colloquia, consisting of theological disputations between himself and Roe; a poem by Roe is printed in Notes and Queries, iv. Ser. v. 9.
  • The Swedish Intelligencer (1632–33), including an account of the career of Gustavus Adolphus and of the Diet of Ratisbon (Regensburg), is attributed to Roe in the catalogue of the British Museum. Several of his speeches, chiefly on currency and financial questions, were also published. Two other works in manuscripts are mentioned by Wood: Compendious Relation of the Proceedings ... of the Imperial Diet at Ratisbon and Journal of Several Proceedings of the Order of the Garter.

Modern biographies Edit

There are three modern biographies:

  • Brown, Michael J. (1970). Itinerant Ambassador: The Life of Sir Thomas Roe. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813151533.
  • Strachan, Michael (1989). Sir Thomas Roe, 1581–1644. A Life. Salisbury: Michael Russell Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9780859551564.
  • Das, Nandini (2023). Courting India. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781526615640.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Williams, William Retlaw (1898). The parliamentary history of the county of Gloucester, including the cities of Bristol and Gloucester, and the boroughs of Cheltenham, Cirencester, Stroud, and Tewkesbury, from the earliest times to the present day, 1213-1898. Cornell University Library. Hereford : Priv. print. for the author by Jakeman and Carver.
  2. ^ Michael Strachan, Sir Thomas Roe 1581-1644. A Life (Michael Russell, Salisbury, Wiltshire, 1989), p. 58.
  3. ^ Akkerman, Nadine (2021). Elizabeth Stuart: Queen of Hearts. Oxford University Press. p. 570.
  4. ^ Strachan (1989), pp. 279-80.
  5. ^ a b c d e Dalrymple, William (2019). The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 15–19. ISBN 978-1-4088-6437-1.
  6. ^ Roe, Sir Thomas (1926) [1899]. Foster, W. (ed.). The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mughal (revised ed.). London: Humphrey Milford.
  7. ^ Negotiations, p. 618.
  8. ^ Macray, Annals of the Bodleian, 2nd de., pp. 70, 72.
  9. ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1897). "Roe, Thomas" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 49. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 91.
  10. ^ Laursen, L. (1917). "1640. 22. April (Flensborg). Handels- og Toldtrakat paa 6 Aar mellem Danmark-Norge og Storbritannien; med dertil horende Toldrulle.- Ikke ratificeret fra engelsk Side." [1640. April 22 (Flensburg). Trade and Customs Treaty of 6 years between Denmark-Norway and Great Britain; with associated Customs Roll.- Not ratified by English Side.]. Traites du Danemark et de la Norvege. Danmark-Norges Traktater 1523—1750 Med dertil horende aktstykker: Tredie Bind (1589-1625) [[Treaties of Denmark-Norway (1523-1750) with Associated Acts- Volume 3 (1589-1625)]] (in Danish). Vol. 3. Copenhagen: L. Laursen, Carlsberg Foundation. p. 210. Retrieved 26 May 2022 – via Rigsarkivet.
  11. ^ Allen, Elsa Guerdrum (1951). "The History of American Ornithology before Audubon". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 41 (3): 387–591. doi:10.2307/1005629. hdl:2027/uc1.31822011760568. JSTOR 1005629.
  12. ^ Gary M. Bell, A handlist of British diplomatic representatives 1509-1688 (Royal Historical Society, Guides and handbooks, 16, 1990).

Further reading Edit

  • Foster Rhea Dulles, Eastward Ho! The First English Adventurers to the Orient: Richard Chancellor, Anthony Jenkinson, James Lancaster, William Adams, Sir Thomas Roe (John Lane, The Bodley Head, 1931)

thomas, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1581, november, 1644, english, diplomat, elizabethan, jacobean, periods, voyages, ranged, from, central, america, india, ambassador, represented, england, mughal, empire, ottoman, empire, holy, roman, empire, house. For other people named Thomas Roe see Thomas Roe disambiguation Sir Thomas Roe c 1581 6 November 1644 was an English diplomat of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods Roe s voyages ranged from Central America to India as ambassador he represented England in the Mughal Empire the Ottoman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire He sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1614 and 1644 Roe was an accomplished scholar and a patron of learning Sir Thomas RoeBornc 1581Low Leyton near Wanstead in EssexDied6 November 1644 aged 62 63 SpouseLady Eleanor BeestonParent s Sir Robert Rowe Elinor Jermy Contents 1 Life 1 1 Family 2 Career 2 1 Amazon explorer 2 2 Ambassador to the Mughal Empire 2 3 Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire 2 4 Diplomat in the Thirty Years War 2 5 Sponsor of Arctic exploration 2 6 English statesman and envoy 3 Works 3 1 Modern biographies 4 References 5 Further readingLife Edit nbsp Sir Thomas standing before the Great Moghul c 1908Roe was born at Low Leyton near Wanstead in Essex the son of Sir Robert Rowe of Gloucestershire and Cranford Middlesex and his wife Elinor Jermy daughter of Robert Jermy of Worstead Norfolk He matriculated at Magdalen College Oxford on 6 July 1593 at the age of twelve In 1597 he entered Middle Temple 1 and became esquire of the body to Queen Elizabeth I of England He was knighted by James I on 23 July 1604 and became friendly with Henry Prince of Wales and also with Henry s sister Elizabeth afterwards briefly Queen of Bohemia with whom he maintained a correspondence and whose cause he championed Sir Thomas Roe died in 1644 at the age of about 63 1 He was buried in the parish church of St Mary in Woodford London Family Edit Roe married Eleanor Lady Beeston the young widowed daughter of Sir Thomas Cave of Stanford on Avon Northamptonshire in 1614 just weeks before embarking for India 2 Eleanor did not go to India but did accompany Roe on the subsequent embassy to Constantinople The couple were childless and adopted Jane Rupa an orphaned girl introduced by Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia 3 When Eleanor died in 1675 she was buried alongside him in the parish church of St Mary Woodford 4 Career EditAmazon explorer Edit In 1610 Roe was sent by Prince Henry on a mission to the West Indies during which he visited Guiana and the Amazon River He tried to reach the Lake Parime location of the fabled El Dorado that was represented in the map of Thomas Harriot in 1596 However he failed then and in two subsequent expeditions to discover the gold he was seeking Ambassador to the Mughal Empire Edit nbsp Jahangir investing a courtier with a robe of honour watched by Sir Thomas Roe English ambassador to the court of Jahangir at Agra from 1615 to 1618 and othersIn 1614 Roe was elected Member of Parliament MP for Tamworth 1 The East India Company persuaded King James to send Roe as a royal envoy to the Agra court of the Great Mughal Emperor Jahangir 5 Roe resided at Agra for three years until 1619 At the Mughal court Roe allegedly became a favourite of Jahangir and may have been his drinking partner certainly he arrived with gifts of many crates of red wine 5 16 and explained to him What beere was How made 5 17 The immediate result of the mission was to obtain permission and protection for an East India Company factory at Surat While no major trading privileges were conceded by Jahingir Roe s mission was the beginning of a Mughal Company relationship that would develop into something approaching a partnership and see the EIC gradually drawn into the Mughal nexus 5 19 While Roe s detailed journals 6 are a valuable source of information on Jahangir s reign the Emperor did not return the favour with no mention of Roe in his own voluminous diaries 5 19 Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Edit In 1621 Roe was elected MP for Cirencester 1 Roe received diplomatic credentials to the Ottoman Empire on 6 September arriving at Constantinople in December In this role he obtained an extension of the privileges of the English merchants He concluded a treaty with Algiers in 1624 by which he secured the liberation of several hundred English captives He also gained the support by an English subsidy of the Transylvanian Prince Gabriel Bethlen for the European Protestant alliance and the cause of the Palatinate Through his friendship with the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Cyril Lucaris the famous Codex Alexandrinus was presented to James I 7 and Roe himself collected several valuable manuscripts which he subsequently presented to the Bodleian Library 29 Greek and other manuscripts including an original copy of the synodal epistles of the council of Basle he presented in 1628 to the Bodleian Library after his letters of appointment had been revoked on 26 October 1627 8 But Roe did not leave the Porte until June 1628 A collection of 242 coins was given by his widow at his desire to the Bodleian Library after his death He also searched for Greek marbles on behalf of the Duke of Buckingham and the second Earl of Arundel 9 Diplomat in the Thirty Years War Edit In 1629 Roe was successful in another mission undertaken to arrange a peace between Sweden and Poland In so doing he enabled Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden to intervene decisively in the Thirty Years War on the side of the Protestant German princes Roe also negotiated treaties with Danzig and Denmark 10 A gold medal was struck in his honour on his return home in 1630 after attending the Diet of Regensburg Sponsor of Arctic exploration Edit In 1631 he sponsored the Arctic exploration of Luke Fox Roes Welcome Sound was named in his honor 11 English statesman and envoy Edit In January 1637 Roe was appointed Chancellor of the Order of the Garter with a pension of 1200 a year In June 1640 Roe was made a privy councillor In November of that year he was elected MP for Oxford University in the Long Parliament He was appointed as England s ambassador to the Holy Roman Empire from 1641 to 1642 12 He took part in the peace conferences at Hamburg Regensburg and Vienna and used his influence to obtain the restoration of the Palatinate the emperor declaring that he had scarce ever met with an ambassador till now Works EditSir Thomas Roe Travels to India nbsp A plan of travel to India nbsp Sir Thomas Roe meets Great Mughal nbsp The Great Mughal CourtA Dutch account of Sir Thomas Roe s travel to Jahangir s court The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mogul 1615 1619 as narrated in his journal and correspondenceHis Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mogul 1615 1619 as narrated in his journal and correspondence several times printed has been re edited with an introduction by William Foster for the Hakluyt Society 1899 This is a valuable contribution to the history of India in the early 17th century Negotiations in his Embassy to the Ottoman Porte 1621 28 vol iVol i was published in 1740 but the work was not continued Other correspondence consisting of letters relating to his mission to Gustavus Adolphus was edited by SR Gardiner for the Camden Society Miscellany 1875 vol vii and his correspondence with Lord Carew in 1615 and 1617 by Sir F Maclean for the same society in 1860 True and Faithful Relation concerning the Death of Sultan Osman 1622 Several of his manuscripts are in the British Museum collections Roe published a True and Faithful Relation concerning the Death of Sultan Osman 1622 a translation from Paolo Sarpi Discourse upon the Resolution taken in the Valteline 1628 and in 1613 Dr T Wright published Quatuor Colloquia consisting of theological disputations between himself and Roe a poem by Roe is printed in Notes and Queries iv Ser v 9 The Swedish Intelligencer 1632 33 including an account of the career of Gustavus Adolphus and of the Diet of Ratisbon Regensburg is attributed to Roe in the catalogue of the British Museum Several of his speeches chiefly on currency and financial questions were also published Two other works in manuscripts are mentioned by Wood Compendious Relation of the Proceedings of the Imperial Diet at Ratisbonand Journal of Several Proceedings of the Order of the Garter Modern biographies Edit There are three modern biographies Brown Michael J 1970 Itinerant Ambassador The Life of Sir Thomas Roe Lexington The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813151533 Strachan Michael 1989 Sir Thomas Roe 1581 1644 A Life Salisbury Michael Russell Publishing Ltd ISBN 9780859551564 Das Nandini 2023 Courting India London Bloomsbury ISBN 9781526615640 References Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Roe a b c d Williams William Retlaw 1898 The parliamentary history of the county of Gloucester including the cities of Bristol and Gloucester and the boroughs of Cheltenham Cirencester Stroud and Tewkesbury from the earliest times to the present day 1213 1898 Cornell University Library Hereford Priv print for the author by Jakeman and Carver Michael Strachan Sir Thomas Roe 1581 1644 A Life Michael Russell Salisbury Wiltshire 1989 p 58 Akkerman Nadine 2021 Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Hearts Oxford University Press p 570 Strachan 1989 pp 279 80 a b c d e Dalrymple William 2019 The Anarchy The Relentless Rise of the East India Company London Bloomsbury pp 15 19 ISBN 978 1 4088 6437 1 Roe Sir Thomas 1926 1899 Foster W ed The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mughal revised ed London Humphrey Milford Negotiations p 618 Macray Annals of the Bodleian 2nd de pp 70 72 Lee Sidney ed 1897 Roe Thomas Dictionary of National Biography Vol 49 London Smith Elder amp Co p 91 Laursen L 1917 1640 22 April Flensborg Handels og Toldtrakat paa 6 Aar mellem Danmark Norge og Storbritannien med dertil horende Toldrulle Ikke ratificeret fra engelsk Side 1640 April 22 Flensburg Trade and Customs Treaty of 6 years between Denmark Norway and Great Britain with associated Customs Roll Not ratified by English Side Traites du Danemark et de la Norvege Danmark Norges Traktater 1523 1750 Med dertil horende aktstykker Tredie Bind 1589 1625 Treaties of Denmark Norway 1523 1750 with Associated Acts Volume 3 1589 1625 in Danish Vol 3 Copenhagen L Laursen Carlsberg Foundation p 210 Retrieved 26 May 2022 via Rigsarkivet Allen Elsa Guerdrum 1951 The History of American Ornithology before Audubon Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 41 3 387 591 doi 10 2307 1005629 hdl 2027 uc1 31822011760568 JSTOR 1005629 Gary M Bell A handlist of British diplomatic representatives 1509 1688 Royal Historical Society Guides and handbooks 16 1990 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Roe Sir Thomas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 450 Further reading EditFoster Rhea Dulles Eastward Ho The First English Adventurers to the Orient Richard Chancellor Anthony Jenkinson James Lancaster William Adams Sir Thomas Roe John Lane The Bodley Head 1931 Parliament of EnglandPreceded bySir Thomas BeaumontSir John Ferrers Member of Parliament for Tamworth1614 With Sir Percival Willoughby Succeeded bySir Thomas PuckeringJohn FerrersPreceded bySir Anthony ManieRobert Strange Member of Parliament for Cirencester1621 1622 With Thomas Nicholas Succeeded byHenry PooleSir William MasterPreceded bySir Francis WindebankeSir John Danvers Member of Parliament for Oxford University1640 1644 With John Selden Succeeded byJohn Selden Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Roe amp oldid 1165203165, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.