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Walter Raleigh

Sir Walter Raleigh[a] (/ˈrɔːli, ˈræli, ˈrɑːli/; c. 1552 – 29 October 1618) was an English statesman, soldier, writer and explorer. One of the most notable figures of the Elizabethan era, he played a leading part in English colonisation of North America, suppressed rebellion in Ireland, helped defend England against the Spanish Armada and held political positions under Elizabeth I.

Sir Walter Raleigh
Portrait of Raleigh, 1588
Government offices
1584–1603Lord Warden of the Stannaries
1585–1603Vice-Admiral of Devon
1587–1603Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall
1586–1592
1597–1603
Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard
1598–1603Custos Rotulorum of Dorset
1600–1603Governor of Jersey
Parliamentary offices
1584–1585
1586–1587
Member of Parliament for Devonshire
1597–1598Member of Parliament for Dorset
1601Member of Parliament for Cornwall
Personal details
Bornc.  22 January 1552 (or 1554)
Hayes Barton, East Budleigh, Devon, England
Died(1618-10-29)29 October 1618 (aged approximately 65)
London, England
Cause of deathExecution by beheading
SpouseElizabeth Throckmorton
ChildrenDamerei
Walter "Wat"[1]
Carew
Alma materOriel College, Oxford
Signature
Military service
Battles/warsDesmond Rebellions
French Wars of Religion
Spanish Armada
Writing career
Notable works

Raleigh was born to a landed gentry family of Protestant faith in Devon, the son of Walter Raleigh and Catherine Champernowne. He was the younger half-brother of Sir Humphrey Gilbert and a cousin of Sir Richard Grenville. Little is known of his early life, though in his late teens he spent some time in France taking part in the religious civil wars. In his 20s he took part in the suppression of rebellion in the colonisation of Ireland; he also participated in the siege of Smerwick. Later, he became a landlord of property in Ireland and mayor of Youghal in East Munster, where his house still stands in Myrtle Grove.[2] He rose rapidly in the favour of Queen Elizabeth I and was knighted in 1585. He was granted a royal patent to explore Virginia, paving the way for future English settlements. In 1591, he secretly married Elizabeth Throckmorton, one of the Queen's ladies-in-waiting, without the Queen's permission, for which he and his wife were sent to the Tower of London. After his release, they retired to his estate at Sherborne, Dorset.

In 1594, Raleigh heard of a "City of Gold" in South America and sailed to find it, publishing an exaggerated account of his experiences in a book that contributed to the legend of "El Dorado". After Queen Elizabeth died in 1603, Raleigh was again imprisoned in the Tower, this time for being involved in the Main Plot against King James I, who was not favourably disposed towards him. In 1616, he was released to lead a second expedition in search of El Dorado. During the expedition, men led by his top commander ransacked a Spanish outpost, in violation of both the terms of his pardon and the 1604 peace treaty with Spain. Raleigh returned to England and, to appease the Spanish, he was arrested and executed in 1618.

Early life

Little is known about Sir Walter Raleigh's birth[3] but he is believed to have been born on 22 January 1552 (or possibly 1554[4]). He grew up in the house of Hayes Barton[5] (in the parish of East Budleigh), in East Devon. He was the youngest of the five sons of Walter Raleigh (1510–1581) (or Rawleigh) of Fardel Manor (in the parish of Cornwood),[6] in South Devon. Raleigh's family is generally assumed to have been a junior branch of the Raleigh family, 11th-century lords of the manor of Raleigh, Pilton[7] in North Devon, although the two branches are known to have borne entirely dissimilar coats of arms,[b] adopted at the start of the age of heraldry (c. 1200–1215).

 
Arms of Katherine Champernowne, mother of Sir Walter Raleigh, impaled by the arms of her first husband, Otes Gilbert. Churston Ferrers Church

His mother was Katherine Champernowne, the third wife of Walter Raleigh senior, and the fourth daughter of Sir Philip Champernowne (1479–1545), lord of the manor of Modbury, Devon, by his wife Catherine Carew, a daughter of Sir Edmund Carew (d.1513) of Mohuns Ottery (in the parish of Luppitt), Devon,[8] and widow of Otes Gilbert (1513–1546/7) of Greenway (in the parish of Brixham) and of Compton Castle (in the parish of Marldon), both in Devon. (The coat of arms of Otes Gilbert and Katherine Champernowne survives in a stained glass window in Churston Ferrers Church, near Greenway.) Katherine Champernowne's paternal aunt was Kat Ashley, governess of Queen Elizabeth I, who introduced Raleigh and his brothers to the court.[9] In addition, Raleigh's maternal uncle was Sir Arthur Champernowne (c. 1524–1578), a Member of Parliament, Sheriff of Devon and Admiral of the West. Walter Raleigh junior's immediate family included his full brother Carew Raleigh, and half-brothers John Gilbert, Humphrey Gilbert and Adrian Gilbert. As a consequence of their kinship with the Champernowne family, all of the Raleigh and Gilbert brothers became prominent during the reigns of Elizabeth I and James I.

Raleigh's family was highly Protestant in religious orientation and had a number of near escapes during the reign of Roman Catholic Queen Mary I of England. In the most notable of these, his father had to hide in a tower to avoid execution. As a result, Raleigh developed a hatred of Roman Catholicism during his childhood, and proved himself quick to express it after Protestant Queen Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558. In matters of religion, Elizabeth was more moderate than her half-sister Mary.[10]

In 1569, Raleigh left for France to serve with the Huguenots in the French religious civil wars.[3] In 1572, Raleigh was registered as an undergraduate at Oriel College, Oxford, but he left a year later without a degree. Raleigh proceeded to finish his education in the Inns of Court.[3] In 1575, he was admitted to the Middle Temple, having previously been a member of Lyon's Inn, one of the Inns of Chancery.[11] At his trial in 1603, he stated that he had never studied law. His life is uncertain between 1569 and 1575, but in his History of the World he claimed to have been an eyewitness at the Battle of Moncontour (3 October 1569) in France. In 1575 or 1576, Raleigh returned to England.[12]

Ireland

 
"Raleigh's First Pipe in England", an illustration included in Frederick William Fairholt's Tobacco, its history and associations[13]

See Plantations of Ireland

Between 1579 and 1583, Raleigh took part in the suppression of the Desmond Rebellions. He was present at the siege of Smerwick, where he led the party that beheaded some 600 Spanish and Italian soldiers.[14][15] Raleigh received 40,000 acres (16,000 ha) (approximately 0.2% of Ireland) upon the seizure and distribution of land following the attainders arising from the rebellion, including the coastal walled town of Youghal and, further up the Blackwater River, the village of Lismore. This made him one of the principal landowners and colonists in Munster, but he had limited success inducing English tenants to settle on his estates.[citation needed]

Raleigh made the town of Youghal his occasional home during his 17 years as an Irish landlord, frequently being domiciled at Killua Castle, Clonmellon, County Westmeath. He was mayor there from 1588 to 1589. His town mansion of Myrtle Grove is assumed to be the setting for the story that his servant doused him with a bucket of water after seeing clouds of smoke coming from Raleigh's pipe, in the belief that he had been set alight. But this story is also told of other places associated with Raleigh: the Virginia Ash Inn in Henstridge near Sherborne, Sherborne Castle, and South Wraxall Manor in Wiltshire, home of Raleigh's friend Sir Walter Long.[citation needed]

Amongst Raleigh's acquaintances in Munster was another Englishman who had been granted land in the Irish colonies, poet Edmund Spenser. In the 1590s, he and Raleigh travelled together from Ireland to the court at London, where Spenser presented part of his allegorical poem The Faerie Queene to Elizabeth I.[citation needed]

Raleigh's management of his Irish estates ran into difficulties which contributed to a decline in his fortunes. In 1602, he sold the lands to Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork, who subsequently prospered under kings James I and Charles I.[16] Following Raleigh's death, members of his family approached Boyle for compensation on the ground that Raleigh had struck an improvident bargain.[citation needed]

New World

 
Engraved portrait of Raleigh

In 1584, Queen Elizabeth granted Raleigh a royal charter authorising him to explore, colonise and rule any "remote, heathen and barbarous lands, countries and territories, not actually possessed of any Christian Prince or inhabited by Christian People", in return for one-fifth of all the gold and silver that might be mined there.[17] This charter specified that Raleigh had seven years in which to establish a settlement, or else lose his right to do so. Raleigh and Elizabeth intended that the venture should provide riches from the New World and a base from which to send privateers on raids against the treasure fleets of Spain. Raleigh himself never visited North America, although he led expeditions in 1595 and 1617 to the Orinoco river basin in South America in search of the golden city of El Dorado. Instead, he sent others in 1585 to find the Roanoke Colony, later known as the "Lost Colony".[18]

These expeditions were funded primarily by Raleigh and his friends but never provided the steady stream of revenue necessary to maintain a colony in America. (Subsequent colonisation attempts in the early 17th century were made under the joint-stock Virginia Company, which was able to raise the capital necessary to create successful colonies.)

In 1587, Raleigh attempted a second expedition, again establishing a settlement on Roanoke Island. This time, a more diverse group of settlers was sent, including some entire families,[19] under the governance of John White.[20] After a short while in America, White returned to England to obtain more supplies for the colony, planning to return in a year. Unfortunately for the colonists at Roanoke, one year became three. The first delay came when Queen Elizabeth I ordered all vessels to remain at port for potential use against the Spanish Armada. After England's 1588 victory over the Spanish Armada, the ships were given permission to sail.[21]

The second delay came after White's small fleet set sail for Roanoke and his crew insisted on sailing first towards Cuba in hopes of capturing treasure-laden Spanish merchant ships. Enormous riches described by their pilot, an experienced Portuguese navigator hired by Raleigh, outweighed White's objections to the delay.[21]

When the supply ship arrived in Roanoke, three years later than planned, the colonists had disappeared.[22] The only clue to their fate was the word "CROATOAN" and the letters "CRO" carved into tree trunks. White had arranged with the settlers that if they should move, the name of their destination be carved into a tree or corner post. This suggested the possibility that they had moved to Croatoan Island, but a hurricane prevented John White from investigating the island for survivors.[22] Other speculation includes their having starved, or been swept away or lost at sea during the stormy weather of 1588. No further attempts at contact were recorded for some years. Whatever the fate of the settlers, the settlement is now remembered as the "Lost Colony of Roanoke Island".

1580s

In December 1581, Raleigh returned to England from Ireland as his company had been disbanded. He took part in court life and became a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I because of his efforts at increasing the Protestant Church in Ireland.[23] In 1585, Raleigh was knighted and was appointed warden of the stannaries, that is of the tin mines of Cornwall and Devon, Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall and vice-admiral of the two counties. He was a member of parliament for Devonshire in 1585 and 1586.[16] He was also granted the right to colonise America.[23]

Raleigh commissioned shipbuilder R. Chapman of Deptford to build a ship for him. She was originally called Ark but became Ark Raleigh, following the convention at the time by which the ship bore the name of her owner. The Crown (in the person of Queen Elizabeth I) purchased the ship from Raleigh in January 1587 for £5,000 (£1.1 million in 2015).[24] This took the form of a reduction in the sum that Sir Walter owed the queen; he received Exchequer tallies but no money. As a result, the ship was renamed Ark Royal.[25]

In the Armada year of 1588, Raleigh had some involvement with defence against the Spanish at Devon. The ship that he had built, Ark Royal, was Lord High Admiral Howard's flagship.[26]

1590–1594

 
Sir Walter Raleigh by William Segar
 
Elizabeth "Bess" Throckmorton Raleigh by William Segar 1595

In 1592, Raleigh was given many rewards by the Queen, including Durham House in the Strand and the estate of Sherborne, Dorset. He was appointed Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard. However, he had not been given any of the great offices of state.[26]

In 1591, Raleigh secretly married Elizabeth "Bess" Throckmorton (or Throgmorton). She was one of the Queen's ladies-in-waiting, 11 years his junior, and was pregnant at the time. She gave birth to a son, believed to be named Damerei, who was given to a wet nurse at Durham House, but he died in October 1592 of plague. Bess resumed her duties to the queen. The following year, the unauthorised marriage was discovered and the Queen ordered Raleigh to be imprisoned and Bess dismissed from court. Both were imprisoned in the Tower of London in June 1592. He was released from prison in August 1592 to manage a recently returned expedition and attack on the Spanish coast. The fleet was recalled by the Queen, but not before it captured an incredibly rich prize—a merchant ship (carrack) named Madre de Deus (Mother of God) off Flores. Raleigh was sent to organise and divide the spoils of the ship. He was sent back to the Tower, but by early 1593 had been released and become a member of Parliament.[27]

It was several years before Raleigh returned to favour,[clarification needed] and he travelled extensively in this time. Raleigh and his wife remained devoted to each other. They had two more sons, Walter (known as Wat) in 1593 and Carew in 1605.[28]

Raleigh was elected a burgess of Mitchell, Cornwall, in the parliament of 1593.[4] He retired to his estate at Sherborne, where he built a new house, completed in 1594, known then as Sherborne Lodge. Since extended, it is now known as Sherborne New Castle. He made friends with the local gentry, such as Sir Ralph Horsey of Clifton Maybank and Charles Thynne of Longleat. During this period at a dinner party at Horsey's, Raleigh had a heated discussion about religion with Reverend Ralph Ironsides. The argument later gave rise to charges of atheism against Raleigh, though the charges were dismissed. He was elected to Parliament, speaking on religious and naval matters.[29]

First voyage to Guiana

In 1594, he came into possession of a Spanish account of a great golden city at the headwaters of the Caroní River. A year later, he explored what is now Guyana and eastern Venezuela in search of Lake Parime and Manoa, the legendary city. Once back in England, he published The Discovery of Guiana[30] (1596), an account of his voyage which made exaggerated claims as to what had been discovered. The book can be seen as a contribution to the El Dorado legend. Venezuela has gold deposits, but no evidence indicates that Raleigh found any mines. He is sometimes said to have discovered Angel Falls, but these claims are considered far-fetched.[31]

1596–1603

 
Raleigh and his son Walter in 1602

In 1596, Raleigh took part in the capture of Cádiz, where he was wounded. He also served as the rear admiral (a principal command) of the Islands Voyage to the Azores in 1597.[32] On his return from the Azores, Raleigh helped England defend itself against the major threat of the 3rd Spanish Armada during the autumn of 1597. The Armada was dispersed in the Channel and later was devastated by a storm off Ireland. Lord Howard of Effingham and Raleigh were able to organise a fleet that resulted in the capture of a Spanish ship in retreat carrying vital information regarding the Spanish plans.

In 1597 Raleigh was chosen as member of parliament for Dorset and in 1601 for Cornwall.[16] He was unique in the Elizabethan period in sitting for three counties.[4]

From 1600 to 1603, as governor of the Channel Island of Jersey, Raleigh modernised its defences. This included the construction of a new fort protecting the approaches to Saint Helier, Fort Isabella Bellissima, or Elizabeth Castle.[citation needed]

Trial and imprisonment

 
Raleigh's cell, Bloody Tower, Tower of London

Royal favour with Queen Elizabeth had been restored by this time, but his good fortune did not last; the Queen died on 24 March 1603. Raleigh was arrested on 19 July 1603 at what is now the Old Exeter Inn in Ashburton, charged with treason for his involvement in the Main Plot against Elizabeth's successor, James I, and imprisoned in the Tower of London.[33]

Raleigh's trial began on 17 November in the converted Great Hall of Winchester Castle. Raleigh conducted his own defence. The chief evidence against him was the signed and sworn confession of his friend Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham. Raleigh repeatedly requested that Cobham be called to testify. "[Let] my acuser come face to face, and be deposed. Were the case but for a small copyhold, you would have witnesses or good proof to lead the jury to a verdict; and I am here for my life!" Raleigh argued that the evidence against him was "hearsay", but the tribunal refused to allow Cobham to testify and be cross-examined.[34][35] Raleigh's trial has been regularly cited as influential in establishing a common law right to confront accusers in court.[36][37][38][39] Raleigh was convicted, but King James spared his life.[40]

While imprisoned in the Tower, Raleigh wrote his incomplete The Historie of the World.[41] Using a wide array of sources in six languages, Raleigh was fully abreast of the latest continental scholarship. He wrote not about England, but of the ancient world with a heavy emphasis on geography. Despite his intention of providing current advice to the King of England, King James I complained that it was "too sawcie in censuring Princes".[42][43] Raleigh remained imprisoned in the Tower until 1616.[44] His son, Carew, was conceived and born (in 1604 or 1605) while Raleigh was imprisoned in the Tower.[45]

Second voyage to Guiana

 
James I's royal warrant pardoning Raleigh in 1617

In 1617, Raleigh was pardoned by the King and granted permission to conduct a second expedition to Venezuela in search of El Dorado. During the expedition, a detachment of Raleigh's men under the command of his long-time friend Lawrence Kemys attacked the Spanish outpost of Santo Tomé de Guayana on the Orinoco river, in violation of peace treaties with Spain and against Raleigh's orders. A condition of Raleigh's pardon was avoidance of any hostility against Spanish colonies or shipping. In the initial attack on the settlement, Raleigh's son, Walter, was fatally shot. Kemys informed Raleigh of his son's death and begged for forgiveness, but did not receive it, and at once committed suicide. On Raleigh's return to England, an outraged Count Gondomar, the Spanish ambassador, demanded that Raleigh's death sentence be reinstated by King James, who had little choice but to do so. Raleigh was brought to London from Plymouth by Sir Lewis Stukley, where he passed up numerous opportunities to make an effective escape.[46][47]

Execution and aftermath

 
Raleigh just before he was beheaded – an illustration from circa 1860

Raleigh was beheaded in the Old Palace Yard at the Palace of Westminster on 29 October 1618. "Let us dispatch", he said to his executioner. "At this hour my ague comes upon me. I would not have my enemies think I quaked from fear." After he was allowed to see the axe that would be used to behead him, he mused: "This is a sharp Medicine, but it is a Physician for all diseases and miseries." According to biographers, Raleigh's last words, spoken to the hesitating executioner, were: "What dost thou fear? Strike, man, strike!"[48][49]

Thomas Hariot may have introduced him to tobacco.[50] Having been one of the people to popularise tobacco smoking in England, he left a small tobacco pouch, found in his cell shortly after his execution. Engraved upon the pouch was a Latin inscription: Comes meus fuit in illo miserrimo tempore ("It was my companion at that most miserable time").[51][52]

Raleigh's head was embalmed and presented to his wife. His body was to be buried in the local church in Beddington, Surrey, the home of Lady Raleigh, but was finally laid to rest in St. Margaret's, Westminster, where his tomb is presently located.[53] "The Lords", she wrote, "have given me his dead body, though they have denied me his life. God hold me in my wits."[54] It has been said that Lady Raleigh kept her husband's head in a velvet bag until her death.[55] After Raleigh's wife's death 29 years later, his head was removed to his tomb and interred at St. Margaret's Church.[56] Although Raleigh's popularity had waned considerably since his Elizabethan heyday, his execution was seen by many, both at the time and since, as unnecessary and unjust, as for many years his involvement in the Main Plot seemed to have been limited to a meeting with Lord Cobham.[57] One of the judges at his trial later said: "The justice of England has never been so degraded and injured as by the condemnation of the honourable Sir Walter Raleigh."[58]

Works

  • The Historie of the World. In five bookes (first ed. 1614). R. White, T. Basset. 1677.
  • The Discovery of Guiana. Hakluyt Society. 1848.

Poetry

 
Arms of Sir Walter Raleigh

Raleigh's poetry is written in the relatively straightforward, unornamented mode known as the plain style. C. S. Lewis considered Raleigh one of the era's "silver poets", a group of writers who resisted the Italian Renaissance influence of dense classical reference and elaborate poetic devices. His writing contains strong personal treatments of themes such as love, loss, beauty, and time. Most of his poems are short lyrics that were inspired by actual events.[3]

In poems such as "What is Our Life" and "The Lie", Raleigh expresses a contemptus mundi (contempt of the world) attitude more characteristic of the Middle Ages than of the dawning era of humanistic optimism. But his lesser-known long poem "The Ocean's Love to Cynthia" combines this vein with the more elaborate conceits associated with his contemporaries Edmund Spenser and John Donne, expressing a melancholy sense of history. The poem was written during his imprisonment in the Tower of London.[3]

Raleigh wrote a poetic response to Christopher Marlowe's "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" of 1592, entitled "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd". Both were written in the style of traditional pastoral poetry and follow the structure of six four-line stanzas employing a rhyme scheme of AABB, with Raleigh's an almost line-for-line refutation of Marlowe's sentiments.[59] Years later, the 20th-century poet William Carlos Williams would join the poetic "argument" with his "Raleigh Was Right".

List of poems

All finished, and some unfinished, poems written by Raleigh or plausibly attributed to him:[c]

  • "The Advice"
  • "Another of the Same"
  • "Conceit begotten by the Eyes"
  • "Epitaph on Sir Philip Sidney"
  • "Epitaph on the Earl of Leicester"
  • "Even such is Time"
  • "The Excuse"
  • "False Love"
  • "Farewell to the Court"
  • "His Petition to Queen Anne of Denmark"
  • "If Cynthia be a Queen"
  • "In Commendation of George Gascoigne's Steel Glass"
  • "The Lie"
  • "Like Hermit Poor"
  • "Lines from Catullus"
  • "Love and Time"
  • "My Body in the Walls captive"
  • "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd"
  • "Of Spenser's Faery Queen"
  • "On the Snuff of a Candle"
  • "The Ocean's Love to Cynthia"
  • "A Poem entreating of Sorrow"
  • "A Poem put into my Lady Laiton's Pocket"
  • "The Pilgrimage"
  • "A Prognistication upon Cards and Dice"
  • "The Shepherd's Praise of Diana"
  • "Sweet Unsure"
  • "To His Mistress"
  • "To the Translator of Lucan's Pharsalia"
  • "What is Our Life?"
  • "The Wood, the Weed, the Wag"

Writing Shakespeare

In 1845, Shakespeare scholar Delia Bacon first proposed that a group of authors had actually written the plays later attributed to William Shakespeare, the main writer being Walter Raleigh.[60][61] Later, George S. Caldwell asserted that Raleigh was actually the sole author.[62] These claims have been supported by other scholars throughout subsequent years, including Albert J. Beveridge and Henry Pemberton, but are rejected by the majority of Shakespearean scholars today.[d]

Legacy

 
Statue of Sir Walter Raleigh at Raleigh Convention Center

In 2002, Raleigh was featured in the BBC poll of the 100 Greatest Britons.[63]

A galliard was composed in honour of Raleigh by either Francis Cutting or Richard Allison.[64]

The state capital of North Carolina, its second-largest city, was named Raleigh in 1792, after Sir Walter, sponsor of the Roanoke Colony. In the city, a bronze statue, which has been moved around different locations within the city, was cast in honour of the city's namesake. The "Lost Colony" is commemorated at the Fort Raleigh National Historic Site on Roanoke Island, North Carolina.[65]

Raleigh County, West Virginia, is named after him.[66]

Mount Raleigh in the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains in British Columbia, Canada, was named for him,[67] with related features the Raleigh Glacier[68] and Raleigh Creek[69] named in association with the mountain. Mount Gilbert, just to Mount Raleigh's south, was named for his half-brother, Sir Humphrey.[70]

Raleigh has been widely speculated to be responsible for introducing the potato to Europe, and was a key figure in bringing it to Ireland. However, modern historians dispute this claim, suggesting it would have been impossible for Raleigh to have discovered the potato in the places he visited.[71]

Due to Raleigh's role in the popularisation of smoking, John Lennon humorously referred to him as "such a stupid git" in the song "I'm So Tired" on the "White Album" The Beatles (1968).[72]

Various colourful stories are told about him, such as laying his cloak over a puddle for the Queen, but they are probably apocryphal.[73][74][75] The story of Raleigh's trial is included in John George Phillimore's 1850 book The History and Principles of Evidence, and his commentary on the story is included in many law school textbooks on evidence in common law countries.

The author George Garrett's historical fiction novel Death of the Fox explores Raleigh's relationships with Elizabeth I and her successor James I.

Raleigh's descendants

 
A statue of Raleigh in Greenwich, southeast London

Many people claim descent from Sir Walter Raleigh, but nearly all have no basis in fact. The only authentic lines of descent are as follows:[citation needed]

Raleigh's only surviving child, Carew Raleigh, had three surviving children—Walter (d. 1660), Anne (d. 1708) and Philip (d. 1705).[citation needed]

The elder son, Walter Raleigh, was knighted in June 1660, but died two months later. He was buried at West Horsley. He left three surviving children—Elizabeth, Philippa and Anne. Philippa (who married Oliver Weekes, of Tortingdon, Sussex) and Anne (who married William Knight, of Barrells, Warwickshire) left descendants. It was Philippa Weekes' daughter, Elizabeth Elwes, who seems to have owned the main store of Raleigh memorabilia and was consulted by William Oldys in 1735 when he was writing his Life of Raleigh.[citation needed]

Anne Raleigh married Sir Peter Tyrrell, of Castlethorpe, Bucks. Her granddaughter, Harriet, married Francis Mann, of Kidlington, Oxfordshire, and died in 1785, leaving descendants.[citation needed]

Philip Raleigh championed his grandfather's cause, publishing several of his hitherto unpublished papers. He had a family of four sons and three daughters. The youngest son, Carew Raleigh, page of honour to William III, was serving as a captain's servant on HMS Bredah when he died of fever in the West Indies in 1697, aged seventeen. The second son, Lieut. Brudenell Raleigh, was also serving in the navy in the West Indies when he died of fever in June 1698, aged 22. The eldest son, Captain Walter Raleigh, Grenadier Guards, was page of honour to Queen Mary, and was killed at the siege of Schellenberg in 1704, aged 31. He was unmarried. After Walter's death, his father was granted a pension by the crown, 'in consideration of his 3 sons being slain in the late and present war'. The third son, Captain-Lieutenant Grenville Raleigh, served in the Duke of Marlborough's army throughout the War of the Spanish Succession and died of fever in 1717, while guarding the prisoners at Chester after the 1715 Jacobite rising. He had married and had two sons and a daughter, Mary. On the death of his daughter in Bath in 1783, it was noted that she was 'the only surviving descendant in the direct line of Sir Walter Raleigh'.[citation needed]

Of Philip Raleigh's daughters, Anne and Elizabeth both died unmarried. The eldest daughter, Frances, married William Honywood, eldest son of Sir William Honywood, of Evington Place, Elmsted, Kent and died in 1730. Her many descendants include the present Lord Mountbatten and the actor Hugh Grant.[76]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Many alternative spellings of his surname exist, including Rawley, Ralegh, Ralagh and Rawleigh. "Raleigh" appears most commonly today, but he is known to have used that spelling only once. His most consistent preference was for "Ralegh". His full name is /ˈwɔːltər ˈrɔːli/, but in practice, /ˈræli/ RAL-ee and even /ˈrɑːli/ RAH-lee are the usual modern pronunciations in England.
  2. ^ Raleigh of Pilton: Gules crusilly or, a bend vair; arms of Raleigh of Fardell: Gules, five fusils conjoined in bend argent[citation needed]
  3. ^ As ye came from the holy land is often attributed to Raleigh, but, in the words of Bullett 1947, p. 280, "it certainly existed before Ralegh arrived on the scene; Ralegh's connexion with it is largely a matter of conjecture"
  4. ^ Kathman 2003, p. 621: "...antiStratfordism has remained a fringe belief system"; Schoenbaum 1991, p. 450; Paster 1999, p. 38: "To ask me about the authorship question ... is like asking a palaeontologist to debate a creationist's account of the fossil record."; Nelson 2004, pp. 149–51: "I do not know of a single professor of the 1,300-member Shakespeare Association of America who questions the identity of Shakespeare ... antagonism to the authorship debate from within the profession is so great that it would be as difficult for a professed Oxfordian to be hired in the first place, much less gain tenure..."; Carroll 2004, pp. 278–9: "I have never met anyone in an academic position like mine, in the Establishment, who entertained the slightest doubt as to Shakespeare's authorship of the general body of plays attributed to him."; Pendleton 1994, p. 21: "Shakespeareans sometimes take the position that to even engage the Oxfordian hypothesis is to give it a countenance it does not warrant."; Sutherland & Watts 2000, p. 7: "There is, it should be noted, no academic Shakespearian of any standing who goes along with the Oxfordian theory."; Gibson 2005, p. 30: "...most of the great Shakespearean scholars are to be found in the Stratfordian camp..."

Citations

  1. ^ Wolfe 2018.
  2. ^ "The Church and Town of Sir Walter Raleigh". United Diocese of Cork, Cloyne and Ross. 21 May 2021. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e Black et al. 2011, p. 724.
  4. ^ a b c Nicholls & Williams 2004.
  5. ^ Batten 2020.
  6. ^ Cherry & Pevsner 2004, p. 288.
  7. ^ Vivian 1895, p. 638.
  8. ^ Vivian 1895, pp. 639, 405, 162.
  9. ^ Ronald 2007, p. 249.
  10. ^ Bremer & Webster 2006, p. 454.
  11. ^ Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple, vol. I, p. 39
  12. ^ Edwards 1868, pp. 26–33.
  13. ^ Fairholt 1859.
  14. ^ St. John 1869, p. 52-77.
  15. ^ Nicholls & Williams 2011, p. 15.
  16. ^ a b c Laughton & Lee 1896.
  17. ^ "Charter to Sir Walter Raleigh: 1584". The Avalon Project. Yale Law School, Lillian Goldman Law Library. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  18. ^ Quinn 1985.
  19. ^ . The Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on 1 November 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  20. ^ Hakluyt 1965, p. 522.
  21. ^ a b Quinn 1985, pp. 125–126.
  22. ^ a b Quinn 1985, pp. 130–133.
  23. ^ a b "Walter Raleigh Biography". The Biography Channel. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
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  30. ^ Raleigh 1848.
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  42. ^ Popper 2012, p. 18.
  43. ^ Racin 1974.
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  46. ^ Wolffe 2004.
  47. ^ Laughton 1898.
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  • Borio, Gene (2007). . Tobacco.org. Archived from the original on 9 November 2012. Retrieved 29 October 2012.
  • Bremer, Francis J.; Webster, Tom (2006). Puritans and Puritanism in Europe and America: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-678-1.
  • Brushfield, Thomas Nadauld (1896). Raleghana. Vol. 8. Plymouth.
  • Bullett, Gerald (1947). Silver Poets of the 16th Century. Everyman's Library. Vol. 1985. London: Dent.
  • Carroll, D. Allen (2004). "Reading the 1592 Groatsworth Attack on Shakespeare". Tennessee Law Review. Tennessee Law Review Association. 72 (1): 277–94. ISSN 0040-3288.
  • Cherry, Bridget; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2004). The Buildings of England: Devon. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-300-09596-8.
  • Christenson, Ron (1991). Political Trials in History: From Antiquity to the Present. Transaction. ISBN 978-0-88738-406-6.
  • Collier, John Payne (1852). "Additional Information respecting the Life and Services of Sir Walter Raleigh". Archaeologia. The Society of Antiquaries of London. 34 (2): 151. doi:10.1017/S026134090000103X.
  • Edwards, Edward (1868). The Life of Sir Walter Ralegh. Vol. 1. Macmillan & Company.
  • Durant, Will; Durant, Ariel (1961). The Story of Civilization. Vol. VII. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1567310238.
  • Fairholt, Frederick William (1859). Tobacco, Its History and Associations. London: Chapman and Hall.
  • Fuller, Thomas (1684). Anglorum Speculum: Or The Worthies of England, in Church and State. J. Wright.
  • Farrand, Michael J. (26 January 2013). "Far and few between: Walter Raleigh Wrote Shakespeare?".
  • Gibson, H. N. (2005) [1962]. The Shakespeare Claimants. Routledge Library Editions—Shakespeare. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-35290-1. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
  • Hakluyt, Richard (1965). Irwin R. Blacker (ed.). Hakluyt's Voyages: The Principle Navigations Voyages Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 978-0-670-01067-7.
  • Hechinger, Paul (October 2011). "Did Shakespeare Really Write His Plays? A Few Theories Examined". BBC America. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  • Kathman, David (2003). "The Question of Authorship". In Wells, Stanley; Orlin, Lena Cowen (eds.). Shakespeare: an Oxford Guide. Oxford Guides. Oxford University Press. pp. 620–32. ISBN 978-0-19-924522-2.
  • King, Walter Raleigh (2019). Sunk Down among the People: The Story of the Descendants of Sir Walter Raleigh. Kindle Direct Publishing. ASIN B081SKM5HD.
  • Laughton, John Knox; Lee, Sidney (1896). "Ralegh, Walter (1552?-1618)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 47. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Laughton, John Knox (1898). "Stucley, Lewis" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 55. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Ley, Willy (December 1965). Frederik Pohl (ed.). "The Healthfull Aromatick Herbe". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction.
  • Lloyd, J.; Mitchinson, J. (2006). The Book of General Ignorance. Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-307-39491-3.
  • May, Steven W. (1989). Sir Walter Ralegh. Boston, MA: Twayne. ISBN 9780805769838. Raleigh as a writer and poet.
  • Nicholls, Mark; Williams, Penry (17 September 2004). "Ralegh, Sir Walter (1554–1618)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23039. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Nelson, Alan H. (2004). "Stratford Si! Essex No!". Tennessee Law Review. Tennessee Law Review Association. 72 (1): 149–69. ISSN 0040-3288.
  • Nicholls, Mark; Williams, Penry (2011). Sir Walter Raleigh: In Life and Legend. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1-4411-1209-5.
  • Paster, Gail Kern (April 1999). "The Sweet Swan" (subscription required). Harper's Magazine. pp. 38–41. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
  • Pendleton, Thomas A. (1994). "Irvin Matus's Shakespeare, IN FACT". Shakespeare Newsletter. University of Illinois at Chicago. 44 (Summer): 21, 26–30. ISSN 0037-3214.
  • Popper, Nicholas (2012). Walter Ralegh's "History of the World" and the Historical Culture of the Late Renaissance. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-67502-2.
  • Quinn, David B. (1985). Set Fair for Roanoke: Voyages and Colonies, 1584-1606. Chapel Hill: UNC Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4123-5.
  • Racin, John (1974). Sir Walter Ralegh as Historian: An Analysis of The History of the World. Inst. f. Engl. Sprache u. Literatur, Univ. Salzburg.
  • Ronald, Susan (2007). The Pirate Queen: Queen Elizabeth I, Her Pirate Adventurers, and the Dawn of Empire. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-082066-4.
  • Rowse, Alfred Leslie (1962). Ralegh and the Throckmortons. London: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9787800419980.
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  • St. John, James Augustus (1869). "Perpetrates the Massacre of Del Oro". Life of Sir Walter Raleigh: 1552-1618. Chapman & Hall.
  • Sutherland, John; Watts, Cedric T. (2000). Henry V, War Criminal?: and Other Shakespeare Puzzles. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-283879-7. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  • Trevelyan, Raleigh (2002). Sir Walter Raleigh. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9326-4.
  • Vivian, John Lambrick (1895). The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Herald's Visitations of 1531, 1564, & 1620. H. S. Eland.
  • Wallace, Willard Mosher (1959). Sir Walter Raleigh. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-7900-7. OCLC 927442536.
  • Wallechinsky, David; Wallace, Irving (1981). "Who Really Wrote Shakespeare's Plays? Sir Walter Raleigh ?". trivia-library.com. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
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Further reading

  • Adamson, J.H. and Folland, H. F. Shepherd of the Ocean, 1969
  • Beer, Anna Sir Walter Raleigh and his readers in the Seventeenth Century (Springer, 1997).
  • Beer, Anna Patriot or Traitor: The Life and Death of Sir Walter Ralegh (Oneworld, 2018)
  • Hiscock, Andrew. "Walter Ralegh and the Arts of Memory." Literature Compass 4.4 (2007): 1030–1058.
  • Dwyer, Jack Dorset Pioneers The History Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-7524-5346-0
  • Gallay, Alan. Walter Ralegh: Architect of Empire (2019), a major scholarly biography excerpt
  • Holmes, John. "The Guiana Projects: Imperial and Colonial Ideologies in Ralegh and Purchas." Literature & History 14.2 (2005): 1–13.
  • Lawson-Peebles, Robert. "The many faces of Sir Walter Ralegh" History Today 48.3 (1998): 17+.
  • Lewis, C. S. English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama, (1954).
  • Lyons, Mathew. The Favourite: Ralegh and His Queen (Hachette UK, 2011).
  • Lyons, Mathew. "Cloaked in Mystery." History Today (2012) 62.7 pp 72–72
  • Pemberton, Henry (Author); Carroll Smyth (Editor), Susan L. Pemberton (Contributor) Shakespeare And Sir Walter Raleigh: Including Also Several Essays Previously Published In The New Shakspeareana, Kessinger Publishing, LLC; 264 pages, 2007. ISBN 978-0548312483
  • Ralegh, Sir Walter, and Michael Rudick. "The Poems of Sir Walter Ralegh: A Historical Edition." (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies/Renaissance English Text Society, 1999).
  • Stebbing, William: Sir Walter Ralegh Oxford, 1899 Project Gutenberg eText
  • Tytler, Patrick Fraser (1848). Life of Sir Walter Raleigh, Founded on Authentic and Original Documents. London: T. Nelson and Sons (published 1853). Retrieved 17 August 2008.

External links

  • The Sir Walter Raleigh Collection in Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Sir Walter Raleigh's Grave
  • Biography of Sir Walter Raleigh at Britannia.com
  • Sir Walter Raleigh at the Fort Raleigh website
  • Quotes attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh
  • Story of Raleigh's last years and his beheading
  • Poetry by Sir Walter Raleigh, plus commentary
  • Searching for the Lost Colony Blog
  • Robert Viking O'Brien & Stephen Kent O'Brien, Discovery of Guiana essay, Yearbook of Comparative and General Literature
  • Sir Walter Raleigh portal at luminarium.org
  • Works by Walter Raleigh at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Walter Raleigh at Internet Archive
  • Works by Walter Raleigh at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • The History of the World at Hathi Trust

walter, raleigh, other, people, named, disambiguation, ɔː, ɑː, 1552, october, 1618, english, statesman, soldier, writer, explorer, most, notable, figures, elizabethan, played, leading, part, english, colonisation, north, america, suppressed, rebellion, ireland. For other people named Walter Raleigh see Walter Raleigh disambiguation Sir Walter Raleigh a ˈ r ɔː l i ˈ r ae l i ˈ r ɑː l i c 1552 29 October 1618 was an English statesman soldier writer and explorer One of the most notable figures of the Elizabethan era he played a leading part in English colonisation of North America suppressed rebellion in Ireland helped defend England against the Spanish Armada and held political positions under Elizabeth I Sir Walter RaleighPortrait of Raleigh 1588Government offices1584 1603Lord Warden of the Stannaries1585 1603Vice Admiral of Devon1587 1603Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall1586 1592 1597 1603Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard1598 1603Custos Rotulorum of Dorset1600 1603Governor of JerseyParliamentary offices1584 1585 1586 1587Member of Parliament for Devonshire1597 1598Member of Parliament for Dorset1601Member of Parliament for CornwallPersonal detailsBornc 22 January 1552 or 1554 Hayes Barton East Budleigh Devon EnglandDied 1618 10 29 29 October 1618 aged approximately 65 London EnglandCause of deathExecution by beheadingSpouseElizabeth ThrockmortonChildrenDamereiWalter Wat 1 CarewAlma materOriel College OxfordSignatureMilitary serviceBattles warsDesmond Rebellions French Wars of Religion Spanish ArmadaWriting careerNotable worksThe LieWhat is Our LifeThe Discovery of GuianaThe Historie of the WorldThe Nymph s Reply to the ShepherdRaleigh was born to a landed gentry family of Protestant faith in Devon the son of Walter Raleigh and Catherine Champernowne He was the younger half brother of Sir Humphrey Gilbert and a cousin of Sir Richard Grenville Little is known of his early life though in his late teens he spent some time in France taking part in the religious civil wars In his 20s he took part in the suppression of rebellion in the colonisation of Ireland he also participated in the siege of Smerwick Later he became a landlord of property in Ireland and mayor of Youghal in East Munster where his house still stands in Myrtle Grove 2 He rose rapidly in the favour of Queen Elizabeth I and was knighted in 1585 He was granted a royal patent to explore Virginia paving the way for future English settlements In 1591 he secretly married Elizabeth Throckmorton one of the Queen s ladies in waiting without the Queen s permission for which he and his wife were sent to the Tower of London After his release they retired to his estate at Sherborne Dorset In 1594 Raleigh heard of a City of Gold in South America and sailed to find it publishing an exaggerated account of his experiences in a book that contributed to the legend of El Dorado After Queen Elizabeth died in 1603 Raleigh was again imprisoned in the Tower this time for being involved in the Main Plot against King James I who was not favourably disposed towards him In 1616 he was released to lead a second expedition in search of El Dorado During the expedition men led by his top commander ransacked a Spanish outpost in violation of both the terms of his pardon and the 1604 peace treaty with Spain Raleigh returned to England and to appease the Spanish he was arrested and executed in 1618 Contents 1 Early life 2 Ireland 3 New World 4 1580s 5 1590 1594 6 First voyage to Guiana 7 1596 1603 8 Trial and imprisonment 9 Second voyage to Guiana 10 Execution and aftermath 11 Works 12 Poetry 12 1 List of poems 12 2 Writing Shakespeare 13 Legacy 14 Raleigh s descendants 15 See also 16 References 16 1 Notes 16 2 Citations 16 3 Sources 16 4 Further reading 17 External linksEarly life Edit The Boyhood of Raleigh by John Everett Millais 1871 Little is known about Sir Walter Raleigh s birth 3 but he is believed to have been born on 22 January 1552 or possibly 1554 4 He grew up in the house of Hayes Barton 5 in the parish of East Budleigh in East Devon He was the youngest of the five sons of Walter Raleigh 1510 1581 or Rawleigh of Fardel Manor in the parish of Cornwood 6 in South Devon Raleigh s family is generally assumed to have been a junior branch of the Raleigh family 11th century lords of the manor of Raleigh Pilton 7 in North Devon although the two branches are known to have borne entirely dissimilar coats of arms b adopted at the start of the age of heraldry c 1200 1215 Arms of Katherine Champernowne mother of Sir Walter Raleigh impaled by the arms of her first husband Otes Gilbert Churston Ferrers Church His mother was Katherine Champernowne the third wife of Walter Raleigh senior and the fourth daughter of Sir Philip Champernowne 1479 1545 lord of the manor of Modbury Devon by his wife Catherine Carew a daughter of Sir Edmund Carew d 1513 of Mohuns Ottery in the parish of Luppitt Devon 8 and widow of Otes Gilbert 1513 1546 7 of Greenway in the parish of Brixham and of Compton Castle in the parish of Marldon both in Devon The coat of arms of Otes Gilbert and Katherine Champernowne survives in a stained glass window in Churston Ferrers Church near Greenway Katherine Champernowne s paternal aunt was Kat Ashley governess of Queen Elizabeth I who introduced Raleigh and his brothers to the court 9 In addition Raleigh s maternal uncle was Sir Arthur Champernowne c 1524 1578 a Member of Parliament Sheriff of Devon and Admiral of the West Walter Raleigh junior s immediate family included his full brother Carew Raleigh and half brothers John Gilbert Humphrey Gilbert and Adrian Gilbert As a consequence of their kinship with the Champernowne family all of the Raleigh and Gilbert brothers became prominent during the reigns of Elizabeth I and James I Raleigh s family was highly Protestant in religious orientation and had a number of near escapes during the reign of Roman Catholic Queen Mary I of England In the most notable of these his father had to hide in a tower to avoid execution As a result Raleigh developed a hatred of Roman Catholicism during his childhood and proved himself quick to express it after Protestant Queen Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558 In matters of religion Elizabeth was more moderate than her half sister Mary 10 In 1569 Raleigh left for France to serve with the Huguenots in the French religious civil wars 3 In 1572 Raleigh was registered as an undergraduate at Oriel College Oxford but he left a year later without a degree Raleigh proceeded to finish his education in the Inns of Court 3 In 1575 he was admitted to the Middle Temple having previously been a member of Lyon s Inn one of the Inns of Chancery 11 At his trial in 1603 he stated that he had never studied law His life is uncertain between 1569 and 1575 but in his History of the World he claimed to have been an eyewitness at the Battle of Moncontour 3 October 1569 in France In 1575 or 1576 Raleigh returned to England 12 Ireland EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Raleigh s First Pipe in England an illustration included in Frederick William Fairholt s Tobacco its history and associations 13 See Plantations of IrelandBetween 1579 and 1583 Raleigh took part in the suppression of the Desmond Rebellions He was present at the siege of Smerwick where he led the party that beheaded some 600 Spanish and Italian soldiers 14 15 Raleigh received 40 000 acres 16 000 ha approximately 0 2 of Ireland upon the seizure and distribution of land following the attainders arising from the rebellion including the coastal walled town of Youghal and further up the Blackwater River the village of Lismore This made him one of the principal landowners and colonists in Munster but he had limited success inducing English tenants to settle on his estates citation needed Raleigh made the town of Youghal his occasional home during his 17 years as an Irish landlord frequently being domiciled at Killua Castle Clonmellon County Westmeath He was mayor there from 1588 to 1589 His town mansion of Myrtle Grove is assumed to be the setting for the story that his servant doused him with a bucket of water after seeing clouds of smoke coming from Raleigh s pipe in the belief that he had been set alight But this story is also told of other places associated with Raleigh the Virginia Ash Inn in Henstridge near Sherborne Sherborne Castle and South Wraxall Manor in Wiltshire home of Raleigh s friend Sir Walter Long citation needed Amongst Raleigh s acquaintances in Munster was another Englishman who had been granted land in the Irish colonies poet Edmund Spenser In the 1590s he and Raleigh travelled together from Ireland to the court at London where Spenser presented part of his allegorical poem The Faerie Queene to Elizabeth I citation needed Raleigh s management of his Irish estates ran into difficulties which contributed to a decline in his fortunes In 1602 he sold the lands to Richard Boyle 1st Earl of Cork who subsequently prospered under kings James I and Charles I 16 Following Raleigh s death members of his family approached Boyle for compensation on the ground that Raleigh had struck an improvident bargain citation needed New World Edit Engraved portrait of Raleigh In 1584 Queen Elizabeth granted Raleigh a royal charter authorising him to explore colonise and rule any remote heathen and barbarous lands countries and territories not actually possessed of any Christian Prince or inhabited by Christian People in return for one fifth of all the gold and silver that might be mined there 17 This charter specified that Raleigh had seven years in which to establish a settlement or else lose his right to do so Raleigh and Elizabeth intended that the venture should provide riches from the New World and a base from which to send privateers on raids against the treasure fleets of Spain Raleigh himself never visited North America although he led expeditions in 1595 and 1617 to the Orinoco river basin in South America in search of the golden city of El Dorado Instead he sent others in 1585 to find the Roanoke Colony later known as the Lost Colony 18 These expeditions were funded primarily by Raleigh and his friends but never provided the steady stream of revenue necessary to maintain a colony in America Subsequent colonisation attempts in the early 17th century were made under the joint stock Virginia Company which was able to raise the capital necessary to create successful colonies In 1587 Raleigh attempted a second expedition again establishing a settlement on Roanoke Island This time a more diverse group of settlers was sent including some entire families 19 under the governance of John White 20 After a short while in America White returned to England to obtain more supplies for the colony planning to return in a year Unfortunately for the colonists at Roanoke one year became three The first delay came when Queen Elizabeth I ordered all vessels to remain at port for potential use against the Spanish Armada After England s 1588 victory over the Spanish Armada the ships were given permission to sail 21 The second delay came after White s small fleet set sail for Roanoke and his crew insisted on sailing first towards Cuba in hopes of capturing treasure laden Spanish merchant ships Enormous riches described by their pilot an experienced Portuguese navigator hired by Raleigh outweighed White s objections to the delay 21 When the supply ship arrived in Roanoke three years later than planned the colonists had disappeared 22 The only clue to their fate was the word CROATOAN and the letters CRO carved into tree trunks White had arranged with the settlers that if they should move the name of their destination be carved into a tree or corner post This suggested the possibility that they had moved to Croatoan Island but a hurricane prevented John White from investigating the island for survivors 22 Other speculation includes their having starved or been swept away or lost at sea during the stormy weather of 1588 No further attempts at contact were recorded for some years Whatever the fate of the settlers the settlement is now remembered as the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island 1580s EditIn December 1581 Raleigh returned to England from Ireland as his company had been disbanded He took part in court life and became a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I because of his efforts at increasing the Protestant Church in Ireland 23 In 1585 Raleigh was knighted and was appointed warden of the stannaries that is of the tin mines of Cornwall and Devon Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall and vice admiral of the two counties He was a member of parliament for Devonshire in 1585 and 1586 16 He was also granted the right to colonise America 23 Raleigh commissioned shipbuilder R Chapman of Deptford to build a ship for him She was originally called Ark but became Ark Raleigh following the convention at the time by which the ship bore the name of her owner The Crown in the person of Queen Elizabeth I purchased the ship from Raleigh in January 1587 for 5 000 1 1 million in 2015 24 This took the form of a reduction in the sum that Sir Walter owed the queen he received Exchequer tallies but no money As a result the ship was renamed Ark Royal 25 In the Armada year of 1588 Raleigh had some involvement with defence against the Spanish at Devon The ship that he had built Ark Royal was Lord High Admiral Howard s flagship 26 1590 1594 Edit Sir Walter Raleigh by William Segar Elizabeth Bess Throckmorton Raleigh by William Segar 1595 In 1592 Raleigh was given many rewards by the Queen including Durham House in the Strand and the estate of Sherborne Dorset He was appointed Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard However he had not been given any of the great offices of state 26 In 1591 Raleigh secretly married Elizabeth Bess Throckmorton or Throgmorton She was one of the Queen s ladies in waiting 11 years his junior and was pregnant at the time She gave birth to a son believed to be named Damerei who was given to a wet nurse at Durham House but he died in October 1592 of plague Bess resumed her duties to the queen The following year the unauthorised marriage was discovered and the Queen ordered Raleigh to be imprisoned and Bess dismissed from court Both were imprisoned in the Tower of London in June 1592 He was released from prison in August 1592 to manage a recently returned expedition and attack on the Spanish coast The fleet was recalled by the Queen but not before it captured an incredibly rich prize a merchant ship carrack named Madre de Deus Mother of God off Flores Raleigh was sent to organise and divide the spoils of the ship He was sent back to the Tower but by early 1593 had been released and become a member of Parliament 27 It was several years before Raleigh returned to favour clarification needed and he travelled extensively in this time Raleigh and his wife remained devoted to each other They had two more sons Walter known as Wat in 1593 and Carew in 1605 28 Raleigh was elected a burgess of Mitchell Cornwall in the parliament of 1593 4 He retired to his estate at Sherborne where he built a new house completed in 1594 known then as Sherborne Lodge Since extended it is now known as Sherborne New Castle He made friends with the local gentry such as Sir Ralph Horsey of Clifton Maybank and Charles Thynne of Longleat During this period at a dinner party at Horsey s Raleigh had a heated discussion about religion with Reverend Ralph Ironsides The argument later gave rise to charges of atheism against Raleigh though the charges were dismissed He was elected to Parliament speaking on religious and naval matters 29 First voyage to Guiana EditFurther information Raleigh s El Dorado Expedition In 1594 he came into possession of a Spanish account of a great golden city at the headwaters of the Caroni River A year later he explored what is now Guyana and eastern Venezuela in search of Lake Parime and Manoa the legendary city Once back in England he published The Discovery of Guiana 30 1596 an account of his voyage which made exaggerated claims as to what had been discovered The book can be seen as a contribution to the El Dorado legend Venezuela has gold deposits but no evidence indicates that Raleigh found any mines He is sometimes said to have discovered Angel Falls but these claims are considered far fetched 31 1596 1603 Edit Raleigh and his son Walter in 1602 In 1596 Raleigh took part in the capture of Cadiz where he was wounded He also served as the rear admiral a principal command of the Islands Voyage to the Azores in 1597 32 On his return from the Azores Raleigh helped England defend itself against the major threat of the 3rd Spanish Armada during the autumn of 1597 The Armada was dispersed in the Channel and later was devastated by a storm off Ireland Lord Howard of Effingham and Raleigh were able to organise a fleet that resulted in the capture of a Spanish ship in retreat carrying vital information regarding the Spanish plans In 1597 Raleigh was chosen as member of parliament for Dorset and in 1601 for Cornwall 16 He was unique in the Elizabethan period in sitting for three counties 4 From 1600 to 1603 as governor of the Channel Island of Jersey Raleigh modernised its defences This included the construction of a new fort protecting the approaches to Saint Helier Fort Isabella Bellissima or Elizabeth Castle citation needed Trial and imprisonment Edit Raleigh s cell Bloody Tower Tower of London Royal favour with Queen Elizabeth had been restored by this time but his good fortune did not last the Queen died on 24 March 1603 Raleigh was arrested on 19 July 1603 at what is now the Old Exeter Inn in Ashburton charged with treason for his involvement in the Main Plot against Elizabeth s successor James I and imprisoned in the Tower of London 33 Raleigh s trial began on 17 November in the converted Great Hall of Winchester Castle Raleigh conducted his own defence The chief evidence against him was the signed and sworn confession of his friend Henry Brooke 11th Baron Cobham Raleigh repeatedly requested that Cobham be called to testify Let my acuser come face to face and be deposed Were the case but for a small copyhold you would have witnesses or good proof to lead the jury to a verdict and I am here for my life Raleigh argued that the evidence against him was hearsay but the tribunal refused to allow Cobham to testify and be cross examined 34 35 Raleigh s trial has been regularly cited as influential in establishing a common law right to confront accusers in court 36 37 38 39 Raleigh was convicted but King James spared his life 40 While imprisoned in the Tower Raleigh wrote his incomplete The Historie of the World 41 Using a wide array of sources in six languages Raleigh was fully abreast of the latest continental scholarship He wrote not about England but of the ancient world with a heavy emphasis on geography Despite his intention of providing current advice to the King of England King James I complained that it was too sawcie in censuring Princes 42 43 Raleigh remained imprisoned in the Tower until 1616 44 His son Carew was conceived and born in 1604 or 1605 while Raleigh was imprisoned in the Tower 45 Second voyage to Guiana Edit James I s royal warrant pardoning Raleigh in 1617 In 1617 Raleigh was pardoned by the King and granted permission to conduct a second expedition to Venezuela in search of El Dorado During the expedition a detachment of Raleigh s men under the command of his long time friend Lawrence Kemys attacked the Spanish outpost of Santo Tome de Guayana on the Orinoco river in violation of peace treaties with Spain and against Raleigh s orders A condition of Raleigh s pardon was avoidance of any hostility against Spanish colonies or shipping In the initial attack on the settlement Raleigh s son Walter was fatally shot Kemys informed Raleigh of his son s death and begged for forgiveness but did not receive it and at once committed suicide On Raleigh s return to England an outraged Count Gondomar the Spanish ambassador demanded that Raleigh s death sentence be reinstated by King James who had little choice but to do so Raleigh was brought to London from Plymouth by Sir Lewis Stukley where he passed up numerous opportunities to make an effective escape 46 47 Execution and aftermath Edit Raleigh just before he was beheaded an illustration from circa 1860 Raleigh was beheaded in the Old Palace Yard at the Palace of Westminster on 29 October 1618 Let us dispatch he said to his executioner At this hour my ague comes upon me I would not have my enemies think I quaked from fear After he was allowed to see the axe that would be used to behead him he mused This is a sharp Medicine but it is a Physician for all diseases and miseries According to biographers Raleigh s last words spoken to the hesitating executioner were What dost thou fear Strike man strike 48 49 Thomas Hariot may have introduced him to tobacco 50 Having been one of the people to popularise tobacco smoking in England he left a small tobacco pouch found in his cell shortly after his execution Engraved upon the pouch was a Latin inscription Comes meus fuit in illo miserrimo tempore It was my companion at that most miserable time 51 52 Raleigh s head was embalmed and presented to his wife His body was to be buried in the local church in Beddington Surrey the home of Lady Raleigh but was finally laid to rest in St Margaret s Westminster where his tomb is presently located 53 The Lords she wrote have given me his dead body though they have denied me his life God hold me in my wits 54 It has been said that Lady Raleigh kept her husband s head in a velvet bag until her death 55 After Raleigh s wife s death 29 years later his head was removed to his tomb and interred at St Margaret s Church 56 Although Raleigh s popularity had waned considerably since his Elizabethan heyday his execution was seen by many both at the time and since as unnecessary and unjust as for many years his involvement in the Main Plot seemed to have been limited to a meeting with Lord Cobham 57 One of the judges at his trial later said The justice of England has never been so degraded and injured as by the condemnation of the honourable Sir Walter Raleigh 58 Works EditThe Historie of the World In five bookes first ed 1614 R White T Basset 1677 The Discovery of Guiana Hakluyt Society 1848 Poetry Edit Arms of Sir Walter Raleigh Raleigh s poetry is written in the relatively straightforward unornamented mode known as the plain style C S Lewis considered Raleigh one of the era s silver poets a group of writers who resisted the Italian Renaissance influence of dense classical reference and elaborate poetic devices His writing contains strong personal treatments of themes such as love loss beauty and time Most of his poems are short lyrics that were inspired by actual events 3 In poems such as What is Our Life and The Lie Raleigh expresses a contemptus mundi contempt of the world attitude more characteristic of the Middle Ages than of the dawning era of humanistic optimism But his lesser known long poem The Ocean s Love to Cynthia combines this vein with the more elaborate conceits associated with his contemporaries Edmund Spenser and John Donne expressing a melancholy sense of history The poem was written during his imprisonment in the Tower of London 3 Raleigh wrote a poetic response to Christopher Marlowe s The Passionate Shepherd to His Love of 1592 entitled The Nymph s Reply to the Shepherd Both were written in the style of traditional pastoral poetry and follow the structure of six four line stanzas employing a rhyme scheme of AABB with Raleigh s an almost line for line refutation of Marlowe s sentiments 59 Years later the 20th century poet William Carlos Williams would join the poetic argument with his Raleigh Was Right List of poems Edit All finished and some unfinished poems written by Raleigh or plausibly attributed to him c The Advice Another of the Same Conceit begotten by the Eyes Epitaph on Sir Philip Sidney Epitaph on the Earl of Leicester Even such is Time The Excuse False Love Farewell to the Court His Petition to Queen Anne of Denmark If Cynthia be a Queen In Commendation of George Gascoigne s Steel Glass The Lie Like Hermit Poor Lines from Catullus Love and Time My Body in the Walls captive The Nymph s Reply to the Shepherd Of Spenser s Faery Queen On the Snuff of a Candle The Ocean s Love to Cynthia A Poem entreating of Sorrow A Poem put into my Lady Laiton s Pocket The Pilgrimage A Prognistication upon Cards and Dice The Shepherd s Praise of Diana Sweet Unsure To His Mistress To the Translator of Lucan s Pharsalia What is Our Life The Wood the Weed the Wag Writing Shakespeare Edit See also List of Shakespeare authorship candidates and Shakespeare authorship question In 1845 Shakespeare scholar Delia Bacon first proposed that a group of authors had actually written the plays later attributed to William Shakespeare the main writer being Walter Raleigh 60 61 Later George S Caldwell asserted that Raleigh was actually the sole author 62 These claims have been supported by other scholars throughout subsequent years including Albert J Beveridge and Henry Pemberton but are rejected by the majority of Shakespearean scholars today d Legacy EditSee also Walter Raleigh in popular culture Statue of Sir Walter Raleigh at Raleigh Convention Center In 2002 Raleigh was featured in the BBC poll of the 100 Greatest Britons 63 A galliard was composed in honour of Raleigh by either Francis Cutting or Richard Allison 64 The state capital of North Carolina its second largest city was named Raleigh in 1792 after Sir Walter sponsor of the Roanoke Colony In the city a bronze statue which has been moved around different locations within the city was cast in honour of the city s namesake The Lost Colony is commemorated at the Fort Raleigh National Historic Site on Roanoke Island North Carolina 65 Raleigh County West Virginia is named after him 66 Mount Raleigh in the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains in British Columbia Canada was named for him 67 with related features the Raleigh Glacier 68 and Raleigh Creek 69 named in association with the mountain Mount Gilbert just to Mount Raleigh s south was named for his half brother Sir Humphrey 70 Raleigh has been widely speculated to be responsible for introducing the potato to Europe and was a key figure in bringing it to Ireland However modern historians dispute this claim suggesting it would have been impossible for Raleigh to have discovered the potato in the places he visited 71 Due to Raleigh s role in the popularisation of smoking John Lennon humorously referred to him as such a stupid git in the song I m So Tired on the White Album The Beatles 1968 72 Various colourful stories are told about him such as laying his cloak over a puddle for the Queen but they are probably apocryphal 73 74 75 The story of Raleigh s trial is included in John George Phillimore s 1850 book The History and Principles of Evidence and his commentary on the story is included in many law school textbooks on evidence in common law countries The author George Garrett s historical fiction novel Death of the Fox explores Raleigh s relationships with Elizabeth I and her successor James I Raleigh s descendants EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A statue of Raleigh in Greenwich southeast London Many people claim descent from Sir Walter Raleigh but nearly all have no basis in fact The only authentic lines of descent are as follows citation needed Raleigh s only surviving child Carew Raleigh had three surviving children Walter d 1660 Anne d 1708 and Philip d 1705 citation needed The elder son Walter Raleigh was knighted in June 1660 but died two months later He was buried at West Horsley He left three surviving children Elizabeth Philippa and Anne Philippa who married Oliver Weekes of Tortingdon Sussex and Anne who married William Knight of Barrells Warwickshire left descendants It was Philippa Weekes daughter Elizabeth Elwes who seems to have owned the main store of Raleigh memorabilia and was consulted by William Oldys in 1735 when he was writing his Life of Raleigh citation needed Anne Raleigh married Sir Peter Tyrrell of Castlethorpe Bucks Her granddaughter Harriet married Francis Mann of Kidlington Oxfordshire and died in 1785 leaving descendants citation needed Philip Raleigh championed his grandfather s cause publishing several of his hitherto unpublished papers He had a family of four sons and three daughters The youngest son Carew Raleigh page of honour to William III was serving as a captain s servant on HMS Bredah when he died of fever in the West Indies in 1697 aged seventeen The second son Lieut Brudenell Raleigh was also serving in the navy in the West Indies when he died of fever in June 1698 aged 22 The eldest son Captain Walter Raleigh Grenadier Guards was page of honour to Queen Mary and was killed at the siege of Schellenberg in 1704 aged 31 He was unmarried After Walter s death his father was granted a pension by the crown in consideration of his 3 sons being slain in the late and present war The third son Captain Lieutenant Grenville Raleigh served in the Duke of Marlborough s army throughout the War of the Spanish Succession and died of fever in 1717 while guarding the prisoners at Chester after the 1715 Jacobite rising He had married and had two sons and a daughter Mary On the death of his daughter in Bath in 1783 it was noted that she was the only surviving descendant in the direct line of Sir Walter Raleigh citation needed Of Philip Raleigh s daughters Anne and Elizabeth both died unmarried The eldest daughter Frances married William Honywood eldest son of Sir William Honywood of Evington Place Elmsted Kent and died in 1730 Her many descendants include the present Lord Mountbatten and the actor Hugh Grant 76 See also EditList of colonial governors of Virginia Sir Walter a race horse The Armada ServiceReferences EditNotes Edit Many alternative spellings of his surname exist including Rawley Ralegh Ralagh and Rawleigh Raleigh appears most commonly today but he is known to have used that spelling only once His most consistent preference was for Ralegh His full name is ˈ w ɔː l t er ˈ r ɔː l i but in practice ˈ r ae l i RAL ee and even ˈ r ɑː l i RAH lee are the usual modern pronunciations in England Raleigh of Pilton Gules crusilly or a bend vair arms of Raleigh of Fardell Gules five fusils conjoined in bend argent citation needed As ye came from the holy land is often attributed to Raleigh but in the words of Bullett 1947 p 280 it certainly existed before Ralegh arrived on the scene Ralegh s connexion with it is largely a matter of conjecture Kathman 2003 p 621 antiStratfordism has remained a fringe belief system Schoenbaum 1991 p 450 Paster 1999 p 38 To ask me about the authorship question is like asking a palaeontologist to debate a creationist s account of the fossil record Nelson 2004 pp 149 51 I do not know of a single professor of the 1 300 member Shakespeare Association of America who questions the identity of Shakespeare antagonism to the authorship debate from within the profession is so great that it would be as difficult for a professed Oxfordian to be hired in the first place much less gain tenure Carroll 2004 pp 278 9 I have never met anyone in an academic position like mine in the Establishment who entertained the slightest doubt as to Shakespeare s authorship of the general body of plays attributed to him Pendleton 1994 p 21 Shakespeareans sometimes take the position that to even engage the Oxfordian hypothesis is to give it a countenance it does not warrant Sutherland amp Watts 2000 p 7 There is it should be noted no academic Shakespearian of any standing who goes along with the Oxfordian theory Gibson 2005 p 30 most of the great Shakespearean scholars are to be found in the Stratfordian camp Citations Edit Wolfe 2018 The Church and Town of Sir Walter Raleigh United Diocese of Cork Cloyne and Ross 21 May 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 a b c d e Black et al 2011 p 724 a b c Nicholls amp Williams 2004 Batten 2020 Cherry amp Pevsner 2004 p 288 Vivian 1895 p 638 Vivian 1895 pp 639 405 162 Ronald 2007 p 249 Bremer amp Webster 2006 p 454 Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple vol I p 39 Edwards 1868 pp 26 33 Fairholt 1859 St John 1869 p 52 77 Nicholls amp Williams 2011 p 15 a b c Laughton amp Lee 1896 Charter to Sir Walter Raleigh 1584 The Avalon Project Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library Retrieved 14 June 2015 Quinn 1985 The lost colony of Roanoke Island The Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on 1 November 2015 Retrieved 29 October 2015 Hakluyt 1965 p 522 a b Quinn 1985 pp 125 126 a b Quinn 1985 pp 130 133 a b Walter Raleigh Biography The Biography Channel Retrieved 12 March 2014 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Collier 1852 p 151 a b May 1989 p 8 May 1989 p 13 May 1989 p 21 May 1989 p 14 Raleigh 1848 Walter Raleigh Delusions of Guiana The Lost World The Gran Sabana Canaima National Park and Angel Falls Venezuela Archived from the original on 9 February 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2015 May 1989 p 16 May 1989 p 19 1 Criminal Trials 400 400 511 1850 Note on the trial under commission of Oyer and Terminer with a jury at a court of assizes PDF Archived from the original PDF on 9 June 2010 White Penny J Spring 2003 Rescuing the Confrontation Clause PDF South Carolina Law Review 54 3 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Perry Hadley Spring 2008 Virtually Face to Face The Confrontation Clause and the Use of Two Way Video Testimony Roger Williams University Law Review 13 2 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Jonakait Randolph N Autumn 1995 The Origins of the Confrontation Clause An Alternative History PDF Rutgers Law Journal 27 1 77 168 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Shaviro Daniel N 1991 The Confrontation Clause Today in Light of its Common Law Background Valparaiso University Law Review 26 337 66 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Rowse 1962 p 241 Raleigh 1677 Popper 2012 p 18 Racin 1974 Wallace 1959 p 256 Wallace 1959 p 228 Wolffe 2004 Laughton 1898 Forbes Malcolm 1988 They Went That a way New York Simon and Schuster p 250 ISBN 0 671 65709 7 Trevelyan 2002 p 552 Ley 1965 p 88 Borio 2007 Sir Walter Raleigh s tobacco pouch Wallace Collection Archived from the original on 9 November 2012 Retrieved 1 November 2012 Williams 1988 Durant amp Durant 1961 p 158 Chap VI Brushfield 1896 Lloyd amp Mitchinson 2006 Christenson 1991 pp 385 387 Crawford v Washington PDF p 44 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Notes for The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Dr Bruce Magee Louisiana Tech University Retrieved 29 October 2012 Farrand 2013 Hechinger 2011 Wallechinsky amp Wallace 1981 BBC Great Britons Top 100 Internet Archive Archived from the original on 4 December 2002 Retrieved 19 July 2017 Mathew Holmes lute books Sir Walter Raleigh s galliard Cambridge Digital Library Retrieved 11 December 2014 The Lost Colony 1 OBX Attraction The Lost Colony Raleigh County history sources West Virginia Division of Culture and History Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2015 Mount Raleigh BCNames GeoBC Raleigh Glacier BC Names GeoBC Raleigh Creek BC Names GeoBC Mount Gilbert BC Names GeoBC Salaman amp Burton 1985 p 148 The Beatles The White Album I m So Tired website Retrieved 11 December 2014 Naunton Robert Fragmenta Regalia 1694 reprinted 1824 Fuller 1684 p 749 10 Historical Misconceptions HowStuffWorks King 2019 Sources Edit Batten Jim 16 August 2020 Woodbury Common Hayes Barton britishexplorers com Retrieved 6 September 2020 Black Joseph et al eds 2011 The Broadview Anthology of British Literature Vol A 2nd ed Broadview Press ISBN 978 1 77048 086 5 Borio Gene 2007 Tobacco Timeline The Seventeenth Century The Great Age of the Pipe Tobacco org Archived from the original on 9 November 2012 Retrieved 29 October 2012 Bremer Francis J Webster Tom 2006 Puritans and Puritanism in Europe and America A Comprehensive Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 678 1 Brushfield Thomas Nadauld 1896 Raleghana Vol 8 Plymouth Bullett Gerald 1947 Silver Poets of the 16th Century Everyman s Library Vol 1985 London Dent Carroll D Allen 2004 Reading the 1592 Groatsworth Attack on Shakespeare Tennessee Law Review Tennessee Law Review Association 72 1 277 94 ISSN 0040 3288 Cherry Bridget Pevsner Nikolaus 2004 The Buildings of England Devon Penguin ISBN 978 0 300 09596 8 Christenson Ron 1991 Political Trials in History From Antiquity to the Present Transaction ISBN 978 0 88738 406 6 Collier John Payne 1852 Additional Information respecting the Life and Services of Sir Walter Raleigh Archaeologia The Society of Antiquaries of London 34 2 151 doi 10 1017 S026134090000103X Edwards Edward 1868 The Life of Sir Walter Ralegh Vol 1 Macmillan amp Company Durant Will Durant Ariel 1961 The Story of Civilization Vol VII Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1567310238 Fairholt Frederick William 1859 Tobacco Its History and Associations London Chapman and Hall Fuller Thomas 1684 Anglorum Speculum Or The Worthies of England in Church and State J Wright Farrand Michael J 26 January 2013 Far and few between Walter Raleigh Wrote Shakespeare Gibson H N 2005 1962 The Shakespeare Claimants Routledge Library Editions Shakespeare Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 35290 1 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Hakluyt Richard 1965 Irwin R Blacker ed Hakluyt s Voyages The Principle Navigations Voyages Traffiques amp Discoveries of the English Nation New York Viking Press ISBN 978 0 670 01067 7 Hechinger Paul October 2011 Did Shakespeare Really Write His Plays A Few Theories Examined BBC America Retrieved 6 September 2020 Kathman David 2003 The Question of Authorship In Wells Stanley Orlin Lena Cowen eds Shakespeare an Oxford Guide Oxford Guides Oxford University Press pp 620 32 ISBN 978 0 19 924522 2 King Walter Raleigh 2019 Sunk Down among the People The Story of the Descendants of Sir Walter Raleigh Kindle Direct Publishing ASIN B081SKM5HD Laughton John Knox Lee Sidney 1896 Ralegh Walter 1552 1618 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 47 London Smith Elder amp Co Laughton John Knox 1898 Stucley Lewis In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 55 London Smith Elder amp Co Ley Willy December 1965 Frederik Pohl ed The Healthfull Aromatick Herbe For Your Information Galaxy Science Fiction Lloyd J Mitchinson J 2006 The Book of General Ignorance Faber and Faber ISBN 0 307 39491 3 May Steven W 1989 Sir Walter Ralegh Boston MA Twayne ISBN 9780805769838 Raleigh as a writer and poet Nicholls Mark Williams Penry 17 September 2004 Ralegh Sir Walter 1554 1618 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23039 Subscription or UK public library membership required Nelson Alan H 2004 Stratford Si Essex No Tennessee Law Review Tennessee Law Review Association 72 1 149 69 ISSN 0040 3288 Nicholls Mark Williams Penry 2011 Sir Walter Raleigh In Life and Legend A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4411 1209 5 Paster Gail Kern April 1999 The Sweet Swan subscription required Harper s Magazine pp 38 41 Retrieved 2 March 2011 Pendleton Thomas A 1994 Irvin Matus s Shakespeare IN FACT Shakespeare Newsletter University of Illinois at Chicago 44 Summer 21 26 30 ISSN 0037 3214 Popper Nicholas 2012 Walter Ralegh s History of the World and the Historical Culture of the Late Renaissance University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 67502 2 Quinn David B 1985 Set Fair for Roanoke Voyages and Colonies 1584 1606 Chapel Hill UNC Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4123 5 Racin John 1974 Sir Walter Ralegh as Historian An Analysis of The History of the World Inst f Engl Sprache u Literatur Univ Salzburg Ronald Susan 2007 The Pirate Queen Queen Elizabeth I Her Pirate Adventurers and the Dawn of Empire HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 082066 4 Rowse Alfred Leslie 1962 Ralegh and the Throckmortons London St Martin s Press ISBN 9787800419980 Salaman Redcliffe N Burton William Glynn 1985 The History and Social Influence of the Potato Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31623 1 Schoenbaum S 1991 Shakespeare s Lives 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 818618 2 St John James Augustus 1869 Perpetrates the Massacre of Del Oro Life of Sir Walter Raleigh 1552 1618 Chapman amp Hall Sutherland John Watts Cedric T 2000 Henry V War Criminal and Other Shakespeare Puzzles Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 283879 7 Retrieved 16 February 2011 Trevelyan Raleigh 2002 Sir Walter Raleigh Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9326 4 Vivian John Lambrick 1895 The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Herald s Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 H S Eland Wallace Willard Mosher 1959 Sir Walter Raleigh Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 7900 7 OCLC 927442536 Wallechinsky David Wallace Irving 1981 Who Really Wrote Shakespeare s Plays Sir Walter Raleigh trivia library com Retrieved 6 September 2020 Williams Norman Lloyd 1988 Sir Walter Raleigh Cassell Biographies ISBN 9780304322411 OCLC 18325609 OL 24939443M Wolfe Brendan 29 October 2018 Sir Walter Raleigh ca 1552 1618 Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Humanities Retrieved 1 March 2020 Wolffe Mary 23 September 2004 Stucley Sir Lewis Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 26740 Subscription or UK public library membership required Further reading Edit Adamson J H and Folland H F Shepherd of the Ocean 1969 Beer Anna Sir Walter Raleigh and his readers in the Seventeenth Century Springer 1997 Beer Anna Patriot or Traitor The Life and Death of Sir Walter Ralegh Oneworld 2018 Hiscock Andrew Walter Ralegh and the Arts of Memory Literature Compass 4 4 2007 1030 1058 Dwyer Jack Dorset Pioneers The History Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 7524 5346 0 Gallay Alan Walter Ralegh Architect of Empire 2019 a major scholarly biography excerpt Holmes John The Guiana Projects Imperial and Colonial Ideologies in Ralegh and Purchas Literature amp History 14 2 2005 1 13 Lawson Peebles Robert The many faces of Sir Walter Ralegh History Today 48 3 1998 17 Lewis C S English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama 1954 Lyons Mathew The Favourite Ralegh and His Queen Hachette UK 2011 Lyons Mathew Cloaked in Mystery History Today 2012 62 7 pp 72 72 Pemberton Henry Author Carroll Smyth Editor Susan L Pemberton Contributor Shakespeare And Sir Walter Raleigh Including Also Several Essays Previously Published In The New Shakspeareana Kessinger Publishing LLC 264 pages 2007 ISBN 978 0548312483 Ralegh Sir Walter and Michael Rudick The Poems of Sir Walter Ralegh A Historical Edition Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Renaissance English Text Society 1999 Stebbing William Sir Walter Ralegh Oxford 1899 Project Gutenberg eText Tytler Patrick Fraser 1848 Life of Sir Walter Raleigh Founded on Authentic and Original Documents London T Nelson and Sons published 1853 Retrieved 17 August 2008 External links EditThe Sir Walter Raleigh Collection in Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sir Walter Raleigh s Grave Biography of Sir Walter Raleigh at Britannia com Sir Walter Raleigh at the Fort Raleigh website Quotes attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh Story of Raleigh s last years and his beheading Poetry by Sir Walter Raleigh plus commentary Searching for the Lost Colony Blog Robert Viking O Brien amp Stephen Kent O Brien Discovery of Guiana essay Yearbook of Comparative and General Literature Sir Walter Raleigh portal at luminarium org Works by Walter Raleigh at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Walter Raleigh at Internet Archive Works by Walter Raleigh at LibriVox public domain audiobooks The History of the World at Hathi Trust Portals Biography England North America Poetry Politics South AmericaWalter Raleigh at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter Raleigh amp oldid 1148078668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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