enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thomas Fuller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Fuller

    Thomas Fuller (baptised 19 June 1608 – 16 August 1661) was an English churchman and historian. He is now remembered for his writings, particularly his Worthies of England , published in 1662, after his death.

  3. John Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Mowbray,_3rd_Duke_of...

    The 20th-century Shakespeare scholar W. W. Greg places it in the reign of Henry VI, basing his conclusion in part on Thomas Fuller's posthumously published History of the Worthies of England (1662). [151] If this is the case then the "Duke of Norfolk" referred to in the play would be Mowbray. [148]

  4. Henry IV, Part 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_IV,_Part_1

    Although the character is called Falstaff in all surviving texts of the play, there is abundant external and internal evidence that he was originally called Oldcastle. The change of names is mentioned in seventeenth-century works by Richard James ("Epistle to Sir Harry Bourchier", c. 1625) and Thomas Fuller (Worthies of England, 1662). It is ...

  5. Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Saint_Hugh_of_Lincoln

    The story is retold as fact in Thomas Fuller's 1662 Worthies of England. [31] [d] Ballads referring to the incident circulated in England, Scotland and France. [32] The earliest English and French versions appear to have been composed near the time. [33]

  6. Alexander Balloch Grosart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Balloch_Grosart

    In 1868 he brought out a bibliography of the writings of Richard Baxter, and from that year until 1876 he was occupied in reproducing for private subscribers the “Fuller Worthies Library,” a series of thirty-nine volumes which included the works of Thomas Fuller, Sir John Davies, Fulke Greville, Edward de Vere, Henry Vaughan, Andrew Marvell ...

  7. Mottingham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mottingham

    In the seventeenth century Thomas Fuller recorded in The Worthies of England a curious incident that happened on 4 August 1585: ...in the Hamlet of Mottingham (pertaining to Eltham in this county) in a Field which belongeth to Sir Percival Hart. Betimes in the morning the ground began to sink, so much that three great Elm trees were suddenly ...

  8. Edward Dyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Dyer

    Among the poems in England's Helicon (1600), signed S.E.D., and included in Dr A.B. Grosart's collection of Dyer's works (Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library, vol. iv, 1876) is the charming pastoral "My Phillis hath the morninge sunne," but this comes from the Phillis of Thomas Lodge.

  9. Waltham Abbey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltham_Abbey

    A complete diocesan list of curates was printed to 1888 and Thomas Fuller, author of The Worthies of England and of the first History of Waltham Abbey, was curate 1649–58. [ 14 ] In the 17th century, a gunpowder factory was opened in the town, no doubt due to good river communications and empty marshland by the River Lea and this now forms ...