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Thomas Coryat (also Coryate) (c. 1577 – 1617) was an English traveller and writer of the late Elizabethan and early Jacobean age. He is principally remembered for two volumes of writings he left regarding his travels, often on foot, through Europe and parts of Asia.
Coryat's Crudities: Hastily gobled up in Five Moneth's Travels is a travelogue published in 1611 by Thomas Coryat (sometimes also spelled "Coryate" or "Coriat") of Odcombe, an English traveller and mild eccentric.
Cooke's play was performed by Queen Anne's Men at the Red Bull Theatre in 1611. The play satirises Coryat's Crudities, the travelogue by Thomas Coryat published in that year. . The company's leading clown, Thomas Greene, played the role of Bubble in the play, and his rendering of Bubble's catch phrase "Tu quoque" (Latin for "you also" or, colloquially, "the same to you"), repeated through the ...
Thomas Coryat, sixteenth century traveller. Henry Cole, Roman Catholic priest [22] Nicholas Udall, Headmaster of Eton and playwright [23] Henry Garnet, complicit in the Gunpowder Plot [24] John White, bishop [25] Nicholas Harpsfield, Roman Catholic apologist [26] Richard Reade, Lord Chancellor of Ireland [27]
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Thomas Coryat, (c. 1577–1617), English traveller Coryat's Crudities hastily gobbled up in Five Months Travels (1611) [1] Pedro Páez, (1564–1622), Spanish jesuit missionary in Ethiopia History of Ethiopia (1620), includes the first account of one of the sources of the Nile River ever written by a European.
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
December – Thomas Coryat, English travel writer (born c. 1577) Unknown dates. Giovanni Botero, Italian political theorist and poet (born 1544) [4] Henry Perry, Welsh linguistic scholar and cleric (born c. 1560) [5]