Richard Fanshawe

Sir Richard Fanshawe (1608 - 1666), diplomatist, translator, and poet, born at Ware Park, Herts, and educated at Cambridge, travelled on the Continent, and when the English Civil War broke out sided with the King and was sent to Spain to obtain money for the cause. He acted as Latin Secretary to Charles II. when in Holland. After the Restoration he held various appointments, and was Ambassador to Portugal and Spain successively. He translated Guarini's Pastor Fido, Selected Parts of Horace, and The Lusiad of Camoens. His wife, nee Anne Harrison, wrote memoirs of her own life. His English translation of the Lusiads, circulated from 1655 or earlier, was the first. He was a royalist in the English Civil War, and was captured at the Battle of Worcester. Fanshawe, Richard Fanshawe, Richard Fanshawe, Richard

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
dpf
sport in the european union
mendicancy
new hollywood
lambda papers
tophet
odyssey of the mind
pacifist socialist party
guy ballard
cadillac catera
camp manito wish
thenkalai
netherbury
ronaldo (disambiguation)
thomas sackville, 1st earl of dorset
thomas sackville
lady susan
donald love
opel senator
andrew collins (writer)
garden river
layperson
netstat
chekhov's gun
vadakalai
excipient
sand river
nate ackerman
the beautifull cassandra
goodnight mr tom
black poplar
ocean beach
english elm
gorboduc (play)
smooth leaved elm
asgard (disambiguation)
russia naming issue
ocean grove
ocean park
ocean view
revis
nissan almera
protector
ysgard