unique_IDs_description """[Gabriel] Harvey's Livy folio has marginalia from persusals in 1568, 1580, and 1590.'""" """Virginia F. Stern notes that 1550 copy of Cicero contains 'Many of [Gabriel], Harvey's annotations, some in [February] 1570 and some in 1579.'""" """[Gabriel Harvey's] marginalia show that he studied Castiglione [...] with considerable care [...] In 1572 he acquired [Thomas] Hoby's translation of Castiglione's [italics]Courtier[end italics] and annotated it copiously.'""" """In a 1573 letter, Gabriel Harvey 'alludes to his study of Cicero's """"""""Topica"""""""", of the German philologist Hegendorff's writings on law logic, and of the first book of the """"""""Institutes"""""""".'""" """[Erasmus's """"""""Parabolae""""""""] was acquired by [Gabriel] Harvey in 1566, read by him at some time thereafter, and was re-read in September of 1577.'""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """In [""""""""Ciceronianus"""""""" (published 1577; delivered c.1575)] [...] Harvey says he has been for nearly twenty weeks in his Tusculan villa, i.e. at his father's house in Saffron Walden, assiduously studying not only the greatest of the old Roman writers, but renaissance writers such as Sturm, Manutius, Osorius, Sigonius and Buchanan. He had given more time to Cicero than to all the rest put together, yet sometimes he had dropped Cicero on Friendship to take up Osorius on Glory'.""" """[Gabriel] Harvey no doubt has the incident [of Philip, Lord Surrey's 'attempts [...] on the virtue' of Harvey's sister Mercy, c. Christmas 1574] in mind when in his copy of Erasmus' """"""""Parabolae"""""""" to the words """"""""stultus magnifica fortuna iniucunda"""""""", he adds the notes, """"""""you knowe, who vsed to write: 'Vnhappy Philip'.""""""""' """ """[Erasmus's """"""""Parabolae""""""""] was acquired by [Gabriel] Harvey in 1566, read by him at some time thereafter, and was re-read in September of 1577.'""" """[Gabriel] Harvey's favourite books were read and annotated a number of times [...] at the conclusion of [his Erasmus] is a large inscription which reads: """"""""Relegi mense Septembri. 1577: Gabriel Harveius"""""""".'""" """In [Gabriel] Harvey's copy of Frontinus, there is evidence of an initial reading in 1578 with marginalia from this period as well as from 1580 and 1588.'""" """Virginia F. Stern notes that 1550 copy of Cicero contains 'Many of [Gabriel], Harvey's annotations, some in [February] 1570 and some in 1579.'""" """[Gabriel] Harvey's Livy folio has marginalia from persusals in 1568, 1580, and 1590.'""" """In [Gabriel] Harvey's copy of Frontinus, there is evidence of an initial reading in 1578 with marginalia from this period as well as from 1580 and 1588.'""" """The date """"""""1580"""""""" is inscribed by [Gabriel] Harvey on sig.Ss3v of the Florio volume [""""""""First Fruites"""""""" (1578)] at the """"""""Finis"""""""" of the major portion of the text.'""" """Despite [Gabriel] Harvey's dissatisfaction with his progress in Italian, in 1580 he managed to read the """"""""First Decade"""""""" of Machiavelli's """"""""Discorsi""""""""'.""" """Early examples of [Gabriel Harvey's] marginalia in [the fields of cosmology and astronomy] are found in the large 1527 folio containing Sacrobosco's """"""""Textus de Sphaera"""""""", Bonetus's """"""""Annuli ... super astrologiam"""""""" [...] and Euclid's first book of geometry translated into Latin by Boethius. On the title-page is Harvey's signature and the date """"""""1580"""""""", which seems to have been the period for many of his annotations in this volume.'""" """Early examples of [Gabriel Harvey's] marginalia in [the fields of cosmology and astronomy] are found in the large 1527 folio containing Sacrobosco's """"""""Textus de Sphaera"""""""", Bonetus's """"""""Annuli ... super astrologiam"""""""" [...] and Euclid's first book of geometry translated into Latin by Boethius. On the title-page is Harvey's signature and the date """"""""1580"""""""", which seems to have been the period for many of his annotations in this volume.'""" """Luca Gaurico's """"""""Tractatus Astrologicus"""""""" is a work giving horoscopes and brief descriptions of noted persons and of city-states and towns, each being illustrated by an astrological diagram. [Gabriel] Harvey read and annotated this volume in 1580'.""" """One of [Gabriel] Harvey's leisure time interests in London at this time [1580s] is suggested by an interesting broadsheet with his signature dated """"""""1588"""""""", some manuscript underlinings of various items, and brief comments. The broadsheet lists the pharmaceuticals and chemicals which can be obtained at the shop of John Hester, """"""""practitioner in the art of Distillation""""""""'.""" """In [Gabriel] Harvey's copy of Frontinus, there is evidence of an initial reading in 1578 with marginalia from this period as well as from 1580 and 1588.'""" """Anthony Grafton, in """"""""Discitur ut agatur: How Gabriel Harvey Read His Livy,"""""""" notes that in 1590 Gabriel Harvey read Livy's Romanae historiae with reference to passages on it in St Augustine's De Civitate Dei; """"""""Harvey read the City of God not on its own but together with its almost equally vast Renaissance companion, the commentary by Juan Luis Vives ...""""""""""" """Anthony Grafton, in """"""""Discitur ut agatur: How Gabriel Harvey Read His Livy,"""""""" notes that in 1590 Gabriel Harvey read Livy's Romanae historiae with reference to passages on it in St Augustine's De Civitate Dei; """"""""Harvey read the City of God not on its own but together with its almost equally vast Renaissance companion, the commentary by Juan Luis Vives ...""""""""""" """Anthony Grafton, in """"""""Discitur ut agatur: How Gabriel Harvey Read His Livy,"""""""" notes that in 1590 Gabriel Harvey read Livy's Romanae historiae with reference to passages on it in St Augustine's De Civitate Dei; """"""""Harvey read the City of God not on its own but together with its almost equally vast Renaissance companion, the commentary by Juan Luis Vives ...""""""""""" """[Gabriel] Harvey's Livy folio has marginalia from persusals in 1568, 1580, and 1590.'""" """At twelve years old he was so affected with the study of Chronology and Antiquity, that, reading over Sleidans Book of the four Empires, and some other Authors, he drew forth an exact Series of the times wherein each eminent person lived; """ """At twelve years old he was so affected with the study of Chronology and Antiquity, that, reading over Sleidans Book of the four Empires, and some other Authors, he drew forth an exact Series of the times wherein each eminent person lived; """ """From thence he was sent to Eaton, where he was educated other six years, during all which time he was more than ordinarily studious and industrious; for when other boyes upon play-dayes took liverty for their sports and pastimes, he would be at his book, wherein he took more delight than others could finde in their Recreations, whereby he profited beyond many his equals. """ """In the early 1590s [Gabriel Harvey] studied Spanish with the aid of Antonio de Corro's """"""""Spanish Grammer"""""""" (1590) and Richard Perceval's """"""""Bibliotheca Hispanica""""""""(1591), an English, Spanish, Latin dictionary printed as an adjunct to Corro's grammar.'""" """In the early 1590s [Gabriel Harvey] studied Spanish with the aid of Antonio de Corro's """"""""Spanish Grammer"""""""" (1590) and Richard Perceval's """"""""Bibliotheca Hispanica""""""""(1591), an English, Spanish, Latin dictionary printed as an adjunct to Corro's grammar.'""" """After priuat praers I did eate my breakfast, then I wrough and reed of the bible tell dinner time'""" """then reed a whill of perkins, and so went to bed'""" """After priuat praier I wrought a whill and hard Mr Rhodes read'""" """after that I walked abroade, then I Cam in and wrought, hard Mr Rhodes read, then I praied with Mr Rhodes'""" """After praier in the morninge, I, beinge not well, did heare Mr Rhodes read of Gyffard upon the songe of Sallemon: sone after I went to breakfast'""" """and after I had read 2 chapters of the Bible, I went to dinner'""" """then I praied with Mr Rhodes and reed tell supper time: after, I hard publect prairs, and Reed of the testement'""" """then I praied with Mr Rhodes and reed tell supper time: after, I hard publect prairs, and Reed of the testement'""" """After priuat praiers I did eate my breakfast, then I reed of the bible and write in my table book, and so went to dinner'""" """and reed of Granhame tell supper time'""" """and after I had reed some of bond of the suboth, I walked abroad: and so to supper'""" """then I Came home and reed to Mrs Ormstone'""" """then I praied and read of the bible, and so went to dimer'""" """and, after I retourned home, I praied priuatly, read a chapter of the bible, and wrought tell dinner time'""" """and so read tel supper Came'""" """after, I had reed of the bible, after to lector, and then to bed'""" """after dinner I did read of a good book, and then went about the house: then I reed againe'""" """After priuat prairs I did eate my breakfast, and then I did read of the Testament, and so went to church'""" """after the sarmon, I walked, and read and talked with Mrs Ormston of that was deliuered'""" """[unsure if reading or writing?] 'then I wrett the most part of an examenation or triall of a christian, framed by Mr Rhodes'.""" """After priuat praier I did eate my breakfast, goe abowt, read of the bible, pray, and after dime: then I talked a while, reed, went about'""" """After priuat praier I did eate my breakfast, goe abowt, read of the bible, pray, and after dime: then I talked a while, reed, went about'""" """that don, I walked tell praiers, then hard Mr Rhodes read a chapter, and so went to bed'""" """and after I had broken my fast ... read some thinge in the bible, and so to work'""" """after dinner I wrought and read tell 4, and then I walked a litle abroad and, after I Cam home, read and [torn] tell all most 6'""" """After priuat praier I did read of the Bible and then eate my breakfast'""" """then I dimed, and talked with some strangers that Came to visitt me, and after, being not well, I slept a while and then reed a while'""" """and after that I walked, and reed a sarmon of Geferd vpon the song of Salomon'""" """After priuat prairs I went about the house and read of the bible and wrought tell dinner time'""" """After priuat praers I Reed tell dinner time'""" """after dinner I went about the house, and read of the arball'""" """then I Came home and hard Mr Rhodes read of the bible'""" """M. Rhodes read a sarmon of the Reuel: and so went to bed'""" """after that, praied priuatly, hauinge reed a Chapter of the bible, and so went to bed'""" """after dinner I wrought and hard Mr Rhodes Read tell all most supper time'""" """after, I reed of the bible, and walked alone'""" """After priuat praier I did eate my breakfast, dispatched diuerse busenes in the house, praied, and then read of the bible, and so dined'""" """and then, walkinge a litle and readinge of the bible in my Chamber, went to supper'""" """then I reed a chapter of the Bible to my mother'""" """then I did reed of the bible, praied, walked a litle abroad, dinned'""" """then I walked, reed of the bible, praied, and so went to dinner'""" """after, I walked and talked with Mr Rhodes, Reed of the bible, and, after, praied'""" """and, sonne after, when I had reed of the Bible, I dined'""" """and then I read of the book of marters and so went to bed'""" """After priuat praier I reed of the bible, eate my breakfast, and went to Church'""" """and then I hard Margaret Rhodes reed of Mr Grenhm'""" """After priuat praier and breakfast I did read a whill for beinge not well, partly through myne owne folly'""" """after, I hard Mr Rhodes Read of Grenhame, and then I praied and so went to bed'""" """After priuat praers I did read of the bible'""" """After priuat praier I did eate my breakfast, Read a Longe Letter and wret an other'""" """After priuat praier I reed of the bible, then brake my fast and walked abroad'""" """after, I wrought, and hard Mr Rhodes read of Mr Grenhame, and so praied priuatly and then went to bed'""" """tell supper time I hard Mr Rhodes read of Cartwright'""" """In the morninge, after priuat praier, I Reed of the bible, and then wrought tell 8: a clock'""" """then I medetated of the sarmons, and read and spoke to Mrs Ormstone of the Chapter that was read in the morning'""" """then I hard Mr Rhodes read tell allmost dinner time'""" """after priuat praier I reed of the bible and wrought tell dinner time, before which I praied; and, after dinner, I continewed my ordenarie Course of working, reading, and dispossinge of busenes in the House, tell after 5:, at which time I praied, read a sermon, and examened my selfe'""" """after priuat praier I reed of the bible and wrought tell dinner time, before which I praied; and, after dinner, I continewed my ordenarie Course of working, reading, and dispossinge of busenes in the House, tell after 5:, at which time I praied, read a sermon, and examened my selfe'""" """after priuat praier I reed of the bible and wrought tell dinner time, before which I praied; and, after dinner, I continewed my ordenarie Course of working, reading, and dispossinge of busenes in the House, tell after 5:, at which time I praied, read a sermon, and examened my selfe'""" """after I wrought, reed of the bible and praied, and then went to dinner'""" """then I reed a hard readinge a whill'""" """then I did read a while to my workwemen, and then to the Lector'""" """then, after dinner, I walked, and hard Mr Rhodes Read'""" """then hard Mr Rhodes read, and so went to bed'""" """then I was busie and hard Mr Rhodes Read his Catechismie tell 5'""" """after priuat praers I did read of the bible, brake my fast, and then went to church'""" """and from thence came home and reed of Grenhame, and hard Megg Rhodes read'""" """and from thence came home and reed of Grenhame, and hard Megg Rhodes read'""" """and hard Auerill reed of Grenham, and then praied'""" """then I wrought and reed tell dinner time'""" """then I walked, and took a Lector, and read tell Lector time: then I hard that, and so went to supper: ... and, after, reed a whill, and so went to bed'""" """then I went a little about the house and reed of the diatt of the soul tell 5:, and then returned to priuat praier and medetacion, and so to readinge of the bible and walkinge tell supper'""" """then I went a little about the house and reed of the diatt of the soul tell 5:, and then returned to priuat praier and medetacion, and so to readinge of the bible and walkinge tell supper'""" """In this Family, partly by his own inclination, and partly by the encouragement of the Governours thereof, he performed Family Duties for the instruction and edification of the whole houshold, expounding to them a portion of Scripture every morning, that the Sun of Righteousness might as constantly arise in their hearts, as the day brake in upon them. In this Exercise, whereby he laboured to profit both himself and others, he went over the Epistles of the Apostles, the Prophesie of Isaiah, and a good part of the Book of Job, rendring the Text out of the Original Languages, and then delivering cleer Explications, and also deducing usefull Observations. """ """When he was ordained, the Bishop (who in those days was primus Presbyter, or Praeses) seeking to oppose him, asked him this Question, Have you read the Bible through? Yes (said he) I have read the Old Testament twice through in the Hebrew, and the New Testament often through in the Greek; and if you please to examine me in any particular place, I shall endeavour to give you an account of it. Nay (said the Bishop) if it be so, I shall need to say no more to you; only some words of Commendation and encouragement he gave him, and so with other assistants, he Ordained him. """ """When he was ordained, the Bishop (who in those days was primus Presbyter, or Praeses) seeking to oppose him, asked him this Question, Have you read the Bible through? Yes (said he) I have read the Old Testament twice through in the Hebrew, and the New Testament often through in the Greek; and if you please to examine me in any particular place, I shall endeavour to give you an account of it. Nay (said the Bishop) if it be so, I shall need to say no more to you; only some words of Commendation and encouragement he gave him, and so with other assistants, he Ordained him. """ """After priuat praiers I did eate my breakfast, then reed of the bible and wrought'""" """After priuat praier I reed a while of the Bible'""" """when I had praied priuatly I did read of the Bible allmost vntell dinner time'""" """then I Came home and did studie my lector, and read a whill'""" """praied with Mr Rhodes, hard one read, and then went to priuat praier'""" """after, I reed of the Bible, and spock of Certaine Chapters to Mrs Ormston and John douson'""" """I walked and kept Mr Hoby Compenie almost tel dinner time: then I reed a litle, and praied, and so to dinner: after which I hilped to read of the book for the placing of the people in the church to Mr Hoby, and then we went to church'""" """after I had supped, I reed of grenhame, and se went to bed'""" """After priuat praier I did eate my breakfast: then I reed of the bible'""" """after supper, hard Mr Rhodes read, and then went to priuat praier'""" """after, I talked, and hard Mr Rhodes Read, then I went to dimer'""" """I Came home, where I did litle good but talked of many maters, litle concerning me, with Mrs Ormston, to whom a read a whill of the Bible'""" """after I wrett my notes in my testement and reed of the bible, then to dinner'""" """after, hard him read, then praied, and so went to bed'"""