Lancelot Andrewes, Plagiarism, and Pedagogy at Hampton Court in 1606.

From: Philological Quarterly | Date: January 1, 1998| Author: KLEMP, P. J. | Copyright information

Bishop John Buckeridge altered historical perception of minister Lancelot Andrewes by assuming control of Andrewes' works as his literary executor. Andrewes had gained a reputation as a skilled orator. Buckeridge plagiarized a sermon of Andrewes', and reconstructed Andrewes' canon to portray him as both a Jacobean preacher and an orthodox supporter of the crown.

The scheme was directed at some wayward Scottish Presbyterians. In 1606, King James I arranged to have four of his leadin...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Travel: All you need is a train, a boat and a barrow boy DAYS OUT: The Hampton Court Flower Show, London
The Independent - London ; If gardening is the new sex then Hampton Court Flower Show must be a major erogenous zone. It is the largest flower show in the country with 600 exhibitors, 31 show gardens and nine floral pavilions and this year expects around 185,000 visitors. Not all of them will be knowledgeable gardeners,
Country & Garden: Flowers to the people Hampton Court Flower Show may not have the same snob value as Chelsea, but you can get a ticket and buy the plants
The Independent - London ; Phew The excitement has hardly died down, the breath has hardly been caught, the post-mortem only just completed. Chelsea Flower Show is still a vivid memory, yet Hampton Court Palace Flower Show is already in full swing. At first, it may appear rather odd for the Royal Horticultural Society to
The early Stuarts and Hampton court; Simon Thurley explains why the first Stuarts kept the great Tudor palace virtually intact.
History Today ; THE REIGNS OF the first two Stuart kings are frequently seen as an artistic golden age. A new style in architecture, painting, drama, music and sculpture swept the educated elite, and the new style was centred on the royal court. We are used to seeing James I (r.1603-25) and Charles I (r.1625-49)
The puzzle of Hampton Court maze
The Independent - London ; Some of the yews are sick and some are too thin, it is very tatty, but Hampton Court maze lives on. Reports of its imminent death have been grossly exaggerated. It is not about to be uprooted. Many anxious visitors rang up earlier in the year after press reports that the maze was to be replaced and
Love the water feature. It's called the Thames Hampton Court flower show has it all - space, fresh air and a spectacular riverside setting, says Victoria Summerley. You can even buy plants
The Independent on Sunday ; You don't know anything about gardening, but you feel you need to go to a flower show. Just once, just to see what all the fuss is about, and because you've been told that gardening is the new rock'n'roll. You find the thought of Chelsea a bit off-putting. All those posh people, all those