Jump to content

George Lily: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Removing from Category:English cartographers Diffusing per WP:DIFFUSE and/or WP:ALLINCLUDED using Cat-a-lot
 
(32 intermediate revisions by 22 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}
'''George Lily''' (died 1559) was an English [[Roman Catholic]] priest, biographer and topographer.
'''George Lily''' (died 1559) was an English [[Roman Catholic]] priest, [[Renaissance humanism|humanist]] scholar, biographer, topographer and cartographer.


==Life==
==Life==
Son of [[William Lily (grammarian)|William Lily]] the grammarian, by Agnes his wife, he was a native of London, and became a commoner of [[Magdalen College, Oxford]], in 1528. Leaving the university without a degree he travelled to Rome, where he found a patron in [[Cardinal Pole]], and became noted for his erudition. After his return to England he was collated to the prebend of Kentish Town or Cantlers, in [[St. Paul's Cathedral]], on 22 November 1556. Cardinal Pole, to whom he was domestic chaplain, collated him on 13 March 1558 to a canonry in the first prebend of [[Canterbury Cathedral]]. He died in 1559 before 29 July, and it is supposed that he was buried near the body of his father in St. Paul's churchyard.
George Lily was born in London, the son of [[William Lily (grammarian)|William Lily]] the grammarian, and his wife Agnes. He may have attended [[St Paul's School, London|St Paul's School]], where his father was [[High Master (academic)|High Master]]; and he may have become a commoner of [[Magdalen College, Oxford]], in 1528.<ref name="odnb">Mayer 2008.</ref> He subsequently entered the service of [[Reginald Pole]], and in the years that followed shared some of Pole's self-imposed exile in France and Italy. Pole awarded him, by 1535, a [[Prebendary|prebend]] in [[Wimborne Minster (church)|Wimborne Minster]]. Also by this date, however, he was studying at the [[University of Padua]], under such scholars as [[Giovanni Battista Egnazio]], [[Lazarus Buonamici]], and Fausto da Longiano. In 1538–39 he was living in Rome; and he afterwards travelled with Pole to [[Viterbo]]. At some point before 1543 he was outlawed in England for treason, presumably on account of his connections with Pole, who was by now a Cardinal and unofficial leader of the English Catholic church in exile.<ref name="odnb"/>

Between 1549 and 1554 Lily served three terms as Pole's deputy as warden of the [[English College, Rome#St Thomas' Hospice (1362-1579)|English Hospice]] in Rome.<ref name="odnb"/> In 1554 he followed Pole to [[Brussels]]; and in November 1555 the two returned to England, now again a Catholic realm under Queen [[Mary I of England|Mary I]]. Pole was consecrated [[Archbishop of Canterbury]] in March 1556; while Lily became his domestic chaplain, and was also collated to the prebend of Kentish Town or Cantlers, in [[St. Paul's Cathedral]], on 22 November 1556, and to the first prebend of [[Canterbury Cathedral]] probably on 10 March 1558.<ref name="odnb"/>

Lily died on 14 July 1559 in [[Canterbury]].<ref name="odnb"/> He is thought to have been buried close to his father in the churchyard of [[Old St Paul's Cathedral|St Paul's Cathedral]].{{sfn|Cooper|1892}}


==Works==
==Works==
===Writings===
Lily wrote:
Lily was a major contributor to the ''Descriptio Britanniae, Scotiae, Hyberniae et Orchadum'', a [[chorography]] of the British Isles conceived by [[Paolo Giovio]], Bishop of Nocera, which was published in [[Venice]] in 1548. As well as supplying information to Giovio for the geographical descriptions, Lily was the author of several self-contained historical appendices: "''Virorum aliquot in Britannia qui nostro seculo eruditione & doctrina clari, memorabilesque fuerunt elogia''", a collection of short biographies of English humanist scholars (including his own father, William), which was dedicated to Giovio; "''Nova et Antiqua Locorum Nomina in Anglia et in Scotia''", a table of ancient and modern place and tribal names; "''A Bruto ... omnium in quos variante fortuna Britanniae imperium translatum brevis enumeratio''", a discussion of the early history of Britain, in which Lily expressed scepticism about the legendary foundation of the realm by [[Brutus of Troy|Brutus]]; "''Lancastrii et Eboracensis de regno contentiones''", an account of the [[Wars of the Roses]]; and "''Regum Angliae genealogia''", a genealogy of the Kings of England.


Lily has also been credited as author of "''Catalogus sive Series Pontificorum et Caesarum Romanorum''" (a catalogue of Roman Popes and Emperors), a "Life of [[John Fisher]], Bishop of Rochester", and an account of the life of [[Thomas Cranmer]] ("''De vita, moribus, et fine Thomae Cranmeri''"); but the latter two of these attributions, at least, are no longer upheld.{{sfn|Cooper|1892}}<ref name="odnb"/>
*‘Virorum aliquot in Britannia, qui nostro seculo eruditione, et doctrina clari, memorabilesque fuerunt, Elogia, per Georgium Lilium Britannum, exarata.’ Dedicated to [[Paul Jovius]], bishop of Nocera, and printed in his ‘Descriptio Britanniæ, Scotiæ, Hyberniæ, et Orchadum,’ Venice, 1548, together with other contributions by Lily, viz.: ‘Nova et Antiqua Locorum Nomina in Anglia et in Scotia’; ‘Anglorum Regum Chronices Epitome,’ down to the year 1547, (reprinted, Frankfort, 1565, with continuation to the accession of Elizabeth in 1558–9; Basle, 1577, &c.; Frankfort, 1614; also in vol. i. of [[Polydore Vergil]]'s ‘Historia Anglica,’ Douay, 1603); ‘Lancastriæ et Eboracensis de regno contentiones’; ‘Regum Angliæ Genealogia’.


===Cartography===
Lily is also credited with ‘Catalogus sive Series Pontificorum et Cæsarum Romanorum,’ and a ‘Life of John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester’. [[John Bale]] mentions ‘De vitâ, moribus, et fine Thomæ Cranmeri,’ by Lily, in his manuscript notes to the ‘Scriptores Majoris Britanniæ;’ and the first exact map of Great Britain, which was afterwards engraved, is assigned to him.
[[File:InsulaeBritannia_1559_.jpg|right|300px]]
Almost certainly intended as a companion-piece to the ''Descriptio Britanniae'', Lily drew the first map of the [[British Isles]] (at a reasonably detailed scale) to be printed.<ref>Lynam 1934.</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=R.W. |last=Shirley |title=Early Printed Maps of the British Isles, 1477–1650 |edition=2nd |place=East Grinstead |publisher=Antique Atlas |year=1991 |ISBN=0951491423 |pages=20–22 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first1=Catherine |last1=Delano-Smith |first2=Roger J.P. |last2=Kain |title=English Maps: a history |publisher=British Library |place=London |year=1999 |isbn=0712346090 |pages=52–3, 61–3}}</ref> It was engraved on two plates and published in Rome in 1546. The map is recognisably a relation of the 14th-century [[Gough Map]], although the orientation has been reversed (West is at the top of the sheet), and many minor improvements have been made. The [[Scotland|Scottish]] coastline, in particular, is considerably more accurate than that on the Gough Map, but Lily's sources for this are not known. The map was pirated on several occasions in Italy; and Lily and Pole appear to have carried the plates back to England with them, as they were reworked by the engraver [[Thomas Geminus]] for a London edition published in 1555.

It has also been suggested that Lily had a hand in the large-scale [[Copperplate map of London|"Copperplate Map"]] of London, printed in about 1559.<ref>{{cite book |first=Peter |last=Barber |chapter=The Copperplate Map in context |editor1-first=Ann |editor1-last=Saunders |editor2-first=John |editor2-last=Schofield |title=Tudor London: a map and a view |series=London Topographical Society Publication |volume=159 |publisher=London Topographical Society |place=London |year=2001 |isbn=0902087452 |pages=16–32 (22–3) }}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
*''[[Dictionary of National Biography]]'', Lily, George (d 1559), Roman catholic divine, by [[Thompson Cooper]]. Published 1892.
;Attribution
{{DNB|first=Thompson|last=Cooper|wstitle=Lily, George|volume=33}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite book |first=Edward |last=Lynam |title=The Map of the British Isles of 1546 |place=Jenkinstown, Pa. |year=1934 }}
*{{Cite odnb |first=T. F. |last=Mayer |title=Lily, George (d. 1559) |origyear=2004 |year=2008 |id=16663 }}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.geog.port.ac.uk/webmap/hantscat/html/lily1.htm ''Notes from Lily's Map of Great Britain, 1546'']
*[http://www.geog.port.ac.uk/webmap/hantscat/html/lily1.htm ''Notes from Lily's Map of Great Britain, 1546'']
*[http://www.maphist.com/artman/publish/article_275.shtml At www.maphist.com]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20040716181637/http://www.maphist.com/artman/publish/article_275.shtml At www.maphist.com]


{{Authority control}}
;Attribution
{{DNB}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Lily, George}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lily, George}}
[[Category:Year of birth missing]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing]]
[[Category:1559 deaths]]
[[Category:1559 deaths]]
[[Category:English Roman Catholic priests]]
[[Category:16th-century English Roman Catholic priests]]
[[Category:English writers]]
[[Category:English biographers]]
[[Category:English topographers]]
[[Category:16th-century English cartographers]]
[[Category:16th-century English writers]]
[[Category:16th-century male writers]]
[[Category:People educated at St Paul's School, London]]

Latest revision as of 04:33, 23 April 2024

George Lily (died 1559) was an English Roman Catholic priest, humanist scholar, biographer, topographer and cartographer.

Life

[edit]

George Lily was born in London, the son of William Lily the grammarian, and his wife Agnes. He may have attended St Paul's School, where his father was High Master; and he may have become a commoner of Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1528.[1] He subsequently entered the service of Reginald Pole, and in the years that followed shared some of Pole's self-imposed exile in France and Italy. Pole awarded him, by 1535, a prebend in Wimborne Minster. Also by this date, however, he was studying at the University of Padua, under such scholars as Giovanni Battista Egnazio, Lazarus Buonamici, and Fausto da Longiano. In 1538–39 he was living in Rome; and he afterwards travelled with Pole to Viterbo. At some point before 1543 he was outlawed in England for treason, presumably on account of his connections with Pole, who was by now a Cardinal and unofficial leader of the English Catholic church in exile.[1]

Between 1549 and 1554 Lily served three terms as Pole's deputy as warden of the English Hospice in Rome.[1] In 1554 he followed Pole to Brussels; and in November 1555 the two returned to England, now again a Catholic realm under Queen Mary I. Pole was consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury in March 1556; while Lily became his domestic chaplain, and was also collated to the prebend of Kentish Town or Cantlers, in St. Paul's Cathedral, on 22 November 1556, and to the first prebend of Canterbury Cathedral probably on 10 March 1558.[1]

Lily died on 14 July 1559 in Canterbury.[1] He is thought to have been buried close to his father in the churchyard of St Paul's Cathedral.[2]

Works

[edit]

Writings

[edit]

Lily was a major contributor to the Descriptio Britanniae, Scotiae, Hyberniae et Orchadum, a chorography of the British Isles conceived by Paolo Giovio, Bishop of Nocera, which was published in Venice in 1548. As well as supplying information to Giovio for the geographical descriptions, Lily was the author of several self-contained historical appendices: "Virorum aliquot in Britannia qui nostro seculo eruditione & doctrina clari, memorabilesque fuerunt elogia", a collection of short biographies of English humanist scholars (including his own father, William), which was dedicated to Giovio; "Nova et Antiqua Locorum Nomina in Anglia et in Scotia", a table of ancient and modern place and tribal names; "A Bruto ... omnium in quos variante fortuna Britanniae imperium translatum brevis enumeratio", a discussion of the early history of Britain, in which Lily expressed scepticism about the legendary foundation of the realm by Brutus; "Lancastrii et Eboracensis de regno contentiones", an account of the Wars of the Roses; and "Regum Angliae genealogia", a genealogy of the Kings of England.

Lily has also been credited as author of "Catalogus sive Series Pontificorum et Caesarum Romanorum" (a catalogue of Roman Popes and Emperors), a "Life of John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester", and an account of the life of Thomas Cranmer ("De vita, moribus, et fine Thomae Cranmeri"); but the latter two of these attributions, at least, are no longer upheld.[2][1]

Cartography

[edit]

Almost certainly intended as a companion-piece to the Descriptio Britanniae, Lily drew the first map of the British Isles (at a reasonably detailed scale) to be printed.[3][4][5] It was engraved on two plates and published in Rome in 1546. The map is recognisably a relation of the 14th-century Gough Map, although the orientation has been reversed (West is at the top of the sheet), and many minor improvements have been made. The Scottish coastline, in particular, is considerably more accurate than that on the Gough Map, but Lily's sources for this are not known. The map was pirated on several occasions in Italy; and Lily and Pole appear to have carried the plates back to England with them, as they were reworked by the engraver Thomas Geminus for a London edition published in 1555.

It has also been suggested that Lily had a hand in the large-scale "Copperplate Map" of London, printed in about 1559.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Mayer 2008.
  2. ^ a b Cooper 1892.
  3. ^ Lynam 1934.
  4. ^ Shirley, R.W. (1991). Early Printed Maps of the British Isles, 1477–1650 (2nd ed.). East Grinstead: Antique Atlas. pp. 20–22. ISBN 0951491423.
  5. ^ Delano-Smith, Catherine; Kain, Roger J.P. (1999). English Maps: a history. London: British Library. pp. 52–3, 61–3. ISBN 0712346090.
  6. ^ Barber, Peter (2001). "The Copperplate Map in context". In Saunders, Ann; Schofield, John (eds.). Tudor London: a map and a view. London Topographical Society Publication. Vol. 159. London: London Topographical Society. pp. 16–32 (22–3). ISBN 0902087452.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainCooper, Thompson (1893). "Lily, George". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 33. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]