Gervasius Markham

Gervasius Markham (natus in Cotham Nottinghamiensis comitatus anno circiter 1568; mortuus die 3 Februarii 1637) fuit auctor et poëta Anglicus. Pro Anglia in Nederlandia, Belgia et Hibernia militavit.

Titulus Cavelarice (1607)
Titulus A Health to the Gentlemanly Profession of Servingmen (1598)

Opera

  • 1593: A Discourse of Horsemanship
  • 1595: (editor) Iuliana Barnes, The Gentleman's Academy
  • 1595: The most Honorable Tragedy of Sir Richard Grinvile
  • 1595: The Poem of Poems, or Syon's Muse
  • 1596: Poem of Poems
  • 1597: Devoreux, Virtue's Tears
  • 1598: A Health to the Gentlemanly Profession of Servingmen (Textus apud Google Books)
  • 1600: Tears of the Beloved, or The Lamentation of St John Editio anni 1871 apud archive.org
  • 1601: Mary Magdalen's Lamentations for the Loss of her Master Editio anni 1871 apud archive.org
  • 1607: Cavelarice, or The English horseman
  • 1607-1613: The English Arcadia
  • 1607: The Most Famous History of Mervine
  • 1607: Rodomonth's Infernal
  • 1608: The Dumb Knight (cum Ludovico Machin)
  • 1609: The Famous Whore, or noble curtizan, conteining the lamentable complaint of Paulina, the famous Roman curtizan, sometimes Mes unto the great Cardinall Hypolito, of Est
  • 1613: The English Husbandman
  • 1615: The English Housewife
  • 1616: (editor) Maison rustique or The Country Farm
  • 1617: Hobson's Horse-Load of Epistles
  • 1621: Hunger's Prevention
  • 1622: Herod and Antipas: a Tragedy (cum Gulielmo Sampson)
  • 1624: Honour in his Perfection
  • 1625: Markham's Farewell to Husbandry
  • 1625: The Soldier's Accidence
  • 1634: The Art of Archerie
  • Markham's Master-piece [summa de equis] Editio anni 1717 apud archive.org

Bibliographia

  • Michael R. Best, ed., Gervase Markham: The English Housewife. Toronto: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-7735-0582-2
  • Frederick Noel Lawrence Poynter, A Bibliography of Gervase Markham, 1568?-1637. Oxonii: Oxford Bibliographical Society, 1962
  • Matthew Steggle, "Markham, Gervase (1568?–1637)" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxonii: Oxford University Press, 2004) situs venalis[nexus deficit]