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William Alabaster
English scholar
Quick Facts
- Born:
- January 27, 1568, Hadleigh, Suffolk, England
- Died:
- early April 1640, Little Shelford, Cambridgeshire (aged 72)
- Notable Works:
- “Roxana”
William Alabaster (born January 27, 1568, Hadleigh, Suffolk, England—died early April 1640, Little Shelford, Cambridgeshire) was an English poet, mystic, and scholar in Latin and Hebrew. He wrote a Latin tragedy, Roxana (1597, published 1632), that the 18th-century critic Samuel Johnson thought was the finest Latin writing in England prior to John Milton’s elegies. Alabaster was educated at the University of Cambridge and in 1596 accompanied the Earl of Essex’s expedition to Cádiz, Spain, as chaplain but became a Roman Catholic in 1597, consequently suffering intermittent imprisonment. When visiting Rome in 1609, he was denounced to the Inquisition because of ...(100 of 144 words)