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File:Thomas Rymer and Pompey.jpg
Thomas Rymer and his King Charles spaniel, Pompey, portrayed in 1819.

Thomas Rymer (c. 1643 – 14 December 1713)Template:Sfn was an English poet, literary critic, antiquary and historiographer.

His lasting contribution was to compile and publish under royal warrant the 17 volumes (the last two posthumously) of the first edition of Foedera, a work conveying treaties between The Crown of England and foreign powers from 1101 to 1625.Template:Efn

Rymer held the office of English Historiographer Royal from 1692 until his death in 1713, which allowed him access to the historical documents published in Foedera and held in the Tower of London and elsewhere.

He is credited with coining the phrase "poetic justice" in The Tragedies of the Last Age Consider'd (1678).

LifeEdit

Early life and educationEdit

Thomas Rymer was born at Appleton Wiske, near Northallerton in the North Riding of Yorkshire in 1643,Template:Sfn or possibly at Yafforth. He was the younger son of Ralph Rymer, lord of the manor of Brafferton in Yorkshire, said by Clarendon to possess a good estate. The son studied at Northallerton Grammar School, where he was a classmate of George Hickes.Template:Sfn There he studied for eight years under Thomas Smelt, a noted Royalist.<ref name="ReferenceA">Template:Acad</ref> Aged 16, he went to study at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, matriculating on 29 April 1659.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

Although Rymer was still at Cambridge in 1662 when he contributed Latin verses to a university volume to mark the marriage of Charles II and Catherine of Braganza, there is no record of his taking a degree. This may have been due to financial problems his father was suffering at the time, or to his father's arrest on 13 October 1663 — he was executed the following year for involvement in the Farnley Wood Plot, an intended uprising in Yorkshire against Charles II. Although Thomas's elder brother Ralph was also arrested and imprisoned, Thomas was not implicated. On 2 May 1666 he became a member of Gray's Inn. He was called to the bar on 16 June 1673.Template:Sfn

Literary careerEdit

From 1674 to 1693 Rymer published a variety of works. He wrote a play; made a number of English translations of Latin authors, especially the poetry of Ovid; contributed prefaces in Latin and English to editions of works by various authors, including Thomas Hobbes; wrote political tracts; and published literary criticism, notably against Shakespeare. These are all discussed in the § Literary works section below.

HistoriographerEdit

On the death of Thomas Shadwell in 1692, Rymer was appointed Historiographer Royal at a yearly salary of £200.Template:Sfn

Under a royal warrant of 1693 and working with original documents dating back to the 12th century, many held in the Tower of London, for the rest of his life he collated and published {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Literally 'pacts' or 'alliances'), a collection of treaties made between the English Crown and foreign European powers. The publication history of its 17 volumes (1704–1717) is somewhat involved, complicated by Rymer's death in 1713. See § Foedera below.

DeathEdit

Rymer died on 14 December 1713 and was buried four days later in St Clement Danes' Church in the Strand in London.Template:Sfn He appears not to have left any immediate family.Template:Sfn

WorksEdit

Literary worksEdit

Rymer's first appearance in printTemplate:Efn was as translator of René Rapin's Reflections on Aristotle's Treatise of Poesie (1674),Template:Sfn to which he added a preface in defence of the classic rules for unity in drama.Template:Efn Following the principles set there, he composed a verse tragedy licensed on 13 September 1677, called Edgar, or the English Monarch, which failed. It was printed in 1678,Template:Sfn with a second edition in 1693.Template:Sfn Rymer's views on drama were again given to the world in a printed letter to Fleetwood Shepheard, a friend of Matthew Prior, entitled The Tragedies of the Last Age Consider'd (1678).Template:Sfn Here, in discussing Rollo Duke of Normandy by John Fletcher, Philip Massinger, Ben Jonson, and George Chapman, Rymer coined the term "poetical justice".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

To Ovid's Epistles Translated by Several Hands (1680), prefaced by Dryden, Rymer contributed Penelope to Ulysses.Template:Efn He was also one of those who Englished the so-called Dryden's Plutarch of 1683–1686 (5 vols.): the life of Nicias fell to his share.Template:Sfn Rymer wrote a preface to Whitelocke's Memorials of English Affairs (1682),Template:Sfn and in 1681 A General Draught and Prospect of the Government of Europe, reprinted in 1689 and 1714 as Of the Antiquity, Power, and Decay of Parliaments,Template:Sfn where ignorant of a future dignity that would be his, he had the misfortune to observe, "You are not to expect truth from an historiographer royal."Template:Sfn

File:Tomb of Edmund Waller-geograph.org.uk-1858339.jpg
Monument to Edmund Waller with poetical inscriptions by Rymer in Beaconsfield churchyard

Rymer contributed three pieces to the collection of Poems to the Memory of Edmund Waller (1688)Template:SfnTemplate:Efn (afterwards reprinted in Dryden's Miscellany Poems),Template:SfnTemplate:Efn and wrote the Latin inscription on all four sides of Edmund Waller's monument in Beaconsfield churchyard.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The preface ("Lectori salutem") to the posthumous Historia Ecclesiastica (1688)Template:Sfn of Thomas Hobbes seems to have been written by Rymer.Template:Efn An English translation appeared in 1722.Template:Sfn The Life of Hobbes (1681), sometimes ascribed to him, was written by Richard Blackburne.Template:Efn He produced a congratulatory poem on the arrival of Queen Mary in Westminster with William III on 12 February 1689.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Rymer's next piece of authorship was to translate the sixth elegy of the third book of Ovid's Tristia for Dryden's Poetical Miscellanies. The only version to contain Rymer's rendering seems to be the second edition of the second part of the Miscellanies, subtitled Silvae (1692).Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Shortly after Rymer's appintment as Historiographer Royal in 1692, there appeared his much-discussed A Short View of Tragedy (1693),Template:Sfn criticising Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, which gave rise to The Impartial Critick (1693) of John Dennis, the epigram of Dryden.Template:Sfn

FoederaEdit

First editionEdit

Rymer's lasting contribution to scholarship was the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (abbr. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), a collection of "all the leagues, treaties, alliances, capitulations, and confederacies, which have at any time been made between the Crown of England and any other kingdoms, princes and states."<ref name="british-history">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Begun under a royal warrant in 1693, it was "an immense labour of research and transcription on which he spent the last twenty years of his life".<ref>Template:Harvnb. The quote is from page xviii.</ref><ref name="edinburgh1834">Template:Cite journal</ref> Documents were presented in their original Latin. Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy's later Syllabus (1869-1885) provided summaries in English,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn despite the multiple incorrect assertions of certain websites.<ref name="british-history"/>

During his last two decades Rymer prepared for the press the text of vols. 1 through 15, most of vol. 16, and some of vol. 17, but only lived to see the publication of vols. 1 though 15, with printing of the latter, according to Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy, "finished on the 25th of August 1713, about four months before the death of Rymer"Template:Sfn These fifteen volumes of the 1st edition which Rymer saw to publication covered the period from May 1101 (Henry I) up to July 1586, half-way through the reign of Elizabeth I. He was assisted by Robert Sanderson, who completed and published by 1717 the material of Rymer's two unfinished volumes covering the period up to 1625 (death of James I), including an index to the whole work of which it was written, "nothing can well be more inconvenient".Template:Sfn

Sanderson, working on his own account (i.e. unsanctioned by a Royal warrant), published in the same format three further volumes (vols. 18–20, pub. 1731–1735) of lesser quality, dealing with domestic history rather than foreign affairs.Template:Sfn Hardy does not consider them to be properly part of Rymer's 1st edition. Hardy is highly critical of these last three volumes, saying that only about a quarter of the articles deserve to be there.Template:Sfn Sanderson added some extraneous material which, according to Hardy, change the whole focus of the work: "Instead of a Foedera he has rather produced a new work in the shape of materials for our domestic history, in which foreign affairs are slightly intermingled."Template:Sfn The Gentleman's Magazine of Edinburgh in 1834 described Sanderson's contributions as "the last three being supplementary."<ref name="edinburgh1834" />

Later editionsEdit

The following section contains a general outline of the complex and involved publication history of further editions of the Foedera.

File:George Holmes Vertue.jpg
George Holmes, editor of the 2nd edition
File:Adam Clarke.jpg
Adam Clarke, editor of the 4th ("Record") edition

George Holmes, clerk to Sir William Petyt, Keeper of the Records in the Tower of London revised the first 17 volumes in a 2nd edition (pub. 1727–1735), and also published a single folio in 1730 of corrections or 'Amendations' to the first edition only.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="edinburgh1834"/>

Hardy states that Holmes was employed by the publisher of the first edition, Jacob Tonson, from p. 112 of Vol. 1, up to the end of Vol. 12 only; and that the subsequent third edition is essentially an edited reprint of the 17 vols. of the 2nd edition, plus Sanderson's last 3 volumes unredacted.Template:Sfn

A re-set and newly edited 3rd ("Hague") edition (10 vols. in two-column format, pub. 1737–1745, including Sanderson's 'supplemental' volumes 18-20), was published and possibly edited by John Neaulme in The Hague,Template:Sfn in "ten closely-printed folio volumes".<ref name="edinburgh1834"/>Template:Efn The first nine reprinted the 2nd edition by Holmes, with the tenth combining the French-language synopses ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of Vols. 1–17 by Jean Le Clerc and Paul de Rapin, which had appeared soon after the English publication of each successive volume, with a new index to this edition of the Foedera.<ref name="edinburgh1834"/>Template:Sfn Rapin's abridgements of Vols. II–XIX (but not I or XX) had been earlier translated into English in 1733.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The Record Commission in 1800 proposed a "Supplement and Continuation" to the Foedera; in 1809 it decided instead to make a complete revision,<ref name="edinburgh1834"/> the 4th ("Record") edition. Seven parts were prepared before the project was abandoned after the Commissioners became dissatisfied with the editing of Dr. Adam Clarke and others.<ref name="edinburgh1834"/>Template:Sfn Six parts in three volumes were published from 1816 to 1830 and the seventh in 1869, along with miscellaneous notes.Template:Efn Foedera was thus seemingly revised up to the year 1383,<ref name="edinburgh1834"/>Template:Sfn but this edition has attracted considerable criticism.

A three-volume English-language summary and index (Syllabus) to the 1st, 3rd and 4th editions of Foedera was published by Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy in 1869–1885.Template:Refn In the introduction to his second volume, Hardy was highly critical of Clarke who, although an industrious biblical and oriental scholar, was utterly unskilled in diplomacy or palaeography, and lacking any profound acquaintance with the English historical and antiquarian literature.Template:Refn Hardy prints a short list of 50 errors he randomly found in Clarke's edition.Template:Sfn He spends ten whole pages berating the editors of the Record edition for both what they included and what they omitted, especially for copying from printed sources and not consulting original MS, even though they were easily available and to hand.Template:Sfn Hardy also blames Clarke for criticising Rymer and Holmes, although Clarke proceeded to commit the same sort of faults himself.Template:Sfn The Gentleman's Magazine of July 1834 also notes that although Clarke was a distinguished orientalist himself, the sole entry in Arabic in the 4th edition has a mistake.<ref name="edinburgh1834" />

Despite Hardy's extensive condemnation of the editors and publications of the Record Commission, backed up by multiple examples of their errors, the Victoria County History recommends citing the Record Commission (RC) edition where available and the Hague edition otherwise.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

All the editions thus suffer from various defects, and no complete and correct revision has been published as of 2024. Hardy had intended in his Syllabus to correct not only all the errors in Clarke, but in the whole of the first three editions as well: but this proved to be beyond him, faced with a vast array of material.Template:Sfn Hardy's work is probably the most reliable guide to the Foedera, but even confirming a single fact can involve checking multiple sources of the various editions of the Foedera and their indexes, along with Holmes's 'Emendations' and his own copy of the 1st edition, against Hardy's Syllabus and its own index, and also his list of errata.Template:Sfn

ReferencesEdit

Notes

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Attribution
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Further readingEdit

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External linksEdit


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