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SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 171 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE  , Bart . (16o8-1666),
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English poet and ambassador, son of
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Sir Henry Fanshawe,
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remembrancer of the
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exchequer, of
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Ware Park, Hertfordshire, and of Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Smith or Smythe, was born early in
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June 16o8, and was educated in Cripplegate by the famous school-master, Thomas Farnaby . In November 1623 he was admitted
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fellow-commoner of Jesus College, Cambridge, and in
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January 1626 he entered the Inner Temple; but the study of the law being distasteful to him he travelled in France and Spain . On his return, an accomplished linguist, in 1635, he was appointed secretary to the English
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embassy at
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Madrid under Lord Aston . At the outbreak of the
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Civil War he joined the king, and while at Oxford in 1644 married Anne, daughter of Sir John Harrison of Balls, Hertfordshire . About the same time he was appointed secretary at war to the prince of Wales, with whom he set out in 1645 for the western counties, Scilly, and afterwards Jersey . He compounded in 1646 with the
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parliamentary authorities, and was allowed to live in
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London till
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October 1647, visiting Charles I. at Hampton Court . In 1647 he published his
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translation of the Pastor Fido of Guarini, which he reissued in 1648 with the addition of several other poems,
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original and translated . In 1648 he was appointed treasurer to the
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navy under Prince Rupert . In November of this
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year he was in Ireland, where he actively engaged in the royalist cause till the spring of 165o, when he was despatched by Charles II. on a
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mission to obtain help from Spain . This was refused, and he joined Charles in Scotland as secretary . On the 2nd of September 165o he had been created a
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baronet .

He accompanied Charles in the expedition into

England, and was taken prisoner at the
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battle of Worcester on the 3rd of September 1651 . After a confinement of some weeks at
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Whitehall, he was allowed, with restrictions, and under the supervision of the authorities, to choose his own place of residence . He published in 1652 his Selected Parts of Horace, a translation remarkable for its fidelity, felicity and elegance . In 1654 he completed
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translations of two of the comedies of the
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Spanish poet Antonio de Mendoza, which were published after his
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death, Querer per solo querer: To Love only for Love's
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Sake, in 167o, and Fiestas de Aranjuez in 1671 . But the
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great labour of his retirement was the translation of the Lusiad, by Camoens published in 1655 . It is in ottava rima, with the translation prefixed to it of the Latin poem Furor Petroniensis . In 1658 he published a Latin version of the Faithful Shepherdess of Fletcher . In
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April 16J9 Fanshawe
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left England for Paris, re-entered Charles's service and accompanied him to England at the Restoration, but was not offered any place in the administration . In 1661 he was returned to parliament for the university of Cambridge, and the same year was sent to
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Portugal to negotiate the
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marriage between Charles II. and the infanta . In January 1662 he was made a privy councillor of Ireland, and was appointed ambassador again to Portugal in August, where he remained till August 1663 . He was sworn a privy councillor of England on the 1st of October . In January 1664 he was sent as ambassador to Spain, and arrived at Cadiz in
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February of that year .

He signed the first draft of a treaty on the 17th of

December, which offered advantageous concessions to English trade, but of which one condition was that it should be confirmed by his government before a certain date . In January 1666 Fanshawe went to Lisbon to procure the adherence of Portugal to this agreement . He returned to Madrid, having failed in his mission, and was almost immediately recalled by Clarendon on the plea that he had exceeded his instructions . He died very shortly afterwards before leaving Madrid, on the 26th of June 1666 . He had a
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family of fourteen children, of whom five only survived him, Richard, the youngest, succeeding as second baronet and dying unmarried in 1694 . As a translator, whether from the
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Italian, Latin, Portuguese or Spanish, Fanshawe has a considerable reputation . His Pastor Fido and his Lusiad have not been superseded by later scholars, and his rendering of the latter is praised by Southey and Sir Richard Burton . As an original poet also the few verses he has left are sufficient evidence of exceptional
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literary talent .

End of Article: SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE
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