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WILLIAM HARRISON (1534–1593)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 25 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM HARRISON (1534–1593)  ,
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English topographer and
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antiquary, was born in
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London on the 18th of
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April 1534 . He was educated, according to his own account, at St Paul's school and at Westminster under Alexander Nowell . In 1551 he was at Cambridge, but he took his B.A. degree from Christ Church, Oxford, in 156o . He was inducted early in 1559 to the rectory of Radwinter, Essex, on the presentation of
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Sir William Brooke, Lord
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Cobham, to whom he had formerly acted as
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chaplain; and from 1J71 to 1581 he held from another
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patron, Francis de la Wood, the living of Wimbish in the same county . He became
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canon of Windsor in 1586, and his
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death and
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burial are noted in the chapter
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book of St George's
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chapel on the 24th of April 1593 . His famous and amusing Description of England was under-taken for the queen's printer, Reginald Wolfe, who designed the publication of " an universall cosmographic of the whole
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world ... with particular histories of every knowne nation." After Wolfe's death in 1576 this comprehensive plan was reduced to descriptions and histories of England, Scotland and Ireland . The
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historical section was to be supplied by Raphael Holinshed, the topographical by Harrison . The
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work was eventually published as The Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland .. . by Raphael Holinshed and others, and was printed in two black-letter folio volumes in 1577 . Harrison's Description of England, humbly described as his " foule frizeled
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treatise," and dedicated to his patron Cobham, is an invaluable survey of the condition of England under Elizabeth, in all its
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political, religious and social aspects . Harrison is a minute and careful observer of men and things, and his descriptions are enlivened with many examples of a lively and caustic humour which makes the book excellent
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reading . In spite of his Puritan prejudices, which lead him to regret that the churches had not been cleared of their " pictures in glass " (" by reason of the extreme cost thereof "), and to exhaust his wit on the effeminate
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Italian fashions of the younger generation, he had an eye for beauty and is loud in his praise of such architectural gems as Henry VIL's chapel at Westminster .

He is properly contemptuous of the snobbery that was even then characteristic of English society; but his account of " how gentlemen are made in England " must be read in full to be appreciated . He is especially instructive on the condition and services of the Church immediately after the

Reformation; notably in the fact that, though an ardent
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Protestant, he is quite unconscious of any breach of continuity in the
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life and organization of the Church of England . Harrison also contributed the
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translation from Scots into English of Bellenden's version of
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Hector Boece's Latin Description of Scotland . His other
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works include a " Chronologie," giving an account of events from the creation to the
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year 1593, which is of some value for the period covered by the writer's lifetime . This, with an elaborate treatise on weights and
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measures, remains in MS. in the diocesan library of Londonderry . For the later
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editions of the Chronicles of England . see HOLI\snED . The second and third hooks of Harrison's Description were edited by Dr F . J . Furnivall for the New Shakspere Society, with extracts from his " Chronologie " and from other contemporary writers, as Shakspere's England (2 vols., 1877-1878) .

End of Article: WILLIAM HARRISON (1534–1593)
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