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See also: antiquary, whose real name was Verstegen, was the son of a See also: cooper whose
See also: father, See also: Theodore See also: Roland Verstegen, a Dutch emigrant, came to See also: England about 1500
.
Under the name of Rowlands, See also: Richard went to Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford, in 1565, where he studied early See also: English See also: history and the Anglo-Saxon language
.
Leaving the university without a degree, he published in 1576 a See also: work of antiquarian research, translated from the See also: German, entitled The See also: Post of the See also: World, describing the See also: great cities of See also: Europe; and soon afterwards he moved to See also: Antwerp, where he resumed the name of Verstegen, and set up in business as a printer and engraver
.
In 1587 he went to See also: Paris, and in 1595 to See also: Spain, where he studied in the See also: college at Seville, after-wards returning to Antwerp, where he lived so far as is known until his See also: death, the date of which, though certainly later than 162o, is unknown
.
Rowlands was a zealous See also: Roman Catholic, and in 1587 he published at Antwerp Theatrum Crudelitatum haereticorum, in which he criticized the treatment of the Roman Catholics in England under See also: Elizabeth so freely that when a French
See also: translation of the See also: book appeared in the following See also: year he was thrown into prison at the instance of the English ambassador in Paris
.
Many of his writings were published in the name of Verstegen
.
His See also: works included A See also: Dialogue on Dying Well (1603), a translation from the See also: Italian; Restitution of Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities concerning the English Nation, dedicated to See also: James I
.
(1605); Neder Dvytsche Epigrammen (1617); Sundry Successive
See also: Regal Governments in England (162o); Spiegel der Nederlandsche Elenden (1621)
.
The verses on the defeat of the Irish rebels under See also: Tyrone, entitled England's Joy, by R
.
R
.
(16oi), is doubtfully attributed to him
.
Richard Verstegan, author of Nederlantische Antiquiteyten (Brussels, 1646), is probably another See also: person, possibly Rowlands's son
.
See Anthony aSee also: Wood, Athenae Oxonienses, edited by P
.
See also: Bliss (4 vols., See also: London, 1813–20) ; J
.
W
.
See also: Burgon, See also: Life and Times of See also: Sir T
.
Gresham (2 vols., London, 1839) ; W
.
C
.
See also: Hazlitt, Collections and Notes (London, 1882 and 1887)
.
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