Roger Ascham

1515–1568

Introduction

Only two autograph manuscripts of literary works by Roger Ascham are known to survive — both Latin translations of Greek commentaries on St Paul (AsR 1-2) — though there is also an early scribal copy of part of his most famous work, The Schoolmaster (AsR 3). In addition, one printed book is known to bear his autograph annotations (*AsR 4).

Various other volumes contain his autograph presentation epistles or inscriptions (AsR 3.3-5). The majority of these are presentation exempla of the first edition of his treatise on archery, Toxophilus (London, 1545) (see Ryan, Roger Ascham, p. 49).

Ascham's generally beautiful calligraphic hand is otherwise to be found in his numerous personal letters and in the state letters and documents which he copied out as a professional scribe. Examples include those in the British Library (Additional, Cotton, Lansdowne, and Royal MSS, and Loan MS 29/240, ff. 22r-31r); National Archives, Kew; Cambridge University Library (MS Add. 40); Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (MS 106, pp. 477-8); St John's College, Cambridge (MSS L3 and W. 1); Folger (MS X. d. 138); and University of Texas (Pforzheimer MS 1c). Ascham's letterbook as Latin secretary to Queen Mary in 1554-8 is British Library, Add. MS 35840. Its continuation until 1568, chiefly in the hands of other scribes, is Royal MS 13 B. I. A facsimile of Add. MS 35840, f. 22r, appears in Shakespeare's England (Oxford, 1917), I, facing p. 288. Facsimile examples of three letters in Lansdowne MS 2, f. 44, National Archives, Kew, SP 1/214, f. 54, and St John's College, Cambridge, MS W. 1, appear in Fairbank and Dickins, op. cit., Plates 4 & 5. Two letters to Cecil, 12 July 1552 and 24 March 1553, in Lansdowne MS 3, are edited in Original Letters of Eminent Literary Men, ed. Sir Henry Ellis, Camden Society 23 (London, 1843), pp. 11-18, and a facsimile example of the first of these appears in Petti, English Literary Hands (1977), No. 24. A reproduction of Cotton MS Titus B. II, f. 184 (a state letter in Ascham's hand signed by Queen Elizabeth) was published by the British Museum some years ago in postcard form. A letter to Catherine de Medici written by Ascham for Queen Elizabeth and once owned by Alfred Morrison (1821-97) is reproduced in the printed catalogue of the Morrison Collection, II (1885), Plate 70.

Early transcripts of letters of Ascham are found in various sources, including Bradford Archives (2D86/18), British Library (Add. MSS 33271, 35841), Cambridge University Library (MSS Dd. 9. 14, ff. 39-45; Ee. 5. 23, pp. 455-9; Mm. 1. 43 (Baker 32), pp. 495-510, 535-7; Mm. 2. 24 (Baker 100), pp. 60-2), Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (MS 110, pp. 359-419), East Sussex Record Office (RAF/F/13/1, ff. 82-95), and Meisei University (MR 0840, pp. 855-904, 968-74, 1036-9).

A number of Ascham's letters were printed in Familiarium epistolarum libri tres (London, [1576]; enlarged edition, ed. William Elstob, Oxford, 1703). Two letters once in the public archives at Strasbourg (but at present unlocated) are printed in The Zurich Letters (second series), ed. Hastings Robinson, Parker Society 18 (Cambridge, 1845), pp. 64-72, 90-3. Two hundred and ninety-five letters written by or to Ascham are printed in The Whole Works of Roger Ascham, ed. J.A. Giles, 4 vols in 3 (London, 1864-5). A useful supplement to this edition is Maurice A. Hatch, The Ascham Letters: An Annotated Translation of the Latin Correspondence contained in the Giles Edition of Ascham's Works (Cornell University, 1948; published by Kentucky University Press, Microcards, Series A, No. 19). Numerous letters of Ascham and other documents relating to him are cited in Ryan, Roger Ascham. Some letters are discussed in John Hazel Smith, Roger Ascham's Troubled Years, Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 65 (1966), 36-46. Three letters written to Ascham by John Hales (d.1571) are printed from transcripts (Cambridge University Library, MS Dd. 9. 14) in Jean Rott and Robert Faerber, Un anglais à Strasbourg au milieu du XVIe siècle: John Hales, Roger Ascham et Jean Sturm, Études Anglaises, 21 (1968), 381-94.

Abbreviations

Ryan, Roger Ascham
Lawrence V. Ryan, Roger Ascham (Stanford & London, 1963).

Prose

Expositiones in epistolam Divi Pauli ad Philemonem

Ascham's Latin translation of Oecumenius's collection of Greek commentaries on St Paul's Epistle to Philemon. First published in Apologia pro caena dominica, ed. E. Grant (London, 1577).

*AsR 1
Autograph

Autograph fair copy, entitled Expositiones quaedam antiquae in Epistolam Divi Pauli ad Philemonem ex diversis Sanctorum Patrum graece scriptis commentariis opera et diligentia Oecumenii collectae et nunc primum latine versae; with a dedication to John Seton, and presented to him on 1 January 1542/3.

1543

This MS recorded in Ryan, Roger Ascham, p. 301.

Facsimiles of the title-page and f. 6r in Alfred Fairbank and Berthold Wolpe, Renaissance Handwriting: An Anthology of Italic Scripts (London, 1960), plate 34. A transcript of the dedication to Seton made by Thomas Baker (1656-1740) is in Cambridge University Library, MS Mm. 1. 43, pp. 535-7.

St John's College, Cambridge (MS L. 3 (James 360))
Expositiones in epistolam Divi Pauli ad Titum

Ascham's Latin translation of Oecumenius's collection of Greek commentaries on St Paul's Epistle to Titus. First published in Apologia pro caena dominica, ed. E. Grant (London, 1577).

*AsR 2
Autograph

Autograph fair copy, 44 quarto leaves (plus blanks), in a recycled vellum devotional text within modern black morocco.

In Ascham's calligraphic roman hand, with (f. 1r) a title-page, Expositiones antiquæ in Epistolam D. Pauli ad Titum, ex diuersis sanctorum Patrum græce scriptis commentarijs ab Oecumenio collectæ, et nunc primum latine uersae: Cantabrigiæ Anno D.M.D XLII, and (ff. 2r-5r) a dedication to Thomas Goodrich, Bishop of Ely.

1542

Inscriptions including Frederick Tilney Non est mortale quod optat Fred. Tilney and Fredericus Tilneus Est Uerus huivs Libri Possessor.

This MS recorded in Ryan, Roger Ascham, p. 301. Facsimiles of ff. 4v-5r in A.J. Fairbank and R.W. Hunt, Humanistic Script of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries (1960; reprinted Oxford, 1993), No. 19 (pp. 32-3), and in Petti, English Literary Hands (1977), No. 23.

The Schoolmaster

First published in London, 1570. Ed. Lawrence V. Ryan (Ithaca, NY, 1967).

AsR 3 c.1564

Copy of an early version of the first book only, in a secretary and italic hand.

Fol. 47r inscribed (partly torn away) [ ]ams institution [ ] hys chylde and Lumley.

This MS described in George B. Parks, The First Draft of Ascham's Scholemaster, Huntington Library Quarterly, 1 (1937-8), 313-27. Discussed in Ryan, Roger Ascham, pp. 331-2.

A folio composite volume of four treatises, in different hands, 162 leaves, in brown calf gilt.

Later in the library of John, first Baron Lumley (c.1533-1609), collector.

The British Library: Royal MSS (Royal MS 18 B. XXIV ff. 47r-78r)
AsR 3.1

Copy of An Abridgement of Roger Ascham's Schoolmaster, in the neat italic hand of John Ward, FRS (1678/9-1758), antiquary, biographer and Professor of Rhetoric at Gresham College, 31 quarto leaves, in modern half brown morocco.

Early-mid-18th century
AsR 3.2

Extracts from an abridgement made by John Ward (1679?-1758).

A duodecimo commonplace book of extracts, in one cursive hand, written from both ends, 117 leaves (plus numerous blanks), in contemporary vellum boards gilt.

c.1630

Owned by William Drake, MP (1606-69), of Shardeloes, near Amersham, Buckinghamshire. Later in the library of Charles Kay Ogden (1889-1957), psychologist, linguist, and book collector.

Drake's commonplace books discussed in Stuart Clark, Wisdom Literature of the Seventeenth Century: A Guide to the Contents of the Bacon-Tottel Commonplace Books, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 6, Part 5 (1976), 291-305; 7, Part 1 (1977), 46-73, and in Kevin Sharpe, Reading Revolutions (New Haven & London, 2000).

University College London (MS Ogden 7/38 passim)
Toxophilus

See AsR 3.3-3.7.

Printed Books and Manuscripts Inscribed by Ascham

Ascham, Roger. Toxophilus (London, 1545)
*AsR 3.4
Autograph

An autograph presentation epistle by Ascham to William Parr, Earl of Essex, on three pages in an exemplum of the first printed edition of Toxophilus.

1545

Later owned by Bertram Ashburnham (1797-1874), fourth Earl of Ashburnham, of Ashburnham Place, Sussex. Donated to the Folger in February 1947 by Dr A.S.W. Rosenbach (1876-1953), Philadelphia bookseller, collector and scholar, and by Lessing Julius Rosenwald (1891-1979), Pennsylvania businessman and collector.

AsR 3.5

A printed exemplum bound for Edward VI (as Prince of Wales).

1545

Later in the Cope Library at Bramshill House, Hampshire.

AsR 3.6

Ascham's exemplum of the first printed edition of Toxophilus, presented to King Henry VIII.

c.1545

Formerly in the Royal Library.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Ascham Toxophilus (I)])
AsR 3.7

An exemplum of the first printed edition of Toxophilus, with Ascham's presentation epistle to the Earl of Essex.

c.1545

Formerly owned by Frank Brewer Bemis (1861-1935), Boston banker and book collector.

Recorded in De Ricci, I (1935), 949.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Ascham Toxophilus (II)])
Osorio da Fonseca, Jeronimo. De nobilitate civili (Florence, 1552)
*AsR 3.8
Autograph

A printed exemplum, with Ascham's autograph inscription to Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham.

c.1552

Facsimile of the inscription in Alfred Fairbank and Bruce Dickins, The Italic Hand in Tudor Cambridge, Cambridge Bibliographical Society, Monograph No.5 (London, 1962), Plate 7.

*AsR 3.9
Autograph

A printed exemplum, with Ascham's autograph inscription to Cardinal Reginald Pole.

1552
St Ambrose. De vocatione omnium gentium libri duo (Geneva, 1541)
Xenophon. Cyri paediae (Paris, 1538-9)
*AsR 5
Autograph

A printed exemplum, with Ascham's autograph inscription on the title-page, in Latin and Greek, to Sir Walter Mildmay, dated 28 October 1564.

1564

Facsimile of the inscribed title-page in British Literary Manuscripts, Series I. ed. Verlyn Klinkenborg et al. (New York, 1981), Plate 14.

Miscellaneous Extracts from Works by Ascham

Extracts
AsR 6

Extracts, headed Ascham.

A folio volume of verse and prose extracts, those on pp. 321-7 headed Observables of a Miscellaneous Nature, those on pp. 367-77 Witty Sentences, in a single cursive secretary hand, 377 pages (including numerous blanks), in reversed brown calf.

Among the family collection established by Christopher Mickleton (1612-69), Durham attorney, and by his eldest son James (1638-93), lawyer and antiquary, which was later incorporated in the collections of Gilbert Spearman (1675-1738), lawyer and antiquary.

1699-1711
Durham University Library (Mickleton & Spearman MS 5 p. 369)