1564 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1564.
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Events
- January – János Zsámboky (Johannes Sambucus) completes the preface to his Emblemata.[1]
- February 6 – John Calvin, in the throes of his final illness, preaches his last sermon.[2]
- March 1 – Ivan Fyodorov with Pyotr Mstislavets prints the Acts and Epistles of the Apostles (an Apostolos), the first printed work in the Russian language that can be dated, at the Moscow Print Yard.
- unknown dates
- A revised edition of the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, authorised by the Council of Trent, is printed in Venice.[3]
- A chained library (librije) with access for the public is attached to the church of St. Walburgis in Zutphen, Netherlands. It will still be extant with its original fittings in the 21st century.
New books
Prose
- John Dee – Monas Hieroglyphica
- Magdeburger Centurien (Magdeburg Centuries), volumes VII and VIII
- Girolamo Maggi – Miscellanorum, seu Variarum Lectionum
Drama
- Vishnu Varamballi – Virata Parva (earliest copy)[4]
Poetry
- See 1564 in poetry
Births
- February 26 (baptised) – Christopher Marlowe, English dramatist and poet (died 1593)
- March 9 – David Fabricius, German theologian (died 1617)
- March 20 – Thomas Morton, English polemicist and bishop (died 1659)
- April 26 (baptism, traditional date of birth April 23) – William Shakespeare, English dramatist and poet (died 1616)[5]
- Unknown dates
- Jean D'Espagnet, French lawyer, politician and author (died c. 1637)
- Kryštof Harant, Czech nobleman, traveller, humanist, soldier, writer and composer (died 1621)
- Henry Reynolds, English poet, schoolmaster and literary critic (died 1632)
- Juan de Aguilar Villaquirán, Spanish writer and translator (died 1618)
- Probable birth year – Henry Chettle, English dramatist and pamphleteer (died c. 1607)
Deaths
- March 5 – Friedrich Staphylus, German theologian (born 1512)
- April – Pierre Belon, French naturalist and travel writer (murdered, born 1517)
- April 1 – Christoph Froschauer, Swiss printer (plague, born c. 1490)
- April 9 – Georg Hartmann, German humanist engineer, author and printer (born 1489)
- May 27 – John Calvin, French-born theologian (born 1509)
- August 11 – Edward Ferrers, credited as an English dramatist (unknown date of birth)
- September 26 – Theodor Bibliander, German theologian and publisher (plague, born c. 1505)
gollark: I don't like trains.
gollark: Also "it might be bad for children because [EQUIVOCATION] and apparently bad study".
gollark: I did GCSE German so I vaguely remember a bunch of the grammar and words.
gollark: It seems like this is being approached from the perspective of "you need to show very well that there's a good reason to make this legal" and not the other way round, because apparently people are just used to "of course things which *might* be bad are banned".
gollark: I don't know. Do you know? Does *anyone* actually have high-quality information on this?
References
- Arnoud S. Q. Visser (2005). Joannes Sambucus And The Learned Image: The Use Of The Emblem In Late-renaissance Humanism. BRILL. p. 215. ISBN 90-04-13866-8.
- George W. Stroup (1 August 2009). Calvin. Abingdon Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-4267-6040-2.
- Niccolò Machiavelli (1891). Il Principe. Clarendon Press. p. 50.
- Karantha, K. Shivarama (1997). Yakṣagāna. New Delhi: Abhinav Publications. p. 162. ISBN 81-7017-357-4.
- "William Shakespeare: The life and legacy of England's bard". BBC Timelines. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
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