Ludovic Lloyd

Ludovic Lloyd[1] (floruit 1573–1610) was a Welsh courtier, poet and compiler of miscellanies.

Life

He was the fifth son of Oliver Lloyd, lord of the manor of Marrington, Chirbury, Shropshire, by Gwenllian, daughter of Griffith ap Howel ab Ieuan Blayney of Gregynog. He describes himself in his works as sergeant-at-arms to Queen Elizabeth, and continued in the post under James I. He was an intimate friend of the publisher John Lane. His works were all dedicated to highly placed court figures.

Works

Lloyd's major compilation is The Pilgrimage of Princes.[2] Prefixed are commendatory verses by, among others, Edward Grant and Thomas Churchyard.

Lloyd's other works are:

  • The Consent of Time, Deciphering the Errors of the Grecians in their Olympiads, 1590, dedicated to John Whitgift.
  • The Triplicitie of Triumphs, containing the Order, Solempnitie, and Pompe of the Feastes, Sacrifices, Vowes, Games, and Triumphes used upon the Nativities of Emperors, 1591.
  • A Brief Conference of Divers Lawes, Divided into certaine Regiments, 1602, dedicated to Queen Elizabeth.
  • The Stratagems of Jerusalem; with the Martiall Lawes and Militarie Discipline, as well of the Jewes as of the Gentiles, 1602, dedicated to Sir Robert Cecil.
  • The Practice of Policy, 1604.
  • The Choice of Jewels, London, 1607, containing verses arranged acrostically on the words "To Anna Queene of Gret Britane Health" followed by congratulations to Christian, king of Denmark, on his visit to England in 1607.
  • The Tragicomedie of Serpents, 1607, a collection, chiefly of classical and biblical fables, dedicated to James I.
  • Linceus Spectacles. Esa. 6, Videntes videbitis non videbitis, 1607, dedicated to James I, and similar in character to the preceding.
  • Hilaria, or the Triumphant Feast for the fifth of August (Coronation Day), 1607.
  • The Jubile of Britane, 1607.

An epitaph by Lloyd, on Sir Edward Saunders, is printed in the Paradise of Dainty Devices, 1576. Lloyd has commendatory verses signed Lodowick Flood, prefixed to The Castle or Picture of Pollicy of William Blandie, and verses in praise of the author prefixed to Thomas Twyne's translation of Humphrey Llwyd's Breviary of Britayne, 1573.

Notes

  1. First name also as Lodowick, Lodovick, Lewis etc.
  2. The Pilgrimage of Princes; penned out of sundry Greeke and Latine Aucthours [1573], printed by William Jones, and to be sold at his nevve long shop at the West door of Powles. Following the title are acrostic verses on Cristoforus Hattonvs, and a prose dedication to Sir Christopher Hatton. Other editions appeared in 1586 and in 1607; and a reissue appeared in 1653, with a transformed text and title, as The Marrow of History, or the Pilgrimage of Kings and Princes, truly Representing the Variety of Dangers inherent to the Crowns, and the lamentable Deaths which many of them, and some of the best of them, have undergone. The editor was Robert Codrington. This was reprinted in 1659.
gollark: What if they're not fighting crime but just random innocent people? Regular clothes?
gollark: The solution is, of course, to remove all weapons from police and train them only in hand to hand combat.
gollark: I'm not sure it's a "they have guns" problem as much as a cultural one. Apparently non-US countries can handle that mostly fine.
gollark: Anyway, I'm not sure about your "⅓ of the population bought into an alternate reality" thing. Politics is not really about, well, policies and the real world, much of the time, but tribalism and signalling.
gollark: Apparently US police get way less training than in most other countries.

References

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Lloyd, Ludovic". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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