- Source: 1562 in poetry
Tupac: Resurrection (2003)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Events
18 January – First performance of Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville's play Gorboduc before Queen Elizabeth I of England. It is the first known English tragedy and the first English-language play to employ blank verse.
Works published
= England
=Thomas Brice, Against Filthy Writing, and Such Like Delighting
Arthur Brooke, translation, The Tragicall History of Romeus and Juliet, a narrative poem, translated from the French version by Pierre Boaistuau (Paris, 1559) of Matteo Bandello's story, "La sfortunata morte di dui infelicissimi manti", from Bandello's Novelle, 1554; Brooke's work is considered to be William Shakespeare's chief source for his play Romeo and Juliet (1597).
Barnabe Googe, Eglogs, Epytaphes and Sonettes (sources disagree on the year of publication; another source asserts the book was published in 1563)
John Heywood:
A Ballad Against Slander and Detraction
Woorkes, including the author's 600 previously published epigrams and his proverbs; the book proved popular, with new editions in 1566, 1576, 1587 and 1598.
Thomas Phaer, The Nyne First Bookes of the Eneidos of Virgil, edited by W. Wightman (see also The Seven First Bookes 1558, The Whole Twelve Bookes 1573, The Thirteen Bookes 1584)
= Other
=Francesco Berni Latin poems, Florence, Italy
Maurice Scève, Microcosme, a long, cosmic, religious and scientific poem about the creation of man, his fate and his achievements; France
Clément Marot and Theodore Beza, The Geneva Psalter, revised edition, with rhymed versions of all 150 Psalms for the first time; some earlier melodies were replaced; many of the lyrics were updated or replaced and all were written by Marot and De Bèze (see also, The Geneva Psalter 1539, 1542, 1543; an edition with changed melodies was published in 1551), Swiss, French-language work published in Geneva
Torquato Tasso, Renaud, heroic poem, Italy
Births
Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
January 13 – Mark Alexander Boyd (died 1601), Scottish poet and soldier of fortune
January 15 (baptized) – Robert Tofte (died 1620), English translator and poet
January 20 – Ottavio Rinuccini (died 1621), Italian poet, courtier and opera librettist
August 26 (baptized) – Bartolomé Leonardo de Argensola (died 1631), Spanish poet, writer and historian; brother of poet Lupercio Leonardo de Argensola
November 25 – Félix Lope de Vega (died 1635), Spanish poet and playwright
Also:
Henry Constable (died 1613), English poet
Samuel Daniel (died 1619), English poet and historian
Alonso de Ledesma, born this year, according to many sources, or 1552, according to many others (died 1623), Spanish
Deaths
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
Nicholas Grimald (born 1519), English poet and translator
Georg Wickram (born 1505), German poet and novelist
See also
Poetry
16th century in poetry
16th century in literature
Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age literature
Elizabethan literature
French Renaissance literature
Renaissance literature
Spanish Renaissance literature