1590_in_literature
1590 in literature
Overview of the events of 1590 in literature
This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1590.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2020) |
- January – The Children of Paul's perform at the English Court twice in the first week; one of the plays act may be John Lyly's Midas. Later this year they are banned from performing over of the involvement of Lily, their chief script-writer, in the Marprelate controversy.
- unknown date – The Teatro all'antica at Sabbioneta (Italy), designed by Vincenzo Scamozzi, is completed.
- Robert Greene
- Greene's Mourning Garment[1]
- Never Too Late
- Thomas Lodge – Rosalynde
- Thomas Nashe – An Almond for a Parrat
- Anonymous (approximate date)
- Robert Greene
- The Comical History of Alphonsus, King of Aragon (approximate date)
- The History of Orlando Furioso
- The Scottish History of James the Fourth (approximate date)
- with Thomas Lodge – A Looking Glass for London (approximate date)
- Christopher Marlowe – Tamburlaine (both parts published)
- George Peele – Famous Chronicle of King Edward the First
- Robert Wilson – The Three Lords and Three Ladies of London (published)
- Sir Philip Sidney – Arcadia
- Edmund Spenser – The Faerie Queene, Books 1–3
- January 30 – Lady Anne Clifford, English literary patron (died 1676)
- March 18 – Manuel de Faria e Sousa, Portuguese historian and poet (died 1649)
- June 24 – Samuel Ampzing, Dutch poet (died 1632)
- July 26 – Johannes Crellius, German-born Polish theologian (died 1633)
- September 12 – María de Zayas, Spanish poet and dramatist (died 1661)
- October 11[2] (or December)[3] – William Pynchon, English-born New England theologian (died 1662)
- unknown dates
- Alonso Andrada, Spanish biographer (died 1672)
- François Annat, French anti-Jansenist theologian (died 1670)[4]
- Thomas Carve, Irish historian writing in Latin (died c. 1672)
- Faqi Tayran, Kurdish poet (died 1660)
- Grigore Ureche, Moldavian chronicler (died 1647)
- Théophile de Viau, French poet and dramatist (died 1626)[5]
- January 7 – Jakob Andreae, German theologian (born 1528)
- February 1 – Lawrence Humphrey, English theologian (born c. 1527)
- March – Petru Cercel, Wallachian prince and poet
- July – Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas, French poet (born 1544)
- September 20 – Robert Garnier, French poet (born 1544)
- November 23 – André Thévet, French cosmographer (born 1502)
- November 29 – Philipp Nicodemus Frischlin, German poet and dramatist (born 1547)
- December 5 – Johann Habermann, German theologian (born 1516)
- probable
- Lambert Daneau, French theologian (born c. 1535)
- Giuseppe Leggiadri Gallani, Italian poet and dramatist (born 1516)
- Lawrence Manley; Prof Lawrence Manley; Manley Lawrence (11 May 1995). Literature and Culture in Early Modern London. Cambridge University Press. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-521-46161-0.
- David M. Powers (19 January 2015). Damnable Heresy: William Pynchon, the Indians, and the First Book Banned (and Burned) in Boston. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-63087-761-3.
- Massachusetts (Colony). Courts (Hampshire Co.) (1961). Colonial Justice in Western Massachusetts, 1639-1702: The Pynchon Court Record. Harvard University Press. p. 6.
- Blaise Pascal (1999). Pensées and Other Writings. Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-19-283655-7.
- David Lee Rubin (2004). La Poésie française du premier 17e siècle: textes et contextes (in French). Rookwood Press. p. 220. ISBN 978-1-886365-53-7.