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Richard Becon

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Richard Becon
NationalityBritish

Richard Becon or Beacon (fl. 1594), was an English administrator in Ireland and author.

Life

Becon was a native of Suffolk, and was educated at Cambridge. He entered St. John's College on 12 November 1567, and proceeded B.A. in 1571 and M.A. in 1575.[1] Admitted a student of Gray's Inn on 19 June 1577, he was called to the bar on 27 January 1584–5. He was appointed 'her majesty's attorney for the province of Munster' on 17 December 1586 at an annual salary of little more than £17 He was chiefly employed in regulating crown grants of land, and two letters on the subject, dated in the one case 17 October 1587 from Clonmel, and in the other 2 December 1587 from Limerick, addressed by him with other commissioners to Walsingham, are at the Record Office. Beacon himself received grants of land – Clandonnell and Clan Derrnott – in Cork, and of Torcraigh in Waterford, all of which he appears to have sublet to other Englishmen. In 1591 the post of attorney in Munster was conferred on another, but Beacon, although no longer in Ireland, is described as the owner of land there in a visitation of 1611. By the standards of most English settlers his attitude to the indigenous Irish was relatively mild, certainly milder than that of his superior Jesse Smythes, the Chief Justice of Munster.

Solon his Follie

Beacon was the author of a political pamphlet on Ireland, Solon his follie; or a politique discourse touching the reformation of common weales conquered, declined, or corrupted, Oxford, 1594. It is dedicated to Queen Elizabeth, and is in the form of a conversation between Solon, Epimenides, and Pisistratus as to the policy that Athens should pursue towards Salamina. In this allegorical discourse Salamina must be understood as Ireland, and Athens by England.

Beacon urges on the English government the adoption of strong coercive measures in order to eradicate Irish national feeling.[DNB 1][DNB 2][DNB 3][DNB 4][DNB 5][2] The work draws on several unacknowledged sources: Jean Bodin, Niccolò Machiavelli and Francesco Guicciardini in particular; and the work of Matthew Sutcliffe on military theory.[3]

References

  1. ^ "Becon, Richard (BCN567R2)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainStephen, Leslie, ed. (1885). "Becon, Richard" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 4. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 92.
  3. ^ Edward Chaney (1990). England and the Continental Renaissance: Essays in Honour of J.B. Trapp. Boydell Press. pp. 153–164. ISBN 978-0-85115-270-7.

DNB references

These references are found in the DNB article referred to above.

  1. ^ Cooper's Athen. Cantab, ii. 174
  2. ^ Foster's Register of Gray's Inn, page 52
  3. ^ Calendar of Carew manuscripts for 1588, 1591, and 1611
  4. ^ Irish series of State Papers for 1589
  5. ^ Beacon's Solon.

External links