Richard Martin (Recorder of London)
Richard Martin | |
---|---|
Born | 1570 |
Died | 1618 | (aged 48)
Occupation | English politician |
Richard Martin (1570–1618) was an English lawyer, orator, and supporter of the Virginia Company who was appointed Recorder of the City of London at the recommendation of James I of England in 1618 but died shortly thereafter.[1]
Lawyer and tavern wit
Martin studied at Oxford University and was admitted to the Middle Temple, one of the Inns of Court providing legal training in Elizabethan London, on 7 November 1587. He was a member of a group of intellectual men, poets, and playwrights including John Donne and Ben Jonson who met the first Friday of every month at the Mermaid Tavern in Bread Street.[1] Martin was "universally well regarded for his warmth of nature, personal beauty, and graceful speech",[2] and was elected "prince of Love" to preside over the Christmas grand revels of the Middle Temple in the winter of 1597/98.[3] Michelle O'Callaghan points out that those elected to oversee the grand revels had to be skilled in "singing, dancing, and music", and well-versed in "rhetoric, law and other scholastic exercises travestied" in the revels.[3] The poet John Davies dedicated his 1596 collection "Orchestra, or a Poeme of Dauncing" to Martin, but they fell out soon after, and Davies was disbarred and briefly thrown in the Tower of London in February 1598 "for thrashing his friend, another roysterer of the day, Mr. Richard Martin, in the Middle Temple Hall" with a cudgel.[1][2] (Davies publicly apologized to Martin in 1601 and was readmitted to the English Bar. He went on to have a brilliant legal career.[4])
Martin defended Jonson and his controversial 1602 play "The Poetaster" to the Lord Chief Justice Sir John Popham. Later, Jonson acknowledged Martin in the dedication of the 1616 folio edition of "The Poetaster" "for whose innocence as for the author's you were once a noble and kindly undertaker to the greatest justice [Popham] of this kingdom."[1][2][5]
Martin is mentioned in, and was perhaps a co-author of, the poetic libel "The Parliament Fart", one of the most popular and malleable comic poems of the early Stuart era, which originated in the circle of tavern wits of which Martin was a part.[6]
Parliament and the Virginia Company
Martin was elected member of Parliament for Barnstaple in 1601. Following the death of Queen Elizabeth in 1603, Martin was chosen to give a speech[7] welcoming the new King James to London on behalf of the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex as part of the celebrations of the royal entry on 7 May. In his speech, Martin reminded the king of the breadth of his new kingdom and warned of the dangers of piracy. The speech was printed that same year.[1][8]
Martin was M.P. for Christchurch in James's first Parliament (1604–11) and Counsel to the Virginia Company from 1612. In May 1614, Martin was invited to speak before the Addled Parliament on the Colony of Virginia as lawyer for the company. From 1611 Martin had taken an active interest in the colonization of the Bermuda Islands or Somers Isles, and in 1615 was a founding shareholder of the Somers Isles Company chartered to manage the colony.[1]
On the death of Sir Anthony Benn, 29 September 1618, King James recommended Martin to the City of London for their recorder or chief counsel to the Lord Mayor, and he was chosen to the position, but died about a month after, of the smallpox, on Sunday morning 2 November 1618, and was buried in the Temple Church, London.[1]
In 1617, when the treasury of the Virginia Company was exhausted, societies of private adventurers were authorized to settle plantations in Virginia under the style of "hundreds." One of the first of these societies, organized in 1618 as the Society of Martin's Hundred, was named in honor of Richard Martin who had so eloquently defended Virginia before Parliament in 1614. Martin's Hundred, containing some 80,000 acres (320 km2), was about seven miles (11 km) below Jamestown, Virginia, on the north side of the James River.[1][9]
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h Brown 1890, p. 645
- ^ a b c Miles 1986, p. 58
- ^ a b O'Callaghan 2007, p. 14
- ^ Jokinen, Anniina. "Life of Sir John Davies". Luminarium. Retrieved 29 December 2008.
- ^ Gifford 1826, p. 206
- ^ "The Parliament Fart (1607– )". Early Stuart libels. Retrieved 29 December 2008.
- ^ Bacon, F.; Birch, T.; George Fabyan Collection (Library of Congress) (1763). Letters, Speeches, Charges, Advices, &c. of Francis Bacon ... Andrew Millar. p. 88. Retrieved 17 May 2015.
- ^ Lee 2004, pp. 154-155
- ^ Harrison 1920, p. 595
References
- Brown, Alexander (1890). The Genesis of the United States: A Narrative of the Movement in England, 1605-1616. Houghton, Mifflin. Retrieved 27 December 2008.
- Gifford, William (1870). The Works of Ben Jonson: With Notes, Critical and Explanatory, and a Biographical Memoir. A.J.Crocker and Brothers. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
- Harrison, Fairfax (1920). The Devon Carys. The De Vinne Press. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
- Lee, Christopher (2004). 1603: The Death of Queen Elizabeth I, the Return of the Black Plague, the Rise of Shakespeare, Piracy, Witchcraft and the Birth of the Stuart Era. Macmillan. ISBN 0-312-32139-2.
- Miles, Rosalind (1986). Ben Jonson: His Life and Work. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-7102-0838-3. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
- O'Callaghan, Michelle (2007). The English Wits: Literature and Sociability in Early Modern England. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-86084-9. Retrieved 30 December 2008.
External links
- Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .