Sir Walter Raleigh, Raleigh also spelled Ralegh, (born 1554?
Thomas Wyatt is reduced to “sometime”; Sir Walter Raleigh, “quiet.”
At least that is what Sir Walter Raleigh, a 16th-century British adventurer, once believed.
They are “sensible” in that they drink and smoke less than, I should imagine, any previous generation since Sir Walter Raleigh brought the evil weed, tobacco, back from the New World.
Walter Raleigh made the first attempt to found an English colony in America.
The English adventurer Sir Walter Raleigh sought the fabled Eldorado in Venezuela.
The English adventurer Sir Walter Raleigh used the deposits in 1595 to caulk his ships.
English colonization in America began with an expedition sent by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1584.
“I felt I was sitting right there with Walter Raleigh putting this pitch together,” Lane told me.
Sir Walter Raleigh searched for Manoa in the Orinoco lowlands (1595), while Spaniards sought Omagua nearby.
It produced such adventurers and explorers as Walter Raleigh and Francis Drake and such statesmen as Lord Burghley.
He sailed with Sir Walter Raleigh to Cádiz and to the Azores (1596–97) and accompanied expeditions to the East Indies in 1598 and 1601.
An earlier British colony had been established at Roanoke Island, now part of North Carolina, in 1585 by an expedition sponsored by Sir Walter Raleigh.
But Sir Walter Raleigh suggests an explanation for this lack of biographical expression in the introduction to his History of the World (1614): “Whosoever,…
“Riches and glory,” wrote Sir Walter Raleigh, “Machiavel’s two marks to shoot at,” had become the universal aims, and this situation was addressed by city comedies and tragedies of state.
A humourless face - which could have been either William Shakespeare or Sir Walter Raleigh - stared back reproachfully when I was in my teens, nervously sneaking my first cigarette at the cinema.
Maybe it last happened in 1585, when Ralph Lane, who governed the English colony at Roanoke, told Sir Walter Raleigh he had found better vines growing wild in the New World than existed in England.
His poem in praise of Sir Walter Raleigh, De Guiana, Carmen Epicum (“An Epic Poem about Guiana,” 1596), is typical of his preoccupation with the virtues of the warrior-hero, the character that dominates most of his plays.
He started a series of state prosecutions for libel and conducted several great treason trials of the day, prosecuting the earls of Essex and Southampton (1600–01), Sir Walter Raleigh (1603), and the conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot (1605).
Conceived by Sir Walter Raleigh, a favoured courtier of Elizabeth I, as a means to “wrest the keys of the world from Spain”, the site was chosen “because on the mainland there is much gold”—and because Raleigh assumed it was strategically placed near an easy passage between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
walter raleigh
noun person
- English courtier (a favorite of Elizabeth I) who tried to colonize Virginia; introduced potatoes and tobacco to England (1552-1618)
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