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         Ascham Roger:     more detail
  1. The scholemaster; written between 1563-8. Posthumously published. First ed., 1570; collated with the 2d ed, 1572. Edited by Edward Arber by Roger, 1515-1568 Ascham, 2009-10-26
  2. English works: Toxophilus, Report of the affaires and state of Germany, The scholemaster. Edited by William Aldis Wright by Roger, 1515-1568 Ascham, 2009-10-26
  3. English works Toxophilus; Report of the affaires and state of Ge by Ascham. Roger. 1515-1568., 1904-01-01
  4. Letters of Roger Ascham by Maurice Hatch, 1989-07
  5. Toxophilus: 1545 (Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies) by Roger Ascham, 2004-01
  6. English works: by Roger Ascham 1515-1568 Wright William Aldis [from old catalog] ed, 1904-12-31

21. Zeal.com - United States - New - Lifestyle - Books - By Country - Europe - Great
Add a Site Profile. 1. Ascham, Roger 1515-1568 http//www.luminarium.org/renlit/Ascham.htmEnglish author of Renaissance literature.
http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=533144

22. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Titles > S
text. Author Ascham, Roger, 15151568 Keywords Authors A Ascham, Roger,1515-1568; Titles S ; Subject Greek and Latin. Schoolmistress
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Ti

23. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > A
Shay), 18091885; Arthur, TS (Timothy Shay), 1809-1885, Editor; Ascham,Roger, 1515-1568; Asquith, Margot, 1864-1945; Astor, John Jacob
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

24. Antiquarian Books Catalogue
? Ascham, Roger (15151568) 1 ?R. Ascham, R. The English Works of Roger Ascham, preceptor to Queen Elizabeth .
http://www.kitazawa.co.jp/ANTIQU/391/C01001E.htm

index
(Japanese) 2. COMPLETE WORKS(INDIVIDUAL AUTHORS)
ŸŸ ASCHAM, ROGER (1515-1568)
1 u‚q.ƒAƒXƒJƒ€‰p•¶’˜ìWv ‰”Å
    ASCHAM, R.:
    The English Works of Roger Ascham, preceptor to Queen Elizabeth....
    With Notes and Observations, and the Author's Life by James Bennet.
    Contemporary calf, neatly rebacked with recent calf spine, red
    leather label with 5 raised bands. Extremities slightly rubbed.
    Two small marginal worm-holes. Text clean, good. 28x22cm.
ŸŸ AUBREY, JOHN (1626-1697)
2 ‚i.ƒI[ƒuƒŠƒB u‰p‘’˜–¼l¬“`v ‚`.ƒNƒ‰[ƒN(•Ò)
    AUBREY, J. / A. CLARK ed.: Brief Lives, chiefly of Contemporaries, set down by John Aubrey, Andrew Clark. With Facsimiles. In 2 Vols.: 426,370pp. (Clarendon Press, 1898) Original red cloth, slightly stained. SCARCE.
ŸŸ BARRIE, JAMES MATTHEW (1860-1937) 3 uJ.M.ƒoƒŠ[‘SWv@Å—Ç”Å
    BARRIE, J.M.: The Works of J.M. Barrie. PETER PAN EDITION. In 16 Vols. Limited edition of 1030 numbered sets, signed by the publisher. (Charles Scribner's, 1929)

25. Antiquarian Books Catalogue
xv,656pp. (Oxford UP, 1948) Cloth with dust wrapper. SCARCE. MC23001 \48,000. Ascham, Roger (1515-1568) 78 Ascham, R. The Schoolmaster; or A plain
http://www.kitazawa.co.jp/ANTIQU/389/C02001E.htm

index
2. Literature: Monographs
ŸŸ AINSWORTH, WILLIAM HARRISON (1805-1882)
70 AINSWORTH, W.H.:
    Jack Sheppard. A Romance. With Illustrations by George Cruikshank.
    In 3 Vols.: 352,292,312pp., portrait frontispiece, 27 engraved plates.
    (London: Richard Bentley, 1839) FIRST EDITION. Half red morocco with
    marbled boards. Spine gilt stamped with 5 raised bands. Top edge gilt,
    marbled endpapers. Joints rubbed, text some spotting, but an attractive
    set. * Ray, 117
ŸŸ ANDERSON, SHERWOOD (1876-1941)
71 ANDERSON, S.:
    COPIES, SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. 1/4 parchment over cloth boards, slighlty spotting, otherwise good.
72 ANDERSON, S.:
    Many Marriages. 264pp. (B.W. Huebsch, 1923) FIRST EDITION. Cloth with dust wrapper.
73 ANDERSON, S.:
    Sherwood Anderson's Notebook. Containing Articles Written during the SPECIAL EDITION. LIMITED TO 225 COPIES, SIGNED BY ANDERSON. Original cloth backed marbled boards, printed label on spine, edges untrimmed, top of front cover and spine browned, slightly dusty, contents very good.

26. Historical Manuscripts Commission | National Register Of Archives | List Of Pers
List of Persons with surname beginning AS Ascham, Roger (15151568) Author (4) Ascherson,Neal (b1932) journalist (1) Ash, Edwin Lancelot Hopewell (1881-1964
http://www.hmc.gov.uk/nra/browser/person/page/personAS.htm

AA
AB AC AD ... AY List of Persons with surname beginning AS
Ascham, Roger (1515-1568) Author

Ascherson, Neal (b1932) journalist

Ash, Edwin Lancelot Hopewell (1881-1964) Physician and Nerve Specialist

Ash, Sir Eric Albert (b 1928) Knight electrical engineer
...
Astry, Richard (? 1632-1714) Antiquary

Persons listed:
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27. Shakespeare's Sources
com/gg/supposes.html Ascham, Roger The Scholemaster, 1570 http//darkwing.uoregon.edu/~rbear/Ascham1.htmAscham, Roger, 15151568 The Scholemaster, 1570
http://www.unibas.ch/shine/linkssources16th.htm

Bibles online
Latin and Greek authors European 16th and 17th Century texts (single works or authors) emblem books ... general collections of literary texts
16th and 17th Century Texts: Authors A-Z
A
B C D ... H I J K L M ... N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A
Alciato:
Alciato 's Book of Emblems http://www.mun.ca/alciato/ (last visit: 09/03/99)
Anon. Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

Anon. Arden of Feversham Arden of Feversham,
Anon. Cromwell
Anon.
Edward III Edward III links on this page. Edward the Third Anon. (John Skot?) Everyman Anon. Gammer Gurton's Needle Anon. Gesta Romanorum, Anon. The History of Titus Andronicus (chapbook) Anon Die Geschichte von Titus Andronicus Anon. The Lamentable Tragedy of Locrine; and Mucedorus. The Lamentable Tr a gedy of Locrine and Mucedorus Anon. A Mirrovr for Magistrates (1610) on-line facsimile edition. A Mirror for Magistrates Ariost Orlando Furioso Ariosto

28. Inscription By Ascham
end of a six page long dedicatory inscription by Roger Ascham to Reginald Ascham (15151568)distinguished himself in classics at St John's and became a fellow
http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/Library/special collections/Pix/Ascham.html
St John's Library Home page Special Collections Early Printed Books Jeronimo Osorio. De nobilitate civili libri II. Eiusdem de nobilitate christiana libri III. Florentiae: apud Laurentium Torrentinum, 1552 The end of a six page long dedicatory inscription by Roger Ascham to Reginald Pole (1500-1558), Cardinal and Archbishop of Canterbury, at the beginning of this volume. Ascham's signature is at the bottom, together with the date, 7 April 1555. Ascham (1515-1568) distinguished himself in classics at St John's and became a fellow in 1534, Tutor to Princess Elizabeth in 1548, Latin Secretary to Queen Mary in 1553 (in which position he was specially permitted to continue in his profession of Protestantism), and Private Tutor to Queen Elizabeth in 1558. The beauty of his handwriting brought him employment as the writer of official letters on behalf of Cambridge University. In 1545 he published Toxophilus, a treatise on archery, in which he had considerable skill. Toxophilus is still honoured by archers as the seminal treatise on their sport, and by literary historians as the most successful of early attempts to write a formal prose discourse in English. Ascham's Scholemaster

29. Math Quotes
the world. Roger Ascham (15151568). Mathematics is the science whichdraws necessary conclusions. Benjamin Pierce. In mathematics
http://www.trentu.ca/academic/math/sb/misc/quotes.html
Some Math Quotes
Here are some quotations about mathematics, culled from various sources and in no particular order. (Thanks to those who passed some on, especially Jim Propp!) I make no guarantee that the quotes are correct or properly attributed, but if you spot any errors or have more to contribute please send them to Stefan Bilaniuk No doubt but magic may do much in this;
For he that reads but mathematic rules
Shall find conclusions that avail to work
Wonders that pass the common sense of men. Robert Greene, in Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay
Algebra Prayer
Our Professor, which doth have tenure,
Feared be thy name.
Thy sets partition,
Thy maps commute,
In groups as in vector spaces.
Give us this day our daily notation,
And forgive us our obtuseness,
As we forgive tutors who canot help us. Lead us not into Lye rings, But deliver us from eigenvalues, For thine is the logic, the notation, and the accent, That confuses us forever. Amen. An anonymous University of Toronto mathematics student. "ARITHMETICUS" Virginia, Nevada. "If it would take a cannonball 3 1/8 seconds to travel four miles, and 3 3/8 seconds to travel the next four, and 3 5/8 to travel the next four, and if its rate of progress continued to diminish in the same ratio, how long would it take to go fifteen hundred million miles?"

30. ENGLISH Literature & Texts (16th Century) (e-Book, E-Books, EBooks)
Ascham, Roger (15151568), The Scholemaster, 1570, Html, n/c, UOregon.Ascham, Roger (1515-1568), The Scholemaster, 1570/1904, Html, n/c, UVaETextL.
http://www.digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010litenglishsixteenthca.asp
D igital B ook I ndex
SEARCH BY:
AUTHOR TITLE KEY WORD AUTHOR / TITLE ... TO LINK TO THE TITLE OF YOUR CHOICE. ALLOW 5-10 SECONDS TO ALPHABETIZE A SEARCH
AUTHOR TITLE EDITION FORMAT PRICE PUBORG Certaine Sermons or Homilies appointed to be read in Churches, In the time...of Queene Elizabeth (ed. Ia Lanca Html n/c UToronto Excepts from Thomas More; Elyot; Ascham; Hall; Book of Homilies; Latimer; Cramner; Wilson; Lily; Elizabeth I; Html n/c TowsonStU The Historie of the Damnable Life, and the Deserved Death of Doctor Iohn Faustus (tr. P.F.Gent) Html n/c PerseusPj Anon. A merry Ieste of a Shrewde and Curst Wyfe Html n/c UOregon Anon. Everyman [illus.] (based on the 1904 Gregg ed) (John Skot, 1521-1537?) Html n/c UOregon Anon. Gammer Gurton's Needle Txt n/c EServer Anon. Spare Your Good Html n/c UOregon Ascham, Roger The Schoolmaster Txt-G n/c GutenbergUS Ascham, Roger (1515-1568) The Scholemaster Html n/c UOregon Ascham, Roger (1515-1568) The Scholemaster Html n/c UVaETextL Barnes, Barnabe (c1569-1609) Html n/c Sonnets Breton, Nicholas Selected Poetry of NICHOLAS BRETON (1555?-1626)

31. Endimion (2)
Roger Ascham (15151568) was one of the most likeable of the early humaniststhosewho brought the revival of classical learning to England in the early
http://www.engl.uvic.ca/Faculty/MBhomepage/ISShakespeare/LLLCourse/wit1.html
Wit, Wisdom, and Language

Sir Roger Ascham Previous page Next page
Introduction
The literary passages you have read so far give some idea of the nature of courtly love, from its early poetic origins to renaissance parody. You will have noticed that as well as having a common subject, all the passages in one way or another seek for elegance in languageand it is this consciousness of language which generates much of the humour in parody, as in the speech of Sir Tophas on the "beauties" of Dipsas, where Lyly is in effect parodying himself. Wit and witty language can of course be misapplied; language can become stilted rather than elegant, smooth rather than sincere. In English in particular, as writers strove to give the language a respectability hitherto reserved for the language of scholarship, Latin, the search for elegance, as in the artificiality of Lyly, led to something at times near absurdity. Not surprisingly there was a reaction against such extremes, illustrated in different ways by the next three readings.
Reading 1. Roger Ascham:

32. QuoteGallery.com
Friday, February 07, 2003 _ Home Quotations by Author Roger Ascham, RogerAscham (15151568), View all quotes by Roger Ascham No Parent Found.
http://www.quotegallery.com/asp/apcategories.asp?author=Roger Ascham

33. Grimsby Archers Archery Club, Lincolnshire, England
Ascham, Roger (15151568), English scholar and author, a major intellectualfigure in Tudor England. Ascham was born in Kirby Wiske, Yorkshire.
http://grimsbyarchers.tripod.com/about.htm
About Archery...
Bows
Arrows

History

Ancient Sport
...
Modern Olympics
Archery , art, practice, or skill of using a bow and arrow for hunting, warfare, or as a sport.
The modern bow
Today, the bows used in archery fall into 3 categories:
The traditional Longbow The "Olympic Recurve" bow The Compound Bow The traditional long bow has changed little in hundreds of years. Traditionally made of Yew, but often made from a variety of woods. The Olympic Recurve is so called as it is the only type of bow that is used in olympic competition. Note how the limbs curve in an S shape. These bows are usually made of wood with fibreglass laminations, or carbon fibre and are either a solid "one piece" bow or have a seperate wooden or metal handle section (called the "riser") that the limbs bolt onto. Notice how, unlike the other two bows, the compound bow has a string (or cable)which travels around a number of pulleys or "cams". These cams are offset or "eccentric" and give a mechanical advantage that has the effect of reducing the amount of effort needed to pull the string back as the string is pulled back. The first few inches of pull may require 60 pounds of pull, but this weight falls away, to a fraction of the weight by the time the archer reaches full draw top Modern arrows (called shafts) are made from wood, fibreglass, aluminium or carbon fibre.

34. Catalogue Four A-B
2nd ed). Renouard 142; Schreiber 195. Dibdin I, 328; Hoffman I, 377.$2,500. 5. Ascham, Roger (15151568). Disertissimi Viri Rogeri
http://www.liberantiquus.com/cat4/a-b.html
Click for Full View 1. Aldrovandi, Ulisse (1522-1605). [Bologna: Typis Io. Baptistae Ferronij, 1653]
Folio, 13.75 x 9.6 in. Second edition. [-]3, A-Z6, Aa-Zz6, Aaa-Zzz6, Aaaa-Rrrr6, Ssss4, a6. Generously illustrated with ninety detailed woodcuts of cloven-hoofed quadrupeds, many half- to full-paged, including abnormally formed and monstrous specimens. Among the animals depicted are: various types of deer, sheep, moose, giraffes, camels, and a rhinoceros. This copy is bound in full, contemporary, sponged calfskin; the boards ruled in blind and gilt, with the spine ornately tooled in gilt compartments. Joints starting. A small portion of the engraved has been repaired. A small section along the architectural border has been restored in pen facsimile. The leaves are in very good condition with only light browning. Graesse Vol. 1, p. 65; Krivatsky 190 (Bologna, 1642 ed.).

35. Archive Of Past Events - Bologna British Council
Archery was one of the favourite hobbies of Roger Ascham (15151568), the humanist,scholar and writer, famous for his promotion of the venacular, his prose
http://www.britishcouncil.org/italy/english/arts/bologna/archivepastevents.htm

36. Incomplete Fictions
Rhetoric, 15001800. Dialogue. More, Thomas,, Sir, Saint, 1478-1535, Technique.Elyot, Thomas,, Sir, 1490?-1546, Technique. Ascham, Roger, 1515-1568, Technique.
http://cuapress.cua.edu/BOOKS/viewbook.cfm?Book=WIIF

37. Roger.html
Roger Ascham. 15151568. Roger Ascham acted as secretary to both QueenMary and Queen Elizabeth. He believed that education was fundamental
http://wilkes.edu/~writing/ascham.html
Roger Ascham Roger Ascham acted as secretary to both Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth. He believed that education was fundamental for children in order for a state to be prosperous. He used humanist methods when teaching his students at the time because he viewed it as being important for the student to realize and understand what they were reading. Ascham favored an education system that was based on questions, discussion, and criticism. He preferred to teach in English rather than Latin and in 1545 he published his first book on the archery, which was entitled The Schoolmaster. He argues that students who learn the material being taught slower learns it more thoroughly than a student that speeds through a lesson. He transformed the traditional education system of the time into one that plays a role in the formation of the individual citizen. Summary of the excerpt from The Schoolmaster taken from the Longman Anthology Ascham starts this excerpt out by condemning the ways of current schoolmaster methods of the time. He says that if your student gets something wrong do not discourage him because it will dull his wits and it will affect his desire for learning. He then states that in his opinion it is better to use love rather than fear, gentleness rather than beatings in order to bring up a child in the right ways of learning. Ascham was very much opposed to beating children in school, which was a common practice at the time in England. He felt that the way of rearing children at the time was an ill service to God, the prince, and the whole country. He agreed that the children should be corrected in their learning as well as their manners but he did not agree with the way it was done. He cites an example of how a schoolmaster will be mad about an outside issue and take it out on his scholar by beating him. In actuality the schoolmaster is the one who should have been beaten for his mistake of taking it out on the scholar. These types of schoolmasters were found all over England. There were almost too many at the time that they would be considered beaters rather than correctors of wrong doings.

38. Perspectives On English Renaissance Government
I (15671625) - from The True Law of Free Monarchies Baldassare Castiglione (1478-1529)- from The Book of the Courtier Roger Ascham (1515-1568) - from The
http://wilkes.edu/~writing/gov1.html
English 233 - Survey of British Literature 1/Fall 1999
Dr. Janet Wright Starner

Government and Self-Goverment
Authors: Mandy Kehler, Mike Krasulski, and Josh Mendoza Table of Contents:
William Tyndale
(1495-1536)- from Obedience of a Christian Man
Juan Luis Vives
(1492-1540) - from Instruction of a Christian Woman
Sir Thomas Elyot
(1490-1546) - from The Book Named the Governor and from The Defence of Good Women
John Ponet
(1514-1556) - from A Short Treatise of Political Power
John Foxe
(1516-1587) - from The Book of Martyrs
Richard Hooker
(1554-1600) - from The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity
James I
(1567-1625) - from The True Law of Free Monarchies Baldassare Castiglione (1478-1529) - from The Book of the Courtier Roger Ascham (1515-1568) - from The Schoolmaster Richard Mulcaster (1530-1611) - from The First Part of the Elementary The perspective "Goverment and Self-Goverment" explores a period that marks a major turning point in English political history and the period's literature expresses this. The perspective begins in the early reign of Henry VIII, when the dynasty is insecure. When Henry VIII decided to break with Rome, England blindly followed. Why? As this perspective's literature prove, Englishmen (and English women) were taught to be loyal to a hierarchical structure with God on the top and the common people on the bottom. Everyone knew their place within this society. When Herny VIII decreed England broke with Rome, very few people agrued.

39. Education Planet Literature,By Period,16th Century Lesson Plans
Add to LearningLinks Tell a friend! 3. Roger Ascham (15151568) - Roger Ascham,Renaissance English humanist and scholar, Father of English Prose.
http://www.educationplanet.com/search/Literature/By_Period/16th_Century/
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40. Quotes From The Mathematical Quotations Server
Ascham, Roger (15151568) Mark all mathematical heads which be wholly and only benton these sciences, how solitary they be themselves, how unfit to live with
http://math.furman.edu/~mwoodard/data.html
Quotes from the Mathematical Quotations Server
Collected by Mark R. Woodard
Furman University
Abel, Niels H. (1802 - 1829)
If you disregard the very simplest cases, there is in all of mathematics not a single infinite series whose sum has been rigorously determined. In other words,the most important parts of mathematics stand without a foundation.
In G. F. Simmons, Calculus Gems , New York: Mcgraw Hill, Inc., 1992, p. 188. Abel, Niels H. (1802 - 1829)
[A reply to a question about how he got his expertise:]
By studying the masters and not their pupils. Abel, Niels H. (1802 - 1829)
[About Gauss' mathematical writing style]
He is like the fox, who effaces his tracks in the sand with his tail.
In G. F. Simmons, Calculus Gems , New York: Mcgraw Hill, Inc., 1992, p. 177. Adams, Douglas (1952 - 2001)
Bistromathics itself is simply a revolutionary new way of understanding the behavior of numbers. Just as Einstein observed that space was not an absolute but depended on the observer's movement in space, and that time was not an absolute, but depended on the observer's movement in time, so it is now realized that numbers are not absolute, but depend on the observer's movement in restaurants.
Life, the Universe and Everything.

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