Erasmus, Desiderius, -1536
Dutch humanist, Catholic priest, and editor of the New Testament, Erasmus is considered one of the greatest scholars of the northern Renaissance.
Dutch humanist, Catholic priest, and editor of the New Testament, Erasmus is considered one of the greatest scholars of the northern Renaissance.
A stoic philosopher who lived from ca. AD 50-125. He was born a slave in Phrygian, Hierapolis in the household of the freedman Epaphroditus in Rome; he later manumitted and started a school of philosophy in Nicopolis.
Living from approximately 420 B.C. to 362 B.C., Epaminondas was a Greek statesman, military strategist, and general who was credited with ending the military dominance of Sparta, thereby permanently shifting the power paradigm among Greek states.
Character in Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison (1754).
The son of two actors, John Emery was initially schooled for a career as a stage musician. As an actor, he was well received in numerous roles, including that of Tyke in the Covent Garden premier of Thomas Morton’s School of Reform (1805).
Elliston was an actor and theater manager, working at many different locations throughout England. Duke Aranza in John Tobin’s The Honey Moon is considered one of his best performances.
The daughter of Edward IV, Elizabeth of York was married to Henry VII in 1486, thereby uniting the houses of York and Lancaster over the British throne and effectively ending The Wars of the Roses.
The last of the Tudor monarchs, Elizabeth became queen in 1558. Sometimes known as "the Virgin Queen" for the fact that she never married, she presided over what many regarded as a golden age of British arts and expansionism.
Known for her Lettres du marquis de Roselle (1764).
Author of Canons of Criticism (1748) as well as a number of sonnets respected by his contemporaries.