Authority Cited: Turberville
Author name and dates: George Turberville (c.1543-c.1597); B. Mantuan Carmelitan [also Battista Mantovano, Battista the Mantuan, Baptista Spagnuoli Mantuanus, Johannes Baptista Spagnolo] (1447-1516)
BKG Bio-tweet (Tuberville): Oxford Fellow; lawyer; poet; translator; falconer; diplomat to Ivan the Terrible; SJ quotes for neutral use of “trull”
BKG Bio-tweet (Mantuan): Reformist Carmelite; church corruption poem used by Luther, popular in England; rustic Latin pastoral eclogues
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: one Turberville cite in1755 Dict. vol. 2. No Turberville cites identified as added in the 1773 Dict.]
Author name and dates: George Turberville (c.1543-c.1597); B. Mantuan Carmelitan [also Battista Mantovano, Battista the Mantuan, Baptista Spagnuoli Mantuanus, Johannes Baptista Spagnolo] (1447-1516)
BKG Bio-tweet (Tuberville): Oxford Fellow; lawyer; poet; translator; falconer; diplomat to Ivan the Terrible; SJ quotes for neutral use of “trull”
BKG Bio-tweet (Mantuan): Reformist Carmelite; church corruption poem used by Luther, popular in England; rustic Latin pastoral eclogues
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: one Turberville cite in1755 Dict. vol. 2. No Turberville cites identified as added in the 1773 Dict.]
- The ij [2nd] Eglogue of Mantuan intituled FORTUNATUS in The eglogs of the poet B. Mantuan Carmelitan, turned into English verse, & set forth with the argument to euery egloge by George Turbervile Gent. Anno. 1567 , Imprinted at London : In Pater noster Rowe, at the signe of the Marmayde, by Henrie Bynneman; trull (p. 14; see image below) [BKG Note: in other poems, Turberville uses trull in a pejorative sense]
- Turberville (no work cited)