16th-century English nobleman; (1516-1547) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517-1547) was an English nobleman and poet.
Henry Howard was born in Hunsdon, Hertfordshire in 1517,[1] during the reign of Henry VIII. His father was Thomas Howard.[1] His mother was Elizabeth Stafford.[2] He took the title of Earl of Surrey in 1524.[1] Today he is known chiefly under that name. In 1532 he married Frances the Vere, who was fourteen years old at the time.[1] Then he became a soldier and fought in Scotland in 1542 and in France and Flanders from 1543 to 1545.[1] He was wounded in the siege of Montreuil. After he came back to England he was accused of treason, as was his father. Henry Howard was executed by beheading in the Tower of London at the age of thirty on 19 January 1547.[2] His father was sentenced to death, too. He was however saved, as the king Henry VIII died.[1] He was kept in prison for some years.[2] He was set free by queen Mary.[2]
Henry Howard is known mainly for two reasons. First, he wrote sonnets.[1] He is often regarded as one of the fathers of English sonnet.[2] He introduced a new rhyme pattern for English sonnet that runs abab cdcd efef gg.[2] Today it is called Shakespearian sonnet,[3] but Surrey was first to use it. Second, he invented blank verse[1] that is unrhymed iambic pentameter.[4] This metre was later used by Thomas Kyd in drama and by John Milton in epic poems. Everyone knows blank verse from Shakespeare's works. Henry Howard used blank verse in his translations from Virgil.[5]
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