Barten Holyday
Archdeacon of Oxford
Appointed1626
Personal details
Born1593
Died2 October 1661
Iffley, Oxfordshire, England
EducationChrist Church, Oxford (DDiv)

Barten Holyday or Holiday (1593 – 2 October 1661) was an English clergyman, author and poet.[1]

Career

He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford and earned a Doctor of Divinity degree.[2] He entered the clergy in 1615; he was appointed Archdeacon of Oxford by King Charles I in 1626. Technogamia was his only play. In 1618, the year it was produced, Holyday served as Sir Francis Stewart's chaplain on Stewart's embassy to Spain. Holyday translated the Odes of Horace and works of Juvenal and Persius, and wrote A Survey of the World, in Verse (1661), plus sermons and miscellaneous works.[3] He was summed up by one commentator as "a good scholar, a shrewd critic, and a fair wit."[4] His translations show strong fidelity to their originals, and have often been considered the best of his works. Samuel Johnson said in Idler 69 that his translations were those of "only a scholar and a critick" not a poet.

He was subject of a derisory poem called "Whoop Holiday", published in 1625 by Peter Heylin[5]

Personal life

Holyday died at Iffley in Oxfordshire on 2 October 1661, "of the new epidemicall disease that rageth now abroad" and was buried at Christchurch Cathedral, Oxford.[6]

References

  1. F. D. A. Burns, ‘Holyday , Barten (1593–1661)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  2. "Hieron-Horridge | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  3. Alexander Chalmers, ed., The General Biographical Dictionary, London, J. Nichols & Son, et al., 1814; Vol. 18, pp. 95-6.
  4. Adolphus William Ward, A History of English Drama to the Death of Queen Anne, London, Macmillan, 1899; Vol. 3, pp. 176-8.
  5. Anthony Milton, ‘Heylyn, Peter (1599–1662)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004
  6. Clark, Andrew, ed. (1891). The Life and Times of Anthony Wood, Antiquary of Oxford, 1632-1695, Described by Himself. Oxford: Oxford Historical Society. p. 416. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
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