HAKLUYT,
RICHARD (c. 1553-1616), British geographer, was born of good family in
or near London about 1553. The Hakluyts were of Welsh extraction, not Dutch
as has been supposed. They appear to have settled in Herefordshire as early
as the 13th century. The family seat was Eaton, 2 m. S.E. of Leominster.
Hugo Hakelute was returned M.P. for that borough in 1304/5. Richard went
to school at Westminster, where he was a queen’s scholar; while there his
future bent was determined by a visit to his cousin and namesake, Richard
Hakluyt of the Middle Temple. His cousin’s discourse, illustrated by “certain
bookes of cosmographic, an universall mappe, and the Bible,” made young
Hakluyt resolve to “prosecute that knowledge and kind of literature.” Entering
Christ Church, Oxford, in 1570, “ his exercises of duty first performed,”
he fell to his intended course of reading, and by degrees perused all the
printed or written voyages and discoveries that he could find. He tookhis
B.A. in 1573/4. It is probable that, shortly after taking his M.A. (1577),
he began at Oxford the first public lectures in geography that “shewed
both the old imperfectly composed and the new lately reformed mappes, globes,
spheares, and other instruments of this art.” That this was not in London
is certain, as we know that the first lecture of the kind was delivered
in the metropolis on the 4th of November 1588 by Thomas Hood.
Hakluyt’s first published work was his Divers Voyages touching
the Discoverie of America (London, 1582, 4to.). This brought
him to the notice of Lord Howard of Effingham, and so to that of Sir Edward
Stafford, Lord Howard’s brother-in-law; accordingly at the age of thirty,
being acquainted with “the chiefest captaines at sea, the greatest merchants,
and the best mariners of our nation,” he was selected as chaplain to accompany
Stafford, now English ambassador at the French court, to Paris (1583).
In accordance with the instructions of Secretary Walsingham, he occupied
himself chiefly in collecting information of the Spanish and French movements,
and “making diligent inquirie of such things as might yield any light unto
our westerne dispoverie in America.” The first-fruits of Hakluyt’s labours
in Paris are embodied in his important work entitled A particular discourse
concerning Westerne discoveries written in the yere 1584, by Richarde Hackluyt
of Oxforde, at the requeste and direction of the right worshipfull Mr Walter
Raghly before the comynge home of his twoo barkes. This long-lost MS.
was at last printed in 1877. Its object was to recommend the enterprise
of planting the English race in the unsettled parts of North America. Hakluyt’s
other works consist mainly of translations and compilations, relieved by
his dedications and prefaces, which last, with a few letters, are the only
material we possess out of which a biography of him can be framed. Hakluyt
revisited England in 1584, laid before Queen Elizabeth a copy of the Discourse
“along with one in Latin upon Aristotle’s Politicks,” and obtained,
two days before his return to Paris, the grant of the next vacant prebend
at Bristol, to which he was admitted in 1586 and held with his other preferments
till his death.
While in Paris Hakluyt interested himself in the publication of the
MS. journal of Laudonniere, the Histoire notable de la Florida, edited;
by Bassanier (Paris, 1586, 8vo.). This was translated by Hakluyt and published
in London under the title of A notable historie containing foure voyages
made by certayne French captaynes into Florida (London, 1587, 4to.).
The same year De orbe novo Petri Martyris Anglerii decades octo illustratae
lahore et industria Richardi Hackluyti saw the light at Paris. This
work contains the exceedingly rare copperplate map dedicated to Hakluyt
and signed F. G. (supposed to be Francis Gualle); it is the first on which
the name of “ Virginia ” appears.
In 1588 Hakluyt finally returned to England with Lady Stafford, after
a residence in France of nearly five years. In 1589 he published the first
edition of his chief work, The Principall Navigations, Voiages and Discoveries
of the English Nation (fol., London, 1vol.). In the preface to this
we have the announcement of the intended publication of the first terrestrial
globe made in England by Molyneux. In 1598 – 1600 appeared the final, reconstructed
and greatly enlarged edition of The principal Navigations, Voyages,
Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation (fol., 3 vols.). Some
few copies contain an exceedingly rare map, the first on the Mercator projection
made in England according to the true principles laid down by Edward Wright.
Hakluyt’s great collection, though but little read, has been truly called
the “ prose epic of the modern English nation.” It is an invaluable treasure
of material for the history of geographical discovery and colonization,
which has secured for its editor a lasting reputation. In 1601 Hakluyt
edited a translation from the Portuguese of Antonio Galvano, The Discoveries
of the World (4to., London). In the same year his name occurs as an
adviser to the East India Company, supplying them with maps, and informing
them as to markets. Meantime in 1590 (April 20th) he had been instituted
to the rectory of Withering-sett-cum-Brockford, Suffolk. In 1602, on the
4th of May, he was installed prebendary of Westminster, and in the following
year he was elected archdeacon of Westminster. In the licence of his second
marriage (20th of March 1604) he is also described as one of the chaplains
of the Savoy, and his will contains a reference to chambers occupied by
him there up to the time of his death; in another official document he
is styled D.D. In 1605 he secured the prospective living of James Town,
the intended capital of the intended colony of Virginia. This benefice
he supplied, when the colony was at last established in 1607, by a curate,
one Robert Hunt. In 1606 he appears as one
of the chief promoters of the petition to the king for patents to colonize
Virginia. He was also a leading adventurer in the London or South Virginia
Company. His last publication was a translation of Fernando de Soto’s discoveries
in Florida, entitled Virginia richly valued by the description of Florida
her next neighbour (London, 1609, 4to). This work was intended to encourage
the young colony of Virginia; to Hakluyt, it has been said, “ England is
more indebted for its American possession than to any man of that age.”
We may notice that it was at Hakluyt’s suggestion that Robert Parke translated
Mendoza’s History of China (London, 1588 – 1589) and John Pory made
his version of Leo Africanus (A Geographical History of Africa, London,
1600). Hakluyt died in 1616 (November 23rd) and
was buried in Westminster Abbey (November 26th); by an error in the abbey
register his burial is recorded under the year 1626. Out of his various
emoluments and preferments (of which the last was Gedney rectory, Lincolnshire,
in x6i2) he amassed a small fortune, which was squandered by a son. A number
of his MSS., suffcient to form a fourth volume of his collections of 1558
– 1600, fell into the hands of Samuel Purchas, who inserted them in an
abridged form in his Pilgrimes (1625-1626, fol.). Others are preserved
at Oxford (Bib. Bod. MS. Seld. B. 8). which consist chiefly of notes gathered
from contemporary authors.
Besides the MSS. or editions noticed in the text (Divers
Voyages (1582); Particuler Discourse (1584); Laudonniere’s Florida
(i58y); Peter Martyr, Decades (1587); Principal Navigations
(1589 and 1598-1600); Galvano’s Discoveries (1601); De Soto’s
Florida record, the Virginia richly valued (1609, &c.), we may
notice the Hakluyt Society’s London edition of the Divers Voyages in
1850, the edition of the Particuler Discourse, by Charles Deane
in the Collections of the Maine Historical Society (Cambridge, Mass.,
1870, with an introduction by Leonard Woods); also, among modern issues
of the Principal Navigations, those of 1809 (5 vols., with much
additional matter), and of 1903 – 1905 (Glasgow, 12 vols.). The new title-page
issued for the first volume of the final edition of the Principal Navigations,
in 1599, merely cancelled the former 1598 title with its reference
to the Cadiz expedition of 1596; but from this has arisen the mistaken
supposition that a new edition was then (1599) published. Hakluyt's Galvano
was edited for the Hakluyt Society by Admiral C. R. D. Bethune in 1862.
This Society, which was founded in 1846 for printing rare and unpublished
voyages and travels, includes the Glasgow edition of the Principal Navigations
in its extra series, as well as C. R. Beazley's edition of Carpini,
Rubruquis, and other medieval texts from Hakluyt (Cambridge, 1903,
1 vol.). Reckoning in these and an issue of Purchas's Pilgrimes by the
Glasgow publisher of the Hakluyt of 1903 – 1905, the society has now published
or " fathered ” 150 vols. See also Voyages of the Elizabethan Seamen
to America, being Select Narratives from the Principal Navigations, by
E. J. Payne (Oxford, 1880; 1893; new edition by C. R. Beazley, 1907).
For Hakluyt's life the dedications of the 1589 and 1598
editions of the Principal Navigations should be especially
consulted; also Winter Jones's introduction to the Hakluyt Society edition
of the Divers Voyages; Fuller's Worthies of England, “Herefordshire
"; Oxford Univ. Reg. (Oxford Hist. Soc.), ii., iii. 39; Historical
MSS. Commission, 4th report, appendix, p. 614, the last giving us the
Towneley MSS. referring to payments (prizes?) awarded to Hakluyt
when at Oxford, May 12th and June 4th, 1575. (C.
H. C.; C. R. B.)
Eleventh edition
Charles
R. Beazley