Historical Dictionary of Renaissance

SMITH, THOMAS

(1513-1578)
Englishhumanistand statesman. After study at Cambridge University, he continued his education abroad at Paris andPadua. He taughtGreekat Cambridge from 1535 to 1540 and was involved in the attempt of several Cambridge humanists, led byJohn Cheke, to introduce the pronunciation of Greek proposed byErasmus, rather than the traditional one based on medieval Byzantine practice. This effort was opposed by the conser-vative chancellor of Cambridge, Bishop Stephen Gardiner, who re-garded it as disrespectful of tradition. Smith was a noted collector of books and under QueenElizabeth Iserved abroad as an ambassador. He is best known as the author ofDe república Anglorum/On the English Polity(written in 1563 but not published until 1583), a con-cise and well informed account of the actual workings of English law and government in his time. In this work he distinguishes England, despite its having a king, from contemporary states because it is a commonwealth in which power is shared among crown, nobility, burgesses, and yeomen. Indeed, he classes England not as a monar-chy but as a "democracy."

  1. smith, thomasLondon to . This well known maker was a pupil of Peter Wamsley. His violoncellos are of the Steiner model and some of them possess considerable power and were formerly h...Violins and Violin Makers. Biographical Dictionary