Actions
Begin New Search
Refine Last Search
Cemetery Lookup
Add Burial Records
Help with Find A Grave

Find all Gascoignes in:
 • St John the Baptist Churchyard
 • Barnack
 • Huntingdonshire
 • Find A Grave

Top Contributors
Success Stories
Discussion Forums
Find A Grave Store
Support Find A Grave

Log In
George Gascoigne
Birth: 1525
Death: Oct. 7, 1577

Author, Soldier, Politician. England's first great literary innovator of the Elizabethan period. His play "Supposes" (1566), translated from Ariosto, was the earliest English prose comedy. Shakespeare used it for the subplot of "The Taming of the Shrew". Gascoigne's adaptation of "Jocasta" (1566), after Euripides, was the first Ancient Greek drama presented in Britain and possibly the first written in blank verse. As a poet he helped introduce the sonnet form to his country. Gascoigne was born in Bedfordshire, the son of Sir John Gascoigne. He studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, became a member of Gray's Inn in 1555, and served two terms in Parliament (1557 to 1559), representing Bedford. His later political ambitions were stymied by his reputation as "a notorious ruffian, a godless person". Disinherited by his father for his excesses, Gascoigne spent time in prison for killing a man in a duel, gambling, and debt, the last of which hounded him throughout his life. In 1568 he married a wealthy country widow but her estate was tied up in legal hassles and he hardly saw a penny from it. By 1572 he was serving as a soldier of fortune under William of Orange in Holland, where he was captured by the Spanish and returned to England in disgrace. Despite this calamity he was entrusted with a probable spying mission to Antwerp in 1575 and in return was allowed to present a copy of his writings to the Queen. His luck was finally starting to improve when he fell ill and died at the home of his friend, the poet George Whetstone, who wrote an elegy in his memory. Gascoigne was one of the first of the Elizabethan gentry to turn to literature as a tool of career advancement. He wrote plays for Gray's Inn and Oxford University and circulated verses (sometimes bawdy and slanderous) in manuscript, but most of his output dates from after 1572, when he tried to win a place at the Royal Court. His restless personality informed his writing, which is often marked by bold experimentation. Perhaps his most remarkable work is the tale of court intrigue, "The Adventures of Master F.J." (1573). Written in a plain, straightforward style, unique for the time, it is comparable only to the later prose narratives of Thomas Nashe and Thomas Deloney as 16th Century forerunners of modern English fiction. Gascoigne's other books include "A Hundred Sundrie Flowers" (1573), "Posies" (1575), "The Fruits of Wars" (1575), and "The Steel Glass" (1576). (bio by: Bobb Edwards) 

 
Search Amazon for George Gascoigne
 
Burial:
St John the Baptist Churchyard
Barnack
Huntingdonshire, England
Plot: Whetstone Family Vault
 
Maintained by: Find A Grave
Originally Created by: Bobb Edwards
Record added: Aug 24, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 21143622
George Gascoigne
Added by: Bobb Edwards
 
George Gascoigne
Added by: julia&keld
 
George Gascoigne
Added by: Anonymous
 
Photos may be scaled.
Click on image for full size.

I light a candle for George Gascoigne ...
- Candles
 Added: Jan. 21, 2012
Thank you for your legacy. Rest in peace.
- Ken MacLeod
 Added: Aug. 4, 2008

- Mellissa Lake Co. Illinois
 Added: Oct. 7, 2007
There are 3 more notes not showing...
Click here to view all notes...
How famous was this person?
Current ranking for this person: Not enough votes to post (8 of 10)
 

Accuracy and Copyright Disclaimer