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Thomas Platter the Younger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Platter the Younger (/ˈplɑːtər/; German: [ˈplatɐ]; c. 24 July 1574 in Basel – 4 December 1628 in Basel)[1] was a Swiss-born physician, traveller and diarist, the son of the humanist Thomas Platter the Elder.

The foremost record of Platter's life is the manuscript journal he kept, written in German,[2] between around 1595 and 1600.[3] It details his life as a medical student in Montpellier and his later travels in France, Spain, Flanders, and England. The diary supplies detail on many aspects of late sixteenth-century European culture: medical education (including dissections), street and carnival life in Barcelona, European theatre, and the practicalities of the slave trade.[1]

Perhaps the most studied[4] section of Platter's diary is his account of a 1599 trip to London with his older half-brother, Felix Platter, including a visit on 21 September, "at about two o'clock", to the Globe Theatre, where Platter saw an early production of Julius Caesar. His account provides Shakespeare scholars with evidence for the dating of that play.[5]

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Transcription

Editions

  • Platter, Félix; Platter, Thomas (1892). Félix et Thomas Platter à Montpellier, 1552-1559, 1595-1599 : notes de voyage de deux étudiants balois publiées d'après les manuscrits originaux appartenant à la Bibliothèque de l'Université de Bâle (in French). Montpellier: Camille Coulet, libraire. OCLC 4175928.
  • Willioms, Clare, ed. (1937). Thomas Platter's Travels in England, 1599. London: Jonathan Cape.
  • Razzell, Peter, ed. (1995). The Journals of Two Travellers in Elizabethan and early Stuart England: Thomas Platter and Horatio Busino. London: Caliban. ISBN 185066014X.

References

  1. ^ a b Jennifer Speake, ed., Literature of Travel and Exploration, Taylor and Francis, 2003, pp. 967–8.
  2. ^ William Driver Howarth and Jan Clark, French Theatre in the Neo-classical Era, 1550-1789, Cambridge University Press, 1997 p. 45.
  3. ^ Universitätsbibliothek, Basel, MS A lambda V 7/8. (http://aleph.unibas.ch/F/?local_base=DSV05&con_lng=GER&func=find-b&find_code=SYS&request=000108438)
  4. ^ J. R. Mulryne and Margaret Shrewring, Shakespeare's Globe Rebuilt, Cambridge Press, 1997, p. 190; cited at http://www.wpi.edu/Academics/Depts/HUA/TT/Globe/app2.html
  5. ^ Marvin Spevack, Introduction to Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, New Cambridge Shakespeare (Cambridge University Press, 1988), pp. 3–4.)
This page was last edited on 30 March 2024, at 13:16
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