Sir Philip Sidney was born at Penshurst Place,
Kent, eldest son of Sir Henry Sidney. He entered Shrewsbury School in
1564 on the same day as Fulke Greville, his friend and biographer. After
attending Christ Church, Oxford
(1568-72), he travelled in Europe where for three years he perfected his
knowledge of Latin, French and Italian. In 1577, aged twenty-two, he
was sent as ambassador to the German Emperor and the Prince of Orange.
His strong Protestant sympathies made him advise Elizabeth I in a
private letter (1579) against marrying the Duke of Anjou, Roman Catholic
heir to the French throne. He was knighted in 1583 and became Member of
Parliament for Kent in 1581 and 1584-85. In 1585 he was appointed joint
master of the ordnance, the office in charge of the country's military
supplies. A patron of scholars, his wide range of interests accounted
for the dedication to him of over forty works of various disciplines.
The best-known poet to enjoy his patronage was Spenser who dedicated his
Shepherd's Calendar to him. Avoiding commercialism, he did not publish
his works in his lifetime. He was fighting against the Spaniards in the
Netherlands when he received a wound which eventually killed him at the
age of thirty-two.
All England mourned this courtier and statesman who had embodied the Elizabethan ideal of virtue.
All England mourned this courtier and statesman who had embodied the Elizabethan ideal of virtue.
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