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Thomas Overbury (about 1485-1544, wife Jone Porter)
Yeoman
Thomas Overbury II (1518-1580, wife Elizabeth
Rutter)
Nicholas Overbury (1547-1643,
wife Mary
Palmer)
Sir
Thomas Overbury (1581 died 1613 in Tower of
London)
Giles Overbury (1603-1653, wife Ann
Shurley)
Nicholas Overbey (1628-1654 in
Virginia)
Nicholas "Ye Younger" Overbey
II
Ludwell
Overbey
Zachariah
Overby
Peter
Overby
Henderson
Overby
Robert Ajax
Overby
Phoebe Overby
Wiggs
Bert R. Wiggs,
Sr.
Bert R. Wiggs,
Jr.
Bert R. Wiggs, III
(Randy)
Carl H.
Wiggs
Carl H. Wiggs, Jr. (Chip)
| 1581–1613, English author and courtier. He was a friend and adviser to Robert Carr, an Oxford acquaintance. The two quarreled violently when Overbury disapproved of Carr’s marriage to Frances Howard, divorced wife of the earl of Essex. Overbury’s hostility was so marked that the Howard family brought pressure to bear, and James I had Overbury imprisoned in the Tower, where he was slowly poisoned. Carr and Frances Howard were convicted of his murder, but their lives were spared by the king. Overbury was a notable writer of brief informal essays describing a type or an individual. His best-known sketch in verse, A Wife (1614), outlines his conception of the ideal wife. |
| Overbury, Sir Thomas |
| (baptized
June 18, 1581, Compton Scorpion, Warwickshire, Eng.--d. Sept. 15, 1613, London),
English poet and essayist, victim of an infamous intrigue at the court of James
I. His poem A Wife, which pictured the virtues that a young man should
demand of a woman, played a large role in the events that precipitated his
murder.
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| Overbury was educated at Oxford and entered the Middle Temple, London, in 1598. Having traveled in the Low Countries, in 1606 he became secretary and close adviser to Robert Carr, the king's favourite who was to become earl of Somerset. Overbury was knighted in 1608, and Carr became Viscount Rochester in 1611. |
| In 1611 Rochester became enamoured of Frances Howard, wife of the Earl of Essex. Lady Essex soon secured a divorce from her husband with the intention of marrying Rochester. Overbury feared that Rochester's prospective marriage would reduce his own influence over Rochester, however, and he tried strongly to dissuade the latter from marrying her. Overbury also circulated manuscript copies of A Wife at court, where the poem was interpreted as an indirect attack on Lady Essex. This incurred the displeasure of the king and enabled Lady Essex' powerful relatives to have Overbury imprisoned in the Tower. Rochester acceded to Overbury's imprisonment only until he could marry Lady Essex, but she herself was evidently determined to have Overbury murdered there. She secretly arranged to have him slowly poisoned to death, which he was. |
| Three months after Overbury died, Rochester, now Earl of Somerset, married
Lady Essex. Two years passed before public suspicions were aroused over what had
taken place, but then investigations were undertaken and the participants in
Overbury's murder were put on trial. Four accomplices in the murder were
convicted and executed; the Earl and Countess of Somerset were also convicted
but were pardoned by the king.
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| Overbury's A Wife was published in 1614 and went through several
editions within a year because of the publicity aroused by Overbury's
victimization. Its real literary value lies in the Characters, ultimately
82, that were added to the second and subsequent editions. These prose portraits
of Jacobean types, drawn with wit and satire, give a vivid picture of
contemporary society and are important as a step in the development of the
essay.
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