Daily entries from the 17th century London diary
If you would like to write a summary for this topic, email phil [at] gyford [dot] com
DIARY of Ralph Josselin,
“Ralph Josselin was vicar of Earls Colne, Essex, from 1641 until his death in 1683. The Diary which he kept during this period is one of the richest seventeenth century sources for English social history.”
About the diary:
http://linux02.lib.cam.ac.uk/earlscolne//reference/diary.htm
Text of the diary:
http://linux02.lib.cam.ac.uk/earlscolne//diary/index.htm#70000005
The diary of Robert Hooke
I enjoyed “Robert Hooke: Victim of Genius” on BBC2 (Monday 12 January 2004), particularly because of what was said about Hooke’s diary, roughly contemporary to Sam’s (1672 to 1680). Its contents seems to have been “unusually” frank…
The text of the diary is - as far as I know - not on the web (nor at Gutenberg) in its entirity, but fragments from it can br found on:
http://freespace.virgin.net/ric.martin/vectis/hookeweb/diary.htm
a list of primary sources [diaries] of 1600’s http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/docs/bp/Diaries.html
eg diary john millward [1666 68]
Contemporary diaries that are sometimes referred to in annotations
The Rev. Ralph Josselin’s diary:
http://linux02.lib.cam.ac.uk/earlscolne//diary/index.htm#70000005
John Evelyn’s diary:
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/LeftBank/1914/ed_main.html
Lady Fanshawe’s memoirs:
http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/mmrsf10.txt
Robert Hooke’s diary:
http://freespace.virgin.net/ric.martin/vectis/hookeweb/diary.htm
Contemporary diaries.
A Journal that may be of great interest to some of the annotators is mentioned below, but I do not think it is available on the internet. If anybody has a copy of the book it would be interesting to hear from them.
Barlow’s Journal of his Life at Sea in King’s Ships, East & West Indiamen & Other Merchantmen from 1659-1703 edited by Basil Lubbock.
on line John Evelyn: it was moved from previous references: [too many hits?]
The Diary of John Evelyn
Parts of this material including footnotes, the dating and other aspects
remain under copyright, and permission to exhibit for non-commercial
purposes has been granted by the publishers and historian Guy de la B
A Critical Edition of John Beadle’s A Journall or Diary of a Thankfull Christian [1656]
(Renaissance Imagination)
by John Beadle, Germaine Fry Murray (Editor)
“Synopsis: Beadle’s book is essentially a how-to manual about how to write a spiritual diary; moreover, it is the only one of its kind written in seventeenth-century England. Modern scholars often mention its influence and importance in understanding the “journaling” impulse among the Puritans of the 16th and 17th centuries. This is the first modern systematic examination or critical edition of the work. …”
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0815315678/
Garland Publishing (March 1, 1996)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0815315678/
Garland Science, December 1996
A most complete list of diaries of the 1600’s is the Diary Research Website
…”a guide to historical and literary sources, in the forms of Diaries and Journals, from all periods and parts of the world, which have been printed in English; its principal content is a searchable version of part of the second edition of An Annotated Bibliography of Diaries Printed in English, compiled by Christopher Handley and published in hardback and electronic formats by Hanover Press.”
Clarendon
Biography of the same by Sir Henry Craik, around 1900, actually more like a summary of Clarendon’s own memoires:
Diary of Thomas Burton esq, volume 1 - July 1653 - April 1657
John Towill Rutt (editor) (1828)
Preface http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=36719&strquery=diary
Illustrated Journeys of Celia Fiennes, 1685-1712
Three hundred years ago, a remarkable woman travelled alone through every county in England. Today, her journal provides us with a glimpse of 17th-century England.
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/prm/blceliafiennes1.htm
John Evelyn’s Diary
The earlier links don’t seem to exist any more. Evelyn’s diary can be read online on:
http://nils.lib.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2000.01.0022
The page-by-page system is a nuisance though. To make it easier for the annotators, I give here the link to the page for December 1662:
http://nils.lib.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2000.01.0022;query=page%3D%23428;layout=;loc=
John Evelyn’s Diary is available for download via FTP -
and so are other works by Evelyn
at this site at the Pennsylvania State University
ftp://ftp.cac.psu.edu/pub/humanities/John_Evelyn/#Evelyn
(copy and paste this site in your browser)
John Evelyn’s Diary is available for download — re Terry
It should be noted that the texts are in .DIA format, unknown to me, and they won’t open in Word.
mine be in*.wp by coral wordperfect. a 30 trial be availabe to print your copy 30 pages for the fug.
by using trial WP, u then save as , the result in your own format mine be *.txt
John Evelyn’s Diary available for download opened for me in Word 2000.
This appears to be as good a place as any to post this.
I recently read,
“Pepys’s Later Diaries.”
Edited C.S. Knighton
Published Sutton Publishing.
www.suttonpublishing.com.uk
Though not as entertaining as the 1660-69 diaries they help to complete the picture.
The following is the blurb from the dustcover of the book:-
“THE Diary that Samuel Pepys kept from 1660 to 1669 is one of the great texts of English literature. Although he never kept a comparable record again, Pepys did resume the diary habit at various key moments in his distinguished career. These later writings have not been collected together in print before; three are now published for the first time from manuscripts in Pepys’s Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge. The set is completed with versions of two journals previously printed by the Navy Records Society, and newly edited for a wider audience.
Pepys’s Later Diaries begins where the great personal Diary left off, with Pepys as the rising man in the Royal Navy’s bureaucracy. The Brooke House Journal shows him defending his department at a parliamentary enquiry after the Second Dutch War. Pepys exchanges banter with Charles II, and argues his opponents into the ground. The next two diaries reflect Pepys’s troubles during the Popish Plot. The King’s Bench Journal is a relatively formal record of Pepys’s attempts to have his case brought to trial. At the same time he was negotiating privately with his accusers, as chronicled in Proceedings with James and Harris. Even here Pepys mixes serious business with his enthusiasms for food and drink, theatre and female company. In the Tangier Journal, which recounts the winding-up of England’s first African colony, the characteristics of the great Diary are most fully revived. Finally, in the Diary of the Special Commission, Pepys is back at the Admiralty giving the fleet and the naval administration a much-needed makeover.
Together these five texts enlarge and enhance our view of Pepys in public and private and form a delightful coda to the original Diary.”
The Navy Records Society publishes original documents on naval history, including the original texts of two of the Pepys diaries presented here.
Membership details are available on http:/www.navyrecordssociety.com
Diaries of the Seventeenth Century, Dr Mark Knights
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/civil_war_revolution/diaries_01.shtml
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