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  1. John Lyly. Født. 1554, Kent, England. Død. 30. november 1606, London. Levetid - kommentar. Fødselsdato ukendt, fødselsår 1553 eller 1554. John Lyly var en engelsk forfatter. Lyly bidrog som skuespilforfatter og parlamentsmedlem på mange måder til den engelske renæssances livlige og konfliktfyldte kulturelle klima.

  2. Author: John Lyly. Written: c. 1590. Earliest Extant Edition: 1592. Genre: Myth. Language Difficulty Rating: 5 (moderate difficulty). Setting: Ancient Phrygia in Asia Minor. The famous story of King Midas was told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses, and, like all of the myths contained in his collection, was well known to educated Englishmen.

  3. Collection: Oxford Handbooks Online. Act 3, scene 3 of Endymion, one of a series of exquisitely crafted comedies written by John Lyly for performance at court, and presented before the Queen at Candlemas in 1588, begins with a joke that would be entirely lost on the vast majority of twenty-first-century spectators: tophas.

  4. John Lyly (Lilly ou Lylie) (v. 1553 – novembre 1606 ) est un écrivain et dramaturge anglais , devenu favori de la Cour. Il est le créateur d'un style, l' euphuisme , qui se rapproche du style précieux français.

  5. 20 de ene. de 2005 · The complete works of John Lyly by Lyly, John, 1554?-1606; Bond, R. Warwick (Richard Warwick), 1857-1943. Publication date 1902 Usage Public Domain Topics

  6. Title: Campaspe. Author: John Lyly.Written: c. 1580-1. First Published: 1584. Genre: Romantic Comedy, Pseudo-Historical. Style: Prose. Language Difficulty Rating: 6 (moderate). Setting: Athens, Ancient Greece, 335 B.C. Campaspe may be the first play John Lyly wrote after the success of his two Euphues novels, and as a result, its language is ...

  7. 5 de dic. de 2012 · John Lyly (c. 1554–1606) followed his grandfather to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he stayed an extra two years hoping for a teaching post there or for preferment under William Cecil, Lord Burghley. Instead, Burghley got him a position as secretary to his son-in-law, Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford. Humanism taught Lyly to love the classics.