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{{short description|English politician and writer}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2012}}▼
{{Infobox person
| honorific_prefix = [[Sir]]
| name = Thomas Elyot
| image = Sir Thomas Elyot by Hans Holbein the Younger.jpg
| birth_date = c. 1496
| death_date = 26 March {{death year and age|1546|1496}}
| occupation = Author<br>Diplomat
| spouse = [[Margaret à Barrow]]
| mother = Alice De la Mare
| father = [[Richard Elyot]]
}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2012}}
[[File:Margaret, Lady Elyot by Hans Holbein the Younger.jpg|thumb|
'''Sir Thomas Elyot''' (c.
▲[[File:Sir Thomas Elyot by Hans Holbein the Younger.jpg|thumb|250px|''Portrait of Sir Thomas Elyot'', drawn by [[Hans Holbein the Younger|Holbein]] ]]
▲[[File:Margaret, Lady Elyot by Hans Holbein the Younger.jpg|thumb|250px|''Portrait of [[Margaret à Barrow|Margaret, Lady Elyot]]'']]
▲'''Sir Thomas Elyot''' (c. 1490 – 26 March 1546) was an [[England|English]] [[diplomat]] and scholar.
==Early life==
Thomas was the child of Sir [[Richard Elyot]]'s first marriage with Alice De la Mare, but neither the date nor place of his birth is accurately known. Alice's first husband Thomas Dabridgecourt had died 10 Oct 1495 so this next marriage has to follow that date.
[[Anthony Wood (antiquary)|Anthony Wood]] claimed him as an alumnus of [[St Mary Hall, Oxford]], while [[Charles Henry Cooper|C. H. Cooper]] in the ''Athenae Cantabrigienses'' put in a claim for [[Jesus College, Cambridge]].<ref>Cooper is followed by {{acad|id=ELT507T|name=Elyot, Thomas}}</ref> Elyot himself says in the preface to his ''Dictionary'' that he was educated under the paternal roof, and was from the age of twelve his own tutor. He supplies, in the introduction to his '' ==Career==
In 1511 he accompanied his father on the western circuit as clerk to the [[assize]], and he held this position until 1528. In addition to his father's lands in [[Wiltshire]] and [[Oxfordshire]] he inherited in 1523 the Cambridge estates of his cousin, Thomas Fynderne. His title was disputed, but [[Cardinal Wolsey]] decided in his favour, and also made him clerk of the [[Privy Council of the United Kingdom|Privy Council]]. Elyot, in a letter addressed to [[Thomas Cromwell]], says that he never received the emoluments of this office, while the empty honour of [[knight]]hood conferred on him when he was displaced in 1530 merely put him to further expense. In that year he sat on the commission appointed to inquire into the [[Cambridgeshire estates]] of his former patron, Wolsey. He was appointed [[High Sheriff of Oxfordshire]] and [[High Sheriff of Berkshire|Berkshire]] in 1527.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
In 1531 he received instructions to proceed to the court of [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor]], to try to persuade him to take a more favourable view of Henry's proposed divorce from [[Catherine of Aragon]], the emperor's aunt. With this was combined another commission, on which one of the king's agents, [[Stephen Vaughan (merchant)|Stephen Vaughan]], was already engaged. He was, if possible, to apprehend [[William Tyndale]]. Elyot was probably suspected, like Vaughan, of lukewarmness in carrying out the king's wishes, but was nevertheless blamed by [[Protestant]] writers. As ambassador Elyot had been involved in ruinous expense, and on his return he wrote unsuccessfully to Cromwell begging to be excused, on the grounds of his poverty, from serving as [[High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire]] for 1532.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
He was one of the commissioners in the inquiry instituted by Cromwell prior to the suppression of the [[monastery|monasteries]] but he did not obtain any share of the spoils. There is little doubt that his known friendship for More militated against his chances of success, for in a letter addressed to Cromwell he admitted his friendship for More, but protested that he rated higher his duty to the king. [[William Roper (biographer)|William Roper]], in his ''Life of More'', says that Elyot was on a second embassy to Charles V in the winter of
From 1539 to 1542 he represented the borough of [[Cambridge (UK Parliament constituency)|Cambridge]] in [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|parliament]]. He had purchased from Cromwell the manor of Carleton in Cambridgeshire, where he died.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
==Private life==
He married [[Margaret à Barrow]], described as a student in the "school" of [[Thomas More|Sir Thomas More]].<ref>Stapleton, ''Vita Thomae Mori'', p. 59, ed. 1558</ref>
==Scholarship==
[[File:The boke named the Gouernour.jpg|thumb|The first page of ''The boke named the Gouervnour, deuysed by syr Thomas Elyot knight'', from a 1537 printing]]
Elyot received little reward for his services to the state, but his scholarship and his books were held in high esteem by his contemporaries.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
Elyot was a supporter of the humanists' ideas concerning the education of women; writing in support of learned women, he published the ''Defence of Good Women''. In this writing he supported Thomas More and other humanist authors' ideals of educated wives who would be able to provide intellectual companionship for their husbands and educated moral training for their children.{{Citation needed|date=September 2019}}
In 1531 he produced ''[[The Book of the Governor|The Boke named the Governour]]'', dedicated to [[Henry VIII
As a prose writer, Elyot enriched the [[English language]] with many new words. In 1536 he published ''The
His ''Image of Governance, compiled of the Actes and Sentences notable of the most noble Emperor [[Alexander Severus]]'' (1540) professed to be a translation from a Greek [[manuscript]] of the emperor's secretary Encolpius (or [[Eucolpius]], as Elyot calls him), which had been lent him by a gentleman of Naples, called Pudericus, who asked to have it back before the translation was complete. In these circumstances Elyot, as he asserts in his preface, supplied the other maxims from different sources.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
He was violently attacked by [[Humphrey Hody]] and later by [[William Wotton]] for putting forward a pseudo-translation but [[Henry Herbert Stephen Croft]] (1842–1923) later discovered that there was a Neapolitan gentleman at that time bearing the name of Poderico, or, Latinized, Pudericus, with whom Elyot may well have been acquainted. [[Roger Ascham]] mentions his ''De rebus memorabilibus Angliae'' and [[William Webbe]] quotes a few lines of a lost translation of the ''[[Ars
==Select list of Elyot's translations==
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*''Rules of a Christian Life'' (1534), from [[Pico Mirandola|Pico della Mirandola]]
*''The Education or Bringing up of Children'' (c. 1535), from [[Plutarch]]
*''Howe one may
He also wrote:
*''[[The Book of the Governor|The Boke named the Governour]]'' (1531)
*''The Knowledge which maketh a Wise Man and Pasquyll the Playne'' (1533)
*''The Bankette of Sapience'' (1534), a collection of moral sayings
*''The
*''The Dictionary of syr Thomas Eliot knyght'' (1538). Enlarged second edition, 1542; reprinted 1545
*''The Defence of Good Women'' (1540), a eulogy of [[Anne of Cleves]], disguised as a biography of [[Queen Zenobia of Palmyra]].<ref>
*''Preservative agaynste Deth'' (1545), which contains many quotations from the [[Church Fathers]]
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{{Authority control}}
{{EB1911 article with no significant updates}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Elyot, Thomas}}
[[Category:1490s births]]
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