Robert Ware

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Robert_Ware an entity of type: Thing

Robert Ware, né le 23 octobre 1639, et mort le 16 avril 1697, est un historien et faussaire de documents historiques, qu'il applique aux polémiques protestantes. rdf:langString
Robert Ware (23 October 1639 – 7 April 1697) was a historian and forger of historical documents, which he applied to Protestant polemics. Ware was born in Dublin, the son of historian Sir James Ware and his wife Elizabeth Newman. Nothing is known of his education, and he was likely educated by his father in London. On his father's death in 1666, he inherited a large collection of historical manuscripts, which he eventually sold to Henry Hyde, 2nd Earl of Clarendon in 1686. While the manuscripts were in his possession, he added a large number of fabricated documents to them. This put him at odds with Roman Catholic interests in Ireland, and he went into exile in England during the reign of King James II of England. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Robert Ware
rdf:langString Robert Ware
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rdf:langString Robert Ware, né le 23 octobre 1639, et mort le 16 avril 1697, est un historien et faussaire de documents historiques, qu'il applique aux polémiques protestantes.
rdf:langString Robert Ware (23 October 1639 – 7 April 1697) was a historian and forger of historical documents, which he applied to Protestant polemics. Ware was born in Dublin, the son of historian Sir James Ware and his wife Elizabeth Newman. Nothing is known of his education, and he was likely educated by his father in London. On his father's death in 1666, he inherited a large collection of historical manuscripts, which he eventually sold to Henry Hyde, 2nd Earl of Clarendon in 1686. While the manuscripts were in his possession, he added a large number of fabricated documents to them. This put him at odds with Roman Catholic interests in Ireland, and he went into exile in England during the reign of King James II of England. On 24 December 1666, Robert married Elizabeth, the daughter of his cousin Sir Henry Piers, 1st Baronet and Mary Jones. He died in 1697 (1696 old style), survived by one son. Ware's invented documents misled historians of the Protestant Reformation for centuries afterwards; Thomas Edward Bridgett finally exposed him in 1890, but it was not until the 20th century that historians were able to sort out the implications of his findings.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3100

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