CLARKE, Sampson ‹ LBT 07010 ›: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{PersonBadges||stationers=1|occupations=1|married=1|apprentices=1}} <!-- 07010 LBT07010 7010 Sampson Simpson Clargo CLARK Clarke Clarkee Clarkey Clarky CLERK CLERK(E) CLERKE-->{{#set: Sex=M | LBTNum=7010 | birth date= | death date= }}{{#set: firstname=Sampson | lastname=CLARKE }}{{FloruitTimeLine|start=1583|end=1598}} __TOC__ <span id="flline">''<span title="Grade of floruit confidence (A to E)">floruit (A)</span>'' '' 1583'' - '' 1598 ''..." |
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== Livery Companies == | == Livery Companies == | ||
Revision as of 07:29, 8 March 2026
floruit (A) 1583 - 1598 ; Male, married
Introduction
Sampson Clarke was a stationer and bookseller active in London during the late sixteenth century, with documented addresses at the Guildhall (1584), the Royal Exchange (1589), and in the parish of St Sepulchre (1589). He was freed of the Stationers' Company on March 26, 1583, and admitted to the livery on July 1, 1598. Clarke published notable works including Thomas Lodge's "An Alarm against Usurers" (1583) and "The First and Second Part of the troublesome Raigne of King John of England" (1591), and he took on at least five apprentices during his career.
Family Relationships
| LBTNumber | Name | Relationship | Occupation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6657 | JACKSON, Ellen (mar. CLARKE) ‹ LBT 06657 › | spouse |
Livery Companies
| Company | Source |
|---|---|
| Stationers' Company |
Occupations (2)
| Occupation | Comment |
|---|---|
| Stationer | Chester, L.M. (1887), vol.1 |
| Bookseller | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910) |
Had Apprentice(s): (5)
| Name | Premium | Paid By | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| DERBYSHIRE, Thomas ‹ LBT 07142 › | |||
| GEORGE, Thomas ‹ LBT 07143 › | |||
| JACKSON, William ‹ LBT 07144 › | |||
| RUDKIN, Robert ‹ LBT 07145 › | |||
| SNOWE, Henrie ‹ LBT 07146 › |
Addresses (3)
| Date | Address | Trade at Addr | Source | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1584, (1584) | Guildhall | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910); STC. vol.3, (1991) | - by | |
| 1589, (1589) | Royal Exchange | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910); STC. vol.3, (1991) | - behind the --- | |
| 1589-03-08 | St Sepulchre | Chester, L.M. (1887), vol.1 | - Parish of |
Events (7)
| Date | Event type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 26 Mar 1583 | Freed - | No record of binding |
| 24 Jun 1587 | Appr - Binding | Robert Rudkin (LBT/07145) |
| 8 Mar 1589 | Marriage Licence | - to Ellen Jackson (LBT/06657) |
| 24 Jun 1590 | Appr - Binding | Henrie Snowe (LBT/07146) |
| 25 Dec 1593 | Appr - Binding | Thomas Derbyeshire (LBT/07142) |
| 25 Mar 1596 | Appr - Binding | Thomas George(LBT/07143) |
| 01 Jul 1598 | Cloathed |
Sources and References
| Original Sources | Comments |
|---|---|
| St.Co. Archive - Binding and Freedom records - extracted by Prof. J.A. Lavin |
SOURCES & TRANSCRIPTIONS
Transcriptions
S.T.C., (1991), vol.3, p.42
McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910), p.70
CLARKE (SAMPSON), bookseller in London, 1583-98; (1) By the Guildhall, 1583; (2) Behind the Royal Exchange, 1589-91. This Stationer was made free of the Company on March 26th, 1583, by George Buck { BUCK, George ‹ LBT 07017 › } and William Broome { BROOME, William ( - 1591) ‹ LBT 08226 › } [Arber, ii. 687). His first book entry was made on November 4th, 1583, and related to Thomas Lodge's Tryed experiences of worldlie abuses (i.e., An Alarm against Usurers) [Arber, ii. 428]. He also dealt in ballads. Sampson Clarke was one of tbe defendants in the suit brought in 1585 by the assigns of Richard Day { DAY, Richard (1552 - ) ‹ LBT 07331 › } against certain stationers for unlawfully printing and selling The A B C and Litell Catechism [Arber, ii. 791, 792). He was admitted to the livery on July 1st, 1598 [Arber, ii. 873]. Amongst his publications in 1591 was the play entitled The First and Second Part of the troublesome Raigne of King John of England, which a later publisher ascribed to Shakespeare.