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Camping Accommodation Suffolk
Think of the great Elizabethan seafarers and explorers - Raleigh,
Drake, Frobisher and the rest - and the name of the one-time
Suffolk parson, Richard Hakluyt, might not come to mind. But
Hakluyt was their contemporary and chronicler; indeed he was
perhaps the first geographer in the modern sense of the word.
So detailed were his accounts of expeditions to foreign lands
drawn from those that made them that he became the essential
consultant for new explorers.
Alongside his research, he pursued his church career and the two sometimes
overlapped, particularly in the gathering of intelligence.
In 1583, after a spell as prebendary in Bristol, he became
chaplain to the English Ambassador in Paris which, in the
absence of an English diplomatic presence in Spain, was the
next best listening post on Spanish activity. His Suffolk
connection began in 1590 when he was appointed rector of Wetheringsett
and Blockford, a parish with 200 communicants, in what seemed
a stingy establishment reward for a successful spy and a scholar.
He retained the post when in 1603, he became prebendary at
Westminster Abbey - and archdeacon the following year - through
to his death in 1616 at Gedney in Lincolnshire by which time
he was also vicar there. His Wetheringsett duties during his
absences were probably left to a curate - he seems to have
kept one, a certain Antonie Harvey, a holder of that office,
having been buried there in 1608.
Barents,
the Dutchman, in search of the north-east passage in 1595-96 abandoned
a winter camp on the Arctic island of Novaya Zemlaya. It was rediscovered
on 17th August 1875 with a Dutch manuscript of an English Voyage of
1580 provided by Hakluyt with 56 pages of clear handwriting still
surviving. No Hakluyt place names now feature on the world map but
there is a Hakluyt Society (01986 788359) devoted to his works and
their analysis. The man himself lies in an unmarked grave in Westminster
Abbey.