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  1. Chapter 5 : Act IV: Murder. em> Scene One: Sudden Death. So busy had been all concerned that summer of 1613, that the death of Sir Thomas Overbury in the Tower on 15th September had gone more or less unnoticed. Overbury had been treated unusually harshly in the Tower. Unlike most prisoners, he had not been permitted to have visitors or to write ...

  2. Sir Thomas Overbury was born in 1581 he was an English poet and essayist, and the victim of one of the most sensational crimes in English history. He was the son of Nicholas Overbury, of Bourton-on-the-Hill, and was born at Compton Scorpion, near Ilmington in Warwickshire.

  3. [Sir Thomas Overbury (1581–1613) was the son of Nicholas Overbury, a squire in Gloucestershire. After three years at Queen’s College, Oxford, where he took the degree of B.A., he travelled for some time on the Continent. His introduction to the Court was doubtless due to Carr, who was, till close upon Overbury’s death, his most intimate ...

  4. Sir Thomas Overbury (June 18, 1581 - September 15, 1613) was an English poet and essayist, and the victim of 1 of the most sensational crimes in English history.[1] Overbury was educated at Oxford, became the friend of Carr (afterwards Earl of Rochester and Somerset), and fell a victim to a court intrigue connected with the proposed marriage of Rochester and Lady Essex, being poisoned in the ...

  5. celm.folger.edu › introductions › OverburySirThomasCELM: Sir Thomas Overbury

    Introduction. The courtier Sir Thomas Overbury is best remembered for the circumstances of his death in 1613, one of the greatest scandals of the Jacobean period, for which the King's erstwhile favourite Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset, and his wife Frances Howard stood trial for murder in 1615, although only their supposed accomplices were ...

  6. www.eudaemonist.com › biblion › overburyOverbury’s Wife

    The first dated mention of Sir Thomas Overbury’s poem ‘A Wife’ (also referred to as ‘The Wife’) is in December 1613, when it was entered at the Stationers’ Registers; the poem was first published, with no additional material, in 1614. By 1664, it had gone through eighteen editions – ten in the years before 1618 alone.

  7. In 1613 Thomas Overbury, the close friend and principal adviser of King James I's favorite, Robert Carr, was arrested for refusing to undertake a diplomatic mission. In what became a major scandal, Overbury was later poisoned to death in the Tower of London and the King's favorite was subsequently tried and convicted of complicity in the murder. The "Overbury affair" contributed to the erosion ...