's
De legibus & consuetudinibus Angliæ (
The Laws and Customs of England, 1st ed., 1569) which was one of Tottel's publications, as is indicated by the statement "
Apud Richardum Tottellum". The phrase
Cum priuilegio ("With privilege") at the bottom of the page refers to Tottel's exclusive patent to publish books on the
common law. Tottel's career leapt forward when he was granted a
patent that would allow him to print all authorized books dealing with common law. This patent was originally granted in April 1553 and was to last seven years. In 1556, the patent was renewed for another seven years and, in 1559, Tottel's patent was granted to him for life. Tottel's publishing played a large role in the founding of the
Worshipful Company of Stationers. Upon receiving its
royal charter in 1557, the Stationers' Company of London named him as the sixty-seventh member of their charter out of ninety-four. Tottel would later rise in the ranks of the Stationers' Company including the title of warden, upper warden, and master from 1578 to 1584. Due to Tottel's failing health he was continually absent to his duties within the company and was excluded from their ranks. He was still fairly loved and admired within the company and at liberty to attend their meetings whenever he was in the area. Tottel's published works mainly include law documents as he was the sole publisher from 1553 until he died. However, he did publish a variety of other books ranging from literary works to books on animal husbandry. The book that gained him a lasting place in history is his publication and editing of
Songes and Sonettes, also known as ''
Tottel's Miscellany''. The following is an incomplete list of works published by Tottel: •
William Baldwin –
A Treatise of Morall Phylosophye Contaynyng the Sayinges of the Wise (1547) •
Thomas More –
A Dialogue of Comfort against Tribulation (1553) •
John Lydgate –
Fall of Princes (1554) •
Stephen Hawes –
Pastime of Pleasure (1555) • Translation of
Cicero's
De Officiis by
Nicholas Grimald (1556) • Translations of the second and fourth books of
Virgil's
Aeneid by
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1557) • Thomas More –
Works (1557) •
Thomas Tusser –
A Hundreth Good Points of Husbandry (1557) • ''
Tottel's Miscellany'' • First edition (1557), second edition (31 July 1557), third edition (1558), fourth edition (1565), fifth edition (1567), and sixth edition (1574) •
Arthur Brooke –
The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet (1562) •
William Painter (author) –
The Palace of Pleasure (1566–67) •
James Dyer –
Collection of Cases (1586) ==Death and legacy==