Born in Dublin, Bathe lived at
Drumcondra Castle,
County Dublin, a member of a leading
Anglo-Irish family. He was the eldest surviving son of
John Bathe,
Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland, and his first wife Eleanor Preston, daughter of Jenico Preston, 3rd
Viscount Gormanston and Lady Catherine Fitzgerald; his paternal grandfather was
James Bathe,
Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, whose second wife, William's grandmother, was Eleanor Burnell of Balgriffin His brother
John Bathe was an Irish representative at the Royal Court in
Madrid in the early 1600s. When William's father died in 1586 the family were among the biggest landowners in Dublin, although their wealth and influence notably declined in the next generation. Bathe was trained as a musician and linguist at
Oxford, where he wrote
A Briefe Introductione to the True Art of Musicke (1584), which was revised as
A Briefe Introduction to the Skill of Song (c.1596) – the first printed treatise on music in the English language. Following a long-standing family tradition, he also studied law at the
Inns of Court in London. For a time he enjoyed the favor of Queen
Elizabeth I, to whom he presented a
harp of his own design. The Queen made him a number of grants of land, thus adding further to the extensive Bathe holdings: but royal favour ceased after 1598, when Elizabeth discovered that William had been ordained a priest. The decision of a third Bathe brother, Luke, to become a priest did nothing to restore the family to favor (under the name Father Edward, Luke became a prominent member of the
Capuchin order). Apart from the religious issue, the close friendship between
Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone and
Sir William Warren, who married William's widowed stepmother Jenet Finglas, raised serious questions about the family's loyalty to the English Crown during O'Neill's rebellion, popularly known as the
Nine Years War. William is not known to have visited Ireland after 1601. William Bathe taught languages in Europe and wrote one of the world's first language teaching texts, (The Door of Tongues, 1611), a juxtaposition of phrases in Latin and Spanish. It proved so popular that within twenty years it had been translated into nine languages. The
Moravian educator
Comenius based his work on this text. For a period of time Bathe was rector of the
Irish College at Salamanca. He should not be confused with his cousin Sir
William Bathe of
Athcarne Castle (died 1597), who was a judge of the Irish
Court of Common Pleas. ==References==