In 1577, with the encouragement of
Abraham Ortelius, Camden began his great work
Britannia, a topographical and historical survey of all of Great Britain and Ireland. His stated intention was to "restore antiquity to Britaine, and Britain to his antiquity". The first edition, written in
Latin, was published in 1586. It proved very popular, and ran through five further Latin editions, of 1587, 1590, 1594, 1600 and 1607, each greatly enlarged from its predecessor in both textual content and illustrations. The 1607 edition included for the first time a full set of English county maps, based on the surveys of
Christopher Saxton and
John Norden, and engraved by William Kip and
William Hole (who also engraved the fine frontispiece). The first
English-language edition, translated by
Philemon Holland, appeared in 1610, again with some additional content supplied by Camden.
Britannia is a county-by-county description of Great Britain and Ireland. It is a work of
chorography: a study that relates landscape, geography, antiquarianism, and history. Rather than write a history, Camden wanted to describe in detail the Great Britain of the present, and to show how the traces of the past could be discerned in the existing landscape. By this method, he produced the first coherent picture of
Roman Britain. He continued to collect materials and to revise and expand
Britannia throughout his life. He drew on the published and unpublished work of
John Leland and
William Lambarde, among others, and received the assistance of a large network of correspondents with similar interests. He also travelled throughout Great Britain to view documents, sites, and artefacts for himself: he is known to have visited East Anglia in 1578, Yorkshire and Lancashire in 1582, Devon in 1589, Wales in 1590, Salisbury, Wells and Oxford in 1596, and Carlisle and Hadrian's Wall in 1599. His fieldwork and firsthand research set new standards for the time. He even learned
Welsh and
Old English for the task: his tutor in Old English was
Laurence Nowell. in the funeral procession of Queen
Elizabeth I, 1603 In 1593 Camden became headmaster of
Westminster School. He held the post for four years, but left when he was appointed
Clarenceux King of Arms. By this time, largely because of the
Britannias reputation, he was a well-known and revered figure, and the appointment was meant to free him from the labour of teaching and to facilitate his research. The
College of Arms at that time was not only a centre of
genealogical and
heraldic study, but also a centre of antiquarian study. The appointment, however, roused the jealousy of
Ralph Brooke,
York Herald, who, in retaliation, published an attack on
Britannia, charging Camden with inaccuracy and plagiarism. Camden successfully defended himself against the charges in subsequent editions of the work.
Britannia was recognised as an important work of Renaissance scholarship, not only in England, but across the European "
Republic of Letters". Camden considered having the 1586
Britannia printed in the
Low Countries, and although that did not happen, the third edition of 1590, in addition to its London printing, was also published the same year in
Frankfurt, and reprinted there in 1616. In 1612 parts were condemned by the
Spanish Inquisition. An abridgement was published in Amsterdam in 1617 and reprinted in 1639; and versions of the text were also included in
Joan Blaeu's
Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (published in Amsterdam in 1645) and in
Jan Janssonius's
Novus Atlas (again published in Amsterdam, in 1646). ==
Annales ==