Walter Raleigh
Alternatively Professor Walter Raleigh was a scholar and author circa 1900.
Sir Walter Raleigh (
1554 -
October 29,
1618) is famed as a writer, poet, spy, and explorer.
N.B.: Many alternate spellings of his surname exist, including
Rawley,
Ralegh, and
Rawleigh; although "Raleigh" appears most commonly today, he himself never used that spelling, preferring "Ralegh". The
city of
Raleigh,
North Carolina takes its name from Sir Walter.

Walter Raleigh was born at Hayes Barton, which lies on the edge of Woodbury Common close to the village of East Budleigh, in
Devon,
England. He was the half brother of Sir
Humphrey Gilbert and Adrian Gilbert. Raleigh's family had a fundamentally
Protestant religious orientation and experienced a number of near escapes during the reign of the Catholic queen
Mary I of England (1553 - 1558). During childhood, Raleigh developed a hatred of
Catholicism, and proved quick to express it after the Protestant Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558.
By
1581, after a number of military and naval engagements in
France,
Ireland and elsewhere, he had become established as a courtier and as Elizabeth's favourite. The story that he once took off an expensive
cloak and threw it over a mud puddle for Queen Elizabeth to walk across illustrates Raleigh's flamboyant manner -- the event probably never happened, but everyone had come to expect that sort of thing from Raleigh, and Elizabeth always favored that kind of showmanship.
Raleigh's scheme for colonisation in "
Virginia" in
North America (1585 onwards) ended in failure at Roanoke (
circa 1590).
His position of influence was greatly extended as he became one of Elizabeth's spymasters, along with
Francis Walsingham, and was largely responsible for the uncovering of the
Babington plot (1586), a Catholic plot to dethrone Elizabeth and replace her with
Mary, Queen of Scots; as a result of this Elizabeth granted Raleigh a 40,000 acre (160 km²) estate in
Ireland. Mary became implicated in the Babington conspiracy and subsequently suffered execution (1587).
Raleigh was Governor of
Jersey 1600-
1603, responsible for modernising the defences of the island. He named the new fortress protecting the approaches to St. Helier
Fort Isabella Bellissima, known thereafter in English as Elizabeth Castle.
Royal favor did not last, however. On
November 17,
1603, after Elizabeth's death, Raleigh went on trial for
treason in the converted Great hall of Winchester Castle, and languished in prison until 1616.
After his second expedition to the
Orinoco in search of
Eldorado Raleigh was beheaded for allegedly conspiring against
James I of England.

The film classic of the relationships between Queen Elizabeth, Raleigh, and his wife is 1955's
The Virgin Queen starring
Bette Davis,
Richard Todd, and
Joan Collins.
External link
Raleigh, Walter\n\n\n