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John Leland (antiquary)
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==Itineraries, c. 1538–43== Even after the [[Dissolution of the Monasteries]], Leland did not abandon his hunt for books. For instance, he obtained official permission to avail himself of the library belonging to the defunct monastery of [[Bury St Edmunds]].<ref name=ODNB /> The descriptions of Britain which he encountered in the manuscripts, however, and his personal experiences of travel, also sparked off fresh interests. By about 1538, Leland had turned his attention to English and Welsh topography and antiquities, embarking on a series of journeys which lasted six years. Probably over the summer of 1538 (though there may also have been earlier and/or later trips), he made an extended excursion through Wales.<ref>Leland, ''De uiris illustribus'', ed. Carley, pp. xcv–c.</ref> He subsequently made a number of journeys in England: the exact sequence and their dates are again uncertain, but there seem to have been five major English itineraries, taken over the summers of the years 1539 to 1543. His one firmly dated itinerary is that of 1542, which took him to the [[West Country]]. By that date he had been on a tour to the north-west, which went via the [[Welsh Marches|Welsh marches]] to [[Cheshire]], [[Lancashire]] and [[Cumberland]]; while other itineraries took him to the [[West Midlands (region)|west Midlands]], the north-east (reaching [[Yorkshire]] and [[County Durham]]), and the [[Bristol]] region.<ref>Chandler (ed.), ''John Leland's Itinerary'' (2nd edn., 1998), pp. x, xxvii–xxxi (though some of Chandler's detailed arguments are now undermined by Carley's redating of the "New Year's Gift").</ref> He probably explored the [[South East England|south-east]] in shorter excursions. He is not known to have toured [[East Anglia]], for which only a few fragmentary notes survive. Leland kept notebooks on his travels, in which he entered and assessed information from personal observation, and from books, charters and oral sources. It is this material which we now know as his 'Itinerary'. In the 1906–10 edition, the ''Itinerary'' runs to five printed volumes. It comprises rough notes and very early drafts, the raw materials for a more digested description of England and Wales – Leland would not have envisaged publishing it in anything like its present form. The county on which he appears to have made greatest progress in organising his material was [[Kent]]. "Let this be the firste chapitre of the booke", he wrote; "The King hymself was borne yn Kent. Kent is the key of al Englande."<ref>Toulmin Smith (ed.), ''Itinerary of John Leland'', vol. 4, p. 57.</ref> [[John Bale]] later listed an ''Itinerarium Cantiae'' (Itinerary of Kent) among Leland's writings.<ref>John Bale, ''Index Britanniae Scriptorum'', ed. R. L. Poole and Mary Bateson, introd. Caroline Brett and J. P. Carley (2nd edn, Cambridge, 1990), p. 226.</ref><ref>John Bale, ''Scriptorum Illustrium Maioris Brytannie ... Catalogus'' (Basel, 1557–59), pt 1, p. 672.</ref> Although Leland's Itinerary notes remained unpublished until the eighteenth century, they provided a significant quarry of data and descriptions for [[William Camden]]'s ''Britannia'' (first edition, 1586), and many other antiquarian works.<ref name="motheaten"/>
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