, author of an excellent History of the Turks, was born in Northamptonshire,
, author of an excellent History
of the Turks, was born in Northamptonshire, and educated
at Oxford, where he was admitted about 1560; but we are
not told of what college, though it is said he was, after
taking his degrees, chosen fellow of Lincoln college. When
he had continued there some time, Sir Peter Manwood, of
St. Stephen’s near Canterbury, “minding to be a favourer
of his studies,
” says Wood, “called him from the university, and preferred him to be master of the free-school at
Sandwich in Kent,
” where he applied himself with diligence, and produced many good scholars for the universities. For their use he composed “Grammaticae Latinae,
Graccae, & Hebraicse, compendium, cum radicibus,
” Lond.
History of the
Turks,
” which was first printed in The general History of the Turks, from the first beginning of that Nation, to the rising of the Ottoman Family,
”
&c. Some have suggested, that Knolles was not the sole
author of this history, because there appear in it several
translations from Arabic histories, which language they
affirmed him not to have known: but such conjectures are
not sufficient to deprive him of the credit which justly
attends the work. It has been continued, since Knolles’s
death, by several hands. One continuation was made,
from the year 1628 to the end of 1637, collected out of the
dispatches of sir Peter Wyche, knight, ambassador at
Constantinople. But the best continuation of the Turkish
history is made by Paul Ricaut, esq. consul of Smyrna,
from 1623 to 1677, printed at London, 1680, in folio.
Hicaut began his “History of the Turkish Empire,
” from
a period earlier than Knolles had left off; for he tells us,
in his preface to the reader, that “the reign of sultan
Amurat, being imperfectly written in Knolles’s history,
consisting, for the most part, of abrupt collections, he had
thought fit, for the better completing the reign of the
sultan, and the whole body of our Turkish history, to deliver all the particular transactions thereof with his own
pen.
”