Francis Coxe
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Francis Coxe (also called Fraunces Cox; fl. 1560–1575) was an English astrologer and quack physician.[1][2] He was tried for sorcery in 1561 and severely punished, and his Unfained Retractation was published in a contemporary broadside.[2] He then published a pamphlet against necromancy, and, in 1575, A Treatise of the Making and Use of Diverse Oils, Unguents, Emplasters and Distilled Waters.[2]
Life
Francis Coxe, a quack physician, who attained some celebrity in the sixteenth century, is best known by a curious volume of receipts entitled De oleis, unguentis, emplastris, etc. conficiendis (lit. A Treatise of the Making and Use of Diverse Oils, Unguents, Emplasters and Distilled Waters), London, 1575, 8vo, which is missing.[1][2] His practices having attracted considerable attention, he was summoned before the privy council on a charge of sorcery, and, having been severely punished, made a public confession of his "employment of certayne sinistral and divelysh artes" at the Pillory in Cheapside on 25 June 1561.[1] On 7 July following John Awdeley issued a broadside entitled The unfained Retractation of Fraunces Cox, a copy of which later entered the library of the Society of Antiquaries.[3][4] Coxe subsequently published what Edward Heron-Allen calls "a grovelling and terror-stricken pamphlet",[5] entitled A Short Treatise declaring the Detestable Wickednesse of Magicall Sciences, as Necromancie, Coniurations of Spirits, Curiouse Astrologie, and such lyke (London, Jhon [sic] Alde, n.d., black letter, 12mo), written, as he says in the preface thereto, "for that I have myself been an offender in these most detestable sciences, against whome I have compilyd this worke".[5] Coxe may also have written Prognostication, n.d., an almanac, which survives in a single copy on the back of a ballad in the British Library.[2] The dates of his birth and death are not known.[5]
See also
References
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Sources
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- Lemon, Robert (1866). Catalogue of a Collection of Printed Broadsides in the Possession of the Society of Antiquaries of London. Westminster: J. B. Nichols and Sons. p. 19.
Attribution:
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Further reading
- Allen, Don Cameron (1941). The Star-Crossed Renaissance: The Quarrel About Astrology and Its Influence in England. Durham, NC: The Duke University Press. pp. 112, 198.
External links
- "Coxe, Francis, fl. 1560". Online Books Page. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
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