HerÃÂologia Anglica (âÂÂEnglish HeroologyâÂÂ, also known as Praise of English Heroes) is a series of short biographies written in Latin, with engravings made by Willem and Magdalena van de Passe, and the text written and published by Henry Holland of London. The book was published in Arnhem in 1620 in two volumes at the expense of Crispijn van de Passe (father of the painters) and the bookseller Jansson.
This collection of portraits, accompanied by biographical and descriptive notes, includes people who lived during the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth, with an emphasis on reformers and opponents of the Papacy (except for Thomas More).
The Heroology holds the earliest published portraits of English historical figures including Martin Frobisher, John Hawkins and Francis Drake, and also includes a short accounts of Drake's voyages. According to art historian A. M. Hind, it is the 'most trustworthy series of English portraits published up to that time'.
The portrait of Francis Drake at page 106, also known as the âÂÂGolden Knightâ (Franciscus Drake Miles Auratus), by Crispijn de Passe includes the inscription: <blockquote> Quem timuit saevis timuit Neptunus in undis / Et rediit toto victor ab Oceano, / Foedifragos pellens pelago prostravit Iberos / Drakius, huic tumulus aequoris unda fuit.
Whom even Neptune feared in the savage waves, / And he returned victorious from the entire ocean, / Driving the treacherous Iberians, struck down by the sea, into defeat; / For him, the wave of the sea became a tomb. </blockquote>
The inscription, and the epitaph at the end of his biography, alludes to Francis Drake's burial at sea. It states that even a resurgence of the Catholic faith (âÂÂReligio RomanaâÂÂ) would not desecrate DrakeâÂÂs grave, as he rests in the water (âÂÂin aquaâÂÂ) safely beyond the reach of fire (âÂÂab igneâÂÂ) and of posterity (âÂÂposteritasâÂÂ), as anyone buried in the ocean cannot be exhumed or burned.
This list gives the Latin forms of the names and titles given in the text, with page numbers from the original edition's index, followed by their modern English equivalents.