Robert Dover (1575/82–1652) was an English attorney, author and wit, best known as the founder and for many years the director of the
Cotswold Olimpick Games.[1]
Family
Robert was probably born between 1575 and 1582 in
Norfolk,[2] one of four children sired by a John Dover, but as the parish registers in
Great Ellingham did not begin until 1630 it is impossible to be certain.
In 1610, Dover married Sibilla Sanford, daughter of
William Cole, Dean of Lincoln[3] and widow of John Sanford of
Stow on the Wold;[4] they had two sons (Robert, died in infancy, and John, 1614–1696) and two daughters (Sibella and Abigail).[5][6]
Dover left university early to avoid swearing the
Oath of Supremacy; and a "Robert Dover" was among those questioned by
Lord Burghley's officers looking for
recusants in Norfolk.[2]
On 27 February 1605, Dover was admitted to
Gray's Inn, and was probably called to the bar in 1611.[11]
Dover was known as a wit, and author of a lost poem The Wandering Jew: according to
Peter Heylin, a pageant put on at
Gray's Inn.[2]
After the inauguration of the Games, he obtained patronage from neighbour
Endymion Porter, a well-connected courtier, who arranged for Dover to receive a cast-off set of royal garments to wear while presiding.[3] Later in life he moved to
Barton-on-the-Heath.[3]
Cotswold Olimpick Games
Dover founded his annual Games held in the
Cotswold hills above Chipping Campden in about 1612,[7] and presided over them for forty years.[12] A mixture of courtly and folk events, the Cotswold Olimpicks were so named in Annalia Dubrensia, one of a series of literary celebrations of the events.[13]
The games consisted of cudgel-playing,
shin-kicking, wrestling, running at the quintain, jumping, casting the bar and hammer, hand-ball, gymnastics, rural dances and games and horse-racing, the winners in which received valuable prizes.[1]
The Games, interrupted by the outbreak of the
English Civil War in 1642,[14] revived after the
Restoration, and continued until 1852. They were revived, once more, in 1951.
Death
Robert Dover was buried at Barton on 24 July 1652[15] (the date of 6 June 1641 appears to be a mistake[16]).
Remembered
There is a monument to Robert Dover at Dover's Hill, near
Aston-sub-Edge.[17]
^
abcdWilliams, Jean (2009). "The Curious Mystery of the Cotswold 'Olimpick' Games: Did Shakespeare Know Dover ... and Does it Matter?". Sport in History. 29 (2). Routledge: 150–170.
doi:
10.1080/17460260902872602.
S2CID162367560.
^
abcPalmer, Alan Warwick; Palmer, Veronica (1999). Who's Who in Shakespeare's England. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 68.
ISBN0-312-22086-3.
^Whitfield, Christopher (1958). A history of Chipping Campden: and Captain Dover's Olympick Games. Shakespeare Head Press. p. 93.
^Dewhurst, Kenneth (1957). The quicksilver doctor: the life and times of Thomas Dover, physician and adventurer. Wright. pp. 5–6.
^Porter, Enid (1969). Cambridgeshire customs and folklore: with Fenland material provided. Taylor & Francis. p. 186.
ISBN0-7100-6201-X.
^Marsden, J.H. (1851). College life in the time of James the first, as illustrated by an unpublished diary of Sir Symonds D'Ewes. John W. Parker. p. 110.
^
Girginov, Vassil; Parry, Jim (2005). The Olympic games explained: a student guide to the evolution of the modern Olympic games. Student sport studies. Routledge. p. 37.
ISBN0-415-34604-5.
^Haddon, Celia (2004). The First Ever English Olimpick Games. Hodder & Stoughton. p. 152.
ISBN0-340-86274-2.
^Powell, John Williams Damer (1930). Bristol privateers and ships of war. J. W. Arrowsmith. p. 130.
^"Thomas Dover, Physician and Cirumnavigator". British Medical Journal: 619. 22 March 1913.
^Verey, David (1979). "Gloucestershire: The Cotswolds". In Pevsner, Nikolaus (ed.). The Buildings of England (2 ed.). p. 92.
ISBN0-14-071040-X.