Awdeley's Fraternitye of Vacabondes, Harman's Caueat, Haben's Sermon, &c.

audiobook

Awdeley's Fraternitye of Vacabondes, Harman's Caueat, Haben's Sermon, &c.

by active 1559-1577 John Awdelay, Parson Haben, active 1567 Thomas Harman

EN·~4 hours

Chapters

Description

Step into the shadowy world of sixteenth‑century England, where beggars, rovers and their secret slang roamed the streets. This collection brings together three of the era’s most vivid pamphlets, each a snapshot of a society trying to understand—and control—their itinerant underclass. The texts are presented with careful scholarly notes that illuminate the original language and the cultural backdrop without drowning the listener in academic jargon.

The first tract sketches the “Fraternity of Vacabondes,” cataloguing the ranks and rituals of wandering bands, while the second, Harman’s famous guide, offers a gritty handbook on the tricks of “cunning‑catchers” and the punishments awaiting them. The third surprises with a paradoxical sermon that extols thieves, revealing how even moral authorities grappled with the allure of the outlaw life. Together they expose the raw attitudes, fears, and curiosities of Tudor officials and common folk alike.

Listeners will hear the cadence of period cant, the vivid descriptions of street life, and the uneasy humor that colored contemporary debates about poverty, crime, and survival. It’s a rare auditory journey into a world that shaped the foundations of modern law‑order narratives.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (284K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, RichardW, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2018-01-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

A1

active 1559-1577 John Awdelay

A shadowy Tudor printer and pamphleteer, remembered for lively popular writing and one of the earliest printed looks at England’s vagabond underworld. Even the uncertainty around his life adds to the intrigue.

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PH

Parson Haben

Remembered through a lively Elizabethan tract on thieves and vagabonds, this shadowy early writer survives more in the pages than in the historical record. The work linked to him offers a sharp, curious glimpse of crime, poverty, and satire in 16th-century England.

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A1

active 1567 Thomas Harman

Best known for one of the earliest English studies of vagrancy, this 16th-century writer left a vivid, unsettling picture of life on the margins of Tudor society. His work mixes social observation, moral warning, and lively storytelling in a way that still feels strikingly direct.

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