Everything about Ralph Lane totally explained
Ralph Lane (
1530 -
1603) was an
English explorer of the
Elizabethan era.
Lane was born in
Lympstone,
Devon, England. His father was Sir Ralph of
Orlingbury, and his mother, Maud, was a cousin of
Catherine Parr, the last queen consort of
Henry VIII.
Lane commenced service with the crown in 1563 as an equerry under Queen
Elizabeth I of England, carrying out duties as an officer of the royal household, which included law enforcement and customs duties.
Lane is best remembered for his unsuccessful attempt to colonize
Roanoke Island, at the request of Sir
Walter Raleigh. Queen Elizabeth had been looking for areas to colonize and the Americas were ripe for expansion in the
1500s. The ill-fated journey began on
April 9,
1585 when Lane set sail from Plymouth in the south west of England with Raleigh's cousin, Sir
Richard Grenville. The voyage on board the vessel
Tiger proved difficult, and Lane found himself at odds with the aggressive leadership of Grenville.
When they finally arrived in the Americas, Lane was left on
Roanoke Island, Virginia with 107 colonists to explore and fortify the area. Almost immediately Grenville left with the
Tiger to return to England. While on the Island, Lane served as Governor and employed his men in exploring the surrounding areas within a 130-mile radius and erecting a Fort to protect their outpost. Contact was made with the
Native Americans, but they were treated harshly. For example, on several occasions the colonists kidnapped tribespeople for the purpose of extracting supplies or information. This treatment may eventually have resulted in the famed disappearance of the Roanoke settlers who remained behind after Sir
Francis Drake departed with Lane and his crew.
After his departure from Roanoke, Lane participated in several other expeditions. He was then appointed muster-master general of Ireland in January 1592, and knighted in 1593. A year later, he suffered severe wounds in an Irish uprising against the crown, from which he never recovered. He died in October 1603.
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