Thomas Achelley


Thomas Achelley, also Achlow or Atchelow was an English poet and playwright of the Elizabethan era. Though little of his work survives, in his own time he had a considerable reputation.

Life and reputation

Nothing is known of Achelley's family. Several contemporaries grouped him with Oxford alumni, but he is not recorded by any school or university. On 6 March 1587, "Thomas Achelley of London, Gentleman", was surety along with James Peele for a £30 loan from Daniel Balgay, a London mercer, to George Peele.
Achelley wrote plays for the Queen’s Men, but none survive. In his , Thomas Dekker places the player John Bentley among a company of deceased playwrights, Thomas Watson, Thomas Kyd, and Achelley. Dekker writes that Bentley, one of the leading actors of the Queen’s Men, "had bene a Player, molded out of their pennes".
Thomas Nashe mentions Achelley in his preface to Robert Greene’s , in company with Mathew Roydon and George Peele as one of the most able men of London able to revive poetry, saying that he "hath more than once or twise manifested, his deepe witted schollership in places of credit". Achelley is compared with Italian poets by Francis Meres in his Palladis Tamia: "As Italy had Dante, Boccace, Petrarch, Tasso, Celiano, and Ariosto; so England had Matthew Roydun, Thomas Atchelow, Thomas Watson, Thomas Kid, Robert Greene, and George Peele".
The preface of Bel-vedére, or the garden of the Muses lists him as one of a group of deceased contributors.

Extant works