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  1. Thomas Campion (a veces escrito Campian) (22 de febrero de 1567 jul.-1 de marzo de 1620) fue un compositor, poeta y médico inglés de la época isabelina. En los libros de canciones de ese período pueden encontrarse poemas líricos de Thomas Campion.

  2. Thomas Campion (sometimes spelled Campian; 12 February 1567 – 1 March 1620 [1]) was an English composer, poet, and physician. He was born in London, educated at Cambridge, studied law in Gray's inn. He wrote over a hundred lute songs, masques for dancing, and an authoritative technical treatise on music.

  3. Thomas Campion was an English poet, composer, musical and literary theorist, and physician. He was one of the outstanding songwriters of the brilliant English lutenist school of the late 16th and early 17th centuries. His lyric poetry reflects his musical abilities in its subtle mastery of rhythmic.

  4. Thomas Campion was born in London, England in 1567. Campion’s importance for nondramatic literature of the English Renaissance lies in the exceptional intimacy of the musical-poetic connection in his work.

  5. Thomas Campion. Médico, poeta y músico inglés. Nació el 12 de febrero de 1567 en Londres (Gran Bretaña). Recibió su educación en Cambridge.

  6. Born in London on February 12, 1567, to John and Lucy Campion, Thomas Campion was a physician, a composer, and a poet. His parents died while he was a child, and at the age of fourteen he and a stepbrother were sent away to Cambridge.

  7. Thomas Campion was born in London on February 12, 1567. He was a law student, a physician, a composer, a writer of masques, and a poet. Campion's parents died when he was still a boy, but they left enough money to send him to Peterhouse College, Cambridge, in 1581.