Background
He was born at Haarlem, and educated by Cornelis Schoneus at the University of Leiden, where he formed a close intimacy with Daniel Heinsius.
He was born at Haarlem, and educated by Cornelis Schoneus at the University of Leiden, where he formed a close intimacy with Daniel Heinsius.
He belonged to the party of Oldenbarnevelt and Grotius, and brought down the displeasure of the government by a copy of Latin verses in honor of their friend, the Remonstrant Leiden pensionaris Rombout Hoogerbeets. Scriverius" poems were considered libelous and he was fined 200 guilders, but when the councilmen came to collect, Scriverius directed them to the kitchen to collect pots and pans, which were not worth enough money. Their portraits were painted on the occasion of their 25th wedding anniversary by Frans Hals.
Most of his life was passed in Leiden, but in 1650 he became blind, and the last years of his life were spent in his son"s house at Oudewater, where he died in 1660.
He is best known as a scholar by his notes on Martial, Ausonius, the Pervigilium Veneris. Editions of the poems of Joseph Justus Scaliger (Leiden, 1615), of the De re militari of Vegetius Renatus, the tragedies of Seneca (P Scriverii collectanea veterum tragicorum, 1621), &c.
His Opera anecdota, philologica, et poetica (Utrecht, 1738) was edited by A. H. Westerhovius, and his Nederduitsche Gedichten (1738) by South. Dockes. He made many valuable contributions to the history of Holland: Batavia Illustrata (4 parts, Leiden, 1609).
Corte historische Beschryvinghe der Nederlandscher Oorlogen (1612).
Inferioris Germaniae.. historia (1611, 4 parts). Beschryvinghe van Out Batavien (Arnheim, 1612).
Het oude Goutsche chronycxken van Hollandt, as editor, and printed at Amsterdam in 1663.
And Principes Hollandiae Zelandiae et Frisiae (Haarlem, 1650), translated (1678) into Dutch by Pieter Brugman.