A Companion to Renaissance DramaArthur F. Kinney John Wiley & Sons, 15.04.2008 - 644 Seiten This expansive, inter-disciplinary guide to Renaissance plays and the world they played to gives readers a colorful overview of England's great dramatic age.
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Seite 5
... king's collector of customs for Faversham; by 1543 he was also the king's comptroller for Sandwich; he was rumored to be the agent provocateur at these ports for North and for the Privy Council. Arden also accumulated land. He bought ...
... king's collector of customs for Faversham; by 1543 he was also the king's comptroller for Sandwich; he was rumored to be the agent provocateur at these ports for North and for the Privy Council. Arden also accumulated land. He bought ...
Seite 14
... King James of Scotland in the late 1580s, “her Majesty could not live above a year or two” (Hammer, 1999, 92). From her accession, Elizabeth I had been reluctant to make her intentions on the succession clear for precisely the reason ...
... King James of Scotland in the late 1580s, “her Majesty could not live above a year or two” (Hammer, 1999, 92). From her accession, Elizabeth I had been reluctant to make her intentions on the succession clear for precisely the reason ...
Seite 16
... king, and ofa king of England too.” It was one of England's proudest moments. God had displayed his favor by sending His winds to save His favorite nation, but the war had just begun. By fall an English fleet was sent to destroy the ...
... king, and ofa king of England too.” It was one of England's proudest moments. God had displayed his favor by sending His winds to save His favorite nation, but the war had just begun. By fall an English fleet was sent to destroy the ...
Seite 19
... king to seek new ways of resolving the tensions. Second, there was never enough money in the treasury to support a king who spent as ifit was bottomless. Third, James's beliefin his royal authority clashed with English political values ...
... king to seek new ways of resolving the tensions. Second, there was never enough money in the treasury to support a king who spent as ifit was bottomless. Third, James's beliefin his royal authority clashed with English political values ...
Seite 20
... king and Parliament. When the king came to open Parliament on November 6, 1605, they would explode 36 barrels of gunpowder beneath Westminster Hall. Wiping out the Protestant leadership would, they thought, trigger a Catholic rising ...
... king and Parliament. When the king came to open Parliament on November 6, 1605, they would explode 36 barrels of gunpowder beneath Westminster Hall. Wiping out the Protestant leadership would, they thought, trigger a Catholic rising ...
Inhalt
1 | |
11 | |
PART TWO The World of Drama | 145 |
PART THREE Kinds of Drama | 237 |
PART FOUR Dramatists | 431 |
Index | 584 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actors Admiral’s Arden audience authority Beaumont and Fletcher Ben Jonson Blackfriars Cambridge University Press century Chamberlain’s characters Christopher Marlowe church city comedy city’s civic closet drama collaboration comic court critics culture Dekker dramatists Early Modern England Edward Edward Alleyn Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Drama English Renaissance entertainments entry female Ford’s gender genre Henry Heywood Heywood’s household Jacobean James John Jonson king King’s Lady license literary London Lord malcontent Marlowe Marlowe’s marriage Marston Mary Sidney masque mayor medieval Middleton moral Oxford pageants patrons Paul’s performed Philaster Philip Henslowe play’s players plays playwrights plot political popular Protestant public playhouses public theaters Queen religious Renaissance Drama repertory Revels revenge Richard role romance royal satire scene sexual Shakespeare Sidney Sidney’s social spectators stage Tamburlaine theater theatrical Thomas Thomas Dekker tion tradition tragedy tragicomedy troupe Tudor Webster William witches women writing Wroth York