This essay looks at travelling players' visits to the Essex town of Maldon. It explores what the history of these visits in the Elizabethan and Stuart eras reveals about attitudes to drama in the community during this period and how these attitudes were influenced by changing views of patronage and the local rise of puritanism
This essay argues that Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, had a long family history of patronizing ...
The records of Lincoln Cathedral possess the largest and most enduring evidence for cathedral-funded...
This thesis examines the relationship between social mobility, early mercantilism, and nationalism i...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modem period of civic and church authoritie...
This work offers the first book-length study of travelling players in Shakespearean England. The int...
This essay provides a close contextual analysis of Elizabeth I's visits to Cambridge in 1564 and Oxf...
Minstrels, morris dancers, and players participated in the lively social intercourse of Cornwall in ...
This essay deals with the London citizen in Elizabethan drama from 1590-1620. In it I have tried to ...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modern period of civic and church authorit...
The records of Lincoln Cathedral possess the largest and most enduring evidence for cathedral-funded...
This chapter reconsiders the commercial culture and playing spaces in which children and scholars pe...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityLittle has been wri...
This agenda-setting volume on travel and drama in early modern England provides new insights into Re...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
This essay argues that Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, had a long family history of patronizing ...
The records of Lincoln Cathedral possess the largest and most enduring evidence for cathedral-funded...
This thesis examines the relationship between social mobility, early mercantilism, and nationalism i...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modem period of civic and church authoritie...
This work offers the first book-length study of travelling players in Shakespearean England. The int...
This essay provides a close contextual analysis of Elizabeth I's visits to Cambridge in 1564 and Oxf...
Minstrels, morris dancers, and players participated in the lively social intercourse of Cornwall in ...
This essay deals with the London citizen in Elizabethan drama from 1590-1620. In it I have tried to ...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modern period of civic and church authorit...
The records of Lincoln Cathedral possess the largest and most enduring evidence for cathedral-funded...
This chapter reconsiders the commercial culture and playing spaces in which children and scholars pe...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityLittle has been wri...
This agenda-setting volume on travel and drama in early modern England provides new insights into Re...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
This essay argues that Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, had a long family history of patronizing ...
The records of Lincoln Cathedral possess the largest and most enduring evidence for cathedral-funded...
This thesis examines the relationship between social mobility, early mercantilism, and nationalism i...