Two lawsuits – one certainly relating to Christopher Marlowe, the other probably relating to him – have been discovered among the records of the court of King’s Bench at The National Archives in Kew, London. In the first, one Edward Elvyn, a friend from his student days at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, sued ‘Christopher Marley’ in debt for the unpaid sum of £10 lent to him in London in April 1588. In the second, James Wheatley, a hackney-man from the parish of Allhallows London Wall, brought suit against ‘Christopher Marlo’ in conversion for the non-delivery of a horse and tackle that the latter had hired from him in August 1587. These documents help to fill a yawning gap in Marlowe&rsquo...
Explores the evidence for a personal friendship between Christopher Marlowe and Gervase Markham
The person of Sir Thomas Malory, author of Morte Darthur, has drawn much scholarly attention since t...
This study attempts to follow the stage history of three of Marlowe's plays, Dr. Faustus, Edward II,...
Two lawsuits – one certainly relating to Christopher Marlowe, the other probably relating to him – h...
Two lawsuits – one certainly relating to Christopher Marlowe, the other probably relating to him – h...
A small number of references to Elizabethan ‘shewes’, dramatic performances and theatres occur among...
A small number of references to Elizabethan ‘shewes’, dramatic performances and theatres occur among...
The most-often-cited London Consistory Court record in relation to early modern London theatre histo...
A small number of references to Elizabethan ‘shewes’, dramatic performances and theatres...
The most-often-cited London Consistory Court record in relation to early modern London theatre histo...
The most-often-cited London Consistory Court record in relation to early modern London theatre histo...
Two legal documents recently discovered among The National Archives at Kew in London provide new inf...
Christopher Marlow still remains a largely undefined dramatist in the twentieth century. Scholarship...
On May 30th, 1593, a celebrated young playwright was killed in a tavern brawl in London. That, at le...
Christopher MarloweJohn NewdigateEdward IIThis article discusses a summary of Christopher Marlowe's ...
Explores the evidence for a personal friendship between Christopher Marlowe and Gervase Markham
The person of Sir Thomas Malory, author of Morte Darthur, has drawn much scholarly attention since t...
This study attempts to follow the stage history of three of Marlowe's plays, Dr. Faustus, Edward II,...
Two lawsuits – one certainly relating to Christopher Marlowe, the other probably relating to him – h...
Two lawsuits – one certainly relating to Christopher Marlowe, the other probably relating to him – h...
A small number of references to Elizabethan ‘shewes’, dramatic performances and theatres occur among...
A small number of references to Elizabethan ‘shewes’, dramatic performances and theatres occur among...
The most-often-cited London Consistory Court record in relation to early modern London theatre histo...
A small number of references to Elizabethan ‘shewes’, dramatic performances and theatres...
The most-often-cited London Consistory Court record in relation to early modern London theatre histo...
The most-often-cited London Consistory Court record in relation to early modern London theatre histo...
Two legal documents recently discovered among The National Archives at Kew in London provide new inf...
Christopher Marlow still remains a largely undefined dramatist in the twentieth century. Scholarship...
On May 30th, 1593, a celebrated young playwright was killed in a tavern brawl in London. That, at le...
Christopher MarloweJohn NewdigateEdward IIThis article discusses a summary of Christopher Marlowe's ...
Explores the evidence for a personal friendship between Christopher Marlowe and Gervase Markham
The person of Sir Thomas Malory, author of Morte Darthur, has drawn much scholarly attention since t...
This study attempts to follow the stage history of three of Marlowe's plays, Dr. Faustus, Edward II,...