King James I’s Basilikon Doron and The Trewe Law of Free Monarchies, originally published in Edinburgh, were reprinted in London in the year of his coronation there (1603). This essay explores the relationship between these two treatises on government and the ruler in Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, the first of his ‘Jacobean’ plays. Maintaining the absolutist principle of divine right, James emphasised that “Monarchie is the trew paterne of Diuinitie”. At his coronation, the Bishop of Winchester examined this view in his sermon: “Princes cannot be Gods by nature, being framed of the same metal, and in the same moulde, that others are; It folweth directly, they are gods by Office...” Comparing Nature to the striker of coins in the mint –...
International audienceIs Measure for Measure “Shakespeare’s play on law”, as it is often asserted? ...
William Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure (1603) has been categorised as a problem play since the ei...
The thesis explores James Stuart\u27s distinct style of kingship as a self-proclaimed absolute monar...
Measure for Measure appears to have been a Christmas play for James VI of Scotland, and new king of ...
A singular coincidence creates a significant connection between the Bible of James I and William Sha...
The paper compares the two dukes in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure and The Tempest as they pull t...
This paper analyzes the development of James I’s theory of divine right in England and how its appli...
In his history plays Shakespeare presents the idea of perfect monarch who achieves to unite the nati...
Measure for Measure can be read as a commentary by Shakespeare on England\u27s conflict over the ref...
This article revisits the long-standing debate on Middleton’s adaptation of the text of Measure for ...
Dans une période où les correspondances étaient de règle, les distinctions entre les doctrines polit...
William Shakespeare's plays, Richard II, 1 and 2 Henry IV and Henry V, form a tetralogy in which the...
International audienceAdds to the evidence for considering The Glasse of Government as a source for ...
This study analyses the aspects o...
The world has come to regard William Shakespeare as a literary genius who used the stage as a tool f...
International audienceIs Measure for Measure “Shakespeare’s play on law”, as it is often asserted? ...
William Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure (1603) has been categorised as a problem play since the ei...
The thesis explores James Stuart\u27s distinct style of kingship as a self-proclaimed absolute monar...
Measure for Measure appears to have been a Christmas play for James VI of Scotland, and new king of ...
A singular coincidence creates a significant connection between the Bible of James I and William Sha...
The paper compares the two dukes in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure and The Tempest as they pull t...
This paper analyzes the development of James I’s theory of divine right in England and how its appli...
In his history plays Shakespeare presents the idea of perfect monarch who achieves to unite the nati...
Measure for Measure can be read as a commentary by Shakespeare on England\u27s conflict over the ref...
This article revisits the long-standing debate on Middleton’s adaptation of the text of Measure for ...
Dans une période où les correspondances étaient de règle, les distinctions entre les doctrines polit...
William Shakespeare's plays, Richard II, 1 and 2 Henry IV and Henry V, form a tetralogy in which the...
International audienceAdds to the evidence for considering The Glasse of Government as a source for ...
This study analyses the aspects o...
The world has come to regard William Shakespeare as a literary genius who used the stage as a tool f...
International audienceIs Measure for Measure “Shakespeare’s play on law”, as it is often asserted? ...
William Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure (1603) has been categorised as a problem play since the ei...
The thesis explores James Stuart\u27s distinct style of kingship as a self-proclaimed absolute monar...