Hardicanute (Canute): Difference between revisions

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== Theatrical Provenance ==
== Theatrical Provenance ==


The history of dating "Hardicanute" is influenced by its appearance without the sign of "ne" in Henslowe's playlists in October 1597 (its ''only'' appearance in theatrical records). [[WorksCited|'''Harbage''']] consequently grouped it with plays as old as those offered by Strange's men at the Rose in 1592 (see his "1590, addenda").  
The history of dating "Hardicanute" is influenced by its appearance without the sign of "ne" in Henslowe's playlists in October 1597. [[WorksCited|'''Harbage''']] grouped it with plays as old as those offered by Strange's men at the Rose in 1592 (see his "1590, addenda"). [[WorksCited|'''Greg II''']] and [[WorksCited|'''Wiggins, ''Catalogue''''']] date the play by its order in Henslowe's entries, though both consider it to have had a stage history already. [[WorksCited|'''Greg II''']] thought it was "[n]o doubt an old play of Pembroke's men" (p. 186, #113). [[WorksCited|'''Wiggins, ''Catalogue''''']] considers the possibility that "Hardicanute" was one of the Admiral's men's "back-catalogue items" but settles on Pembroke's ownership as the stronger "likelihood"; reasoning thus, '''Wiggins'' assigns the play to Pembroke's new offerings during their run at the Swan in 1597 (#1069).  
 
 
Pembroke's, [[WorksCited|'''Greg II''']], p. 186, #113 ("No doubt an old play of Pembroke's men")
 
also Gurr, p. 230, n.70.
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Revision as of 11:32, 5 July 2019

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Historical Records

F. 27v (Greg I, p. 54)

octobʒ
tt at hardwute. . . . . . . . . . 00|16|00 — 00 — 1 —
novembʒ 1597
3 tt at knewtvs. . . . . . . . . . 00|10|00 — 14 — 00



Theatrical Provenance

The history of dating "Hardicanute" is influenced by its appearance without the sign of "ne" in Henslowe's playlists in October 1597. Harbage grouped it with plays as old as those offered by Strange's men at the Rose in 1592 (see his "1590, addenda"). Greg II and Wiggins, Catalogue date the play by its order in Henslowe's entries, though both consider it to have had a stage history already. Greg II thought it was "[n]o doubt an old play of Pembroke's men" (p. 186, #113). Wiggins, Catalogue considers the possibility that "Hardicanute" was one of the Admiral's men's "back-catalogue items" but settles on Pembroke's ownership as the stronger "likelihood"; reasoning thus, 'Wiggins assigns the play to Pembroke's new offerings during their run at the Swan in 1597 (#1069).

Probable Genre(s)

History

Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

References to the Play

Critical Commentary

For What It's Worth

Works Cited