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  • This category tags lost plays that feature women professionally in the business of sex.
    1 member (0 subcategories, 0 files) - 12:19, 12 May 2018
  • Major parts for women are sometimes implied by the evidence of those plays' existence.<br><br>
    2 members (0 subcategories, 0 files) - 16:12, 8 August 2022
  • The women who attended the English queen were often referred to as the Maids of Honou
    1 member (0 subcategories, 0 files) - 12:59, 8 October 2020
  • | [[Two Angry Women of Abington, Part 2]]||[[1599]]||[[:Category:Admiral's|Admiral's]] | [[Two Merry Women of Abington]]||[[1599]]||[[:Category:Admiral's|Admiral's]]
    866 bytes (107 words) - 23:59, 16 May 2018
  • ...of London. Author of (most recently) ''Renaissance Literature'' (2007), ''Women and Crime in the Street Literature of Early Modern England'' (2003), Series
    437 bytes (55 words) - 19:12, 9 November 2010
  • ...of London. Author of (most recently) ''Renaissance Literature'' (2007), ''Women and Crime in the Street Literature of Early Modern England'' (2003), Series
    437 bytes (55 words) - 19:15, 9 November 2010
  • ...ter, dramatist, wrote at least one play for the Admiral's men (''Two Angry Women of Abingdon'') in the late 1590s; he was killed in a fight (reputedly) with
    3 members (0 subcategories, 0 files) - 18:14, 2 October 2020
  • | [[Massinger, Philip]]||[[Honor of Women]]||[[Unknown]]
    657 bytes (76 words) - 01:52, 10 May 2018
  • ...does not suggest a sudden increase in literary barbs aimed at man-clothed women" (144), Woodbridge does note in a footnote that: Linda Woodbridge. ''Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1
    3 KB (393 words) - 20:12, 2 June 2015
  • | [[Way to Content All Women, or How a Man May Please His Wife]]||[[1624]]||[[:category:Palsgrave's|Pals
    752 bytes (98 words) - 19:07, 16 May 2018
  • | [[Porter, Henry]]||[[Two Angry Women of Abington, Part 2]]||[[Admiral’s]] | [[Porter, Henry]]||[[Two Merry Women of Abington]]||[[Admiral’s]]
    3 KB (394 words) - 18:12, 24 November 2019
  • | [[Anon.]]||[[Masque of Italian Women]]||[[:category:Whitehall|Whitehall]]
    1 KB (165 words) - 02:12, 10 May 2018
  • | [[Anon.]]||[[Masque of Women]]||[[:category:Whitehall|Whitehall]]
    1 KB (159 words) - 02:15, 10 May 2018
  • ...so include ''Jacobean Civic Pageants'' (Keele UP, 1995) and ''Women Beware Women and Other Plays by Thomas Middleton'' (Oxford UP, 1999). He edited ''Volpon
    0 members (0 subcategories, 0 files) - 20:51, 1 November 2020
  • | [[Honor of Women]]||[[1628]]||[[:Category:Unknown|Unknown]]
    2 KB (216 words) - 22:46, 16 May 2018
  • ...''Henry V''), the conflict is located within the male protagonist, and the women equated with the castles and countries that the hero conquers. However, the ...Feldmann and Tetzeli von Rosador point out that ''More Dissemblers Besides Women'' features two conquerers (the returning general Andrugio and the figure of
    3 KB (479 words) - 05:03, 1 August 2018
  • ...if it might deal with a law made by a woman, or possibly one made against women (on the analogy, perhaps, of the Middleton/Rowley comedy ''The Old Law'').
    1 KB (135 words) - 15:58, 10 December 2021
  • ::The Way to content all Women or how a man may please his wife<br>
    2 KB (348 words) - 05:01, 1 August 2018
  • ...of the British Shakespeare Association); the collection of essays ''Roman Women in Early Modern English Drama'' for Medieval Institute Publications; and ''
    17 members (0 subcategories, 0 files) - 11:25, 16 October 2018
  • ...example of "noble ravishers" might be the story of the Rape of the Sabine Women, but it doesn't follow that the play was about that story.
    1 KB (198 words) - 15:50, 10 December 2021
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