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  • | [[Ashton, Thomas]]||||[[Carleton, Thomas]]||||[[Ferebe, George]]||||[[Hemming, William]] ...nes, (William?)]]||||[[Cecil, Robert]]||||[[Fletcher, John]]||||[[Heywood, Thomas]]
    4 KB (382 words) - 01:18, 17 May 2018
  • | [[Anon.]]||[[Pageant for Sir Thomas Lodge]]||[[:category:London Grocers' Company|London Grocers' Company]] | [[Browne, Thomas]]||[[Thebais]]||[[:category:King's College, Cambridge|King's College, Cambr
    2 KB (193 words) - 02:13, 10 May 2018
  • ===Lodge's response to Gosson (c.1579)=== ...''School of Abuse'', an anonymous text (subsequently attributed to Thomas Lodge) came to the defence of playing. This text is variously referred to as ''Ho
    6 KB (928 words) - 13:03, 8 December 2022
  • | Lent vnto thomas downton the 20 of Janewary ||} ...subsequently reproduced in the "Breviat of Sir Henry and Simon Thelwall v. Thomas Betterton" (Bawcutt 255, item R33):
    8 KB (1,259 words) - 16:50, 25 November 2020
  • ::* Thomas Lanquet, ''An Epitome of Chronicles'' (1559; a brief outline only) ::* Celio Augustino Curione, ''A Notable History of the Saracens'', trans. Thomas Newton (1575), 27-31
    4 KB (588 words) - 16:54, 4 October 2022
  • ...is suggested analogue of ''Gorboduc'', Griffin sees irony in the fact that Thomas Sacville sat in judgment on the Babington conspirators and probably witness ...' but stopped short of claiming that the author of "Estrild" also knew it. Lodge's interest in the narrative does nevertheless show that the story of Estril
    14 KB (2,180 words) - 19:25, 27 October 2021
  • ...at the company wanted to go back to the themes already developed in Thomas Lodge's ''The Wounds of Civil Wars'', this time focusing on far more popular pers ...ert Wilson and Henry Chettle) and "[[Caesar's Fall]]" (by Michael Drayton, Thomas Middleton, Anthony Munday and John Webster) as a remarkable multi-Caesarean
    9 KB (1,453 words) - 11:19, 15 September 2022
  • In his response to Gosson's ''School of Abuse'', Thomas Lodge criticised Gosson and accused him of plagiarism for his ''Catiline'' (for a ...: -2em;"> Gosson, Stephen. ''The School of Abuse''. Printed at London: for Thomas Woodcocke, 1579. [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A01953.0001.001?rgn=main
    5 KB (731 words) - 16:07, 24 February 2023
  • ...suffred in a Christian common weale, by the waye both the cauils of Thomas Lodge, and the play of playes, written in their defence, and other obiections of
    4 KB (579 words) - 00:14, 17 March 2015
  • ...inental histories, "Torismond" is the name of the King of France in Thomas Lodge's ''Rosalind'', the source for Shakespeare's ''As You Like It'' (a parallel ...''' (276n) notes that that Torismond "is the name of the king of France in Lodge's ''Rosalynde''", and quotes the observation of P.A. Daniel: "There is, of
    16 KB (2,365 words) - 12:59, 4 July 2018
  • Together with Thomas Lodge, Robert Greene wrote another biblical drama, ''A Looking Glass for London a
    5 KB (697 words) - 05:03, 1 August 2018
  • ...ave been ''The Conspiracie of Lucius Catiline, translated into Englishe by Thomas Paynell; worthy, profitable, and pleasaunt to be red'' (London, in officina ...heatrical ''School of Abuse'' (1579) (see the entry for "[[Short_and_Sweet#Lodge.27s_response_to_Gosson_.28c.1579.29|'''Short and Sweet''']]" for a fuller d
    10 KB (1,511 words) - 12:06, 4 August 2022
  • ...f. 43r); edited in [http://books.google.com/books?id=e3pEAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA132 Lodge 3:132].</td> '''Sir Thomas Edmondes to Gilbert Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, 3 August 1602'''
    24 KB (3,607 words) - 12:46, 4 July 2018
  • ...ed by the entry in Henslowe's ''Diary'' and alluded to by Nashe (1589) and Lodge (1596) as the same play; it considers this early version of the Hamlet stor ..., see [[#References to the Play|References to the Play]], below). However, Lodge could have been remembering an earlier run at the Theater, even that which
    44 KB (7,026 words) - 17:40, 11 October 2020
  • ..., Sir Thomas, then takes his leave. In his absence, Queen Elinor lures Sir Thomas out of the bower, wounds him, and using his clue of thread to navigate the ...ications of the labyrinthine bower by reminding her that he built it "[t]o lodge thee safe from iealous ''Ellenor''" (fol.8), and by reinforcing the ''liebe
    16 KB (2,574 words) - 15:31, 10 December 2021
  • ===Sir Thomas Lake to the Earl of Salisbury=== ...nderous rich" (48). Bulmer, in association with the owner of the land, Sir Thomas Hamilton, began mining, finding "spar powdered with lead" in June 1606 and,
    19 KB (2,951 words) - 16:26, 1 July 2019
  • In 1815, Thomas Park conducted the first survey of Barnes’s life and work following the R ...de Roos, the Lorde Molyns, the Lorde Hungerford, sir Thomas Wentworth, sir Thomas Huse, sir Ihon Fynderne, & many other. Kyng Henry was this daie, the beste
    23 KB (3,812 words) - 09:15, 12 December 2023
  • ...he most detailed vita of Pythagoras in Elizabethan English is the entry in Thomas Cooper’s ''Thesaurus linguae Romanae & Britannicae tam accurate congestus ...ythagoras occur in Greene’s ''Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay'' (c. 1590) and Thomas Nashe’s ''Summer’s Last Will and Testament'' (c. 1593). Pythagoras hims
    21 KB (3,085 words) - 14:50, 11 August 2022
  • ...Stewart, Lord Aubigny; Thomas Somerset (likely meant by 'young Somerset'; Thomas appeared in Jonson’s ''Hymenaei'' [Wiggins, ''Drama'' 56]); Sir Philip He ====Correspondence of Sir Thomas Edmonds====
    22 KB (3,437 words) - 14:49, 9 January 2023
  • Vickers, Brian, gen. ed. ''The Collected Works of Thomas Kyd''. Volume 1. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2024. McInnis, David, ed. Thomas Dekker, ''Old Fortunatus'' (Manchester: MUP, 2020).<br>
    43 KB (5,662 words) - 21:35, 11 March 2024
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