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         Jonson Ben:     more books (100)
  1. The devil is an ass by Ben, 1573?-1637 Jonson, 2009-10-26
  2. THE WORKS OF BEN JOHNSON IN SIX VOLUMES by Ben (1573?-1637) Jonson (Johnson), 1716
  3. The case is altered by Ben Jonson 1573?-1637 Selin William Edward, 1917-12-31
  4. Epicoene; or, The silent woman by Ben Jonson 1573?-1637 Henry Aurelia 1877- ed, 1906-12-31
  5. Catiline his conspiracy by Ben Jonson 1573?-1637 Harris Lynn Harold ed, 1916-12-31
  6. The magnetic lady; or Humors reconciled by Ben Jonson 1573?-1637 Peck Harvey Whitefield ed, 1914-12-31
  7. The Cambridge Companion to Ben Jonson (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
  8. Ben Jonson's Plays and Masques (Second Edition) by Ben Jonson, Richard Harp, 2000-09
  9. Every Man in His Humour: Quarto Version (Revels Plays) by Ben Jonson, 2000-10-13
  10. Ben Jonson in Context
  11. Ben Jonson and the Cavalier Poets (Norton Critical Editions) by Ben Jonson, 1975-01-17
  12. The Devil Is an Ass: And Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) by Ben Jonson, 2009-10-04
  13. The Alchemist and Other Plays: Volpone, or The Fox; Epicene, or The Silent Woman; The Alchemist; Bartholomew Fair (Oxford World's Classics) by Ben Jonson, 2009-03-15
  14. New Perspectives on Ben Jonson

41. Mystery Of Love S Martyr
Ben Jonson, well Ben Jonson was Ben Jonson. then all circumstantial evidence seemsto indicate Ben would write of the Oxford of around the year 1573, when he
http://www.pe.net/~webrebel/Martyr.html
Mystery of Love's Martyr Randall Barron Love's Martyr, or Rosalin's Complaint published in London in 1601 and authored by a man called Robert Chester. This Star of England (1), I thought it might be worth while to take a look at it in its original context. Martyr I found intriguing (2). Martyr . Besides Shakespeare, these were Ben Jonson, John Marston, George Chapman and...Ignoto. This Star of England believed Shakespeare's "The Phoenix and the Turtle" was definitely about the Great Romance and the Succession to the throne of England. So did Gertrude C. Ford in her A Rose by Any Name (3). Betty Sears' whole book Shakespeare and the Tudor Rose was about the Great Romance and the Succession (4). Henry V111 . It matches the mindset in "The Phoenix and the Turtle" to a certain extent. An indelible, key match, in fact, for anyone looking for clues to get to the ultimate bottom of this murky mystery. Henry V111 section makes it very clear Shakespeare in his mind identified Queen Elizabeth with the Phoenix, and its legendary death and resurrection as metaphorically connected with the Succession. Martyr arrived (5). On an interlibrary loan from Georgetown University. Big book, fine print, the binding crumbling around the edges. Introduction and notes by A.B. Grosart.

42. BREWER: Dictionary Of Phrase And Fable, 547-548
(15731651.) COSMO DI MEDICI, first Grand Duke of Tuscany.(1519, 1537-1574.) GONZALESPEDRO DE MENDOZA, great Cardinal of Spain Jonson (Ben), a bricklayer.
http://www.bootlegbooks.com/Reference/PhraseAndFable/data/547.html
The First Hypertext Edition of
The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
T HE D ICTIONARY OF P HRASE AND F ABLE BY E. C OBHAM B REWER
F ROM THE N EW AND E NLARGED E DITION OF Previous page
Table of contents and search form
Gravelled I'm regularly gravelled. Non-plussed, like a ship run aground and unable to move.
"When you were gravelled for lack of matter."
Shakespeare: As You Like It, iv. 1. Gray The authoress of Auld Robin Gray was Lady Anne Lindsay, afterwards Lady Barnard (1750-1825). Gray Cloak An alderman above the chair; so called because his proper costume is a cloak furred with gray amis. ( Hutton: New View of London, intro.) Gray Man's Path A singular fissure in the greenstone precipice near Ballycastle, in Ireland. Gray's Inn (London) was the inn or mansion of the Lords Gray. Grayham's See Grahame's Dyke Graysteel The sword of Kol, fatal to the owner. It passed to several hands, but always brought ill-luck. ( Icelandic Edda. See Fatal Gifts Swords Greal San ). Properly divided, it is sang-real

43. Offline Seznam Personálních Autorit - Jones, Inigo 1573 - 1652
Inigo 1573 1652 Záhlaví, Název, Signatura. CAMBRIDGE, The Cambridge guide tothe arts in Britain, S 17629/4. HARP, Richard, The Cambridge companion to Ben Jonson,
http://www.mlp.cz/cz/offline/perlie/j/2057908.htm
Jones, Inigo 1573 - 1652
Záhlaví Název Signatura CAMBRIDGE The Cambridge guide to the arts in Britain S 17629/4 HARP, Richard The Cambridge companion to Ben Jonson S 17982 PIJOAN, José Dìjiny umìní S 15977/7 STANTON, Sarah Cambridge paperback guide to theatre S 16393 STYAN, J. L. The English stage S 18225 Offline poslední zmìny: 13.10.2003 kont@kt

44. DONNE
English poet and divine of the reign of James I., was born in 1573 in the poetry wasmainly the product of his exile, if we are to believe Ben Jonson, who told
http://67.1911encyclopedia.org/D/DO/DONNE.htm
DONNE
DONNE, JOHN (1573-1631), English poet and divine of the reign of James I., was born in 1573 in the parish of St Nicholas Olave, in the city Of London. His father was a wealthy merchant, who next year became warden of the Company of Ironmongers, but died early in 1576. Donnes parents were Catholics, and his mother, Elizabeth Heywood, was directly descended from the sister of the great Sir Thomas More; she was the daughter of John Heywood the epigrammatist. As a child, Donnes precocity was such that it was said of him that this age hath brought forth another Pico della Mirandola. He entered Hart Hall, Oxford, in October 1584, and left it in 1587, proceeding for a time to Cambridge, where he took his degree: At Oxford he began his friendship with Henry Wotton, and at Cambridge, probably, with Christopher Brooke. Donne was removed to London about 1590, and in 1592 he entered Lincolns Inn with the intention of studying the law. In 1610 Donne formed the acquaintance of a wealthy gentleman, Sir Robert Drury of Hawsted, who offered him and his wife an apartment in his large house in Drury Lane. Drury lost his only daughter, and in 1611 Donne published an extravagant elegy on her, entitled An Anatomy of the World, to which he added in 1612 a Progress of the Soul on the same subject; he threatened to celebrate the blessed Maid; Elizabeth Drury, in a fresh elegy on each anniversary of her death, but he happily refrained from the third occasion onwards. At the close of 1611 Sir Robert Drury determined to visit Paris (but not, as Walton supposed, on an embassy of any kind), and he took Donne with him. When he left London, his wife was expecting an eighth child. It seems almost certain that her fear to have him absent led him to compose one of his loveliest poems:

45. WWW.HappyOtter.Com - Quotes...
Daniel Webster. He knows not his own strength that hath not met adversity. Ben Jonson 1573. I do want to say a few things to the graduates
http://www.happyotter.com/hoquote/Quote_1Page3.html
Adversity: (misfortune...misery...hardship...obstacle ) ... the greatest part of our happiness or misery depends on our dispositions and not on our circumstances. - Martha Washington 1731 Educate your children to self-control, to the habit of holding passion and prejudice and evil tendencies subject to an upright and reasoning will, and you have done much to abolish misery from their future lives and crimes from society. - Daniel Webster He knows not his own strength that hath not met adversity. - Ben Jonson 1573 I do want to say a few things to the graduates ... I ask you to give to your children a better world than we gave to you. I ask you to temper your striving for material success, for the glitter of things, with the drive to overcome the injustice and misery that still stalk our nation and our planet ... Be steadfast, be stronge, be of good cheer. - Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. Reflect on your present blessings, of which every man has many, not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some. - Charles Dickens 1812 Remember that there is nothing stable in human affairs; therefore avoid undue elation in prosperity, or undue depression in adversity. - Socrates 469BC

46. Questia Online Library - New Search
Subjects Masques, Jones, Inigo15731652, TheatersStage-Setting And Scenery etc.,European dramaRenaissance, 1450-1600, Jonson, Ben (Dramatist)Criticism
http://www.questia.com/SM.qst?act=search&subjects=Masques&subjectsSearchType=100

47. TABLE OF CONTENTS
The first and most powerful of the Fantastic Poets was John Donne, who was born about1573 ; and, according to Ben Jonson, he wrote all his best pieces before
http://www.uni-mannheim.de/mateo/camenaref/cmh/cmh426.html
CHAPTER XXVI. THE FANTASTIC SCHOOL OF ENGLISH POETRY. By A. CLAYTON-BEOCK, B.A., New College, Oxford. Elizabethan poetry and the Fantastic School . 760 Contrast between the Elizabethan and the Fantastic Poets .761 Donne's passion for argument .762 The wit of the Fantastic Poets .763 ... Marvell and Dryden . 775 CHAPTER XXVI. THE FANTASTIC SCHOOL OF ENGLISH POETRY. But, just as the political conflicts of that age produced characters of a beauty and temper not to be found in less exacting times, so the Fantastic Poets in their conflicts of thought produced beauties, " things extreme and scattering bright," to quote the words of Donne, which cannot be paralleled in any other period of our literature. The Elizabethan lyric poet wrote to express, not something that occurred to himself alone, but something old and universal such as any lover could sing to his mistress without incongruity, and his whole poetic energy was spent upon saying these old things better than they had ever been said before. Hence the extraordinary verbal beauty and the high level of execution, even in minor poets of the Elizabethan age. It is clear, however, that Donne was tired of this verbal beauty. Though he was anything but a Puritan himself, there was something Puritanic in his view of his art. He despised poetry which took the line of least resistance, as the Puritans despised men who lived easily. He thought it the duty of a poet to wrestle with all difficulties of thought, and he did not care if he lost all graces of manner in the process.

48. TourLiteratur - Geburtstagskalender Juni
Translate this page 11. Juni. Ben Jonson (1573). 12. Juni. HC Artmann (1921) Djuna Barnes (1892) AnneFrank (1929) Christoph Meckel (1935) Otto Schenk (1930) Johanna Spyri (1827). 13.
http://www.tour-literatur.de/kalender/geburtstag_juni.htm
Home Autoren Werkverzeichnisse Epochen ... Geburtstagskalender Juni Geburtstage Juni 1. Juni Peter de Mendelssohn (1908)
Ferdinand Raimund (1790) 2. Juni Bazon Brock (1936)
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Marquis de Sade (1740) 3. Juni Martin Gregor-Dellin (1926)
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49. Fathom :: The Source For Online Learning
In 1573 George Gascoigne s Hundred Sundrie Flowres was preceded by an about the theftand misinterpretation of poems run through Ben Jonson s Poetaster (1601
http://www.fathom.com/feature/122592/
Media Index
By Learning Center Jewish Studies Exploring Biodiversity Locating the Victorians Shakespeare Women's Studies African American Studies September 11 The World of the Pyramids Exploring the Deep Ocean Discovering Mammals
By Institution American Film Institute British Library British Museum Cambridge University Press Columbia University London School of Economics Natural History Museum New York Public Library RAND Science Museum University of Chicago University of Michigan Museum Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution The Idea of the Author in Elizabethan London
EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION London in the 1580s and 1590s nurtured a literary culture of extraordinary achievement. William Shakespeare was only one among many distinguished dramatists and poets, whose ranks included Christopher Marlowe, Ben Jonson and John Donne. In this extract from a contribution to The Cambridge Companion to English Literature 1500-1600 (available through Fathom), Colin Burrow, senior lecturer in English at the University of Cambridge, considers some of the reasons why writing flourished here as never before and why writers themselves began to emerge as public figures to be acknowledged and celebrated.
he most extraordinary literary phenomenon of the century was the sudden burst of literary activity in the 1580s and 1590s, when Shakespeare, Marlowe, Jonson and Donne were all at work within a few miles of each other. There is inevitably a shortfall between any quasi-causal "explanation" of this kind of miracle and the phenomenon itself. But those writers were the beneficiaries of many things: an expansion of grammar schools had produced an increasingly eloquent, classically learned body of men from relatively humble backgrounds for whom public offices (as secretaries to noblemen or as minor civil servants) were in critically short supply. For men who could not get any other job which would enable them to make use of their training in eloquence, writing provided an opportunity to use their eloquence in a public forum.

50. Other Voices
Ben Jonson (1573 – 1634) SONG TO CELIA Drink to me only with thine eyes, And Iwill pledge with mine; Or leave a kiss but in the cup, And I’ll not look for
http://hometown.aol.com/pateaden/myhomepage/profile.html
Main Other Fine Arts htmlAdWH('7002326', '234', '60');
Other Voices
Warriors and Priests
Before the birth of Christ, Britain had been known to only a few ancient Greek writers as a dim, remote, and mysterious region. It was only after the time of Julius Caesar (44 B.C.) that the classical worlds of Greece and Rome received direct knowledge about these misty isles. The Roman Emperor Claudius established Roman rule there in 43 A.D.. Over the next four centuries, as the Roman Empire began to crumble, Rome gradually withdrew from this distant land.
For almost 500 years, the British Isles had been a battlefield for the Celts, many Germanic tribes, the Romans, and the Vikings, but by 650 A.D. the Anglo-Saxons had England firmly in their grasp. After these centuries of fighting, the warrior-kings were the undisputed masters of their individual worlds, but things were changing. Christianity was slowly seeping into the fabric of "pagan" Briton.
The Roman popes sent priests, like St. Patrick and St. Augustine, to convert these violent and aggressive peoples to a kinder and gentler way of life and to establish the status of the Church above even that of a king. This wasn’t easy, but the priests and the warriors managed to maintain a shaky balance of power into the Middle Ages.
Brave New World
The 16th century was a time of great events in politics and religion which helped to power a Renaissance in English literature producing some of the greatest of the English writers. Even though they lived almost four hundred years ago, their ideas of human love and their spiritual convictions sound much like ours. Here are a few excerpts, scraps from their collective tables:

51. Sanatsal.Net » Resim » Bacon, Francis » Biyografi
1573 yilinin nisaninda cambridge üniversitesi ne gönderilmis ve on alti güzelkonustugu, arkadasi büyük yazar Ben Jonson un su sözlerinden
http://resim.sanatsal.net/biyografi.asp?ressam=5

52. John Donne Source 2 Biography At LiteratureClassics.com
English poet and divine of the reign of James I, was born in 1573 in the was mainlythe product of his exile, if we are to believe Ben Jonson, who told
http://www.literatureclassics.com/showbiography.asp?IDNo=147&bioID=2

53. Margaret RADCLIFFE (Maid Of Honour)
Margaret RADCLIFFE. Baptized 26 Jan 1573. A magnificent monument was erected overher grave at the Queen s expense, and Ben Jonson wrote the inscription for it.
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/MargaretRadcliffe.htm
Margaret RADCLIFFE Baptized: 26 Jan 1573 Died: 10 Nov 1599, Richmond Palace Buried: Church of St. Margaret, Westminster Father: John RADCLIFFE of Ordsall (Sir) Mother: Anne ASSHAWE Margaret Radcliffe was twin to Alexander Radcliffe and their natural relationship was reinforced by a strong bond of mutual affection. As children they were inseparable companions, and when Alexander came to Court he brought his sister with him. The arrival of the two young people so wondrously alike in their striking physical beauty created something of a mild sensation at the Palace of Whitehall, famous as it was for the excellence of its gallants and the radiance of its ladies. Margaret was immediately claimed by the Queen Elizabeth to adorn the privy chamber as a Maid of Honour. The girl's ready wit and shrewd judgment allied to her exquisite grace commanded her strongly to her royal mistress, an aging woman nearing her sixtieth year and seeing perhaps in the accomplished and vivacious maid a reincarnation of the splendour of her own lost youth. Margaret was elevated above all other ladies of the Court as the Queen 's prime favourite, and all who would sue for

54. [EMLS 4.2 / SI 3 (September, 1998)] Article Abstracts / Résumés Des Articles
En effet, le supplément au Theatrum Orbis Terrarum d Ortelius publié en 1573 comprenaitune carte tracée par le On the Famous Voyage Ben Jonson and Civic
http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/04-2/04-2abs.htm

"Upon the Suddaine View": State, Civil Society and Surveillance in Early Modern England

Swen Voekel, Rochester University
English
French Civilizing Wales: Cymbeline ... , Roads and the Landscapes of Early Modern Britain
Garrett Sullivan, Pennsylvania State University
English
French A Map of Greater Cambria
Philip Schwyzer, UC Berkeley
English
French Partial Views: Shakespeare and the Map of Ireland
Bernhard Klein, University of Dortmund
English
French Significant Spaces in Edmund Spenser's View of the Present State of Ireland
Joanne Woolway Grenfell, Oxford University English French Translated Geographies: Spenser's "Ruins of Time" Huw Griffiths, University of Strathclyde English French "On the Famous Voyage": Ben Jonson and Civic Space Andrew McRae, University of Sydney English French John Donne's Use of Space Lisa Gorton, Oxford University / Rhodes University, Grahamstown, SA English French Britannia Rules the Waves?: Images of Empire in Elizabethan England Lesley Cormack, University of Alberta English French Ruling the World: The Cartographic Gaze in Elizabethan Accounts of the New World Mark Koch, St Mary's College English French Anti-geography Robert Appelbaum, University of Cincinnati

55. [EMLS 9.1 ([May, 2003]: 16.1-11 Review Of Maps And Memory In Early Modern Englan
explores a wider range of literary, and now urban, geographies, but privileges IsabellaWhitney s 1573 poetic Wyll On the Famous Voyage Ben Jonson and Civic
http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/09-1/edwarev.html
Rhonda Lemke Sanford. Maps and Memory in Early Modern England: A Sense of Place . New York and Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2002. xiv+225pp.+10 illus. ISBN 312 29455 7.
Jess Edwards
London Metropolitan University
j.edwards@unl.ac.uk

Edwards, Jess. "Review of Rhonda Lemke Sanford. Maps and Memory in Early Modern England: A Sense of Place ." Early Modern Literary Studies http://purl.oclc.org/emls/09-1/edwarev.html
  • "The historian of cartography," writes Christian Jacob, can consider maps in isolation, as self-defined artefacts to be classified and analysed. Or an attempt can be made to understand maps within the culture that produced and used them, so long as such a contextual approach does not lose sight of the map itself.
    The cultural context of a map might be compared to a pattern of concentric circles surrounding the map. We can move from the inner circle of map making to the remote circles of economic, social, political, intellectual and artistic context. (193) In Maps and Memory Rhonda Lemke Sanford makes a fresh incursion into a field which has been defined over the last decade by the work of Richard Helgerson, John Gillies, Tom Conley, Andrew McRae, Garrett Sullivan, and most recently Bernhard Klein. Where specialist map historians have focussed traditionally on the inner circle referred to by Jacob above, these cultural historians have moved towards the outer circles, placing early modern cartography and its associated practices within a wider, and often principally literary, context.
  • 56. Ben Jonson S Genius Was Comedy. Not Stand-up, Yuck-yuck Comedy
    Ben Jonson s genius was comedy. (Jonson was born on or about June 11, 1573.) Playsand songs were quoted and discussed at least among the small
    http://www.geocities.com/~bblair/030611f.htm
    Ben Jonson's genius was comedy. Not stand-up, yuck-yuck comedy, but the kind of entertainment where fools get what they deserve, and lovers marry, and foolish lovers well, they end alright. In entertaining people he also became a very good lyricist comedies did, and still do, involve songs. If you wanted to get the most out of Jonsonian comedy, though, you couldn't leave your brain at home. (Jonson was born on or about June 11, 1573.) Plays and songs were quoted and discussed at least among the small minority of Englishmen who attended them and to miss the point probably led to an embarrassment in conversation. I encourage you to draw your own pithy conclusions from Karolin's Song from The Sad Shepherd . Whether you bring them up with your friends is up to you. Bob Blair

    57. The True Story Of The Shakespeare Publications
    Hart proposed Ben Jonson as the author. The Earl of Oxford published Cardanus Comfortin English in 1573 and wrote a preface and a beautiful poem to accompany
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Thebes/4260/book1.html
    The True Story of the Shakespeare Publications
    by Robert Brazil

    Book now available by Mail Order
    New Lower Price: $20
    To obtain a copy please send an e-mail to:
    robertbrazil@juno.com

    Book excerpts below.
    CONTENTS Part One: "Some enigma, some riddle" Chapter 1. The Shakespeare Problem Scroll down for Text Chapter 2. Doubts about Shaksper of Stratford Scroll down for Text Chapter 3. The Authorship Investigation and Debate Scroll down for Text Chapter 4. The case for Oxford in brief Scroll down for Text and
    Chapter 4 continued
    Part Two : Curious Clues Part Three: Wounded Truth is Renewed Part One : "Some enigma, some riddle" ARMADO. Some enigma, some riddle; come, thy l'envoy; begin Loves Labors Lost , III: 1 Chapter 1. The Shakespeare Problem You may ask: what Shakespeare problem ? He's been the most successful screenwriter of the 1990's and he never has to be paid. He gets away with crude jokes that would be called tasteless anywhere else. Shakespeare's just fine the way he is! Shakespeare is high and low. Shakespeare is gay and straight. The Bard, whose personal story is unknown and unquestioned, has been reduced to an icon or symbol of rarefied intelligence, of impenetrable, unreachable genius. All things to all readers, the author has conveniently disappeared in favor of his words. The problem has emerged because the few biographical facts that exist about Mr. Shaksper of Stratford-on-Avon don't tally with what we would expect from the brilliant author of the plays and poems. The content, attitude, life experience, interests, and deep classical education evident in the plays surpass what is on record for William Shaksper of Stratford-on-Avon. Nothing in his life suggests that he was the author of the Shakespeare Canon, or had a reputation in his own lifetime to that effect.

    58. The Edmund Spenser Home Page: Biography
    After taking his BA (1573) and MA (1576), Spenser left Cambridge for Kent took upresidence in King s Street, and died there, according to Ben Jonson for lake
    http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenser/biography.htm
    The Shepheardes Calender (December, 37-42) that it was his 'shepherd peres' at the Merchant Taylors' school and Mulcaster (probably the 'good olde shephearde, Wrenock ') who first encouraged him to write verse. I n May 1569, Spenser left school and matriculated as a sizar at Pembroke Hall (now Pembroke College), Cambridge, receiving a further ten shillings from the Nowell bequest to support him. Although he had to work for his meals and accommodation, and may often have been ill during his studies, this appears to have been an important and productive time for the young poet. At Pembroke, Spenser came to know the master John Young, later Bishop of Rochester, and probably met Lancelot Andrewes, the future Bishop of London and privy councillor, who had also been at the Merchant Taylors' school. The most important influence on Spenser during this period, though, was undoubtedly his intimate friendship with Gabriel Harvey, himself admitted as a Fellow of Pembroke Hall in 1570. While Spenser's relationship with Harvey was later satirized by fellow students in a play titled Pedantius , Harvey appears to have introduced Spenser to a number of important connections and potential patrons, including Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. After taking his B.A. (1573) and M.A. (1576), Spenser left Cambridge for Kent, where he acted as secretary for John Young, recently created Bishop of Rochester. It was there that the poet probably composed

    59. The Beginning - Page 2
    these masques were designed by the architect/designer Inigo Jones (1573 1652 Hiscollaborators included Ben Jonson, Thomas Campion and William and Henry Lawes
    http://home.prcn.org/~pauld/opera/begining2.htm
    THE BEGINNING - PAGE 2 HOME PAGE 1 PAGE 2
    Elizabeth I of England
    The precurser to English opera was the masque, the royal entertainments of Queen Elizabeth I and the Stuart courts of James I and Charles I.. Stage scene for the masque Oberon , and costumes for Oberon and Titania. Many of these masques were designed by the architect/designer Inigo Jones (1573 - 1652). Jones visited Italy in 1613 and came back to England enthused with Italian stage techniques.Between 1605 and 1640 he was involved in over 40 productions as stage and costume designer, machinery operator, director and co-author. His collaborators included Ben Jonson, Thomas Campion and William and Henry Lawes. Jonson's Oberon, the Faery Prince, a Masque of Prince Henries , with costumes designed by Jones, was performed on January 1, 1611, for King James I. John Milton 1608 - 1674 At the high point of the genre the masque contained almost all the ingredients of opera except a coherent plot and continuous music. The poet John Milton wrote several masques, among them Samson Agonistes and Comus
    OPERA - A PHILATELIC HISTORY : WEBSITE DESIGNED AND MAINTAINED BY PAUL DEN OUDEN

    60. Ren Faire: History: Timeline
    Elizabeth. 1572, Ben Jonson born. 1573, John Donne born 09/28 MichelangeloBuanarroti born in Caprese, Italy. 1582, Shakespeare married.
    http://www.renfaire.com/History/timeline.html
    Timeline of the Period
    Faire Index Page
    History
    Timeline Elizabeth's Household
    04/15 Leonardo da Vinci born 10/27 James Cook is born 02/19 Nicolas Copernicus born in Thorn, Poland 08/22 Death of King Richard III, Last of the Plantagenets 08/03 Columbus sets sail for Cathay 06/26 Toothbrush invented Reformationist John Knox born 07/10 John Calvin born 10/31 Luther nails 95 Theses to door of Castle Church, Wittenberg 09/20 Magellan leaves Spain on the first Round the World passage 04/27 Magellan killed in Phillippines 09/07 Queen Elizabeth I of England born Anne Boleyn executed for treason
    Henry VIII marries Jane Seymour Elizabeth declared a bastard
    Edward born to Henry VIII and Jane Seymour
    Jane Seymour dies Lady Jane Grey born Henry marries and separates from Anne of Cleves Henry marries Anne Boleyn's cousin Catherine Howard Catherine Howard executed Henry marries Catherine Parr Henry VIII dies
    Edward VI crowned
    Elizabeth lives with Catherine Parr Elizabeth leaves Catherine Parr's household under questionable circumstances because of rumors of an affair between Elizabeth and Thomas Seymour, Catherine's husband
    Catherine dies in childbirth Thomas Seymour tried and executed for treason Elizabeth returns to court in London Edward VI dies
    7/10 Lady Jane Grey crowned
    7/19 Crown relinquished to Mary I Mary I on Throne Mary I married Philip II of Spain Lady Jane Grey executed Protestant rebellion and rumors of Elizabeth's involvement have her imprisoned in the Tower of London on false charges.

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