Westminster festivals: Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
m (Text replacement - "=== Notes ===" to "== Notes ==")
m (Text replacement - "=== Allusions ===" to "== Allusions ==")
Line 6: Line 6:
On 18 January, 1510,<ref>{{:Lancashire, Ian 1984a}}, No. 977.</ref> Henry VIII, the earls of Essex and Wiltshire and other noblemen burst into the queen's chamber, dressed as Robin Hood and his men and brandishing or carrying bows and arrows as well as swords and bucklers to complete the outfit. They entertained the ladies with dances and unspecified 'pastime', after which they left.<!-- Is there a precise date in Letters & Papers (one of DTRB's sources)? If not, DTRB's date is probably simply based on the reference to Shrovetide, but the passage is an interpolation in the 1587 ed. of Holinshed, and perhaps it was just added at this specific point because it seemed a fittingly festive context. The phrase '[o]n a time suggests the writer did not know exactly when this Robin Hood-event happened.  -->
On 18 January, 1510,<ref>{{:Lancashire, Ian 1984a}}, No. 977.</ref> Henry VIII, the earls of Essex and Wiltshire and other noblemen burst into the queen's chamber, dressed as Robin Hood and his men and brandishing or carrying bows and arrows as well as swords and bucklers to complete the outfit. They entertained the ladies with dances and unspecified 'pastime', after which they left.<!-- Is there a precise date in Letters & Papers (one of DTRB's sources)? If not, DTRB's date is probably simply based on the reference to Shrovetide, but the passage is an interpolation in the 1587 ed. of Holinshed, and perhaps it was just added at this specific point because it seemed a fittingly festive context. The phrase '[o]n a time suggests the writer did not know exactly when this Robin Hood-event happened.  -->


=== Allusions ===
== Allusions ==
{{#ask:[[Category:Allusions (Westminster festivals)]]| format=embedded|embedformat=h4|columns=1|limit=1000|sort=Utitle}}
{{#ask:[[Category:Allusions (Westminster festivals)]]| format=embedded|embedformat=h4|columns=1|limit=1000|sort=Utitle}}



Revision as of 15:18, 12 July 2018

Template:FlItemTop

Loading map...
Westminster.

[[File:|thumb|right|500px|The Palace of Westminster from The London Eye / Bill Henderson, 21 May 2002, Creative Commons, via Geograph.]]

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-05-19. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-07-12.

On 18 January, 1510,[1] Henry VIII, the earls of Essex and Wiltshire and other noblemen burst into the queen's chamber, dressed as Robin Hood and his men and brandishing or carrying bows and arrows as well as swords and bucklers to complete the outfit. They entertained the ladies with dances and unspecified 'pastime', after which they left.

Allusions

1587 - Holinshed, Raphael - Chronicles (2)

[...] The king soone after came to Westminster, and there kept his Shrouetide with great bankettings, dansings, and other iollie pastimes.
 And on a time the king in person, accompanied with the earles of Essex, Wiltshire and other noble men, to the number of twelue, came suddenlie in a morning into the queenes chamber, all apparelled in short coates of Kentish Kendall, with hoodes on their heads & hosen of the same, euerie one of them his bow and arrowes, and a sword and a buckler, like outlawes, or Robin Hoods men. Whereat the queene, the ladies, and all other there were abashed, as well for the strange sight, as also for their sudden comming, and after certeine danses and pastime made, they departed. On Shrouesundaie the same yeare, the king prepared a goodlie banket in the parlement chamber at Westminster, for all the ambassadors, which then were here out of diuerse realmes and countries. [...][2]

Lists and gazetteers

Background

Notes

Template:FlItemNav