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From International Robin Hood Bibliography

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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-24. Revised by … This section includes pages on specific dramas, a list of anthologies, and a list of studies and criticism. Specific dramas The pages on specific dramas are arranged alphabetically according to authors' surnames. Anthologies ⁃ Drama anthologies. Studies and criticism List of relevant drama studies and criticism. Titles dealing with specific dramas are found under the dramas in question. ⁃ Studies and criticism. Bibliography ⁃ Drama bibliography.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-05-09. Revised by … Useful ⁃ Parfitt, George 1978a,see pp. 11-12. Drama
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-26. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Essential ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 203-49. Contents: ⁃⁃ Robin Hood and the Sheriff (c.1475; pp. 203-207) ⁃⁃ Robin Hood and the Friar (c.1560; pp. 208-14) ⁃⁃ Robin Hood and the Potter (c.1560; pp. 215-19) ⁃⁃ extracts from Anthony Munday's and Henry Chettle's Downfall of Robert, Earl of Huntington (1597-98; pp. 220-30) ⁃⁃ extracts from Anthony Munday's and Henry Chettle's Death of Robert, Earl of Huntington (1597-98; pp. 220-30) ⁃⁃ extracts from Ben Jonson's Sad Shepherd (1637?; pp. 231-36) ⁃⁃ the anonymous Robin Hood and his Crew of Souldiers (1661; pp. 237-42) ⁃⁃ extracts from Alfred Tennyson's Foresters (1892; pp. 243-49). Drama
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-26. Revised by … Significant ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 41, 43-45. Good discussion of Robin Hood folk drama (p. 41) and Elizabethan and later drama (pp. 43-45). ⁃ Echols, Katherine 2013a ⁃ Griffin, Carrie 2017a ⁃ Krasner, Orly Leah 2008a ⁃ Judge, Roy 1997a ⁃ Leach, Robert 2001a ⁃ Marshall, John 1998a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020b ⁃ Marshall, John 2001a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020c ⁃ Marshall, John 2006a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020d ⁃ Marshall, John 2007a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020e ⁃ Marshall, John 2008a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020f ⁃ Marshall, John 2017a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020g ⁃ Marshall, John 2018a ⁃ Marshall, John 2020a ⁃ Stock, Lorraine Kochanske 2008a ⁃ Thorndike, Ashley Horace 1902a ⁃ Uéno, Yoshiko 1979a. …
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Page text matches

  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-05-09. Revised by … Useful ⁃ Parfitt, George 1978a,see pp. 11-12. Drama
    408 bytes (48 words) - 06:54, 17 May 2022
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-24. Revised by … This section includes pages on specific dramas, a list of anthologies, and a list of studies and criticism. Specific dramas The pages on specific dramas are arranged alphabetically according to authors' surnames. Anthologies ⁃ Drama anthologies. Studies and criticism List of relevant drama studies and criticism. Titles dealing with specific dramas are found under the dramas in question. ⁃ Studies and criticism. Bibliography ⁃ Drama bibliography.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-24. Revised by … Editions ⁃ A'Beckett, Gilbert Arthur 1867a.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-06-19. Revised by … Editions ⁃ Crawford, Jack Randall 1912a.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-06-19. Revised by … Thomas Malling, Robin Hood (1994). Danish comedy. Editions ⁃ Malling, Thomas 1994a ⁃ Malling, Thomas 1994b. Brief mention ⁃ skuespil.net: Robin Hood (Thomas Malling).
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-06-25. Revised by … Editions ⁃ Crossland, John Redgwick 1931a, pp. 35-41.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-06-15. Revised by … A pantomime of the kind that has words. Editions ⁃ Samuel, K O 1933a.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-06-19. Revised by … Editions ⁃ Cavanah, Frances 1930a ⁃ Cavanah, Frances 1930b, pp. 5-7.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised by … Scholarly editions ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 243-49.
    496 bytes (55 words) - 05:33, 27 May 2022
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-26. Revised by … Significant ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 41, 43-45. Good discussion of Robin Hood folk drama (p. 41) and Elizabethan and later drama (pp. 43-45). ⁃ Echols, Katherine 2013a ⁃ Griffin, Carrie 2017a ⁃ Krasner, Orly Leah 2008a ⁃ Judge, Roy 1997a ⁃ Leach, Robert 2001a ⁃ Marshall, John 1998a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020b ⁃ Marshall, John 2001a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020c ⁃ Marshall, John 2006a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020d ⁃ Marshall, John 2007a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020e ⁃ Marshall, John 2008a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020f ⁃ Marshall, John 2017a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020g ⁃ Marshall, John 2018a ⁃ Marshall, John 2020a ⁃ Stock, Lorraine Kochanske 2008a ⁃ Thorndike, Ashley Horace 1902a ⁃ Uéno, Yoshiko 1979a. …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-08. Revised by … Studies and criticism ⁃ Hook, Frank S 1956a ⁃ Reeves, John D 1956a ⁃ Thornton, Richard H 1914a. Brief mention ⁃ Smith, G C Moore 1920a.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised by … Scholarly editions ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 234-40.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised by … Studies and criticism ⁃ Krasner, Orly Leah 2008a ⁃ Stock, Lorraine Kochanske 2008a Background ⁃ Wikipedia: Reginald De Koven.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-10. Revised by … A musical pantomime performed at Covent Garden on the following dates in 1796: January 1-2, 4, 16, 19-23, 25-29 Anonymous 1796a ; February 1, 8. Anonymous 1796b Background ⁃ Wikipedia: Royal Opera House. Notes
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-02-05. Revised by … Brief mention ⁃ Byrne, Muriel St Clare 1920a; see p. 369 ⁃ Merriam, Thomas 2019a, see p. 416. Biography ⁃ Hotson, Leslie 1959a.
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  • Somerset, J.A.B. 'Local Drama and Playing Places at Shrewsbury: New Findings from the Borough Records', Medieval & Ranaissance Drama in England, vol. 2 (1985), pp. 1-31 .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-09. Revised by … Scholarly editions ⁃ Dodsley, Robert 1874a, vol. VII, pp. 385-506. Criticism ⁃ Hyland, Peter 2005a. Brief mention ⁃ Freeburg, Victor Oscar 1915a, pp. 9,11, 24, 25, 26, 27, 91n, 109, 122, 126, 128-32, 169n, 186n, 199, 200, 212.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-08. Revised by … Postcards relating to Robin Hood drama. Discussion ⁃ Lake, Fred 1991a.
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  • Scharling, Henrik. Marsk Stig og Fru Ingeborg: Tragisk Drama. Med en Afhandling om dansk Skuespildigtning. Kjøbenhavn: C.A. Reitzels Forlag, 1878. 242 pp. Citation ⁃ Scharling, Henrik. Marsk Stig og Fru Ingeborg: Tragisk Drama (Copenhagen, 1878)
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  • Dutka, Joanna, ed. Proceedings of the First Colloquium at Erindale College, University of Toronto 31 August – 3 September 1978 edited by Joanna Dutka (Records of Early English Drama). Toronto: Records of Early English Drama, ©1979. xii, 190, [2] pp. Hardback. Relevant contents ⁃ pp. 128-44. Wasson, John. 'Records of Early English Drama: Where They are and What They Tell Us'. ⁃ pp. 145-56. Carson, Neil. 'Analysing Henslowe's Diary'. Citation ⁃ Dutka, Joanna, ed. Proceedings of the First Colloquium at Erindale College, University of Toronto 31 August – 3 September 1978 (Records of Early English Drama) (Toronto, ©1979) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-08. Revised by … This is the first of two plays appended to William Copland's (c. 1560) and Edward White's (c. 1590?) printings of the Gest of Robyn Hode. Scholarly editions ⁃ Blackstone, Mary A 1981a ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 208-14 ⁃ Parfitt, George 1978a, see pp. 6-9. Modernized text ⁃ Dacre, Michael 2013a, pp. 151-60 ⁃⁃ Dacre, Michael 2015a, pp. 151-60.
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  • Blackstone, Mary. 'A Survey and Annotated Bibliography of Records Research and Performance History relating to Early British Drama and Minstrelsy for 1984-8 ', Records of Early English Drama Newsletter, vol. 15, No. 1 ( 1990 ), pp. 1-104 .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised by … Scholarly editions ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 231-36 (excerpts) ⁃ Jonson, Ben 1979a, pp. 275-310. ⁃⁃ Jonson, Ben 1979e, pp. 275-310. Studies and criticism ⁃ Greg, Walter Wilson 1902a ⁃ Hayes, Thomas Wilson 1992a ⁃ Knight, Stephen Thomas 2005a ⁃ Uéno, Yoshiko 1979a. Brief mention ⁃ Freeburg, Victor Oscar 1915a Localities figuring in the play Localities figuring as locales or mentioned in The Sad Shepherd:
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-26. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Essential ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 203-49. Contents: ⁃⁃ Robin Hood and the Sheriff (c.1475; pp. 203-207) ⁃⁃ Robin Hood and the Friar (c.1560; pp. 208-14) ⁃⁃ Robin Hood and the Potter (c.1560; pp. 215-19) ⁃⁃ extracts from Anthony Munday's and Henry Chettle's Downfall of Robert, Earl of Huntington (1597-98; pp. 220-30) ⁃⁃ extracts from Anthony Munday's and Henry Chettle's Death of Robert, Earl of Huntington (1597-98; pp. 220-30) ⁃⁃ extracts from Ben Jonson's Sad Shepherd (1637?; pp. 231-36) ⁃⁃ the anonymous Robin Hood and his Crew of Souldiers (1661; pp. 237-42) ⁃⁃ extracts from Alfred Tennyson's Foresters (1892; pp. 243-49). Drama
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  • Bates, Richard. 'Trollope's Notes on Drama ', Notes & Queries, vol. 31 ( 1984 ), pp. 491-97 .
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  • Wasson, John M., ed. Devon. Edited by John M. Wasson (Records of Early English Drama). Toronto; Buffalo; London: University of Toronto Press, ©1986. lxxv, 623 pp. 4 b/w maps. ISBN 0-8020-5706-3. Downloads ⁃ PDF Citation ⁃ Wasson, John M., ed. Devon. (Records of Early English Drama) (Toronto; Buffalo; London, ©1986) .
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  • Barber, Lester E., ed. Misogonus / edited with an Introduction [by] Lester E. Barber ( Renaissance Drama ). New York; London: Garland, 1989. ii, 374 pp. 24 cm. Facs. ISBN 0-8240-9751-3. Citation ⁃ Barber, Lester E., ed. Misogonus (Renaissance Drama) (New York; London, 1989) .
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  • Tickner, Frederick James, ed. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to Everyman. Edited and arranged for acting by F.J. Tickner (The Teaching of English Series, No. 55). London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1932. 310 pp. 8vo. b/w illus. Citation ⁃ Tickner, Frederick James, ed. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to Everyman (London and Edinburgh, 1932)
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-01-24. Revised by … Introduction In Scotland, Robin Hood-related entertainments occurred in several festive contexts: at Easter, at Whitsuntide, in May games (in the month of May or later), in summer games and on St Nicholas's Day, December 6. Counties with evidence of festivals Gazetteers The list includes gazetteers, lists and calendars of evidence relating to festivals for England in general or for specific historical counties or other similar areas. Also included are lists of allusions to Robin Hood (or subsidiary characters of the tradition) as figures in festivals and folk drama. Sources dealing only with specific localities are found under the localities in question. ⁃ Lancashire, Ian 1984a. List of British drama texts, references and allusions to performances, and gazetteer of localitites for which evidence of dramatic activity survives from 1558 or earlier, including entries on the then known occurrences of Robin Hood …
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  • Clark, A. ' Maldon Records and the Drama ', Notes & Queries, Series 10, vol. VII ( 1907 ), pp. 43-44 . Related Items Clark, Andrew 1907b.
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  • Clark, A. ' Maldon Records and the Drama ', Notes & Queries, Series 10, vol. VII ( 1907 ), pp. 422-23 . Related Items Clark, Andrew 1907c.
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  • Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama by Lord Raglan. London; Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1936. xii, 311, [1 blank] pp. 21,5 x 14 cm. Hardbound. Author's full name and title: Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan. Citation ⁃ Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama (London, 1936) .
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  • Schade, Jens August. Marsk Stig: Drama, udsprunget af et Folkevise-Motiv. København: Funkis Forlag, 1934. 111, [1 blank] pp. 15 x 22 cm. Illus. by Ernst Hansen. Paperback. Citation ⁃ Schade, Jens August. Marsk Stig: Drama, udsprunget af et Folkevise-Motiv (Copenhagen, 1934) .
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  • Clark, A. ' Maldon Records and the Drama ', Notes & Queries, Series 10, vol. VII ( 1907 ), pp. 181-83 . Related Items Clark, Andrew 1907a Clark, Andrew 1907c.
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  • Clark, A. ' Maldon Records and the Drama ', Notes & Queries, Series 10, vol. VII ( 1907 ), pp. 342-43 . Related Items Clark, Andrew 1907b Clark, Andrew 1907d.
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  • Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama by Lord Raglan (Vantage Books, K32). New York; Vintage Books, 1956. x, 296, xi, [1], [1 blank] pp. 21,5 x 14 cm. Hardbound. Pagination taken from 1975 reprint. Author's full name and title: Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan. Citation ⁃ Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama (Vantage Books, K32) (New York, 1956) .
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  • Meagher, John C. ' The First Progress of Henry VII ', Renaissance Drama, New Series, Vol. 1 ( 1968 ), pp. 45-73 . Downloads ⁃ PDF – Read online or download.
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  • Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama by Lord Raglan. Mineola, New York; Dover Publications, 2003. x, 296, xi, [1], [1 blank] pp. 22 cm. Hardbound. ISBN 0-4864-2708-0. Reprint of 1956 ed. Author's full name and title: Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan. Bibliographical sources ⁃ National Library of Australia: Trove. Citation ⁃ Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama (Mineola, New York, 2003) .
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  • Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama by Lord Raglan. Westport, Connecticut; Greenwood Publishers, 1975. x, 296, xi, [1], [1 blank] pp. 21,5 x 14 cm. Hardbound. ISBN 0-8371-8238-0. LC Card No, 75-23424. Reprint of 1956 ed. Author's full name and title: Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan. Citation ⁃ Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama (Westport, Connecticut, 1975) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-01-14. Revised by … Introduction Among festivals that might involve some kind of Robin Hood-related entertainment, drama, sports activity, symbolism or disguise were Whitsun or May games, summer games, Easter celebrations and St Nicholas's Eve celebrations in Scotland, church ales, church dedication day feasts, Lord Mayor's shows (London), Dickens Day Parades (London and elsewhere, 19th cent. or later), carnivals, royal jubilees, ad hoc charity events, high school graduation ceremonies and end-of-term celebrations. For England and Scotland, where there was much festival activity and is much evidence, the information relating to specific localities is grouped under counties. Outside this region, information relating to specific localities is grouped under continent and country. England Specific localities in England organized by historic county. Scotland Scotland has its own page. ⁃ Festivals in Scotland. Allusions This …
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  • Sponsler, Claire. Drama and Resistance: Bodies, Goods, and Theatricality in Late Medieval England / Claire Sponsler (Medieval Cultures, vol. 10). Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press, 1997. 232 pp. 6 b./w. photos. 23 x 15 cm. ISBN 0-8166-2926-9; ISBN 0-8166-2927-7 (pbk). LC Card No. 96-40235. Citation ⁃ Sponsler, Claire. Drama and Resistance: Bodies, Goods, and Theatricality in Late Medieval England (Medieval Cultures, vol. 10) (Minneapolis and London, 1997) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-08. Revised by … The dialogue, without speech attributions, of the anonymous playlet known as Robin Hood and the Sheriff or Robin Hood and the Knight was jotted down on the verso of household accounts that seem to have belonged to the Paston family. Since we know that W. Wood, John Paston III's groom, performed in such a play, there is a very real possibility this is the text he would have used. Scholarly editions ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 203-207 ⁃ Parfitt, George 1978a, see pp. 5-6. Studies and criticism ⁃ Butzner, Alexis 2011a. Discussion and reconstruction of the playlet. Whereas some critics have regarded the text as a medley of two very short playlets, Butzner emphasizes its unity and restates the case for its dependence on a now lost version of the ballad of Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne. ⁃ Marshall, John 1998a ⁃⁃ Marshall, John 2020b. Also see ⁃ 1473 - Paston, …
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  • Richardson, Christine. ' The Figure of Robin Hood within the Carnival Tradition ', Records of Early English Drama Newsletter, vol. 22, No. 2 ( 1997 ), pp. 18-24 . Downloads ⁃ PDF.
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  • Freeburg, Victor Oscar. Disguise Plots in Elizabethan Drama: a Study in Stage Tradition by Victor Oscar Freeburg (Columbia University Studies in English and Comparative Literature). New York: Columbia University Press, 1915. x, 241, [1], [4 advert.] pp. Downloads ⁃ PDF. Citation ⁃ Freeburg, Victor Oscar. Disguise Plots in Elizabethan Drama: a Study in Stage Tradition (Columbia University Studies in English and Comparative Literature) (New York, 1915) .
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  • Erler, Mary C., ed. Ecclesiastical London. Edited by Mary C. Erler (Records of Early English Drama). Toronto and Buffalo: University of Toronto Press; London: British Library. 2008. cxxxvi, 483, [1 blank], [1 advert], [3 blank] pp. (incl. 3 pp. plates). 17 x 25 cm. B./w. illus. (3 pp. plates, 2 maps). Hardback. ISBN 978-0-7123-5024-2. Citation ⁃ Erler, Mary C., ed. Ecclesiastical London (Records of Early English Drama) (Toronto and Buffalo; London. 2008) .
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  • Tickner, Frederick James, ed.; Newbolt, Henry, gen. series ed. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to the Second Play of the Shepherds. Edited and arranged for acting by F.J. Tickner [...] New and enlarged edition (The Teaching of English Series, No. 55). London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson & Sons, [1931]. xvi, 17-287 pp. 16 cm. b/w illus. Year of publication perhaps 1932. Citation ⁃ Tickner, Frederick James, ed. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to the Second Play of the Shepherds (London and Edinburgh, [1931])
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  • Anonymous. 'Drama', The Athenæum, No. 4184 (4 Jan. 1908), pp. 23-24 . Downloads ⁃ PDF etc. (entire volume).
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  • Clark, Robert L. A. ' Clark, Robert L. A.; Sponsler, Claire. “Queer Play: The Cultural Work of Crossdressing in Medieval Drama ', New Literary History, vol. 28 ( 1997 ), pp. 319-44 .
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  • Hyland, Peter. ' Look About You, Anonymity, and the Value Theatricality', Research Opportunities in Medieval & Renaissance Drama, vol. 44 (2005), pp. 65-74 .
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  • Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama by Lord Raglan (The Thinker's Library, No. 133). London; Watts & Co., 1949. x, 310 pp. 16.5 x 10.5 cm. Hardbound. Col. Dust-jacket. P. ix: "Preface to Thinker's Library edition", dated June, 1948: "a few small additions" made to this ed. Author's full name and title: Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan. Citation ⁃ Raglan, Lord. The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth, and Drama (The Thinker's Library, No. 133) (London, 1949) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Scholarly editions ⁃ Munday, Anthony 1828a. ⁃ Collier, John Payne 1833a (separate pagination). Same ed. as preceding. ⁃ Dodsley, Robert 1874a, vol. VIII, pp. 209-327. Studies and criticism ⁃ Margeson, J M R 1974a ⁃ Oakley-Brown, Liz 2005a ⁃ Skura, Meredith 2003a ⁃ Uéno, Yoshiko 1979a. Brief mention ⁃ Byrne, Muriel St Clare 1920a; see pp. 368-69 ⁃ Merriam, Thomas 2009a, see p. 50 ⁃ Merriam, Thomas 2019a, see p. 416 ⁃ Oliphant, Ernest Henry Clarke 1911a; see p. 454: attributes the Huntingdon plays to Munday and Chettle ⁃ Parrott, Thomas Marc 1915a; see pp. 250, 251. On rhyme-schemes, comic "malapropisms" etc. as evidence of authorship in Downfall and Death. Biography ⁃ Hotson, Leslie 1959a. Also see ⁃ Munday, Anthony - Downfall of Robert Earle of Huntington ⁃ Munday, …
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  • Tickner, Frederick James, ed.; Baldwin, Thomas Whitfield, revis.; Bernbaum, Ernest, series ed. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to Everyman. Edited and arranged for acting by F.J. Tickner. American edition, rev. by Thomas Whitfield Baldwin (Nelson's English Series, No. 55). New York: Thomas Nelson & Sons, [c. 1929]. xx, 17-304 pp. 16 cm. B/w illus., port. LC 27-9621. Citation ⁃ Tickner, Frederick James, ed.; Baldwin, Thomas Whitfield, revis. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to Everyman (New York, [c. 1929]) .
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  • Laidler, Josephine. 'A History of Pastoral Drama in England until 1700', Englische Studien, vol. XXXV (1905), pp. 193-259 . Downloads ⁃ PDF.
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  • Wasson, John. 'Records of Early English Drama: where they are and what they tell us', in: Dutka, Joanna 1979a, pp. 128-44
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  • Johnson, Reginald Brimley, ed.; Rhys, Ernest Percival, ser. ed. A Book of British Ballads. Reprinted / Selected and arranged by R. Brimley Johnson (Everyman’s Library, Poetry and the Drama). London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd; New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1917. xxiv, 340, [1] pp. 175 mm. Ornam. border on t.-p. Bibliographical sources ⁃ Gable, John Harris 1939a, No. 404 [B]. Citation ⁃ Johnson, Reginald Brimley, ed.; Rhys, Ernest Percival, ser. ed. A Book of British Ballads. Reprinted (Everyman’s Library, Poetry and the Drama) (London; New York, 1917) .
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  • Wilson, F.P.; Hunter, G.K., ed. & bibl.; Dobrée, Bonamy, gen. ed.; Davis, Norman, gen. ed. The English Drama 1485–1585 (The Oxford History of English Literature, vol. IV, Pt. I). Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, 1969. [viii], 244 pp. 14 x 22 cm. Dust-jacket. Hardback. Citation ⁃ Wilson, F.P.; Hunter, G.K., ed. & bibl.; Dobrée, Bonamy, gen. ed.; Davis, Norman, gen. ed. The English Drama 1485–1585 (The Oxford History of English Literature, vol. IV, Pt. I) (Oxford, 1969) .
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  • Williams, Charles Dewhurst. 'Five Miscellaneous Notes on Juvenile Drama', Notes & Queries, vol. CLXXXIX (1945), pp. 12-13
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-28. Revised by … The Robin Hood Panto was one of the shows offered at the Brighton Aquarium according to the first of the picture postcards below. The card is undated, but one specimen is postmarked Oct. 18, 1906. Designed by acclaimed architect and pier builder Eugenius Birch (1818-84), the Brighton Aquarium opened in august 1872. Apart from the aquarium, the complex contained a reading room, restaurant and conservatory. In a couple of years a roof terrace garden, roller skating rink, smoking room and music conservatory had been added. During the 1890's the establishment hosted events such as organ recitals, lectures, concerts and plays. But there was also a good deal of light entertainment, for the acts booked during the period c. 1873-88 included comedians, singers, minstrels, magicians, acrobats, clowns, ventriloquists, puppeteers, living statuary, animal acts, swimmers, and skaters. Harvard University Library: Brighton (England). Aquarium. …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-01. Revised by … This section covers allusions occurring in narrative or lyrical sources, including belletristic literature, works of folk literature, historical narrative works such as chronicles and non-specialist works on English (local) history, cartographical works published in book form, itineraries, (auto)biographies, and records and papers of belletrist authors, scientists, politicians etc. as well as letters of all kinds. Allusions are generally understood to be short passages occurring in longer works. This may include short poems quoted in toto in other works. Records relating to actual persons, criminal or otherwise, named Robin/Robert Hood or surnamed Robinhood, persons carrying the same name as secondary or minor characters, i.e. Little John or Will Scarlet, men surnamed Littlejohn, and records relating to historical sheriffs of Nottingham are found in the Records subsection of the Historiography section. Records relating to …
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  • Young, Abigail Ann. 'Minstrels and Minstrelsy: Household Retainers or Instrumentalists?', Records of Early English Drama Newsletter, vol. 20, No. 1 (1995), pp. 11-17
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  • Epperly, Elizabeth R., compil. 'Trollope's Notes on Drama', Notes & Queries, vol. 31 (1984), pp. 491-97 .
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  • Fisher, Keely. 'The Crying of ane Playe: Robin Hood and Maying in Sixteenth-Century Scotland', Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England, vol. 12 (1999), pp. 19-58
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  • MacLean, Sally-Beth. ‘King Games and Robin Hood: Play and Profit at Kingston upon Thames‘, Research Opportunities in Renaissance Drama, vol. 29 (1986), pp. 85-94 .
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  • Williams, Charles Dewhurst. 'Some Poetical Origins of Juvenile Drama', Notes & Queries, vol. CXC (1946), pp. 276-77 Author's full name probably Charles Dewhurst Williams.
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  • Radford, Cecily. 'Early Drama in Exeter', Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature, and Art, vol. 67 (1935), pp. 361-70 .
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  • Johnson, R. Brimley, ed.; Rhys, Ernest, ser. ed. A Book of British Ballads / Selected and arranged by R. Brimley Johnson (Everyman’s Library, Poetry and the Drama). London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd; New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., [1912]. xxiv, 340, [1] pp. 175 mm. Ornam. border on t.-p. LCCN A121005. Bibliographical sources ⁃ Gable, John Harris 1939a, No. 404 [A]. Citation ⁃ Johnson, R. Brimley, ed.; Rhys, Ernest, ser. ed. A Book of British Ballads (Everyman’s Library, Poetry and the Drama) (London; New York, [1912]) .
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  • Tickner, Frederick James, ed.; Osborne, H., annotator; Newbolt, Henry, series ed. Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to Everyman. Edited and arranged for acting by F.J. Tickner (The Teaching of English Series, No. 55). London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson & Sons, [1926]. xvi, 17-310 pp. 18 cm. B/w illus. LC 27-9621 27-9621. P. [iv]: "This Edition has been specially annotated by H. Osborne, M.A., for the University Tutorial Press, Ltd., 25 High Street, New Oxford Street, London, W.C.2, by whom it is supplied." Osborne's "Notes and Summaries" are found on pp. 253-310. Citation ⁃ Tickner, Frederick James, ed.; Osborne, H., annotator; Earlier English Drama: from Robin Hood to Everyman (London and Edinburgh, [1926])
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  • Scherb, Victor I. "'I'de have a shooting': Catherine of Aragon's Receptions of Robin Hood", Research Opportunities in Renaissance Drama, vol. 42 (2003), pp. 123-146
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  • Hays, Rosalind Conklin, ed.; McGee, C.E., ed,; Joyce, Sally L., ed.; Newlyn, Evelyn S., ed. Dorset / Edited by Rosalind Conklin Hays and C.E. McGee. Cornwall / Edited by Sally L. Joyce and Evelyn S. Newlyn (Records of Early English Drama). [Turnhout, Belgium]: Brepols Publishers; Toronto; Buffalo, N.Y.: University of Toronto Press, 1999. x, 719, [1 advert], [4 blank] pp. Maps. ISBN 0-4020-4379-8 (U. of Toronto P.); ISBN 2-503-50813-8. hardbound. Citation ⁃ Hays, Rosalind Conklin, ed.; McGee, C.E., ed.; Joyce, Sally L., ed.; Newlyn, Evelyn S., ed. Dorset [and] Cornwall (Records of Early English Drama) ([Turnhout, Belgium]; Toronto; Buffalo, N.Y., 1999
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  • [Smith, Garnet], review. 'Heroes and History: Myth, Epic, Traditional Drama', The Times Literary Supplement (12 Sep. 1936), p. 722 . Work reviewed ⁃ Raglan, Lord 1936a.
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  • Knutson, Roslyn L. 'The Commercial Significance of the Payments for Playtexts in "Henslowe's Diary", 1597–1603', Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England, vol. 5 (1991), pp. 117-63 .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-11. Revised by … Editions Facsimile editions ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1886a Text editions ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1872a ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1896a ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1923a ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1924a ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1928a Translations English ⁃ Halle, Adam de la 1928a Bibliography ⁃ ARLIMA: Adam de la Halle. Studies and criticism ⁃ Chambers, Edmund Kerchever 1903a, vol. I, pp. 171-74. Reprinted 1925 ⁃ Cruse, Mark 2004a ⁃ Frank, Grace 1936a; see pp. 378, 380, 382, 383 ⁃ Langlois, Ernest 1895a. Argues that two passages mentioning places near Arras are later interpolations ⁃ Langlois, Ernest 1907a. On a game played by the main characters of the play ⁃ Verrier, Paul 1931a, vol. I, pp. 145-46, suggests that the Robin Hood figure originated in the French pastoral dramatic and carole traditons, as embodied in de la Halle's …
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  • Douglas, Audrey, ed.; MacLean, Sally-Beth, ed.; Somerset, J.A.B., general ed. REED in Review: Essays in Celebration of the First Twenty-Five Years, ed. Audrey Douglas & Sally-Beth MacLean (Studies in Early English Drama, general editor J.A.B. Somerset, vol. 8). Toronto; Buffalo; London: University of Toronto Press, 2006. viii, 271 pp. 23 x 16 cm. Hardcover. Illus. cover. ISBN-13: 978-0-8020-3827-2; ISBN-10: 0-8020-3827-1. Relevant contents ⁃ pp. 65-84: Marshall, John. 'Gathering in the Name of the Outlaw: REED and Robin Hood'. Citation ⁃ Douglas, Audrey, ed.; MacLean, Sally-Beth, ed.; Somerset, J.A.B., general ed. REED in Review: Essays in Celebration of the First Twenty-Five Years (Studies in Early English Drama, vol. 8) (Toronto; Buffalo; London, 2006) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-10. Revised by … According to the "Theatrical Register" column in the Gentleman's Magazine, one or more pieces entitled Robin Hood was/were performed quite frequently at Covent Garden during the 1780 and '90s. The Register lists just the titles and dates of performance. No doubt further data such as full titles and authors will be found in other sources, but in the meantime the dates of performance are collected on this page. Two other titles possibly related to the Robin Hood tradition also figure quite frequently: Marian (at Covent Garden) and Richard Coeur de Lion (at Drury Lane). The dates for these pieces are listed on the "Discussion" page. Performances of pieces entitled "Robin Hood" ⁃ 1784 ⁃⁃ April 17, 19-20 Anonymous 1784a , 30 Anonymous 1784b ⁃⁃ May 3, 5, 11-14, 19, 24, 31 Anonymous 1784b ⁃⁃ October 12, 15, 22 Anonymous 1784c ⁃⁃ November 2, 9 Anonymous 1784c …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-10. Revised by … According to the "Theatrical Register" column in the Gentleman's Magazine, one or more pieces entitled Robin Hood was/were performed quite frequently at Covent Garden during the 1780 and '90s. The Register lists just the titles and dates of performance. No doubt further data such as full titles and authors will be found in other sources, but in the meantime the dates of performance are collected on this page. Two other titles possibly related to the Robin Hood tradition also figure quite frequently: Marian (at Covent Garden) and Richard Coeur de Lion (at Drury Lane). The dates for these pieces are listed on the "Discussion" page. Performances of pieces titled 'Robin Hood' ⁃ 1784 ⁃⁃ April 17, 19-20 Anonymous 1784a , 30 Anonymous 1784b ⁃⁃ May 3, 5, 11-14, 19, 24, 31 Anonymous 1784b ⁃⁃ October 12, 15, 22 Anonymous 1784c ⁃⁃ November 2, 9 Anonymous 1784c …
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  • Malling, Thomas. Robin Hood. Gråsten: Drama, 1994. 110 [2] pp. 21 cm. 2 b&w illus., illus. cover. Illustrator: Jane Wessely. ISBN 87-7419-704-5. Copies ⁃ Royal Library, Copenhagen, Dramatisk Bibliotek ⁃ Royal Library, Copenhagen, Nærmagasin ⁃ Aalborg Teater. Citation ⁃ Malling, Thomas. Robin Hood (Gråsten, 1994) .
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  • Malling, Thomas. Robin Hood. Gråsten: Drama, 1994. 20 booklets. A4. ISBN 87-7419-507-3. Set of 20 booklets, one for each role, for rehearsal. Citation ⁃ Malling, Thomas. Robin Hood. [20 booklets with parts, for rehearsal] (Gråsten, 1994) .
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  • ; Butterworth, Philip, ed. Early English Performance: Medieval Plays and Robin Hood Games / John Marshall. Edited by Philip Butterworth (Shifting Paradigms in Early English Drama Studies) (Variorum Collected Studies). Abingdon, Oxon; New York; Routledge, 2020. ISBN 978-1-138-3793-7 (hbk); ISBN 978-0-429-42778-7 (ebk). viii, 367, [2 blank], [1] pp. Relevant contents ⁃ Butterworth, Philip. 'Introduction', pp. 1-9 ⁃ Marshall, John. "'goon in-to Bernysdale': the Trail of the Paston Robin Hood Play", pp. 219-47 ⁃ Marshall, John. "Comyth in Robyn Hode: Paying and Playing the Outlaw in Croscombe", pp. 248-70 ⁃ Marshall, John. 'Gathering in the Name of the Outlaw: REED and Robin Hood', pp. 271-92 ⁃ Marshall, John. 'Riding with Robin Hood: English Pageantry and the Making of a Legend', pp. 293-315 ⁃ Marshall, John. 'Picturing Robin Hood in Early Print and Performance: 1500–1590', pp. 316-36 ⁃ Marshall, John. 'Revisiting and Revising Robin Hood …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised by … Scholarly editions ⁃ Munday, Anthony 1828a. ⁃ Collier, John Payne 1833a; (separate pagination). Same ed. as preceding. ⁃ Dodsley, Robert 1874a, vol. VIII, pp. 93-207. Studies and criticism ⁃ Margeson, J M R 1974a ⁃ Oakley-Brown, Liz 2005a ⁃ Skura, Meredith 2003a ⁃ Uéno, Yoshiko 1979a. Brief mention ⁃ Freeburg, Victor Oscar 1915a, pp. 25, 105, 151 n., 223 ⁃ Griffin, Carrie 2017a ⁃ Merriam, Thomas 2009a, see p. 50 ⁃ Merriam, Thomas 2019a, see p. 416 ⁃ Oliphant, Ernest Henry Clarke 1911a; see p. 454: attributes the Huntingdon plays to Munday and Chettle ⁃ Parrott, Thomas Marc 1915a; see pp. 250, 251. On rhyme-schemes, comic "malapropisms" etc. as evidence of authorship in Downfall and Death ⁃ Reynolds, George F 1905a; see p. 597. Biography ⁃ Hotson, Leslie 1959a. Also see ⁃ Munday, Anthony …
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  • Farmer, John S., ed. Recently Recovered "Lost" Tudor Plays; with Some Others [...] Edited by John S. Farmer (Early English Dramatists). London: Privately printed for subscribers by the Early English Drama Society, 1907. viii, 472 pp. Downloads ⁃ PDF. Citation ⁃ Farmer, John S., ed. Recently Recovered "Lost" Tudor Plays (London, 1907) .
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  • Farmer, John S., ed. Six Anonymous Plays, First Series (c. 1507-1537) [...] Edited by John S. Farmer (Early English Dramatists) (London: Printed for the Early English Drama Society, 1905). [iv], 286 pp. B&w Illus. (facs.) Citation ⁃ Farmer, John S., ed. Six Anonymous Plays, First Series (c. 1507-1537) (London, 1905) .
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  • Britton, G.C., review. '[Review of:] Non-Cycle Plays and the Winchester Dialogues: Facsimiles of Plays and Fragments in Various Manuscripts and the Dialogues in Winchester College MS. 33. With introductions and a transcript of the Dialogues by Norman Davis ( Leeds Texts and Monographs. Medieval Drama Facsimiles V) (Leeds: University of Leeds School of English, 1979)', Notes & Queries, New Series, vol. 29 (1982), pp. 241-43 .
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  • Hammond, Eleanor Prescott, ed. English Verse between Chaucer and Surrey: Being Examples of Conventional Secular Poetry, exclusive of Romance, Ballad, Lyric and Drama, in the Period from Henry the Fourth to Henry the Eight. Edited with Introductions and Notes by E. P. Hammond (Duke University Publications). Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1927. xii, 591 pp. 8vo. Citation ⁃ Hammond, Eleanor Prescott, ed. English Verse between Chaucer and Surrey (Durham, N.C., 1927)
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … The attribution of the play George a Greene to Robert Greene is uncertain. See for instance Murphy, Donna N 2012a; Kyungchan, Charles Min 2015a. Scholarly editions ⁃ Dodsley, Robert 1780a, vol. I, pp. 1-58. ⁃ Dodsley, Robert 1825a, vol. III, pp. 1-48. ⁃ Greene, Robert 1905a, vol. II, pp. 159-217, 367-77. Studies and criticism ⁃ Detobel, Robert. 'Shapiro-Tagebuch (3): "Forgeing" oder Forschhung?', Shake-Speare (Neue Shake-speare Gesellschaft, April 14, 2010). Online item. ⁃ Greg, Walter Wilson 1911a; see pp. 288-90, on the authenticity of the MS attribution of the play to Robert Greene. ⁃ Kyungchan, Charles Min 2015a. Argues on linguistic evidence that the attribution to Robert Greene is untenable. ⁃ Lin, Erika T 2009a. ⁃ Melnikoff, Kirk 2008a. ⁃ Murphy, Donna N 2012a. Argues on linguistic and stylistic evidence that the attribution to Robert Greene …
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  • Hammond, Eleanor Prescott, ed. English Verse between Chaucer and Surrey: Being Examples of Conventional Secular Poetry, exclusive of Romance, Ballad, Lyric and Drama, in the Period from Henry the Fourth to Henry the Eight. Edited with Introductions and Notes by E. P. Hammond. New York: Octagon Books, 1969. xii, 591 pp. 8vo. LC Card#: 65-25568. Citation ⁃ Hammond, Eleanor Prescott, ed. English Verse between Chaucer and Surrey (New York, 1969)
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  • Lancashire, Ian, compil. Dramatic Texts and Records of Britain: a Chronological Topography to 1558 (Studies in Early English Drama, vol. I). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984. ci, 633 pp. 23.5 cm. 23 plates, 6 maps (all b/w); 1 vign. on binding. Hardcover. ISBN 0802055923 (U. of Toronto Press); 0 521 26295 X (CUP). Citation ⁃ Lancashire, Ian, compil. Dramatic Texts and Records of Britain: a Chronological Topography to 1558 (Cambridge, 1984)
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  • Farmer, John Stephen, ed. Six Anonymous Plays (Second Series) comprising Jacob and Esau, Youth, Albion Knight, Misogonus, Godly Queen Hester, Tom Tyler and his Wife, Note-Book and Word-List. Edited by J. S. Farmer (Early English Dramatists). London: Early English Drama Society, 1906. 478 pp. 8vo. Copies ⁃ British Library, General Reference Collection: 2303.a.5/9. Bibliographical sources ⁃ To Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Huntington Library Citation ⁃ Farmer, John Stephen, ed. Six Anonymous Plays (Second Series) (London, 1906) .
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  • Quarmby, Kevin A. The Disguised Ruler in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries / Kevin A. Quarmby (Studies in Performance and Early Modern Drama). Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VA: Ashgate, 2012. ISBN-13: 978-1-138-27704-5; ISBN-10: 1-138-27704-5. xvi, 267 pp. Citation ⁃ Quarmby, Kevin A. The Disguised Ruler in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries (Farnham, Surrey, UK; Burlington, VA, 2012) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-03-04. Revised by … Not surprisingly the country name 'England' figures in a variety of early narrative and dramatic sources dealing with its greatest hero. Occurrences of the name in ballads (folk poetry) and drama will be listed below. Ballads
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  • Heywood, John; Farmer, John S., ed. The Proverbs, Epigrams, and Miscellanies of John Heywood: Comprising A Dialogue of the Effectual Proverbs in the English Tongue concerning Marriages — First Hundred Epigrams — Three Hundred Epigrams on Three Hundred Provberbs — The Fifth Hundred Epigrams — A Sixth Hundred Epigrams — Miscellanies — Ballads — Note-Book and Word-List. Edited by John S. Farmer (Early English Dramatists). London: Privately Printed for Subscribers by the Early English Drama Society, 1906. 466 pp. Downloads ⁃ PDF. Citation ⁃ Heywood, John; Farmer, John S., ed. The Proverbs, Epigrams, and Miscellanies of John Heywood (Early English Dramatists) (London, 1906)
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-14. Revised by … This page on websites includes a short list of lists of websites and a slightly longer list of websites as well as a long list of potentially useful web resources. Lists and webographies ⁃ Robin Hood Project at the University of Rochester: Other Ressources. Lists a handful of dedicated sites. Robin Hood Websites The items included here deal exclusively with or include substantial amounts of material on the Robin Hood tradition. ⁃ Experience Nottinghamshire: Robin Hood (official tourism website of Nottinghamshire) ⁃ Here Begynneth A Lytell Geste of Robin Hood… ⁃ The Legend of Robin Hood ⁃ Our Nottinghamshire: Robin Hood ⁃ The Outlaw Robin Hood - His Yorkshire Legend (Barbara Green) ⁃ Robin Hood: Bold Outlaw of Barnsdale and Sherwood. Site with information on various aspects of the tradition, history etc. ⁃ Robin Hood Loxley Yorkshire ⁃ The Robin Hood …
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  • Short introduction We hope that this wiki will in due course come to live up to its somewhat grand name. It is called 'International' because in addition to the vast amount of material that exists in English, we intend to add information about materials in other languages such as translations of ballads, secondary literature, children's fiction, literature on foreign analogues of Robin Hood etc. Arguably 'Bibliography' is a misnomer as the site already includes a wealth of all sorts of information one would not nor­mally expect to find in a biblio­gra­phy, but the biblio­gra­phical aspect is in all cases taken quite seriously, and there is already a wiki named the Robin Hood Wiki, so another name had to be found for the site. Latest news NEW subsite: IRHB Editions, currently with a single edition: A Gest of Robyn Hode ⁃ 2024-03-12: All tithe awards for the following English counties have now been searched for Robin Hood-related place names: …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-15. Revised by … Allusion Source notes The 1872 source reprints original prints with original t.-ps. and separate pagination. Lists ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. ⁃ Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources ⁃ Taylor, John (1578-1653) 1639a. Not seen. ⁃ Taylor, John (1578-1653) 1870a, First Collection, p. 28 of This summer's Travels (separate pagination). ⁃ Taylor, John (1578-1653) 1872a, p. 23 of This Summers Travels. Notes
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-15. Revised by … Allusion Source notes Reprints original prints with original t.-ps. and separate pagination. Lists ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. ⁃ Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources ⁃ Taylor, John (1578-1653) 1622a. Not seen. ⁃ Taylor, John (1578-1653) 1872a, p. 10 of Sir Gregory Nonsence. Notes
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-01-10. Revised by … Papplewick Close, a cul-de sac in Tuckswood, may be regarded as the extension of Friar Tuck Road on the southern side of Robin Hood Road. This short street is named after Papplewick in Nottinghamshire, the home of Maudlin, a witch in Ben Jonson's Robin Hood-themed drama The Sad Shepherd. This rather slender connection with Robin Hood is reinforced locally – in Papplewick, not necessarily in Papplewick Close – by the claim that Allen a Dale was married or buried (or both) in Papplewick. With so many streets in the Tuckswood neighbourhood to be given Robin Hood-inspired names, imagination was given a free rein. Gazetteers ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-311.
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-01-07. Revised by … Huntingdon, formerly the county town of Huntingdonshire, now relegated to the status of a market town in Cambridgeshire, does not in itself have any clear connection with the outlaw, but from c. 1598 on Robin Hood has been frequently portrayed as earl of Huntingdon. He was endowed with this title by minor Elizabethan dramatists. More recently the idea has been especially popular with film makers. A tragedy with a lowborn criminal as its hero would not have sat well with Elizabethan theatre audiences, at least not with those segments who could afford the more expensive admission fees, so when it was decided that a proper Robin Hood tragedy must be written and staged, it was probably inevitable that the yeoman hero must have some title foisted on him. This was not entirely without precedent, for Richard Grafton in 1568 claimed to have read "in an olde an auncient Pamphlet" that Robin Hood "discended of a noble parentage: or …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … Allusion IRHB Comment Presumably "Meedes" = "meads" (the drink), so the reference here is to a pub named after the pinder in Wakefield in the 1630's. Lists ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 316. ⁃ Outside scope of: Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1818a, pp. 120-21. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1820a, vol. II, pp. 364-65. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1822a, pp. 140-43. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1852a, pp. 150-53. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1876a, pt. I (unpaginated); "Barnabæ Itinerarium", "Pars quarta"; "Barnabee's Journall", "Fourth part". Notes
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … Allusion Lists ⁃ Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 316. ⁃ Outside scope of: Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1818a, pp. 16-19. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1820a, vol. II, pp. 60-63; note in vol. I, p. 93. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1822a, pp. 34-36. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1852a, pp. 34-37; notes pp. 261-62. ⁃ Braithwaite, Richard 1876a, pt. I (unpaginated); "Barnabæ Itinerarium", "Pars prima", first page; "barnabee's Journall", "First part". Notes
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  • Calne. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … Record Source notes "In all probability the proceeds of a collection made by 'Robin Hood' on May Day." Marsh et al. op. cit., p. 369 n. 4. The amount xxxviij s iiij d (38s. 4d.) equals £. IRHB comments This reference seems to have been overlooked by previous writers on pre-Restoration drama and the Robin Hood tradition. In preceding and subsequent years there were church ales, king ales and choosing of a king and prince, the last church ale being in 1603. Marsh et al. op. cit., pp. 368-73. The forthcoming REED volume on Wiltshire, being edited by Rosalind Hays, will very likely reveal new facts about Robin Hood festivals at this locality. Lists and gazetteers ⁃ Not included in Lancashire, Ian 1984a. ⁃ Not included in Wiles, David 1981a, Appendix I. Sources ⁃ Marsh, A E W 1903a, p. 369. Notes
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-25. Revised by … County description The Historic Counties Trust describes Devon as follows: Devon is large county in the southeastern corner of the land; only Cornwall lies beyond to the west. Devon has two seacoasts to north and south, with the Bristol Channel and English Channel respectively. Dorset and Somerset are to the east. Devonshire has a proud seagoing tradition. The Elizabethan navy that defeated the armada and "singed the King of Spain's beard" was largely drawn from Devon. Sir Francis Drake was a Tavistock man. Only in recent years has the Royal Navy scaled down its dominant presence in Devonport in Plymouth. The southern coast is very lovely, rugged between Thurlestone and Salcombe, from where a network of craggy tidal creeks reaches deep into the land. Cliffs front the sea. The northern coastline is remarkable for steep thickly-wooded cliffs between Lynmouth and Ilfracombe, while beyond the Taw and Torridge estuaries there is …
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  • The former Robin Hood. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-06-13. Revised by … The Robin Hood Inn in Bridport closed in 1961, but the name is still used locally to refer to the building, which became a private residence shortly after the pub closed. Closed Pubs: Dorset: Bridport: Robin Hood. A.D. Mills in the English Place-Name Society's fourth volume on Dorset cites Kelly's Directory of 1939 as source and also, oddly enough, refers to a typescript calendar of records of Bridport for mention of a Robin Hood ale in a 1555 record. Mills, A David 1977a, pt. IV, p.360; and pt. I, pp. xiii, xx, for source references. It would have been somewhat remarkable if there had been any direct causal relationship between a feast arranged to bolster parish funds in 1555 and the existence of a public house first recorded in 1939, and there is in fact no reason to think that this was the case. Mills, writing in 2010, might have turned to the Records of Early English Drama volume on Dorset, …
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  • Viborg where 'thing' was to be held; Finderup where the king was killed; the outlaws' island stronghold of Hjelm; the manor of Gjorslev, enfeoffed to Rane Jonsen. / HTN collection.]] By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised by … No less than 14 versions exist of a Danish ballad on the murder of King Erik the Fifth 'Klipping' in 1286 and its aftermath. It is possible this king's nickname 'Klipping' refers to his devaluing, clipping the coins. See Wikipedia: Eric V of Denmark. They all feature Marsk Stig Andersen Hvide (d. 1293) and his relatives or associates as central characters. A "marsk" Ordbog over det danske Sprog: Marsk, sb. 2 (in Danish). or "marskalk" was a commander of an army (cf. English "marshall"), a royal servant of very high rank that can be compared to a minister of war or minister of defence in more recent times. Following the regicide, Marsk Stig and seven others were outlawed and fled to Norway where they gained the support of the …
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  • The site of Robin Hood's Well. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-12-11. Revised by … Allusion Source notes Italics as in printed source. IRHB's brackets. IRHB comments For [Charles] Deering and his old source referred to in the text, see 1751 - Deering, Charles - Nottinghamia Vetus et Nova. Lists ⁃ Not included in Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. ⁃ Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources ⁃ Orange, James 1840a, vol. I, pp. 368 Notes
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  • By the coast: Caister Castle. The Pastons were in intermittent possession of Caister Castle, and it may have been where W. Wood performed in one or more Robin Hood plays. Well inland: Norwich, another possible venue for W. Wood's performances. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by … Allusion           Wyrsshypffull and ryght hertyly belowyd broþer, I recomande me on-to yow, letyng yow wet e þ a t on Wednysdaye last past I wrot e yow a lett er wheroff John Garbalde had þe beryng, promyttyng me þ a t ye shold haue it at Norwyche þys daye or ellys to-morowe in þe mornyng; wherin I praye yow to take a labor e acordyng afftr e þe tenur e off þe same, and þ a t I maye haue an answer e at London to Hoxon iff any massenger come, as eu[er]e I maye doo for e yow. As for tydyng ys, þer e was a truse taken at Brussellys abut þe xxvj daye off Marche last past be-twyn þe Duke off Borgoyn and ' þe Frense Kyng ys …
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  • The site of Robin Hood's Well. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-10-15. Revised by … Robin Hood's Well a.k.a. St Ann's Well was located in the north-eastern neighbourhood of Nottingham now known as St Ann, an area that was once part of Sherwood Forest and retained a bucolic character until the mid-19th century. Nottingham Hidden History Team: St Ann's Well by Joe Earp. The well, known by several names, played an important role in Nottingham civic life over the centuries. From the late 1550s on, borough records list expenses relating to a procession of the mayor and members of the civic administration, wearing their official liveries and accompanied by musicians, to the well for a festive dinner in or outside the adjacent woodward's house. The history of the well from the mid-16th century to its destruction in the late 19th century is intertwined with that of the woodward's house, so both are treated together here. Names of the well The well is perhaps referred to in …
    29 KB (4,728 words) - 03:53, 12 February 2021