BIBLIOGRAPHY

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[In the following list are included the books and articles constituting the main authorities upon which the present study is based. The list is not intended to be an exhaustive bibliography, though from the nature of the case it is fairly complete. For the guidance of scholars the more important titles are marked with asterisks. It will be seen that not all the works are included which are cited in the text, or referred to in footnotes; the list, in fact, is strictly confined to works bearing upon the history of the pre-Restoration playhouses. Considerations of space have led to the omission of a large number of books dealing with the topography of London, and of the counties of Middlesex and Surrey, although a knowledge of these is essential to any thorough study of the playhouses. Furthermore, titles of contemporary plays, pamphlets, and treatises are excluded, except a few of unusual and general value. Finally, discussions of the structure of the early stage, of the manner of dramatic performances in the time of Shakespeare, and of the travels of English actors on the Continent are omitted, except when these contain also material important for the study of the theatres. At the close is appended a select list of early maps and views of London.]

Transcriber's Note: In the original book, the numbers of the entries below are at the end of the entry at the right margin, preceded by a single square bracket. For the sake of clarity, in this e-book the entries below are numbered at the left margin without the bracket.

*1. Actors Remonstrance, or Complaint for the Silencing of their Profession. London, 1643. (Reprinted in W.C. Hazlitt's The English Drama and Stage, and in E.W. Ashbee's Facsimile Reprints.)*2. Adams, J.Q. The Conventual Buildings of Blackfriars, London, and the Playhouses Constructed Therein. (The University of North Carolina Studies in Philology, xiv, 64.)3. —— The Four Pictorial Representations of the Elizabethan Stage. (The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, x, 329.)*4. —— The Dramatic Records of Sir Henry Herbert, Master of the Revels 1623-1673. New Haven, 1917.5. —— Lordinge (alias "Lodowick") Barry. (Modern Philology, ix, 567. See No. 189.)6. Albrecht, H.A. Das englische Kindertheater. Halle, 1883.7. Archer, T. The Highway of Letters. London, 1893. (Chap. xv, "Whitefriars and the Playhouses.")8. Archer, W. The Fortune Theatre. (The London Tribune, October 12, 1907; reprinted in New Shakespeariana, October, 1908, and in the Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xliv, 159. See also Nos. 8, 38, 61, 129.)9. —— A Sixteenth Century Playhouse. (The Universal Review, June, 1888, p. 281. Deals with the De Witt drawing of the Swan.)10. Aronstein, P. Die Organisation des englischen Schauspiels im Zeitalter Shakespeares. (Germanisch-Romanische Monatsschrift, ii, 165, 216.)11. Audi Alteram Partem. Cunningham's Extracts from the Revels' Books. (The AthenÆum, 1911, ii, 101, 130, 421; 1912, i, 469, 654; ii, 143. See Nos. 80, 179, 180, 183.)12. Baker, G.P. The Children of Powles. (The Harvard Monthly, May, 1891.)13. —— The Development of Shakespeare as a Dramatist. New York, 1907.14. Baker, H.B. History of the London Stage and its Famous Players. London and New York, 1904. (A new and rewritten edition of The London Stage. 2 vols. London, 1889.)15. —— Our Old Actors. 2 vols. London, 1881. (There was an earlier edition, London, 1878, printed in New York, 1879, with the title, English Actors from Shakespeare to Macready.)16. Bapst, C.G. Essai sur l'Histoire du ThÉÂtre. Paris, 1893.17. Barrett, C.R.B. The History of the Society of Apothecaries of London. London, 1905.

Bear Garden and Hope. See Nos. 27, 72, 99, 119, 143, 144, 147, 152, 157, 198, 221, 222, 223, 228, 236, 238, 239, 240, 241, 274, 281, 303, 304, 316.*18. Bell, H. Contributions to the History of the English Playhouse. (The Architectural Record, March and April, 1913.)19. Bell, W.G. Fleet Street in Seven Centuries. London, 1912. (Chap. xiv, "The Whitefriars Playhouses.")20. Besant, Sir W. MediÆval London. London in the Time of the Tudors. London in the Time of the Stuarts. 4 vols. London, 1903-06.21. Binz, G. Deutsche Besucher im Shakespeare'schen London. (Beilage zur Allgemeinen Zeitung. MÜnchen, August, 1902.)22. —— Londoner Theater und Schauspiele im Jahre 1599. (Anglia, xxii, 456.)*23. Birch, T. and R.F. Williams. The Court and Times of James the First. 2 vols. London, 1849.

Blackfriars, First and Second. See Nos. 2, 6, 17, 20, 26, 34, 41, 42, 43, 59, 61, 72, 90, 97, 100, 101, 105, 106, 108, 119, 136, 137, 146, 150, 163, 178, 179, 191, 196, 201, 214, 218, 223, 244, 248, 287, 288, 289, 293, 296, 297, 298.24. Blanch, W.H. Dulwich College and Edward Alleyn. London, 1877.25. Bolingbroke, L.G. Pre-Elizabethan Plays and Players in Norfolk. (Norfolk ArchÆology, xi, 336.)26. Bond, R.W. The Complete Works of John Lyly. 3 vols. Oxford, 1902.27. Boulton, W.B. The Amusements of Old London. 2 vols. London, 1901.*28. Braines, W.W. Holywell Priory and the Site of the Theatre, Shoreditch. London, 1915. (Part xliii of Indications of Houses of Historical Interest in London, issued by the London County Council.)

Brand, J. See No. 157.29. Brandes, G. William Shakespeare. Translated by William Archer. 2 vols. London, 1898.30. Brayley, E.W. Historical and Descriptive Accounts of the Theatres of London. London, 1826. (Brief notice of the Cockpit in Drury Lane; relates chiefly to Restoration theatres.)31. Brereton, J. Le G. De Witt at the Swan. (A Book of Homage to Shakespeare. Oxford, 1916, p. 204.)32. Bruce, J. Who was "Will, my lord of Leycester's jesting player"? (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 88.)33. Bullen, G. The Cockpit or Phoenix Theatre in 1660. (The AthenÆum, May 21, 1881, p. 699.)*34. BÜlow, G. von and W. Powell. Diary of the Journey of Philip Julius, Duke of Stettin-Pomerania, through England in the year 1602. (Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, New Series, vi. See No. 146.)*35. Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1547-1660. London, 1856-. (See also No. 192.)36. Calendar of the Patent Rolls. London, 1891-1908.37. Calmour, A.C. Fact and Fiction about Shakespeare, with Some Account of the Playhouses, Players, and Playwrights of His Period. Stratford-on-Avon, 1894.38. A Catalogue of Models and of Stage-Sets in the Dramatic Museum of Columbia University. New York, 1916. (See also Nos. 129, 211.)*39. Chalmers, George. An Apology for the Believers in the Shakspeare-Papers. London, 1797.*40. —— A Supplemental Apology. London, 1799.*41. Chambers, E.K. Commissions for the Chapel. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 357.)*42. —— Court Performances Before Queen Elizabeth. (The Modern Language Review, ii, 1.)*43. —— Court Performances Under James the First. (Ibid., iv, 153.)*44. —— Dramatic Records from the Lansdowne Manuscripts. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 143.)45. —— The Elizabethan Lords Chamberlain. (Ibid., i, 31.)46. —— [Review of] Henslowe's Diary, Edited by Walter W. Greg. (The Modern Language Review, iv, 407, 511.)*47. —— A Jotting by John Aubrey. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 341. Concerns Beeston and the Cockpit in Drury Lane.)*48. —— The MediÆval Stage. Oxford, 1903.49. —— Nathaniel Field and Joseph Taylor. (The Modern Language Review, iv, 395.)50. —— Notes on the History of the Revels Office under the Tudors. London, 1906.51. —— The Stage of the Globe. (The Works of William Shakespeare. Stratford-Town Edition. Stratford-on-Avon, 1904-07, x, 351.)52. —— Two Early Player-Lists. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 348.)53. —— William Kempe. (The Modern Language Review, iv, 88.)*54. Chambers, E.K. and W.W. Greg. Dramatic Records from the Privy Council Register, 1603-1642. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 370. For the records prior to 1603 see No. 87. Cf. also No. 260.)*55. —— Dramatic Records of the City of London. The Remembrancia. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 43. See also No. 224.)*56. —— Royal Patents for Players. (The Malone Society's Collections, i, 260.)57. Charlanne, L. L'Influence FranÇaise en Angleterre au xviie Siecle, Le ThÉÂtre et la Critique. Paris, 1906.*58. Child, H. The Elizabethan Theatre. (The Cambridge History of English Literature, vol. vi, chap. x.)59. Clapham, A.W. On the Topography of the Dominican Priory of London. (ArchÆologia, lxiii, 57. See also Nos. 2, 61.)*60. —— The Topography of the Carmelite Priory of London. (The Journal of the British ArchÆological Association, New Series, xvi, 15. See also No. 61.)61. Clapham, A.W. and W.H. Godfrey. Some Famous Buildings and their Story. Westminster, [1913]. (Contains Godfrey's study of the Fortune contract, and, in abbreviated form, the two articles by Clapham noted above, Nos. 59, 60. See also Nos. 8, 38, 116, 129.)62. Clark, A. Players or Companies on Tour 1548-1630. (Notes and Queries, x Series, xii, 41.)

Cockpit-in-Court. See Nos. 18, 80, 81, 82, 83, 89, 99, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 197, 228, 250, 253, 305, 313.

Cockpit-in-Drury Lane. See Nos. 4, 30, 33, 47, 72, 88, 91, 99, 119, 138, 139, 142, 147, 159, 197, 223, 227, 228, 303.*63. Collier, J.P. The Alleyn Papers. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1843. (See No. 161.)64. —— The Diary of Philip Henslowe. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1845. (See No. 143.)*65. —— The History of English Dramatic Poetry. 3 vols. 1831. Second edition, London, 1879.66. —— Lives of the Original Actors. (See No. 68.)*67. —— Memoirs of Edward Alleyn. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1841. (See No. 316.)68. —— Memoirs of the Principal Actors in the Plays of Shakespeare. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1846. (Reprinted with some corrections in No. 65.)69. —— On Players and Dramatic Performances in the Reign of Edward IV. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, ii, 87.)*70. —— Original History of "The Theatre" in Shoreditch, and Connexion of the Burbadge Family with it. (Ibid., iv, 63.)71. —— Richard Field, Nathaniel Field, Anthony Munday, and Henry Chettle. (Ibid., iv, 36.)*72. —— The Works of Shakespeare, London, 1844. (Vol. i, p. ccxli, reprints a record of the end of certain early playhouses from "some manuscript notes to a copy of Stowe's Annales, by Howes, folio, 1631, in the possession of Mr. Pickering." See No. 119.)73. Conrad, H. Robert Greene als Dramatiker. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xxix-xxx, 210.)74. Corbin, J. Shakspere his own Stage-Manager. (The Century Magazine, lxxxiii, 260.)75. Creighton, C. A History of Epidemics in Britain. 2 vols. Cambridge, 1891-94.76. Creizenach, W. Geschichte des neueren Dramas. Vol. iv, Part I, Book viii. Halle, 1909. (English translation by CÉcile Hugon, London, 1916.)77. —— Die Schauspiele der englischen KomÖdianten. (Deutsche National-Litteratur, xxiii.)78. Cullen, C. Puritanism and the Stage. (Proceedings of the Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow, xliii, 153.)79. Cunningham. P. Did General Harrison Kill "Dick Robinson" the Player? (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, ii, 11.)*80. —— Extracts from the Accounts of the Revels at the Court in the Reigns of Queen Elizabeth and King James I. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1842. (See Nos. 11, 180, 181, 184.)81. —— A Handbook of London. 2 vols. London, 1849. (A new edition, "corrected and enlarged," London, 1850. See also No. 305.)82. —— Inigo Jones. A Life of the Architect. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1848.83. —— Inigo Jones, and his Office under the Crown. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 103.)84. —— Plays at Court, Anno 1613. (Ibid., ii, 123.)85. —— Sir George Buc and the Office of the Revels. (Ibid., iv, 143.)*86. —— The Whitefriars Theatre, the Salisbury Court Theatre, and the Duke's Theatre in Dorset Gardens. (Ibid., iv, 89.)

Curtain. See Nos. 96, 150, 151, 222, 223, 284.*87. Dasent, J.R. Acts of the Privy Council of England. New Series. London, 1890-. (This contains the Acts to the end of Elizabeth's reign; for those Acts relating to the drama from 1603 to 1642, see No. 54. Cf. No. 260.)88. Description of the Great Machines of the Descent of Orpheus into Hell. Presented by the French Comedians at the Cockpit in Drury Lane. London, 1661.89. Diaries and Despatches of the Venetian Embassy at the Court of King James I., in the Years 1617, 1618. Translated by Rawdon Brown. (The Quarterly Review, cii, 398.)

Diary, of the Duke of Stettin-Pomerania. (See Nos. 34, 146.)90. Dobell, B. Newly Discovered Documents. (The AthenÆum, March 30, 1901, p. 403. Of value for Blackfriars.)*91. Downes, J. Roscius Anglicanus. London, 1708.92. Dramaticus. On the Profits of Old Actors. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 21.)93. —— The Players Who Acted in The Shoemaker's Holiday, 1600. (Ibid., iv, 110.)94. Durand, W.Y. Notes on Richard Edwards. (The Journal of Germanic Philology, iv, 348.)95. —— PalÆmon and Arcyte, Progne, Marcus Geminus, and the Theatre in Which They Were Acted, 1566. (Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, xx, 502.)96. Ellis, H. The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Saint Leonard, Shoreditch. London, 1798.97. Elton, C.I. William Shakespeare, His Family and Friends. London, 1904. (Chap. iv deals with Blackfriars and the Globe.)98. Evans, M.B. An Early Type of Stage. (Modern Philology, ix, 421.)99. Evelyn, J. Diary and Correspondence. Edited by William Bray and H.B. Wheatley. 4 vols. London, 1906.*100. Feuillerat, A. Blackfriars Records. (The Malone Society's Collections, ii, 1.)101. —— John Lyly. Cambridge, 1910.102. —— Le Bureau des Menus-Plaisirs (Office of the Revels) et la Mise en ScÈne a la Cour D'Élizabeth. Louvain, 1910.*103. —— Documents Relating to the Office of the Revels in the Time of Queen Elizabeth. Louvain, 1908.104. —— Documents Relating to the Revels at Court in the Time of King Edward VI and Queen Mary. (The Loseley Manuscripts.) Louvain, 1914.*105. —— The Origin of Shakespeare's Blackfriars Theatre. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlviii, 81.)106. —— Shakespeare's Blackfriars. (The London Daily Chronicle, December 22, 1911.)*107. Firth, C.H. The Suppression of the Drama during the Protectorate and Commonwealth. (Notes and Queries, vii Series, vi, 122.)108. Fitzjeffrey, H. Notes from Black-fryers. London, 1620.*109. Fleay, F.G. A Biographical Chronicle of the English Drama, 1559-1642. 2 vols. London, 1891.110. —— A Chronicle History of the Life and Work of William Shakespeare. London, 1886.*111. —— A Chronicle History of the London Stage, 1559-1642. London, 1890.112. —— History of the Theatres in London from their First Opening in 1576 to their Closing in 1642. (Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, x, 114. Also privately issued.)113. —— On the Actor Lists, 1578-1642. (Ibid., ix, 44.)114. —— A Shakespeare Manual. London, 1878.115. Flecknoe, R. A Short Discourse of the English Stage. (Attached to Love's Kingdom, 1664; reprinted in No. 158.)116. Forestier, A. The Fortune Theatre Reconstructed. (The Illustrated London News, August 12, 1911, p. 276.)117. —— Origins of the English Stage (Ibid., cxxxv, 934; cxxxvi, 57, 169, 225, 344, 423.)

Fortune. See Nos. 8, 24, 38, 46, 61, 63, 64, 67, 72, 89, 116, 119, 120, 126, 129, 143, 144, 161, 190, 211, 223, 231, 234, 235, 239, 303, 304, 316.118. Fowell, F. and F. Palmer. Censorship in England. London, [1913].*119. Furnivall, F.J. The End of Shakespeare's Theatres. (The Academy, xxii, 314. Manuscript notes from the Phillipps copy of Stow's Annals, 1631. Previously printed by Collier. See No. 72.)120. —— The Fortune Theatre in 1649. (Notes and Queries, x Series, i, 85.)*121. —— Harrison's Description of England. The New Shakspere Society. London, 1877-78. (See No. 154.)

122. G., G.M. The Stage Censor, an Historical Sketch: 1544-1907. London, 1908.*123. Gaedertz, K.T. Zur Kenntnis der altenglischen BÜhne. Bremen, 1888. (On the De Witt drawing of the Swan. See Nos. 31, 193, 306.)124. Gaehde, C. Das Theater; Schauspielhaus und Schauspielkunst vom griechischen Altertum bis auf die Gegenwart. Leipzig, 1908.125. Gardner, A.E. The Site of the Globe Playhouse of Shakespeare. (The AthenÆum, December 5, 1914.)126. Gayton, E. Pleasant Notes on Don Quixot. London, 1654. (The second edition, 1768, is of no value.)127. Genest, J. Some Account of the English Stage from the Restoration in 1660 to 1830. 10 vols. Bath, 1832.*128. Gildersleeve, V.C. Government Regulation of the Elizabethan Drama. New York, 1908.

Globe. See Nos. 38, 49, 51, 72, 97, 117, 119, 125, 150, 152, 165, 166, 167, 171, 176, 191, 205, 206, 207, 208, 211, 212, 213, 223, 233, 236, 237, 240, 241, 251, 257, 266, 292, 297, 299, 300, 301.129. Godfrey, W.H. An Elizabethan Playhouse. (The Architectural Review, London, April, 1908; reprinted in No. 61. See also the Architect and Builder's Journal, London, August 16, 1911, and The Architectural Review, London, January, 1912, for descriptions of Mr. Godfrey's model of the Fortune. This model is now in the Dramatic Museum at Columbia University, and a duplicate is in the Museum of European Culture at the University of Illinois. See also Nos. 8, 38, 61, 116, 211.)130. Goodwin, A.T. Court Revels in the Reign of Henry VII. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 47.)131. Grabo, C.H. Theatres of Elizabeth's London. (Chautauquan, November, 1906.)*132. Graves, T.S. The Court and the London Theatres During the Reign of Elizabeth. Menasha, Wis., 1913.*133. —— A Note on the Swan Theatre. (Modern Philology, ix, 431. See No. 135.)134. —— The Shape of the First London Theatre. (The South Atlantic Quarterly, July, 1914.)135. —— Tricks of Elizabethan Showmen. (Ibid., April, 1915. Deals with The Swan. See No. 133.)*136. Greenstreet, J. The Blackfriars Playhouse: Its Antecedents. (The AthenÆum, July 17, 1886, p. 91, January 7, 1888, p. 25.)*137. —— Blackfriars Theatre in the Time of Shakespeare. (Ibid., April 7, 1888, p. 445; April 21, 1888, p. 509; August 10, 1889, p. 203. These documents are reprinted by Fleay, No. 111.)*138. —— Documents Relating to the Players at the Red Bull, Clerkenwell, and the Cockpit in Drury Lane, in the Time of James I. (The New Shakspere Society Transactions, 1880-86, p. 489. Also in The AthenÆum, February 21, 1885. Reprinted by Fleay, No. 111.)*139. —— Drury Lane Theatre in the Reign of James I. (The AthenÆum, 1885, February 21, p. 258; August 29, p. 282. Reprinted by Fleay, No. 111.)*140. —— The Red Bull Playhouse in the Reign of James I. (The AthenÆum, November 28, 1885, p. 709. Reprinted by Fleay, No. 111; and by Wallace, in completer form, No. 303.)*141. —— The Whitefriars Theatre in the Time of Shakespeare. (The New Shakspere Society Transactions, 1887-90, p. 269.)*142. —— The Will of Thomas Greene, with Particulars as to the Red Bull. (The AthenÆum, August 29, 1885. Reprinted by Fleay, No. 111.)*143. Greg, W.W. Henslowe's Diary. 2 vols. London, 1904-1908. (See No. 46.)*144. —— Henslowe Papers. London, 1907.

---- See also under Chambers, E.K. and W.W. Greg.145. Grote, W. Das London zur Zeit der KÖnigin Elisabeth in deutscher Beleuchtung. (Neueren Sprachen, xiv, 633.)*146. Hager, H. Diary of the Journey of Philip Julius, Duke of Stettin-Pomerania, through England in the Year 1602. (Englische Studien, xviii, 315. See No. 34.)*147. Halliwell-Phillipps, J.O. A Collection of Ancient Documents Respecting the Office of the Master of the Revels, and Other Papers Relating to the Early Theatre. London, 1870. (Only eleven copies printed. The documents, with others, have been reprinted by Adams in No. 4.)148. —— Dispute between the Earl of Worcester's Players and the Corporation of Leicester in 1586. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, iv, 145.)149. —— Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare. London, 1874. (The material of this book has been embodied in No. 150.)*150. —— Outlines of the Life of Shakespeare. 2 vols. The eleventh edition. London, 1907. (The page numbers have not been changed since the seventh edition, 1887.)151. —— Tarlton's Jests, and News out of Purgatory. London. Printed for The Shakespeare Society, 1844.152. —— Two Old Theatres. Views of the Globe and Bear Garden. Privately printed. Brighton, 1884.153. —— The Visits of Shakespeare's Company of Actors to the Provincial Cities and Towns of England, Illustrated by Extracts Gathered from Corporate Records. Privately printed. Brighton, 1887.*154. Harrison, William. Harrison's Description of England. Edited by F.J. Furnivall. The New Shakspere Society, London, 1877-78. (Additions by Mrs. C.C. Stopes, The Shakespeare Library, 1908. Edited also by L. Withington, London, 1902.)155. Haslewood, Joseph. Account of the Old London Theatres. (Roxburghe Revels, Edinburgh, 1837, p. 85. Fifty copies only printed.)156. Hatcher, O.L. A Book for Shakespeare Plays and Pageants. New York, 1916. ("Theatres," p. 133.)157. Hazlitt, W.C. Brand's Popular Antiquities of Great Britain. Faiths and Folklore. 2 vols. London, 1905.*158. —— The English Drama and Stage under the Tudor and Stuart Princes, 1543-1664. Printed for the Roxburghe Library, 1869.159. Heckethorn, C.W. Lincoln's Inn Fields, and the Localities Adjacent. London, 1896.160. Hentzner, P. Itinerarium GermaniÆ; GalliÆ; AngliÆ; ItaliÆ. NÜremberg, 1612.161. Herbert, J.F. Additions to "The Alleyn Papers." (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 16. See No. 63.)162. Heywood, T. An Apology for Actors. London, 1612. (London: Reprinted for The Shakespeare Society, 1841.)*163. Historical Manuscripts Commission. Calendars and Reports. London, 1870-.164. Hitchcock, R. An Historical View of the Irish Stage. 2 vols. Dublin, 1788.

Hope. See Bear Garden and Hope.*165. Hubbard, G. On the Exact Site of the Globe Playhouse of Shakespeare. (Transactions of the London and Middlesex ArchÆological Society, New Series, vol. ii, part iii, 1912.)*166. —— The Site of the Globe Theatre of Shakespeare on Bankside as Shown by Maps of the Period. (Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, London, 1909, Third Series, xvii, 26.)167. —— The Site of the Globe. (Notes and Queries, xii Series, xii, 11, 50, 70, 201, 224.)168. Hughson, D. An Epitome of the Privileges of London, Including Southwark, as Granted by Royal Charters. London, 1812.169. —— Multum in Parvo. The Privileges of Southwark. London, [c. 1818].170. Ingleby, C.M. A Complete View of the Shakespeare Controversy. London, 1861. (A discussion of the inaccuracies and forgeries of J.P. Collier.)171. Jackson, R.C. The Site of Shakespeare's Globe Playhouse. (The AthenÆum, October 30, 1909, p. 525.)*172. Jeaffreson, J.C. Middlesex County Records. 4 vols. London, 1886-92.173. Jenkinson, W. The Early Playhouses and the Drama as Referred to in Tudor and Stuart Literature. (The Contemporary Review, cv, 847.)174. Jusserand, J.J. Les ThÉÂtres de Londres au Temps de Shakespeare. (La Revue de Paris, vi, 713.)175. —— A Literary History of the English People From the Renaissance to the Civil War. 2 vols. London, 1906-09. (Vol. ii, bk. v, chap. v.)176. K., L.L. Site of the Globe Theatre (Notes and Queries, xi Series, x, 290, 335.)*177. Kelly, W. Notices Illustrative of the Drama and Other Popular Amusements. London, 1865.*178. Kempe, A.J. The Loseley Manuscripts. London, 1836.*179. La FÈvre de la Boderie, Antoine. Ambassades de Monsieur de La Boderie en Angleterre ... depuis les annÉes 1606 jusq' en 1611. 5 vols. [Paris], 1750.180. Law, E. Cunningham's Extracts from the Revels' Books, 1842. (The AthenÆum, 1911, vol. ii, pp. 297, 324, 388; 1912, vol. i, pp. 390, 469. See Nos. 11, 80, 181, 184.)181. —— More About Shakespeare "Forgeries." London, 1913. (See Nos. 11, 80, 180, 184.)182. —— Shakespeare at Whitehall. (The London Times, October 31, 1910, p. 10.)183. —— Shakespeare's Christmas, St. Stephen's Day, 1604. (Ibid., December 26, 1910, p. 10.)184. —— Some Supposed Shakespeare Forgeries. London, 1911. (See Nos. 11, 80, 180, 181.)*185. Lawrence, W.J. The Elizabethan Playhouse and Other Studies. Stratford-upon-Avon, 1912. Second Series, 1913. (I do not record separately the numerous articles by Mr. Lawrence which appeared first in periodicals, and which are reprinted in these two volumes.)*186. —— The Evolution and Influence of the Elizabethan Playhouse. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlvii, 18.)*187. —— A Forgotten Restoration Playhouse. (Englische Studien, xxxv, 279.)188. —— Ireland's First Theatrical Manager. (The Weekly Freeman, St. Patrick's Day Number, March 11, 1916.)*189. —— The Mystery of Lodowick Barry. (The University of North Carolina Studies in Philology, xiv, 52.)*190. —— Restoration Stage Nurseries. (Archiv fÜr das Studium der Neueren Sprachen und Literaturen, 1914, p. 301.)191. Lee, Sir S. A Life of William Shakespeare. New York, 1916. (Chap. vi.)*192. Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII. London, 1862-1905. (Calendar of State Papers; see No. 35.)193. Logeman, H. Johannes de Witt's Visit to the Swan Theatre. (Anglia, xix, 117. Cf. The Academy, December 26, 1896. See No. 31, 123, 306.)194. London Topographical Society. London Topographical Record. London, 1901-.195. Maas, H. Äussere Geschichte der Englischen Theatertruppen in dem Zeitraum von 1559 bis 1642. Louvain, 1907.196. —— Die Kindertruppen. GÖttingen, 1901.*197. McAfee, H. Pepys on the Restoration Stage. New Haven, 1916.198. Malcolm, J.P. Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London during the Eighteenth Century. London, 1808.199. —— Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasion to the Year 1700. London, 1811.*200. Malone, E. The Plays and Poems of William Shakespeare. 21 vols. London, 1821. (The Variorum edition, edited by Boswell.)201. Manly, J.M. The Children of the Chapel Royal and their Masters. (The Cambridge History of English Literature, vol. vi, chap. xi.)202. Manning, O. and W. Bray. The History and Antiquities of the County of Surrey. 3 vols. London, 1804-14.203. Mantzius, K. Engelske Theaterforhold i Shakespeare-tiden. Khvn., 1901. (See No. 204.)204. —— A History of Theatrical Art in Ancient and Modern Times. Authorised Translation by Louise von Cossel. Vol. iii, "The Shakespearean Period in England." London, 1904.205. Martin, W. Shakespeare in London. (The London Times, October 8, 1909, p. 10.)206. —— The Site of Shakespeare's Globe Playhouse. (The AthenÆum, October 9, 1909, p. 425.)207. —— The Site of the Globe. (Notes and Queries, xi Series, x, 209, xii, 10, 121, 143, 161.)*208. —— The Site of the Globe Playhouse of Shakespeare. (Surrey ArchÆological Collections, London, 1910, xxiii, 149. Also separately printed.)209. Member From the Beginning. Accounts of Performances and Revels at Court in the Reign of Henry VIII. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, iii, 87.)210. Meymott, W.J. The Manor of Old Paris Garden; an Historical Account of Christ Church, Surrey. London, 1881. (Printed for private circulation. Inaccurate. See Notes and Queries, vii Series, iii, 241.)211. Miles, D.H. The Dramatic Museum at Columbia University. (The American Review of Reviews, xlvi, 67. Illustrations of models of early playhouses. See No. 38, 129.)212. Mills, C.A. Shakespeare and the Globe Theatre. (The London Times, April 11, 1914.)213. Model of the Globe Playhouse. (The Graphic, London, lxxxii, 579; Illustrated London News, cxxxvi, 423.)214. Morgan, A. The Children's Companies. (Shakesperiana, ix, 131.)215. Murray, J.T. English Dramatic Companies in the Towns Outside of London, 1550-1600. (Modern Philology, ii, 539.)*216. —— English Dramatic Companies. 2 vols. London, 1910.217. N., T.C. The Old Bridge at Newington. (Notes and Queries, ii Series, xii, 323.)218. Nairn, J.A. Boy-Actors under the Tudors and Stuarts. (Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, ii Series, xxxii, 11.)*219. Nichols, J. The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth. 4 vols. London, 1823.*220. —— The Progresses, Processions, and Magnificent Festivities of King James the First. 4 vols. London, 1828.221. Onions, C.T. Shakespeare's England. 2 vols. Oxford, 1916. (Chap. xxiv, "Actors and Acting," by Percy Simpson; chap. xxv, "The Playhouse," by William Archer and W.J. Lawrence; chap. xxvii, section 7, "Bearbaiting, Bull Baiting, and Cockfighting," by Sir Sidney Lee. A popular treatise.)*222. Ordish, T.F. Early London Theatres. London, 1894. (For an important review, see E.K. Chambers in The Academy, August 24, 1895, p. 139.)*223. —— London Theatres. (The Antiquary, xi-xvi. "Theatre and Curtain," xi, 89; "Rose," xi, 212; "Bear Garden," xi, 243; "Globe," xii, 41; "Elizabethan Stage," xii, 193; "Swan," xii, 245; "Blackfriars," xiv, 22, 55, 108; "Fortune," xiv, 205; "Red Bull," xiv, 236, "Cockpit," xv, 93; "Whitefriars," xv, 262; "Salisbury Court," xvi, 244.)*224. Overall, W.H. and H.C. Analytical Index to the Series of Records Known as the Remembrancia. Preserved among the Archives of the City of London. 1579-1664. London, 1878. (See No. 55.)225. Overend, G.H. On the Dispute between George Maller, Glazier and Trainer of Players to Henry VIII, and Thomas Arthur, his Pupil. (The New Shakspere Society's Transactions, 1877-79, p. 425.)226. Paget, A.H. The Elizabethan Playhouses. London, 1891. (Privately printed, 8vo, 14 pp.)*227. Parton, J. Some Account of the Hospital and Parish of St. Giles in the Fields, Middlesex. London, 1822. (Contains parish records relating to the Cockpit in Drury Lane.)

Paul's. See Nos. 6, 12, 26, 101, 196, 201, 214, 218, 297.*228. Pepys, S. The Diary of Samuel Pepys. Edited by Henry B. Wheatley. 9 vols. London, 1893.

Phoenix. See Cockpit in Drury Lane.229. Pinks, W.J. The History of Clerkenwell. Second edition. London, 1880. (The Red Bull Playhouse, p. 190.)230. Pleadings in Rastell v. Walton, a Theatrical Lawsuit, temp. Henry viii. (Arber, An English Garner, Fifteenth Century Prose and Verse, 1903, p. 305.)231. Plomer, H.R. Fortune Playhouse (Notes and Queries, x Series, vi, 107.)232. Pollock, A. The Evolution of the Actor. (The Drama, August and November, 1915, and November, 1916.)233. Porter, C. Playing Hamlet as Shakespeare Staged It in 1601. (Ibid., August and November, 1915.)234. Prynne, W. Histriomastix. London, 1633.235. Rankin, G. Early London Theatres. (Notes and Queries, iv Series, vi, 306; cf. p. 423.)

Red Bull. See Nos. 4, 91, 107, 126, 138, 139, 140, 142, 147, 197, 223, 228, 229, 234, 303.

Remembrancia. See Nos. 55, 224.*236. Rendle, W. The Bankside, Southwark, and the Globe Playhouse. (In Furnivall's edition of Harrison's Description of England, Part ii, Book iii. See No. 121. Deals with the Swan, Bear Garden, Hope, Rose, and Globe.)*237. —— The Globe Playhouse. (Walford's Antiquarian, viii, 209.)238. —— Paris Garden and Christ Church, Blackfriars. (Notes and Queries, vii Series, iii, 241, 343, 442.)239. —— Philip Henslowe. (The Genealogist, iv, 149.)*240. —— The Playhouses at Bankside in the Time of Shakespeare. (The Antiquarian Magazine and Bibliographer, vii, 207, 274; viii, 55.)241. —— Old Southwark and its People. London, 1878.242. —— The Swan Playhouse, Bankside, circa 1596. (Notes and Queries, vii Series, vi, 221.)*243. Rendle, W. and P. Norman. The Inns of Old Southwark and Their Associations. London, 1888.*244. Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts. London, 1870-. (See No. 163.)245. Rimbault, E.F. The Old Cheque-Book, or Book of Remembrance, of the Chapel Royal from 1561 to 1744. (The Camden Society, 1872.)246. —— Who was "Jack Wilson" the Singer of Shakespeare's Stage? London, 1846. (Cf. The Shakespeare Society's Papers, ii, 33.)

Rose. See Nos. 24, 46, 63, 64, 67, 143, 144, 161, 222, 223, 236, 239, 240, 241, 257, 263, 300, 302, 304, 316.*247. Rye, W.B. England as Seen by Foreigners in the Days of Elizabeth and James I. London, 1865.

Salisbury Court. See Nos. 4, 7, 19, 72, 86, 91, 99, 119, 147, 197, 223, 228.248. Schelling, F.E. "An Aery of Children, Little Eyases." (The Queen's Progress and Other Elizabethan Sketches, Boston and New York, 1904, chap. v.)249. —— The Elizabethan Theatre. (Lippincott's Monthly Magazine, lxix, 309.)

Shakespeare's England. See No. 221.250. Sheppard, E. The Old Royal Palace of Whitehall. London and New York, 1902.251. The Site of the Globe Theatre, Bankside. (The Builder, March 26, 1910, p. 353.)252. Smith, W.H. Bacon and Shakespeare. An Inquiry Touching Players, Playhouses, and Play-Writers in the Days of Elizabeth. London, 1857.253. Spiers, W.L. An Autograph Plan by Wren. (The London Topographical Record, 1903. Concerns Whitehall Palace and the Cockpit.)

State Papers. See Nos. 35, 192.254. Statutes of the Realm. Record Commission. 9 vols. London, 1810-28.255. Stephenson, H.T. Shakespeare's London. New York, 1905. (Chap. xiv, "The Theatres.")256. —— The Study of Shakespeare. New York, 1915. (Chap. iii, "The Playhouses.")*257. Stopes, C.C. Burbage and Shakespeare's Stage. London, 1913.258. —— The Burbages and the Transportation of "The Theatre." (The AthenÆum, October 16, 1909, p. 470.)259. —— Burbage's "Theatre." (The Fortnightly Review, xcii, 149.)260. —— Dramatic Records from the Privy Council Register, James I and Charles I. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlviii, 103. See No. 54.)261. —— Giles and Christopher Alleyn of Holywell. (Notes and Queries, x Series, xii, 341.)262. —— "The Queen's Players" in 1536. (The AthenÆum, July 24, 1914.)263. —— The Rose and the Swan, 1597. (The Stage, January 6, 1910. The documents here summarized are printed in full in No. 257 and again in No. 302.)264. —— Shakespeare's Environment. London, 1914. (Chapters on William Hunnis, Burbage's "Theatre," and The Transportation of Burbage's "Theatre.")*265. —— Shakespeare's Fellows and Followers. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlvi, 92.)266. —— The Site of the Globe. (Notes and Queries, xi Series, xi, 447.)267. —— "The Theatre." (Archiv fÜr das Studium der Neueren Sprachen und Literaturen, cxxiv, 129.)268. —— William Hunnis. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xxvii, 200.)269. —— William Hunnis. (The AthenÆum, March 31, 1900.)270. —— William Hunnis and the Revels of the Chapel Royal. Louvain, 1910.*271. Stow, J. A Survey of London. Edited by C.L. Kingsford. 2 vols. Oxford, 1908.*272. —— A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster ... Corrected, Improved, and Very Much Enlarged ... by John Strype. 2 vols. London, 1720.*273. —— Annales, or A Generall Chronicle of England, Continued by Edmund Howes. London, 1631.274. Strutt, J. Sports and Pastimes of the People of England. London, 1801.

Strype, J. See No. 272.275. —— The Anatomy of Abuses. Edited by F.J. Furnivall, for The New Shakspere Society. London, 1877-79. (There is an earlier edition by J.P. Collier, 1870.)

Swan. See Nos. 9, 31, 46, 123, 133, 135, 144, 193, 210, 214, 222, 223, 236, 238, 240, 241, 242, 257, 263, 302, 306.276. Symonds, J.A. Shakespeare's Predecessors. London, 1883. (Chap. viii, "Theatres, Playwrights, Actors, and Playgoers.")

Theatre, Burbage's. See Nos. 28, 70, 96, 134, 150, 151, 222, 223, 257, 258, 259, 261, 264, 267, 277, 290.277. The Theater; a Middlesex Sessions Record Touching James Burbage's "Theater." (The AthenÆum, February 12, 1887, p. 233.)*278. Thompson, E.N.S. The Controversy between the Puritans and the Stage. New York, 1903.279. Thornbury, G.W. Shakespeare's England. 2 vols. London, 1856. (Vol. ii, chap. x, "The Theatre.")*280. Thorndike, A.H. Shakespeare's Theatre. New York, 1916. (Chap. iii, "The Playhouses.")281. Tiler, A. The History and Antiquities of St. Saviours. London, 1765.282. Tomlins, T.E. A New Document Regarding the Authority of the Master of the Revels. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, iii, 1. The document is reprinted in No. 103.)283. —— The Original Patent for the Nursery of Actors and Actresses in the Reign of Charles II. (Ibid., iii, 162.)*284. —— Origin of the Curtain Theatre, and Mistakes Regarding It. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 29.)285. —— Three New Privy Seals for Players in the Time of Shakespeare. (Ibid., iv, 41.)286. Tyson, W. Heming's Players at Bristol in the Reign of Henry VIII. (Ibid., iii, 13.)287. Victoria History of London. London, 1909.*288. Wallace, C.W. The Children of the Chapel at Blackfriars 1597-1603. Lincoln [Nebraska], 1908. (Originally printed in University Studies, University of Nebraska, 1908.)*289. —— The Evolution of the English Drama up to Shakespeare, with a History of the First Blackfriars Theatre. (Schriften der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, Band iv. Berlin, 1912.)*290. —— The First London Theatre, Materials for a History. (University Studies, University of Nebraska, vol. xii. Lincoln, Nebraska, 1913.)291. —— Gervase Markham, Dramatist. (The Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlvi, 345. Cf. J.Q. Adams, in Modern Philology, x, 426.)*292. —— Globe Theatre Apparel. [London.] Privately printed, August, 1909. (For the nature of the contents see the London Times, November 30, 1909, p. 12; and the Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlvi, 239.)293. —— Keysar v. Burbage and Others. Privately printed, 1910. (These documents are included in the author's Shakespeare and his London Associates, No. 297.)294. —— A London Pageant of Shakespeare's Time. (The London Times, March 28, 1913.)295. —— New Shakespeare Discoveries. (Harper's Monthly Magazine, cxx, 489. See No. 297.)296. —— Old Blackfriars Theatre. (The London Times, September 12, 1906; the New York Evening Post, September 24, 1906.)*297. —— Shakespeare and His London Associates as Revealed in Recently Discovered Documents. (University Studies, University of Nebraska, x, 261.)298. —— Shakespeare and the Blackfriars Theatre. (The Century Magazine, September, 1910. The documents on which this popular article is based may be found in Nos. 289 and 297.)*299. —— Shakespeare and the Globe. (The London Times, October 2 and 4, 1909. Deals with the Osteler-Heminges documents, and the site of the Globe. These documents Mr. Wallace has privately printed in Advance Sheets from Shakespeare, The Globe, and Blackfriars, The Shakespeare Head Press, 1909, whence they were printed in the Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlvi, 235.)*300. —— Shakespeare and the Globe. (The London Times, April 30 and May 1, 1914.)301. —— Shakspere's Money Interest in the Globe Theatre. (The Century Magazine, August, 1910. The documents on which this popular article is based may be found in No. 297.)*302. —— The Swan Theatre and the Earl of Pembroke's Servants. (Englische Studien, xliii, 340. See Nos. 257, 263.)*303. —— Three London Theatres of Shakespeare's Time. (University Studies, University of Nebraska, ix, 287.)*304. Warner, G.F. Catalogue of the Manuscripts and Muniments of Alleyn's College of God's Gift at Dulwich. [London], 1881.305. Wheatley, H.B. London, Past and Present.... Based upon the Handbook of London by the late Peter Cunningham. London and New York, 1891. (See No. 81.)*306. —— On a Contemporary Drawing of the Interior of the Swan Theatre, 1596. (The New Shakspere Society's Transactions, 1887-90, p. 213.)

Whitefriars. See Nos. 5, 6, 7, 19, 43, 60, 61, 86, 141, 144, 189, 196, 201, 214, 218, 223, 239, 287, 293, 297.*307. Wilkinson, R. Londina Illustrata. 2 vols. London, 1819-25. (The second volume is entitled Theatrum Illustrata.)308. Wilson, J.D. Life in Shakespeare's England. Cambridge, 1911. (Chap. vii, "The Theatre.")*309. —— The Puritan Attack upon the Stage. (The Cambridge History of English Literature, vol. vi.)*310. Winwood, R. Memorials of Affairs of State. 3 vols. London, 1725.311. Woolf, A.H. Shakespeare and the Old Southwark Playhouses: a Lecture. London, 1903. (20 pp., 8vo, privately printed.)312. Wotton, Sir H. ReliquiÆ WottonianÆ. London, 1651.313. Wright, G.R. The English Stage in the Year 1638. (The Journal of the British ArchÆological Association, xvi, 275; reprinted in the author's ArchÆologic and Historic Fragments, London, 1887.)*314. Wright, J. Historia Histrionica, London, 1699. (Reprinted in Hazlitt's Dodsley, vol. xv.)315. Wright, T. Queen Elizabeth and Her Times. 2 vols. London, 1838.*316. Young, W. The History of Dulwich College, with a Life of the Founder, Edward Alleyn, and an Accurate Transcript of his Diary, 1617-1622. 2 vols. London, 1889. (Edition limited to 250 copies, privately printed for the author.)


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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