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The Staging of The Court Drama to 1595
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Extract
It has usually been assumed by historians of the drama that amusements of a dramatic kind at court kept pace with those of the country in general. The entries of 1348 in the Record Books of the Great Wardrobe, which belong to the reign of Edward III, and which concern tunics and visors used in a Christmas celebration, have been interpreted as referring to dramatic entertainments (Collier, i, 15, 22; Warton, ii, 72; Brotanek; Ward, i, 148). This view, however, has recently been called into question in the researches of Professor Arthur Beatty, of the University of Wisconsin, who has pointed out that tunics and visors were also necessities of the tournament, that “It is antecedently improbable that Edward III should have had dramatic entertainments on important occasions,” and that therefore these important entries do not prove the existence of dramatic entertainments at this early date.
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- Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1909
References
page 185 note 1 Beatty, Professor Arthur: On the Supposed Dramatic Character of the Ludi in the Great Wardrobe Accounts of Edward III, 1345–1349. A paper read by title at the meeting of the Modern Language Association, 1908. See program for abstract of the paper.
page 192 note 1 Search has failed to reveal the width of this Hall. Travelers through England, however, estimate its width at about fifty feet.
page 197 note 1 Record for 1573 and other years.