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  • ...publications (journals, books, etc.) arising out of research conducted for the ''Lost Plays Database''. ::[[David McInnis]] and [[Matthew Steggle]], "''Nothing'' will come of nothing? Or, What can we Learn from Plays that Don't Exist?", 1-16. <br>([h
    12 KB (1,694 words) - 09:49, 17 February 2024
  • ...licensing terms for externally provided content, especially digitisations of manuscripts and books. ==The Beinecke Library, Yale University==
    12 KB (1,766 words) - 05:41, 8 June 2023
  • ====Bond, William Bird (Borne) with the Admiral's men in Philip Henslowe's diary==== ...to document fully the one legitimate entry in the diary in terms of which the forgeries had for a time some credibility.
    40 KB (6,428 words) - 20:58, 10 March 2021
  • ===Richard Lichfield, ''The Trimming of Thomas Nashe'' (1597)=== ...inus et Non Terminus'', which is credited in early sources to Nashe and to the poet and future schoolmaster Robert Mills.
    19 KB (2,991 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • '''Symposium:''' “A Symposium on Early Modern Verbatim Theatre”, The Anatomy Museum, King’s College London (Strand Campus), 6 May 2016, 12.30p ...ether we can approach these records as a performance text, creating a form of early modern verbatim theatre.
    43 KB (5,662 words) - 21:35, 11 March 2024
  • ...ly and hereinafter called the "Ur-Hamlet"— to be essentially discrete from the ''Hamlet''s preserved in Q1 (1603), Q2 (1604-5), and F (1623). In June 1594, Henslowe entered the following heading into his diary:
    44 KB (7,026 words) - 17:40, 11 October 2020