Theme Explorer

Page 18 of 30 531 Records Found

Pen Nib

This is one of eight pen nibs in the collection of Leamington Spa Art Gallery and Museum that were used by the cobbler W. Smith and Son. In 1875 William Smith bought the shoe shop at 58 Bath Street, where ...

Pen Nib

This is one of eight pen nibs in the collection of Leamington Spa Art Gallery and Museum that were used by the cobbler W. Smith and Son. In 1875 William Smith bought the shoe shop at 58 Bath Street, where ...

Pen Nib

This is one of eight pen nibs in the collection of Leamington Spa Art Gallery and Museum that were used by the cobbler W. Smith and Son. In 1875 William Smith bought the shoe shop at 58 Bath Street, where ...

Pen Tray

This pen tray was used by the cobbler W. Smith and Son of Bath Street, Leamington Spa. The tray is carved from a piece of wood from York Minster. A plaque of metal from York Minster bears the inscription, ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - binding view

A notable binding contemporary with Shakespeare. A royal coat-of-arms was stamped in gold on this volume in the seventeenth century. The same gilded ownership coat-of-arms adorns the back as the front ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - binding, front board

The front board of a Shakespearian sourcebook. The original owner of this book probably purchased it from the printer, a friend of William Shakespeare, Richard Field, or from his publisher Thomas Wight. ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - Caius Martius Coriolanus, p.221.

The story of Coriolanus in Shakespeare's source. The central facts for the play of Coriolanus were taken by from North’s translation of Plutarch's Lives. The fable of the belly and its rebellion ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - detail, p. A4r.

The translator's notes 'To the Reader' of a Shakespeare sourcebook. Sir Thomas North, writing in January 1579, attached a ‘Foreword’ to the readers of his translation of Plutarch’s ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - detail, printer and publisher imprint

The imprint of Shakespeare’s fellow Stratfordian. Richard Field, who was two years older than Shakespeare, was son of Henry Field, a Stratford tanner. In September 1579, at the age of seventeen ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - fore-edge title

An Elizabethan identification of a Shakespearian sourcebook. An early owner of this volume stored his books in the same way as many of his contemporaries, with the fore-edge facing outwards, rather ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - Julius Caesar, p.712.

The story of Julius Caesar, as read by Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s first knowledge of Latin and the Roman heroes had been acquired at school, and later for his play Julius Caesar he took the story ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - p.1, Theseus.

Theseus is first in North's study of the Greeks as read by Shakespeare. The first story in North’s translation of Plutarch is of the Greek king Theseus whose marriage to Hippolyta, Queen of the ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - title page, printer's device

A printer’s ornament known to Shakespeare. Each Elizabethan printer used a personal ‘device’ on the title page of his work. Richard Field, the printer who came from Stratford, used ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1603 - title page.

Shakespeare’s source for stories of Greece and Rome. Shakespeare’s contemporary, the lawyer and scholar Sir Thomas North (?1535 - 1601) translated the biographies of fifty Greek and Roman ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1612 - Antony and Cleopatra, p. 922, detail.

Shakespeare followed this description of Cleopatra. Shakespeare became very familiar with Plutarch’s stories, and he often followed the wording of sections in North’s translation very ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1612 - Coriolanus's mother, Volumnia, detail, p.238.

Shakespeare's source for Coriolanus's mother, Volumnia. On this page from Plutarch’s ‘Life of Coriolanus’, Volumnia, Patrician mother of Coriolanus, agrees to go with Virgilia, his ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1612 - dedication detail, p. A3r.

The translator's dedication of a Shakespeare edition repeated in a later edition. In his dedication to Queen Elizabeth, Sir Thomas North recognized her especial interest in the classics. He called ...

Plutarch, The lives of the noble Grecians and Romaines, 1612 - ornamental headpiece above dedication, p. A3r, detail.

The translator's dedication to Shakespeare's queen. Above the translator’s dedication the printer, Richard Field, placed a decorative woodcut with a central figure playing the lute, as the Queen ...