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Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - binding

A binder's ornament on a book contemporary with Shakespeare. The sturdy, leather binding on this copy of Ortelius' small atlas is the original which was probably created for the book’s first ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - binding view.

Binding for everyday use in Shakespeare's time. Elizabethan books were usually sold unbound, the price being set by a Stationers' Company ordinance, or regulation, of 1586 at 1d. [one old penny] per ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p. 103 The Turkish Empire.

The world travelled by Shakespeare's characters: Antony, Octavia, and by Pericles. The small pocket version of Ortelius’s great atlas of the known world includes a view of the Eastern Mediterranean ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p. 3 Asia.

Asia as it was known to Shakespeare’s contemporaries. The trading ventures of Antonio, Shakespeare's merchant of Venice, involved ships sailing to many parts of the world in search of goods to ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p. 73, Padua, Italy.

The province of Italy inhabited by Kate and her sister in Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew. In The Taming of the Shrew Petruchio’s first words are 'Verona, for awhile I take my leave, to ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p. 90, Map of Ilyria.

Shakespeare's heroine, Viola, is shipwrecked in Illyria, a province in Ortelius’s atlas. Illyria, ruled over by Duke Orsino in Twelfth Night, is the European state, now known as Croatia. ‘What ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p.1. The known world.

The world known to Shakespeare and his contemporaries. English sailors, led by Francis Drake, first circumnavigated the world in 1578-1580. By this time the Dutch already had trading stations in India ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p.2, Europe.

Europe in Shakespeare’s time. The maps of Ortelius, first printed in Antwerp in 1570, were republished in England in a small handbook format in 1603. Contemporary English writers, such as Shakespeare, ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p.6, England

Shakespeare’s England. The pocket atlas of Ortelius was a useful handbook for all Elizabethans or Jacobeans who chose to travel, especially to Europe, either in person, or in their dreams of ...

Abraham Ortelius, Abraham Ortelius his epitome of the theatre of the worlde, 1603 - p.75, Verona, Italy

The Italy of Romeo and Juliet. If Shakespeare knew the Ortelius maps he would have seen clearly the proximity of Verona, home of Juliet, to Mantua, the city to which Romeo goes after his banishment ...

Addenbrooke summoned to answer William Shakespeare, 15 March 1609. Front

There is no record of the hearing of the case which William Shakespeare brought against John Addenbrooke, but the jury clearly found in favour of Shakespeare. Here the serjeants-at-mace are ordered to ...

Argentinian Quatercentenary Medal

This silver medal was struck in Argentina to commemorate the 400th anniversary in 1964 of Shakespeare's birth. Presented by the Comision Argentina de Homenaje a Shakespeare. This portrait of Shakespeare ...

Argentinian Quatercentenary Medal

This silver medal was struck in Argentina to commemorate the 400th anniversary in 1964 of Shakespeare's birth. Presented by the Comision Argentina de Homenaje a Shakespeare. This side shows the Globe ...

Artist's impression of New Place, Stratford upon Avon

Artist's impression of New Place as it would have been in the time of William Shakespeare. New Place was Shakespeare's family home from 1597, where he lived when not in London and where he died in ...

Assise of Bread [John Powell, editor], 1608 - woodcuts, p.D1v, detail.

Bakers at work: Shakespeare's neighbours. In towns few people baked their own bread on account of the dangers of chimney fires. The baker’s role was one of the most important in any community, ...

Assise of Bread [John Powell,editor] , 1608 - title page, p.A1r.

Bakery regulations: a source for Shakespeare. The woodcuts in this official government text that regulated the work of bakers show the work of kitchens with which Shakespeare would have been familiar. ...

Assise of Bread [John Powell,editor] ,1608 - table of permitted weights of loaves, p.D2r.

Contemporary unrest provided ideas for the food riots in Coriolanus. This page shows bakers at work above the official charts published for authorized legal weights of loaves of bread. In 1608 famine ...

Beautiful Britain: Stratford on Avon with Leamington & Warwick

Beautiful Britain: Stratford on Avon with Leamington & Warwick, by Dixon Scott. The book features colour illustrations by Fred Whitehead. It was published by A & C Black Ltd, London, and printed by Billing ...