Archbishop Edmund Grindal (see 4.13-4.14 on prophesyings) |
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Scholar's Choice, Elizabethan Religious Performances
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Scholar's Choice, Global Elizabethans
A True Description of the Naval Expedition of Francis Drake (detail, rounding Cape Horn and into the "South Sea") |
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Scholar's Choice, Religious Reformations (1547-1559)
Undergraduate group “c” discussion leaders have been asked to provide 1-2 sentences for each of 3 documents from Key and Bucholz, Sources and Debates, ch. 3 “Religious Reformations” [docs. 3.12-3.18], as to what seems useful or interesting about the document, in a comment below (beginning with the one they'd most like to examine/explain/contextualize). [For students: by Sept. 16. Fri., Group c recommendations are due (online); document assignments & readings distributed by that Sun.; presentations.Sept. 22. Thurs.]
Feasting on Early Modern Theater Database
A review of a new digital resource - Early Modern London Theatres, ed. by John McGavin
Toronto, Records of Early English Drama, 2011 - in Reviews in History (David Kathman, review of Early Modern London Theatres, review no. 1119), drew me to the online source and database itself. This appears to be the first stage (as it were) of the database, or Version 1 (February 2011): "Records pertaining to the Eight Theatres north of the Thames [Red Lion (1567), the Theatre (1576), the Curtain (1577), the Fortune (1600), the Red Bull (1604), the Boar's Head (1602), the Phoenix or Cockpit (1616), and Salisbury Court (1629)." A quick run through the database, finds some 40 uses of the term "feast." Although the term is, of course, often used to date contracts, the following note from mid-November 1626:
Materials, then, for "Elizabethan Worlds," and beyond.
Sunday, September 04, 2011
Scholar's Choice, Religious Reformations (pre-1547)
J. Foxe, Acts and Monuments (1563), detail |
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Scholar's Choice, Tudor Challenge
Edward Hall, The Union of the Two Noble and Illustre Famelies (1550). |
Monday, August 29, 2011
Remembering Anniversaries: Kett's Rebellion
Samuel Wales, Under the Oak of Reformation at his Camp on Mousehold Heath, Norwich |
Friday, August 19, 2011
1688 And All That
University of Nottingham Library, has a great visual representation of William of Orange's Itinerary (specifically a "map of southern England showing the routes followed by William's headquarters, four of the main Dutch commanders, and some English detachments.") Their set of online documents, timelines, and other sources on the invasion are also worth noting. (Thanks, and a tip of the hat to Charlie Foy.)
1688 also has its chronology (well 1685-89) here. There is a Williamite world (well Universe) here. And, to be fair, a Jacobite world (including an extensive set of documents) here.
1688 also has its chronology (well 1685-89) here. There is a Williamite world (well Universe) here. And, to be fair, a Jacobite world (including an extensive set of documents) here.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
(b)log rolling
London booksellers (n.d.) |
Course(s) Correction
Amended list (on the left-hand side of this blog) of The Courses (using either Early Modern England and/or Sources and Debates) based on currently active URLs (based solely on a quick, basic search):
Say good-bye (for now) to:
Say hello to (among others, I am trying to recall what I added yesterday):
Say good-bye (for now) to:
- Britain in the Stuart Age, 1603-1688 (Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
- Crown and Peoples: Early Modern Britain (Anglia Ruskin, pre-course reading)
- England Under the Tudors, 1485-1603 (Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
- Religion, Conflict and the Printing Press in Early Modern Europe (Illiniois, Urbana-Champaign)
- Selected Topics in Tudor and Stuart History (Western Ontario)
- Tudor and Stuart Britain, 1500-1700 (Ohio State)
- Tudor and Stuart England (Texas, Permian Basin)
Say hello to (among others, I am trying to recall what I added yesterday):
- Britain in the Modern World, 1550-1815 (Grinnell)
- Cultural Stress in Britain: From Reformation to Revolution (Salisbury)
- Early Modern England (Georgia State)
- Elizabeth I of England (Marian)
- English Renaissance Literature (Salem State)
- History of England, 1485-1714 (Texas, Arlington)
- Reformation Britain (Utah State, 2nd)
- Reformations and Revolutions in Early Modern Britain (Northumbria)
- Selected Topics in Tudor and Stuart History (Western Ontario)
- Shakespeare’s England, 1450–1603 (Ohio)
- Tudor and Stuart Britain, 1500-1700 (UCL)
- Tudor England (University College, Dublin)
- Tudor Stuart Britain (Salisbury)
- Tudor-Stuart England (Georgia)
- Tudor-Stuart England 1485-1688 (Central Arkansas)
Monday, August 08, 2011
The (Early Modern) Revolution Will Be Crowd-sourced?
Worlds collide. For following changes in a region stretching roughly from Morocco to Iran (which I follow myself at Small Ax), my current fave blog is iRevolution, which shows how innovation and technology such as Crisis Mapping or Crowdsourcing can be used both to understand the changes and to impel the changes themselves. It has struck me how some of these techniques might be used by historians although we rarely have datasets as big as those. For example, Analyzing the Libya Crisis Map Data in 3D (Video), would be fascinating to apply to, say, incidents mentioned for one year in one or two newspapers from the 1640s. (Blogger "A Trumpet of Sedition," who seems particularly focused on the mid-century revolutions, might consider how such techniques might help understand the revolutionary era from a post-revisionist stance.)
Now, iRevolution has posted Crowdsourcing Solutions and Crisis Information during the Renaissance which suggests how crowdsourcing was used in the past, in this case, to aggregate pamphlet reporting on the 1607 Severn inlet floods. Turns out of course there already is a website for the Great Flood of 1607 with a great set of sources on same.
Now, iRevolution has posted Crowdsourcing Solutions and Crisis Information during the Renaissance which suggests how crowdsourcing was used in the past, in this case, to aggregate pamphlet reporting on the 1607 Severn inlet floods. Turns out of course there already is a website for the Great Flood of 1607 with a great set of sources on same.
Thursday, June 02, 2011
Virtual Royal Exchange - addendum to early modern blogroll
Wenceslaus Hollar, Byrsa Londinensis, vulgo The Royall Exchange of London (1644), detail |
- Early Modern Commons (extensive blogroll, with Aggregator)
- Hans Eworth & The London Stranger Painters (Tudor Art)
- History Woman (includes late Medieval, early modern)
- Homo Gastronomicus (late 17th & 18th century feasting)
- she-philosopher.com (not really a blog, but I borrowed the close-up detail to left, from Women booksellers, 1640 and 1644, gallery)
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Union Jack(ed)
London Metropolitan Archives' FLickr photostream has some interesting images (mostly 19th and 20th cent.). Dirck Stoop's "The Manner how her Maties. D. Catherine imbarketh from Lisbon for England," (which they title, The Marriage of Catherine of Braganza to King Charles II, 1662) has the English Fleet flying the Union Jack, which must be one of the earliest portrayals of said flag. The OED, has the following early reference - London Gazette, 924 (1674), "[t]hat from henceforth [subjects] do not presume to wear His Majesties Jack (commonly called, The Union Jack) in any of their Ships or Vessels, without particular Warrant" - although the practice dates from the early Stuarts.
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Get Thee To...The Continent
"Painted Life," Mary Ward and Companions |
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
Goldman Sachs and Goldsmith Vyner
In honor of my joining Facebook to further some committee work (and noting Goldman Sachs investment in same, as well as their role "in contributing to the worst US economic crisis since the 1930s"), I offer the following doggerel made by an anonymous critic of Sir Robert Vyner (presumably in the 1670s)
The Family of Sir Robert Vyner, by John Michael Wright (d.1694)
- Cursed be the banker and hanged the covetous banker
- That like a fatal rust or cancer
- That viper-like through mothers' bowels eat
- Their way to private wealth and hope to cheat
- Abused mankind with glorious words.
The Family of Sir Robert Vyner, by John Michael Wright (d.1694)
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Before there were blogs
The Folger Shakespeare Library ran a vibrant exhibition, "Breaking News: Renaissance Journalism and the Birth of the Newspaper," curated by Chris R. Kyle and Jason Peacey with Elizabeth Walsh, September 25, 2008-January 31, 2009. The exhibition is still online and is a sort of catalog book of the early newspaper from 1620s to early 18th century.
Our Sources and Debates in English History, 1485-1714 includes selections from MS. newsletters - 4.2 A Spanish newsletter about Hawkins and Drake (December 1569) and 8.8 Selections from newsletters (1675–82), as well as selections from early modern newspapers - 8.9 Selections from Whig and Tory newspapers (1679–82). Selections from the many newsbooks of the 1640s, however, must be searched for elsewhere. Early English Books Online (EEBO) has those collected and bound by George Thomason, and a modern edition of selections is to be found in Joad Raymond, The Invention of the Newspaper: English Newsbooks 1641-1649 (Oxford University Press, 2005).
Our Sources and Debates in English History, 1485-1714 includes selections from MS. newsletters - 4.2 A Spanish newsletter about Hawkins and Drake (December 1569) and 8.8 Selections from newsletters (1675–82), as well as selections from early modern newspapers - 8.9 Selections from Whig and Tory newspapers (1679–82). Selections from the many newsbooks of the 1640s, however, must be searched for elsewhere. Early English Books Online (EEBO) has those collected and bound by George Thomason, and a modern edition of selections is to be found in Joad Raymond, The Invention of the Newspaper: English Newsbooks 1641-1649 (Oxford University Press, 2005).
Sunday, January 09, 2011
EME Plugged
Early Modern England 1485-1714: A Narrative History, 2nd ed. is now available as a CourseSmart eTextbook.
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
Talking Heads / Housing Coffee
Perhaps because of the publication Brian Cowan, The Social Life of Coffee: The Emergence of the British Coffeehouse (Yale University Press, 2005); Markman Ellis, The Coffee House: A Cultural History (Phoenix, 2005), etc., but more probably because of the expansion of blogs (and the decline of newspapers) had everyone scrambling back to an earlier age and technology of communication shift (from newsbooks to newspapers, from taverns to coffeehouses). In any case, the last five years have seen numerous online musings: Coffee-houses vs. Salons; a review of Cowan considering the Coffeehouse Mob; a discussion of the public sphere From the Coffee House to the World Wide Web (though I am unsure how the image Hogarth's Treating fits, given that that is clearly a tavern/private dining room); Notes on Coffee (though perhaps it should be titled Notes on Habermas); a long article "Coffee and Civilization," by Scott Horton (Harper's, August 20, 2007); and recently "Coffee Society."
The concluding chapter of Bucholz and Key, Early Modern England discusses coffee-houses quite a bit, in relation to London's mercantile and insurance developments, aristocratic sociability, and, of course, the nascent public sphere. I worry whether coffeehouses can be all things to all people; but they certainly were a prominent early modern feature. (We don't use the picture at left in Early Modern England or Sources and Debates, though I believe it is circa 1705.) For more on coffeehouses and modernity, see Drinking as Enlightenment? (below). To resist the Whiggish idea that coffeehouses developed everything new about the modern public sphere, see Philip Withington, Society in Early Modern England (Polity Press, 2010), 235, where everything "associated with the Enlightenment coffeehouse had been promulgated through the council chambers and parish vestries of England for the previous one hundred years"!
The concluding chapter of Bucholz and Key, Early Modern England discusses coffee-houses quite a bit, in relation to London's mercantile and insurance developments, aristocratic sociability, and, of course, the nascent public sphere. I worry whether coffeehouses can be all things to all people; but they certainly were a prominent early modern feature. (We don't use the picture at left in Early Modern England or Sources and Debates, though I believe it is circa 1705.) For more on coffeehouses and modernity, see Drinking as Enlightenment? (below). To resist the Whiggish idea that coffeehouses developed everything new about the modern public sphere, see Philip Withington, Society in Early Modern England (Polity Press, 2010), 235, where everything "associated with the Enlightenment coffeehouse had been promulgated through the council chambers and parish vestries of England for the previous one hundred years"!
Virtual St. Paul's Churchyard - addendum
Six month's ago, we noted a Virtual Grub Street? of blogs devoted to aspects of early modern England. Perhaps it is time to add a few more:
- Early Modern History Blog (perhaps we are all a bit samey with the naming; this one is Tudor-focused)
- Georgian London (a book in progress, 18th-century material culture)
- In Pursuit of History (formerly The Gentleman Administrator; includes early modern history)
- Renaissance Diary (conferences, events)
- Women in Medieval and Early Modern History (links to broadsides, ballads, and other primaries)
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