shakespearesengland.co.uk
Shakespeare's England » Monarchy
http://www.shakespearesengland.co.uk/category/monarchy
Everyday Life In Seventeenth Century England. October 30, 2013 – 7:29 pm. Anne Boleyn’s bedroom. Anne Boleyn’s bedroom. Anne Boleyn’s Book of Hours. Anne Boleyn’s bedroom window. The Six Wives of Henry VIII Placemat and Coaster set in the Gift Shoppe. Tudor Christmas Baubles in the Gift Shoppe. Original content here is published under these license terms:. 8216;The trumpets sound: stand close, the queen is coming’. August 28, 2013 – 12:26 pm. From the First Folio (1623). At the close of. Henry announces ...
balladed.wordpress.com
hannahlhogan | Balladed
https://balladed.wordpress.com/author/hannahlhogan
The merry ditties and doleful tunes of early modern England. Imagining early modern working women, or, economic history’s image problem. Detouring into PhD territory (although broadside ballads feature in the discussion)…. A thought-provoking and very exciting post by Brodie Waddell on economic history’s ‘image problem’ in post-Reformation England through an exploration of depictions of working women. John Styles’ comments below are also essential reading! However, the ones that caught my eye were the ma...
balladed.wordpress.com
Upcoming Conference ~ “Living English Broadside Ballads, 1550-1750: Song, Art, Dance, Culture” | Balladed
https://balladed.wordpress.com/2014/03/15/upcoming-conference-living-english-broadside-ballads-1550-1750-song-art-dance-culture
The merry ditties and doleful tunes of early modern England. Upcoming Conference “Living English Broadside Ballads, 1550-1750: Song, Art, Dance, Culture”. A quick post to spread the word that EBBA’s. Director Patricia Fumerton is convening a two-day conference at the Huntington Library on April 4-5th. The brochure can be found here. Go, go if you are able – I hope there are many more conferences like this to come. Until next time,. March 15, 2014. A “Butt Song from Hell”. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
balladed.wordpress.com
“Here comes the spirit of my love, with pale and gastly face”: a spooky ballad for All Hallows’ Eve | Balladed
https://balladed.wordpress.com/2013/10/31/here-comes-the-spirit-of-my-love-with-pale-and-gastly-face-a-spooky-ballad-for-all-hallows-eve
The merry ditties and doleful tunes of early modern England. Here comes the spirit of my love, with pale and gastly face : a spooky ballad for All Hallows’ Eve. Dear readers (from this world or the next…)! Just a quick post this evening (after a long, long hiatus, for which I apologise profusely) sadly I have no carved pumpkin (although something woodcut themed, now I think about it, would be frankly amazing) or a horrific costume/ “scary selfie”. For the occasion, but I do. October 31, 2013. You are com...
theprintshopwindow.com
December | 2016 | The Printshop Window
https://theprintshopwindow.com/2016/12
Caricature and Graphic Satire in the Long Eighteenth-Century. 8220;I toiled like a camel and fared like an ass” – A biographic sketch of Thomas Dolby (1782 – 1836). In Isaac Robert Cruikshank. The trade in caricature prints. Asymp; 5 Comments. Dolby’s first shop at 34 Wardour Street depicted in Horwood’s 1799 map of London. Thomas Dolby was born in the tiny Northamptonshire village of Sawtry on 6. IR Cruikshank, Figures in the Fog, published by Thomas Dolby, 1820. The Committee cannot, however, doubt but...
theprintshopwindow.com
The Schoolboy Beating the Retreat Before his Master, 1815 | The Printshop Window
https://theprintshopwindow.com/2016/11/25/the-schoolboy-beating-the-retreat-before-his-master-1815
Caricature and Graphic Satire in the Long Eighteenth-Century. The Schoolboy Beating the Retreat Before his Master, 1815. Asymp; 1 Comment. The image is the work of an artist-engraver named Lacroix whose caricatures were frequently listed in the. Bibliographie de la France. Napoleon is being unceremoniously stuffed into a rubbish bin by Wellington and Blucher, whilst in another. L’écolier battant la retraite devant son maître. The Schoolboy Beating the Retreat Before his Master. Bibliographie de la France.
historybotherer.wordpress.com
*dust dust, cough cough* | History Botherer
https://historybotherer.wordpress.com/2015/12/04/dust-dust-cough-cough
039;In pursuit of history' dusted off and reposted. Dust dust, cough cough*. Just dust of Mr Sykes’ blog will you, he wants the bloody thing back on the internet for some reason. Dust, dust, cough cough* The great thing about blogs is that even if you make them private and stash them away in your sock drawer for three years, the pages don’t go all foxed and yellow and you’re only ever one button press away from sharing your amateur history ramblings with the world all over again. Will I update it? Meh, d...
balladed.wordpress.com
Love Me, Love My Dog | Balladed
https://balladed.wordpress.com/2014/02/02/love-me-love-my-dog
The merry ditties and doleful tunes of early modern England. Love Me, Love My Dog. I’ve resolved to post far more frequently than I have been doing, and I thought I would begin a new year by sharing one of my favourite ballads with you. 8220;My Dog and I” (1678-80), Magdalene College, Pepys 4.229. Image courtesy of English Broadside Ballads Archive (ID 21889). As far as we know. It is full of innuendo for a start – “proper Probe”, anyone? These examples do much to highlight the importance of ballad melod...