


Sir Walter Raleigh's notes

First English dictionary

Letter about Guy Fawkes

Gunpowder Plot conspirators

The head of Guy Fawkes

Shakespeare's King Lear

The Globe Theatre

King James Bible

Surgeons' tools

Chinese globe

Shakespeare's First Folio

Lotus Sutra

Witch hunting

English Civil War scenes

Execution of Charles I

Agreement of the People

Charles I's executioner

Early A - Z of London

Advert for a quack doctor

Oliver Cromwell as the Devil

A cure for the Plague

Robert Hooke, Micrographia

Great Fire of London map

Great Fire of London

Wren's plans after the fire

Theatrical figures

Dictionary of criminal slang

Games and pastimes

Habeas Corpus Act

Map of the moon

A London Rhinoceros

Henry Purcell

Locke's Two Treatises

East India Company

Account of a shipwreck

Map of South America
This is the first collected edition of the Shakespeare's plays, published in 1623, only 7 years after the playwright’s death. It is known as the 'First Folio' - 'folio' comes from the Latin 'leaf', but in printer's jargon means 'page'. It was two of Shakespeare's fellow actors and closest friends, John Heminge and Henry Condell, who undertook the work of editing the text and supervising the printing.
None of Shakespeare's manuscripts survive, so the printed texts of his plays are our only source for what he originally wrote. The quarto editions are the texts closest to Shakespeare's time. Some are thought to preserve either his working drafts or his finished 'fair copies'. Others are thought to record versions remembered by actors who performed the plays in Shakespeare's day.
William Shakespeare began his career as an actor and playwright around 1592, not long after the first public playhouses were opened in London. He belonged to The Chamberlain's Men, a company of actors who performed in the Globe, an open-air playhouse built on the south bank of the Thames in 1599. Shakespeare wrote at least 37 plays, many of which were very successful both at court and in the public playhouses.
Shelfmark: G.11631.