


Shakespeare, Hamlet

Shakespeare, Othello

Letter about Guy Fawkes

Newsbook

Shakespeare, King Lear

English arrives in North America

Shakespeare's Sonnets

King James Bible

Webster, The Duchess of Malfi

First English dictionary

The Globe Theatre

Shakespeare's First Folio

John Donne, Poetry

Jonson, The English Grammar

Areopagitica by John Milton

Confessions of Charles I's executioner

Advert for a quack doctor

Marvell, 'An Horatian Ode'

Early A - Z of London

Samuel Pepys' Diary

Theatrical figures

Coffee houses

A cure for the Plague

The Fire of London

John Milton's Paradise Lost

Criminal slang

Aphra Behn, The Rover

Bunyan, Pilgrim’s Progress

Habeas Corpus Act

Advert for a Rhinoceros

Account of a shipwreck
The panorama of London shown here was produced in 1616, and includes an illustration of the Globe Theatre, in which Shakespeare performed many of his plays. The view of London, from the South Bank of the River Thames, looks across old London Bridge to the Tower of London, the spires of the City, and St Paul's Cathedral.
The first public playhouses were built in London in the late 1500s. Theatres were not permitted within the boundaries of the City itself, but were tolerated in outer districts of London, such as Southwark, where the Globe was located. Southwark was notorious for its noisy, chaotic entertainments and for its sleazy low-life: its theatres, brothels, bear baiting pits, pickpockets and the like.
The Globe was built in 1599, from the reused timbers of a playhouse known as The Theatre. It was an open-air amphitheatre, with three tiers of galleries, a covered stage and a thatched roof. The first Globe was burnt down in 1613, when its thatch caught fire during a performance of Shakespeare and Fletcher's Henry VIII. The second Globe was built on the foundations of the first, but given a tiled roof. It could accommodate an audience of 3,000.
Shelfmark: B.L. Maps 162.o.1.