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The Charters and Letters Patent Granted to the Borough by Richard I. and Succeeding Sovereigns. [Edited by William Gurney Benham. The Translations Collated and Corrected by I. H. Jeayes.].
  • Language: en

The Charters and Letters Patent Granted to the Borough by Richard I. and Succeeding Sovereigns. [Edited by William Gurney Benham. The Translations Collated and Corrected by I. H. Jeayes.].

  • Categories: Law
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1903
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This book contains the many charters and letters that pertain to the borough of Colchester, England. The first such charter was written and signed by Richard I in December of 1189 granting the borough of Colchester the freedom to chose their own bailiffs and a chief Justice as long as they followed the rules laid out in the charter governing the positions.

Benham's Book of Quotations, Proverbs and Household Words
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 3048

Benham's Book of Quotations, Proverbs and Household Words

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1948
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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The Fairy Pastoral
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 158

The Fairy Pastoral

A pastoral satire about homicidal women- and men-haters being forced into marriage. A standard “Shakespearean” comedy takes a group of youths who are attracted to those who are not interested in them, and regroups them by the conclusion into neat pairings of three or four marriages. In contrast, Fairy Pastoral appears to have been censored because the men in the pairings are wooing their intended partners from the beginning, while the women are homicidally opposed to marriage and prove to the men how much they hate them during the plot, only for them all to be forced into four marriages that all of them are miserable in by the resolution. The setting is the Forest of Elvida inhabited by ...

The Aphrodisia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 168

The Aphrodisia

A rare marinal about disguised identities and loves among the Greco-Roman deities under the Mediterranean Sea. Percy described Aphrodisia as an experiment in a new genre he was inventing, the marinal, designed to contrast the pastoral set on land in the countryside. Beyond this setting, this comedy focuses on taking to an extreme the popular European trope of disguises by having most of the main characters reveal themselves to have an identity other than the one they present themselves as. Arion relates a sad story that is an original translation of a segment out of Bartas’ Weeks about him being a poor singer who was captured by pirates, but in the conclusion, Arion reveals himself to actu...

Nobody and Somebody
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 138

Nobody and Somebody

A comedy that juxtaposes fame with anonymity, and tyrannical abuse with fair governance. The rapid succession of monarchs across Nobody and Somebody satirizes the standard plots of “Shakespearean” histories that end with the overthrow or death of the preceding tyrannical monarch, and suggest hope that the next monarch will be better, before this hope is dispelled in the next tragic history, as is the case with the chronological series of Edward III, Richard II, and 1 Henry IV. Nobody is set in 85-60 BC, or just before the Roman invasion of the British Isles. The plot opens with two Court advisors, Cornwall and Marcian, scheming to overthrow their corrupt King Archigallo who unfairly conf...

A Restitution for Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 508

A Restitution for Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities

The launch of Britain’s “Anglo-Saxon” origin-myth and the first Old English etymological dictionary. This is the only book in human history that presents a confessional description of criminal forgery that fraudulently introduced the legendary version of British history that continues to be repeated in modern textbooks. Richard Verstegan was the dominant artist and publisher in the British Ghostwriting Workshop that monopolized the print industry across a century. Scholars have previously described him as a professional goldsmith and exiled Catholic-propaganda publisher, but these qualifications merely prepared him to become a history forger and multi-sided theopolitical manipulator. T...

The Thirsty Arabia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 174

The Thirsty Arabia

A closeted first attempt to present the complexities and elegance of the Islamic faith and the prophet Muhammad on the English stage. Thirsty Arabia was written over a century before the first English translation of the Qur’an was published. Despite this shortfall in primary sources about Islam, this comedy incorporates with unbiased research a wealth of theological and cultural details. Information flowed into Britain from Muslim countries alongside general trade in goods after Pope Pius V excommunicated Elizabeth I in 1570, but trade was halted shortly after this play was written in 1603. The narrative is launched when Muhammad declares he will destroy all mortals in Arabia for their sin...

Job Triumphant in His Trial and The Woodman’s Bear
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 204

Job Triumphant in His Trial and The Woodman’s Bear

The first verse English translation of the Book of Job, and a fantasy epic poem about the woeful love between the Woodman and the Bear. Computational, handwriting, and other types of evidence proves that Josuah Sylvester ghostwrote famous dramas and poetry, including the first “William Shakespeare”-bylined book Venus and Adonis (1593), the “Robert Greene”-bylined Orlando Furioso (1594) and the two “Mary Sidney”-assigned translations of Antonie (1592) and Clorinda (1595). Sylvester is also the ghostwriter behind famously puzzling attribution mysteries, such as the authorship of the anonymous “Shakespeare”-apocrypha Locrine (1595), and behind controversial productions such as t...

The Book of Bill
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 260

The Book of Bill

A collection of quotations from "some four hundred of the most noted and notorious Bills of all time"--from playwright William Shakespeare to William Shatner, Billy the Kid, Willie Mays, William O. Douglas, and many others.