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Edmund and Spenser
Raphael Holinshed calls her Voadicia, while Edmund Spenser calls her " Bunduca ", a version of the name that was used in the popular Jacobean play Bonduca, in 1612.
** The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser ( 1596 )
Category: Edmund Spenser
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On the other hand, Edmund Spenser applies elf to full-sized beings in The Faerie Queene.

Edmund and 1590
In 1590 Edmund Spenser appended a sonnet to Oxford in The Faerie Queen.
Such plot devices were used in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night ( 1601 ), The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser in 1590, and James Shirley's The Bird in a Cage ( 1633 ).
The meaning " something which stands for something else " was first recorded 1590, in Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene.
Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene, published 1590, also contains a character named Cordelia, who also dies from hanging, as in King Lear.
English readers were familiar with Mother Hubbard, already a stock figure when Edmund Spenser published his satire " Mother Hubbard's tale ", 1590 ; with the superstitious advice on getting a husband or a wife of " Mother Bunch ", who was credited with the fairy stories of Madame d ' Aulnoy when they first appeared in English.
The epic Elizabethan poem The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser was published, in its first part, in 1590 and then in completed form in 1597.
In The Faerie Queene ( first published in 1590 ) Edmund Spenser wrote of the river:
For example, Michael Taylor argues that there were at least thirty-nine history plays prior to 1592, including the two-part Christopher Marlowe play Tamburlaine ( 1587 ), Thomas Lodge's The Wounds of Civil War ( 1588 ), the anonymous The Troublesome Reign of King John ( 1588 ), Edmund Ironside ( 1590 also anonymous ), Robert Green's Selimus ( 1591 ) and another anonymous play, The True Tragedy of Richard III ( 1591 ).
In 1590, Edmund Spenser also composed a very famous pastoral epic called The Faerie Queene, in which he employs the pastoral mode so as to accentuate the charm, lushness, and splendor of the poem's ( super ) natural world.
* He is referred to in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene ( 1590 ).
Among other things the series asserts that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford was a secret illegitimate son of Queen Elizabeth I ; that Sir Francis Walsingham, the Queen's spymaster, did not die in 1590 as history records but lived in secret for another five years ; that playwrights Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare and Ben Jonson were all secret agents of the Queen and underwent dangerous missions in her service, in addition to their theatrical activities ; that the plays of all three had profound secret political and magical meanings ; that Edmund Spencer's The Faerie Queene was not a fictional work but was based on a true Kingdom of Faerie, whose Queen had a secret pact of mutual help with the English Queen Elizabeth ; that Christopher Marlowe was not assassinated in 1593 as history records but was taken into Faerie where he became the lover of the witch Morgan le Fay ; and that Shakespeare had also visited Faerie and personally met with Puck and other supposedly legendary characters depicted in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
It is named after a character in Edmund Spenser's epic poem The Faerie Queene ( 1590 ).
The origins of the poem may be traced at least as far back as to the following lines written in 1590 by Sir Edmund Spenser from his epic The Faerie Queene ( Book Three, Canto 6, Stanza 6 ):
* The Faerie Queene, a poem by Edmund Spenser published in two parts, in 1590 and 1596
Sir Edmund Plowden ( 1590 July 1659 in Lydbury, Shropshire, England ) also titled Lord Earl Palatinate, Governor and Captain-General of the Province of New Albion in North America was an explorer and colonial governor who attempted to colonize North America in the mid-seventeenth century under a grant for a colony to be named New Albion.
The grandson of the eminent jurist, Edmund Plowden ( 1515 1585 ), Sir Edmund Plowden was born in 1590 to Francis Plowden ( 1562 1652 ) of Shiplake Court in Oxfordshire and Wokefield Park in Berkshire and his wife, Mary Fermor.
Edmund Spenser's usage of the English-language word ' ghost ', in his 1590 The Faerie Queene, demonstrates the former, broader meaning of the English-language term.
Sir Edmund Verney ( 1 January 1590 or 7 April 1596 23 October 1642 ) was an English politician and soldier and favourite of Charles I.

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