Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "The Theatre" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Newington and Butts
This prompted the construction of permanent playhouses outside the jurisdiction of London, in the liberties of Halliwell / Holywell in Shoreditch and later the Clink, and at Newington Butts near the established entertainment district of St. George's Fields in rural Surrey.
The Theatre was constructed in Shoreditch in 1576 by James Burbage with his brother-in-law John Brayne ( the owner of the unsuccessful Red Lion playhouse of 1567 ) and the Newington Butts playhouse was set up, probably by Jerome Savage, some time between 1575 and 1577.
* Newington Butts
The earliest known performance of the play is recorded in Philip Henslowe's Diary on 13 June 1594, as The Tamynge of A Shrowe at the Newington Butts Theatre.
Middleton died at his home in Newington Butts in 1627.
The name survives now in the street names Newington Causeway and Newington Butts and in the open space Newington Gardens, formerly the location of Horsemonger Lane Gaol from 1791.
In William Shakespeare's time, there was a theatre called Newington Butts and later there were further theatres.
The scientist Michael Faraday was born here, in Newington Butts, in 1791.
It continues along Newington Butts, Kennington Park Road, Clapham Road and Clapham High Street.
Short died in Newington Butts, London in 1768, having made a considerable fortune from his profession.
Newington Butts and Walworth Road adjoin the southern intersection.
Known previously as Newington ( Newington Butts and Newington Causeway are two of the principal roads of the area ), in the medieval period it was simply a part of rural Surrey, of the manor of Walworth.
He also had interests in the Newington Butts Theatre and The Swan.
It was the fourth of the public theatres to be built, after The Theatre ( 1576 ), the Curtain ( 1577 ), and the theatre at Newington Butts ( c.
: First recorded performance: probably performed at Newington Butts Theatre, 13 June 1594, as The Tamynge of A Shrowe.
It was the fifth in the series of large public playhouses of London, after James Burbage's The Theatre ( 1576 ) and Curtain ( 1577 ), the Newington Butts Theatre ( between 1575 and 1577 ) and Philip Henslowe's Rose ( 1587 – 88 ).
This prompted the construction of playhouses outside the jurisdiction of London, in the liberties of Halliwell / Holywell in Shoreditch and later the Clink, and at Newington Butts near the established entertainment district of St. George's Fields in rural Surrey.
Newington Butts was clearly established by Lady Day 1577, and Wickham et al.
He was a Strict Baptist and preached at several locations including the Surrey Tabernacle ( where he was Deacon for sixteen years ), St Mary's Newington Butts, St Paul's Deptford and St Saviour ; this led to opportunities to be a churchwarden and Guardian of the Poor.
:" A subway commencing ... near ... Short Street at the ... junction ... with Newington Butts and terminating at King William Street ...

Newington and may
Newington may refer to:
In the surrounding area there may be over 50 synagogues and many observant Jews in the neighbouring areas of Stoke Newington, Upper Clapton and Tottenham identify with Stamford Hill.

Newington and have
His parents were Presbyterian dissenters ; he was educated in a dissenting academy at Newington Green run by Charles Morton and is believed to have attended the church there.
Two that have been significant in national life are the Cross Street Chapel in Manchester and Newington Green Unitarian Church in north London.
The resulting boundaries seem rather anomalous now ; the entire eastern side of Stoke Newington High Street and beyond, including Stoke Newington Common, were included in the next door Metropolitan Borough of Hackney, but in fact this area was then part of the parish of Hackney – not Stoke Newington – and much of it would have been regarded as being in Shacklewell at the time.
Stoke Newington Church Street, the central commercial area of Stoke Newington, contains four independent stores / restaurants that each have two branches, each across the street from one another.
In London, notable social centres have included the London Action Resource Centre, rampART, the Freedom Club, 56a Crampton Street infoshop, The Square ' and in the old Vortex Jazz Club on Stoke Newington Church Street.
The title appears to have been inspired by a popular, now-gone steak restaurant named ( Rocco ) Matarese's Circle in Newington, Connecticut, about 10 miles from Wesleyan University, Ludlum's alma mater.
Newington Green Unitarian Church made history when it became the first religious establishment in Britain to refuse to carry out any weddings at all until same-sex couples have the right to full legal marriage.
Three more stores in Connecticut, located in Manchester, Newington, and Enfield have also opened.

Newington and been
Diane Julie Abbott ( born 27 September 1953 ) is a British Labour Party politician who has been the Member of Parliament ( MP ) for Hackney North and Stoke Newington since 1987, when she became the first black woman to be elected to the House of Commons.
Stoke Newington or ' new town in the wood ', has been lightly settled for many hundreds of years, close to larger neighbouring Saxon settlements near the River Lea.
In the 19th century it was discovered that Stoke Newington Common and Abney Park Cemetery had been part of a Neolithic working area for axe-making, some examples of which can be seen in the Museum of London.
After the war a substantial amount of residential housing, particularly to the east of modern Stoke Newington, in Hackney borough at the time, had been either destroyed or left in such a bad state that it was seen by the urban planners of that era as better to demolish it.
The main hall has now been incorporated into the Business Design Centre .< ref name = social >< cite >' Islington: Social and cultural activities ', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 8: Islington and Stoke Newington parishes ( 1985 ), pp. 45-51 accessed: 8 March 2007 </ ref >
In August 2001, a group of townspeople from Newington and Rye made a plea in protest to the state legislature to consider allowing the town to secede from the state due to disproportionate property tax laws which had been passed by the state in 1997 to balance the state's education economy.
In August 2001, a group of townspeople from Newington and Rye made a plea in protest to the state legislature to consider allowing the town to secede from the state due to disproportionate property tax laws which had been passed by the state in 1997 to balance the state's education economy.
The college was originally named Hackney College when it was formed in 1974 by the amalgamation of Hackney and Stoke Newington College of Further Education with those sites of Poplar Technical College that had been established in Hackney.
Clissold Park Café is at the late-18th century villa ; the spire of Stoke Newington ( parish ) | St Mary's Church, Stoke Newington can been seen in the background.
All the members of its predecessor committee ( 1783-1787 ) had been Quakers, and nine of the twelve founders of the subsequent non-denominational Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade were Quakers, including two-Samuel Hoare Jr and Joseph Woods Sr ( father of the botanist Joseph Woods Jr )-who lived close to William Allen in Stoke Newington, the village near London where Allen had family interests after his second marriage in 1806.
The nature of Newington Green had changed — the fresh bucolic village had been swallowed up by London's relentless growth, and had become a " thriving and expanding suburb ".
This area shares in the gentrification of Islington and Stoke Newington, so the old shopping area has now been supplemented by a number of new and trendy shops, bars and restaurants.
Since 1922 Newington has been governed by an Act of Parliament.
* Suzanne Bennett has been a lay Synod appointment to Council since 2001 and her three sons and husband all attended Newington.
Although some industry remains, largely Turkish-run, it has been superseded as a commercial centre by neighbouring Stoke Newington and Dalston.
Modern Shacklewell is one of the more ill-defined districts of Hackney, most of its outer lying areas having, in public definition, been lost to the surrounding districts of Stoke Newington and Dalston.

0.217 seconds.