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The Assassination Of Shakespeares Patron Investigating The Death Of The Fifth Earl Of Derby Daugherty

  • SKU: BELL-10530180
The Assassination Of Shakespeares Patron Investigating The Death Of The Fifth Earl Of Derby Daugherty
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The Assassination Of Shakespeares Patron Investigating The Death Of The Fifth Earl Of Derby Daugherty instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambria Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.34 MB
Pages: 348
Author: Daugherty, Leo
ISBN: 9781604977370, 160497737X
Language: English
Year: 2011

Product desciption

The Assassination Of Shakespeares Patron Investigating The Death Of The Fifth Earl Of Derby Daugherty by Daugherty, Leo 9781604977370, 160497737X instant download after payment.

Lord Ferdinando Stanley was the fifth earl of Derby, a leading claimant to the throne. Considered a man who had everything, he was also the patron of the company of players which was fortunate enough to include William Shakespeare. At the time, Shakespeare was an up-and-coming junior member who had just begun to write plays for them--plays which were already the talk of London. Lord Stanley was incalculably rich, having married one of the wealthiest heiresses in England. His home in Lancashire was called the "Northern Court" because of its grandness, surpassing any in England but (perhaps) the Queen's own. Then one day, April Fool's Day, 1594, he was reportedly approached by a witch (one of the famous legion of "Lancashire witches") and they engaged in brief conversation while strolling outside his largest palace, Lathom Hall. Four days later, he fell violently ill. For twelve days he lingered, while four of the best doctors in the country, including the famous Dr. John Case of Oxford, labored in vain to save him. Two of his retainers wrote gruesomely detailed accounts of the progress of his "diseases"--accounts that survive in manuscript today. When he died, Dr. Case was heard to murmur (as reported by Sir George Carey, the earl's brother-in-law): "Flat poisoning. And none other but." For months after his passing and interment, no one could get close enough to the family crypt to pay his or her respects because of an overwhelming stench that continued to emanate from his body. Who killed him and why? Historians started debating that question almost as soon as he died, and outraged gossip was to be heard everywhere in England. This book studies the death of Lord Derby within the immediate contexts of Elizabethan power politics, succession mania, passionate religious controversy, the records of prominent families in the North, and the cult of personality just then beginning to become a major factor in the nation's social history. The book's scope also includes

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