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Early Modern Newsletter #4 October, 2024

Let's start with something a little different...

Fiction: In the Margins

Set in England in 1647, Gail Holmes's novel imaginatively recreates the life of Frances Wolfreston, an early modern book collector.

And if you're really into that kind of thing, this could be right up your street...

PhD opportunity: Women in Historical Fiction of the English Civil War Era

Loughborough University is advertising for candidates for a PhD. I have to say, as a Brit living abroad, the main thing that struck me about this one was the huge disparity between the domestic fee and the international fee!

Reading Group: Courting India

There will be a discussion on Nandini Das's Courting India: England, Mughal India and the Origins of Empire (2023) on October 16. I'm a little late getting this newsletter out, but if you miss this one, be sure to bookmark the site for future events; these King's College, London, events are a treat!

Blog post: John and Mary: Black Children at Queen Anne's Court?

In this Historic Royal Palaces blog post, Misha Ewen tells what is known of two Black children who arrived at Chapel Royal in St. James's Palace in 1704.

Podcast: Early Modern Servants

In this podcast on Female Servants in Early Modern England, Jana Byars hosts Charmian Mansell talking about her recent open-access book surveying the 27,000 witnesses and 9,000 cases involving female servants whose records she has examined in church court testimony.

Article: Women as child carers: Arranging and compensating mothering in early modern Lancashire

An article on women who cared for non-kin children in loco parentis. Emily Rhodes draws on a database of 50 petitions to the Lancashire Quarter Session Courts, 1660-1720.

Digitised: The Journals of John Locke

The Bodleian Library has digitised the complete journals of John Locke from manuscripts purchased in 1947 and others acquired in 1960-71.

Article: Thomas Kyd’s Verbal Borrowing from Tito Vespasiano Strozzi in The Spanish Tragedy

In this article, Emanuel Stelzer demonstrates Kyd's indebtedness to an Italian source.

Theatre: Marlowe in Atlanta

A Resurgens production of Marlowe's Doctor Faustus will run from November 20-24 in Atlanta.

Newspaper article: Marlowe's possible co-author

A Guardian report on research by the ubiquitous Darren Freebury-Jones suggesting that the largely forgotten Henry Porter may have written the comic scenes in Doctor Faustus.

Early Modern Philosophy on Facebook

A Facebook page on early modern philosophy, for all those times you've wished there was someone you could talk to about the things closest to your heart!

Exhibition: Renaissance: Scotland and Europe 1480 to 1630

Discover how Scotland and Europe influenced one another in this National Library of Scotland Exhibition. Runs till April 1, 2025.

 

Blog post: Hamlet and Laertes

Paul Adrain Fried discusses Seven ways Hamlet might see a mirror of himself in Laertes.

The early modern twitterverse

A late 17th century European view of Turkish life - men smoking & playing chess and women drinking coffee Jan Luyken, 1698 (Rijksmuseum) #InternationalCoffeeDay pic.twitter.com/WWsrvD9Ofg

— John McCafferty (@jdmccafferty) October 1, 2024

It is quite mind-blowing that Mary Boleyn’s descendants, particularly the Careys, preserved not only her memory but also that of her executed sister, Anne Boleyn. And no one is talking about it.

Stay tuned for more info because there's a lot to talk about. ❤️ pic.twitter.com/AE6XlmEhFX

— Sylvia Barbara Soberton (@SylviaBSo) September 23, 2024

If I wrote a novel about a 16th century cunning woman and her ghost helper bumbling about the countryside solving crimes, would you read it? pic.twitter.com/DLMtuJ1Ykq

— Dr Tabitha Stanmore (@MagicNotWitches) October 5, 2024

Sitting in a bar with ⁦⁦⁦@elegantfowl⁩ ready to answer all your early modern espionage questions for #HistoryWritersDay24! Hit us with anything about #Spycraft ⁦@YaleBooks⁩ ⚡️Are you reading our book? We would love to hear from you pic.twitter.com/TpRqoZXsK3

— Professor Nadine Akkerman (@misswalsingham) October 5, 2024

Jacob Jordaens Portrait of a Young Woman c. 1635-1640 (The Morgan) pic.twitter.com/tXSQqFIssu

— John McCafferty (@jdmccafferty) September 27, 2024

Fairy folklore friends, what is the oldest image of a fairy you're aware of?
I know there's this 17th century English woodcut, but is there anything earlier? pic.twitter.com/8RHxC8g8U1

— Morgan Daimler (@MorganDaimler) September 26, 2024

Hear ye! 'Tis time for #StuartSaturday! "Allegory of Charles I of England and Henrietta of France in a Vanitas Still Life", Carstian Luyckx (1623 – c. 1675). After 1669. Today, please share an artwork that depicts Charles I or Henrietta Maria. Image: Birmingham Museum of Art,… pic.twitter.com/PjQP2JYdZd

— Andrea Zuvich (@17thCenturyLady) September 28, 2024

Let me know if you have any comments, queries or requests for inclusion in the next newsletter!

Discourses of Suffering
Early modern religious controversies
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