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Christopher Marlowe

Christopher Marlowe, also known as Kit Marlowe (/ˈmɑːrl/; baptised 26 February 1564 – 30 May 1593), was an English playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era.[a] Marlowe is among the most famous of the Elizabethan playwrights. Based upon the "many imitations" of his play Tamburlaine, modern scholars consider him to have been the foremost dramatist in London in the years just before his mysterious early death.[b] Some scholars also believe that he greatly influenced William Shakespeare, who was baptised in the same year as Marlowe and later succeeded him as the pre-eminent Elizabethan playwright.[c] Marlowe was the first to achieve critical reputation for his use of blank verse, which became the standard for the era. His plays are distinguished by their overreaching protagonists. Themes found within Marlowe's literary works have been noted as humanistic with realistic emotions, which some scholars find difficult to reconcile with Marlowe's "anti-intellectualism" and his catering to the prurient tastes of his Elizabethan audiences for generous displays of extreme physical violence, cruelty, and bloodshed.[4]

Christopher Marlowe
Born
Canterbury, Kent, England
Baptised26 February 1564
Died30 May 1593 (aged 29)
Deptford, Kent, England
Resting placeChurchyard of St. Nicholas, Deptford, Kent, England; unmarked; memorial plaques inside and outside church
Alma materCorpus Christi College, Cambridge
Occupations
  • Playwright
  • Poet
Years active1564–93
Era
Notable work
MovementEnglish Renaissance
Parents
  • John Marlowe (father)
  • Katherine Arthur (mother)

Events in Marlowe's life were sometimes as extreme as those found in his plays.[d] Differing sensational reports of Marlowe's death in 1593 abounded after the event and are contested by scholars today owing to a lack of good documentation. There have been many conjectures as to the nature and reason for his death, including a vicious bar-room fight, blasphemous libel against the church, homosexual intrigue, betrayal by another playwright, and espionage from the highest level: the Privy Council of Elizabeth I. An official coroner's account of Marlowe's death was revealed only in 1925,[6] and it did little to persuade all scholars that it told the whole story, nor did it eliminate the uncertainties present in his biography.[7]

Early life

 
Marlowe was christened at St George's Church, Canterbury. The tower, shown here, is all that survived destruction during the Baedeker air raids of 1942.

Christopher Marlowe, the second of nine children, and oldest child after the death of his sister Mary in 1568, was born to Canterbury shoemaker John Marlowe and his wife Katherine, daughter of William Arthur of Dover.[8] He was baptised at St George's Church, Canterbury, on 26 February 1564 (1563 in the old style dates in use at the time, which placed the new year on 25 March).[9] Marlowe's birth was likely to have been a few days before,[10][11][12] making him about two months older than William Shakespeare, who was baptised on 26 April 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon.[13]

By age 14, Marlowe was a pupil at The King's School, Canterbury on a scholarship[e] and two years later a student at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he also studied through a scholarship with expectation that he would become an Anglican clergyman.[14] Instead, he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1584.[8][15] Marlowe mastered Latin during his schooling, reading and translating the works of Ovid. In 1587, the university hesitated to award his Master of Arts degree because of a rumour that he intended to go to the English seminary at Rheims in northern France, presumably to prepare for ordination as a Roman Catholic priest.[8] If true, such an action on his part would have been a direct violation of royal edict issued by Queen Elizabeth I in 1585 criminalising any attempt by an English citizen to be ordained in the Roman Catholic Church.[16][17]

Large-scale violence between Protestants and Catholics on the European continent has been cited by scholars as the impetus for the Protestant English Queen's defensive anti-Catholic laws issued from 1581 until her death in 1603.[16] Despite the dire implications for Marlowe, his degree was awarded on schedule when the Privy Council intervened on his behalf, commending him for his "faithful dealing" and "good service" to the Queen.[18] The nature of Marlowe's service was not specified by the Council, but its letter to the Cambridge authorities has provoked much speculation by modern scholars, notably the theory that Marlowe was operating as a secret agent for Privy Council member Sir Francis Walsingham.[19] The only surviving evidence of the Privy Council's correspondence is found in their minutes, the letter being lost. There is no mention of espionage in the minutes, but its summation of the lost Privy Council letter is vague in meaning, stating that "it was not Her Majesties pleasure" that persons employed as Marlowe had been "in matters touching the benefit of his country should be defamed by those who are ignorant in th'affaires he went about." Scholars agree the vague wording was typically used to protect government agents, but they continue to debate what the "matters touching the benefit of his country" actually were in Marlowe's case and how they affected the 23-year-old writer as he launched his literary career in 1587.[8]

Adult life and legend

Little is known about Marlowe's adult life. All available evidence, other than what can be deduced from his literary works, is found in legal records and other official documents. Writers of fiction and non-fiction have speculated about his professional activities, private life, and character. Marlowe has been described as a spy, a brawler, and a heretic, as well as a "magician", "duellist", "tobacco-user", "counterfeiter" and "rakehell". While J. A. Downie and Constance Kuriyama have argued against the more lurid speculations, it is the usually circumspect J. B. Steane who remarked, "it seems absurd to dismiss all of these Elizabethan rumours and accusations as 'the Marlowe myth'".[20][21][22] Much has been written on his brief adult life, including speculation of: his involvement in royally-sanctioned espionage; his vocal declaration as an atheist; his (possibly same-sex) sexual interests; and the puzzling circumstances surrounding his death.

Spying

 
The corner of Old Court of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where Marlowe stayed while a Cambridge student and, possibly, during the time he was recruited as a spy

Marlowe is alleged to have been a government spy.[23] Park Honan and Charles Nicholl speculate that this was the case and suggest that Marlowe's recruitment took place when he was at Cambridge.[23][24] In 1587, when the Privy Council ordered the University of Cambridge to award Marlowe his degree as Master of Arts, it denied rumours that he intended to go to the English Catholic college in Rheims, saying instead that he had been engaged in unspecified "affaires" on "matters touching the benefit of his country".[25] Surviving college records from the period also indicate that, in the academic year 1584–1585, Marlowe had had a series of unusually lengthy absences from the university which violated university regulations. Surviving college buttery accounts, which record student purchases for personal provisions, show that Marlowe began spending lavishly on food and drink during the periods he was in attendance; the amount was more than he could have afforded on his known scholarship income.[26][f]

 
Portrait of alleged "spymaster" Sir Francis Walsingham c. 1585; attributed to John de Critz

It has been speculated that Marlowe was the "Morley" who was tutor to Arbella Stuart in 1589.[g] This possibility was first raised in a Times Literary Supplement letter by E. St John Brooks in 1937; in a letter to Notes and Queries, John Baker has added that only Marlowe could have been Arbella's tutor owing to the absence of any other known "Morley" from the period with an MA and not otherwise occupied.[30] If Marlowe was Arbella's tutor, it might indicate that he was there as a spy, since Arbella, niece of Mary, Queen of Scots, and cousin of James VI of Scotland, later James I of England, was at the time a strong candidate for the succession to Elizabeth's throne.[31][32][33][34] Frederick S. Boas dismisses the possibility of this identification, based on surviving legal records which document Marlowe's "residence in London between September and December 1589". Marlowe had been party to a fatal quarrel involving his neighbours and the poet Thomas Watson in Norton Folgate and was held in Newgate Prison for a fortnight.[35] In fact, the quarrel and his arrest occurred on 18 September, he was released on bail on 1 October and he had to attend court, where he was acquitted on 3 December, but there is no record of where he was for the intervening two months.[36]

In 1592 Marlowe was arrested in the English garrison town of Flushing (Vlissingen) in the Netherlands, for alleged involvement in the counterfeiting of coins, presumably related to the activities of seditious Catholics. He was sent to the Lord Treasurer (Burghley), but no charge or imprisonment resulted.[37] This arrest may have disrupted another of Marlowe's spying missions, perhaps by giving the resulting coinage to the Catholic cause. He was to infiltrate the followers of the active Catholic plotter William Stanley and report back to Burghley.[38]

Philosophy

 
Sir Walter Raleigh, shown here in 1588, was the alleged centre of the "School of Atheism" c. 1592.

Marlowe was reputed to be an atheist, which held the dangerous implication of being an enemy of God and the state, by association.[39] With the rise of public fears concerning The School of Night, or "School of Atheism" in the late 16th century, accusations of atheism were closely associated with disloyalty to the Protestant monarchy of England.[40]

Some modern historians consider that Marlowe's professed atheism, as with his supposed Catholicism, may have been no more than a sham to further his work as a government spy.[41] Contemporary evidence comes from Marlowe's accuser in Flushing, an informer called Richard Baines. The governor of Flushing had reported that each of the men had "of malice" accused the other of instigating the counterfeiting and of intending to go over to the Catholic "enemy"; such an action was considered atheistic by the Church of England. Following Marlowe's arrest in 1593, Baines submitted to the authorities a "note containing the opinion of one Christopher Marly concerning his damnable judgment of religion, and scorn of God's word".[42] Baines attributes to Marlowe a total of eighteen items which "scoff at the pretensions of the Old and New Testament" such as, "Christ was a bastard and his mother dishonest [unchaste]", "the woman of Samaria and her sister were whores and that Christ knew them dishonestly", "St John the Evangelist was bedfellow to Christ and leaned always in his bosom" (cf. John 13:23–25) and "that he used him as the sinners of Sodom".[22] He also implied that Marlowe had Catholic sympathies. Other passages are merely sceptical in tone: "he persuades men to atheism, willing them not to be afraid of bugbears and hobgoblins". The final paragraph of Baines's document reads:

 
Portrait often claimed to be Thomas Harriot (1602), which hangs in Trinity College, Oxford

These thinges, with many other shall by good & honest witnes be approved to be his opinions and Comon Speeches, and that this Marlowe doth not only hould them himself, but almost into every Company he Cometh he persuades men to Atheism willing them not to be afeard of bugbeares and hobgoblins, and vtterly scorning both god and his ministers as I Richard Baines will Justify & approue both by mine oth and the testimony of many honest men, and almost al men with whome he hath Conversed any time will testify the same, and as I think all men in Cristianity ought to indevor that the mouth of so dangerous a member may be stopped, he saith likewise that he hath quoted a number of Contrarieties oute of the Scripture which he hath giuen to some great men who in Convenient time shalbe named. When these thinges shalbe Called in question the witnes shalbe produced.[43]

Similar examples of Marlowe's statements were given by Thomas Kyd after his imprisonment and possible torture (see above); Kyd and Baines connect Marlowe with mathematician Thomas Harriot's and Sir Walter Raleigh's circle.[44] Another document claimed about that time that "one Marlowe is able to show more sound reasons for Atheism than any divine in England is able to give to prove divinity, and that ... he hath read the Atheist lecture to Sir Walter Raleigh and others".[22][h]

Some critics believe that Marlowe sought to disseminate these views in his work and that he identified with his rebellious and iconoclastic protagonists.[46] Plays had to be approved by the Master of the Revels before they could be performed and the censorship of publications was under the control of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Presumably these authorities did not consider any of Marlowe's works to be unacceptable other than the Amores.

Sexuality

 
Title page to 1598 edition of Marlowe's Hero and Leander

It has been claimed that Marlowe was homosexual. Some scholars argue that the identification of an Elizabethan as gay or homosexual in the modern sense is "anachronistic," claiming that for the Elizabethans the terms were more likely to have been applied to sexual acts rather than to what we currently understand to be exclusive sexual orientations and identities.[47] Other scholars argue that the evidence is inconclusive and that the reports of Marlowe's homosexuality may be rumours produced after his death. Richard Baines reported Marlowe as saying: "all they that love not Tobacco & Boies were fools". David Bevington and Eric C. Rasmussen describe Baines's evidence as "unreliable testimony" and "[t]hese and other testimonials need to be discounted for their exaggeration and for their having been produced under legal circumstances we would now regard as a witch-hunt".[48]

J. B. Steane considered there to be "no evidence for Marlowe's homosexuality at all".[22] Other scholars point to the frequency with which Marlowe explores homosexual themes in his writing: in Hero and Leander, Marlowe writes of the male youth Leander: "in his looks were all that men desire..."[49][50] Edward the Second contains the following passage enumerating homosexual relationships:

The mightiest kings have had their minions;
Great Alexander loved Hephaestion,
The conquering Hercules for Hylas wept;
And for Patroclus, stern Achilles drooped.
And not kings only, but the wisest men:
The Roman Tully loved Octavius,
Grave Socrates, wild Alcibiades.[51]

Marlowe wrote the only play about the life of Edward II up to his time, taking the humanist literary discussion of male sexuality much further than his contemporaries. The play was extremely bold, dealing with a star-crossed love story between Edward II and Piers Gaveston. Though it was a common practice at the time to reveal characters as homosexual to give audiences reason to suspect them as culprits in a crime, Christopher Marlowe's Edward II is portrayed as a sympathetic character.[52] The decision to start the play Dido, Queen of Carthage with a homoerotic scene between Jupiter and Ganymede that bears no connection to the subsequent plot has long puzzled scholars.[53]

Arrest and death

 
Marlowe was buried in an unmarked grave in the churchyard of St Nicholas, Deptford. This modern plaque is on the east wall of the churchyard.

In early May 1593, several bills were posted about London threatening the Protestant refugees from France and the Netherlands who had settled in the city. One of these, the "Dutch church libel", written in rhymed iambic pentameter, contained allusions to several of Marlowe's plays and was signed, "Tamburlaine".[54] On 11 May the Privy Council ordered the arrest of those responsible for the libels. The next day, Marlowe's colleague Thomas Kyd was arrested, his lodgings were searched and a three-page fragment of a heretical tract was found. In a letter to Sir John Puckering, Kyd asserted that it had belonged to Marlowe, with whom he had been writing "in one chamber" some two years earlier.[44][i] In a second letter, Kyd described Marlowe as blasphemous, disorderly, holding treasonous opinions, being an irreligious reprobate and "intemperate & of a cruel hart".[55] They had both been working for an aristocratic patron, probably Ferdinando Stanley, Lord Strange.[55] A warrant for Marlowe's arrest was issued on 18 May, when the Privy Council apparently knew that he might be found staying with Thomas Walsingham, whose father was a first cousin of the late Sir Francis Walsingham, Elizabeth's principal secretary in the 1580s and a man more deeply involved in state espionage than any other member of the Privy Council.[56] Marlowe duly presented himself on 20 May but there apparently being no Privy Council meeting on that day, was instructed to "give his daily attendance on their Lordships, until he shall be licensed to the contrary".[57] On Wednesday, 30 May, Marlowe was killed.

 
Title page to the 1598 edition of Palladis Tamia by Francis Meres, which contains one of the earliest descriptions of Marlowe's death

Various accounts of Marlowe's death were current over the next few years. In his Palladis Tamia, published in 1598, Francis Meres says Marlowe was "stabbed to death by a bawdy serving-man, a rival of his in his lewd love" as punishment for his "epicurism and atheism".[58] In 1917, in the Dictionary of National Biography, Sir Sidney Lee wrote, on slender evidence, that Marlowe was killed in a drunken fight. His claim was not much at variance with the official account, which came to light only in 1925, when the scholar Leslie Hotson discovered the coroner's report of the inquest on Marlowe's death, held two days later on Friday 1 June 1593, by the Coroner of the Queen's Household, William Danby.[6] Marlowe had spent all day in a house in Deptford, owned by the widow Eleanor Bull, with three men: Ingram Frizer, Nicholas Skeres and Robert Poley. All three had been employed by one or other of the Walsinghams. Skeres and Poley had helped snare the conspirators in the Babington plot and Frizer was a servant[59] to Thomas Walsingham probably in the role of a financial or business agent, as he was for Walsingham's wife Audrey a few years later.[60][61] These witnesses testified that Frizer and Marlowe had argued over payment of the bill (now famously known as the 'Reckoning') exchanging "divers malicious words" while Frizer was sitting at a table between the other two and Marlowe was lying behind him on a couch. Marlowe snatched Frizer's dagger and wounded him on the head. In the ensuing struggle, according to the coroner's report, Marlowe was stabbed above the right eye, killing him instantly. The jury concluded that Frizer acted in self-defence and within a month he was pardoned. Marlowe was buried in an unmarked grave in the churchyard of St. Nicholas, Deptford immediately after the inquest, on 1 June 1593.[62]

The complete text of the inquest report was published by Leslie Hotson in his book, The Death of Christopher Marlowe, in the introduction to which Prof. George Kittredge said, "The mystery of Marlowe's death, heretofore involved in a cloud of contradictory gossip and irresponsible guess-work, is now cleared up for good and all on the authority of public records of complete authenticity and gratifying fullness" but this confidence proved fairly short-lived. Hotson had considered the possibility that the witnesses had "concocted a lying account of Marlowe's behaviour, to which they swore at the inquest, and with which they deceived the jury" but came down against that scenario.[63] Others began to suspect that this scenario was indeed the case. Writing to the Times Literary Supplement shortly after the book's publication, Eugénie de Kalb disputed that the struggle and outcome as described were even possible and Samuel A. Tannenbaum insisted the following year that such a wound could not have possibly resulted in instant death, as had been claimed.[64][65] Even Marlowe's biographer John Bakeless acknowledged that "some scholars have been inclined to question the truthfulness of the coroner's report. There is something queer about the whole episode" and said that Hotson's discovery "raises almost as many questions as it answers".[66] It has also been discovered more recently that the apparent absence of a local county coroner to accompany the Coroner of the Queen's Household would, if noticed, have made the inquest null and void.[67]

One of the main reasons for doubting the truth of the inquest concerns the reliability of Marlowe's companions as witnesses.[68] As an agent provocateur for the late Sir Francis Walsingham, Robert Poley was a consummate liar, the "very genius of the Elizabethan underworld" and is on record as saying "I will swear and forswear myself, rather than I will accuse myself to do me any harm".[69][70] The other witness, Nicholas Skeres, had for many years acted as a confidence trickster, drawing young men into the clutches of people in the money-lending racket, including Marlowe's apparent killer, Ingram Frizer, with whom he was engaged in such a swindle.[71] Despite their being referred to as generosi (gentlemen) in the inquest report, the witnesses were professional liars. Some biographers, such as Kuriyama and Downie, take the inquest to be a true account of what occurred, but in trying to explain what really happened if the account was not true, others have come up with a variety of murder theories:[72][73]

  • Jealous of her husband Thomas's relationship with Marlowe, Audrey Walsingham arranged for the playwright to be murdered.[64]
  • Sir Walter Raleigh arranged the murder, fearing that under torture Marlowe might incriminate him.[74]
  • With Skeres the main player, the murder resulted from attempts by the Earl of Essex to use Marlowe to incriminate Sir Walter Raleigh.[75]
  • He was killed on the orders of father and son Lord Burghley and Sir Robert Cecil, who thought that his plays contained Catholic propaganda.[76]
  • He was accidentally killed while Frizer and Skeres were pressuring him to pay back money he owed them.[77]
  • Marlowe was murdered at the behest of several members of the Privy Council, who feared that he might reveal them to be atheists.[78]
  • The Queen ordered his assassination because of his subversive atheistic behaviour.[79]
  • Frizer murdered him because he envied Marlowe's close relationship with his master Thomas Walsingham and feared the effect that Marlowe's behaviour might have on Walsingham's reputation.[80]
  • Marlowe's death was faked to save him from trial and execution for subversive atheism.[j]

Since there are only written documents on which to base any conclusions and since it is probable that the most crucial information about his death was never committed to paper, it is unlikely that the full circumstances of Marlowe's death will ever be known.

Reputation among contemporary writers

 
Ben Jonson, leading satirist of the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras, was one of the first to acknowledge Marlowe for the power of his dramatic verse.

For his contemporaries in the literary world, Marlowe was above all an admired and influential artist. Within weeks of his death, George Peele remembered him as "Marley, the Muses' darling"; Michael Drayton noted that he "Had in him those brave translunary things / That the first poets had" and Ben Jonson wrote of "Marlowe's mighty line". Thomas Nashe wrote warmly of his friend, "poor deceased Kit Marlowe," as did the publisher Edward Blount in his dedication of Hero and Leander to Sir Thomas Walsingham. Among the few contemporary dramatists to say anything negative about Marlowe was the anonymous author of the Cambridge University play The Return from Parnassus (1598) who wrote, "Pity it is that wit so ill should dwell, / Wit lent from heaven, but vices sent from hell".

The most famous tribute to Marlowe was paid by Shakespeare in As You Like It, where he not only quotes a line from Hero and Leander ("Dead Shepherd, now I find thy saw of might, 'Who ever lov'd that lov'd not at first sight?'") but also gives to the clown Touchstone the words "When a man's verses cannot be understood, nor a man's good wit seconded with the forward child, understanding, it strikes a man more dead than a great reckoning in a little room."[82] This appears to be a reference to Marlowe's murder which involved a fight over the "reckoning," the bill, as well as to a line in Marlowe's Jew of Malta, "Infinite riches in a little room."

 
The influence of Marlowe upon William Shakespeare is evidenced by the Marlovian themes and other allusions to Marlowe found in Shakespeare's plays and sonnets.

Shakespeare was much influenced by Marlowe in his work, as can be seen in the use of Marlovian themes in Antony and Cleopatra, The Merchant of Venice, Richard II and Macbeth (Dido, Jew of Malta, Edward II and Doctor Faustus, respectively). In Hamlet, after meeting with the travelling actors, Hamlet requests the Player perform a speech about the Trojan War, which at 2.2.429–32 has an echo of Marlowe's Dido, Queen of Carthage. In Love's Labour's Lost Shakespeare brings on a character "Marcade" (three syllables) in conscious acknowledgement of Marlowe's character "Mercury", also attending the King of Navarre, in Massacre at Paris. The significance, to those of Shakespeare's audience who were familiar with Hero and Leander, was Marlowe's identification of himself with the god Mercury.[83]

Shakespeare authorship theory

An argument has arisen about the notion that Marlowe faked his death and then continued to write under the assumed name of William Shakespeare. Academic consensus rejects alternative candidates for authorship of Shakespeare's plays and sonnets, including Marlowe.[84]

Literary career

 
Edward Alleyn, lead actor of Lord Strange's Men was possibly the first to play the title characters in Doctor Faustus, Tamburlaine, and The Jew of Malta.

Plays

Six dramas have been attributed to the authorship of Christopher Marlowe either alone or in collaboration with other writers, with varying degrees of evidence. The writing sequence or chronology of these plays is mostly unknown and is offered here with any dates and evidence known. Among the little available information we have, Dido is believed to be the first Marlowe play performed, while it was Tamburlaine that was first to be performed on a regular commercial stage in London in 1587. Believed by many scholars to be Marlowe's greatest success, Tamburlaine was the first English play written in blank verse and, with Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy, is generally considered the beginning of the mature phase of the Elizabethan theatre.[85]

The play Lust's Dominion was attributed to Marlowe upon its initial publication in 1657, though scholars and critics have almost unanimously rejected the attribution. He may also have written or co-written Arden of Faversham.

 
Ferdinando Stanley, 5th Earl of Derby, aka "Ferdinando, Lord Straunge," was patron of some of Marlowe's early plays as performed by Lord Strange's Men.

Poetry and translations

Publication and responses to the poetry and translations credited to Marlowe primarily occurred posthumously, including:

Collaborations

Modern scholars still look for evidence of collaborations between Marlowe and other writers. In 2016, one publisher was the first to endorse the scholarly claim of a collaboration between Marlowe and the playwright William Shakespeare:

  • Henry VI by William Shakespeare is now credited as a collaboration with Marlowe in the New Oxford Shakespeare series, published in 2016. Marlowe appears as co-author of the three Henry VI plays, though some scholars doubt any actual collaboration.[89][90][91][92]
 
Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, Lord High Admiral, shown here c. 1601 in a procession for Elizabeth I of England, was patron of the Admiral's Men during Marlowe's lifetime.

Contemporary reception

Marlowe's plays were enormously successful, possibly because of the imposing stage presence of his lead actor, Edward Alleyn. Alleyn was unusually tall for the time and the haughty roles of Tamburlaine, Faustus and Barabas were probably written for him. Marlowe's plays were the foundation of the repertoire of Alleyn's company, the Admiral's Men, throughout the 1590s. One of Marlowe's poetry translations did not fare as well. In 1599, Marlowe's translation of Ovid was banned and copies were publicly burned as part of Archbishop Whitgift's crackdown on offensive material.

Chronology of dramatic works

(Patrick Cheney's 2004 Cambridge Companion to Christopher Marlowe presents an alternative timeline based upon printing dates.)[93]

Dido, Queen of Carthage (c. 1585–1587)

 
Title page of the 1594 first edition of Dido, Queen of Carthage

First official record 1594

First published 1594; posthumously

First recorded performance between 1587 and 1593 by the Children of the Chapel, a company of boy actors in London.[94]

Significance This play is believed by many scholars to be the first play by Christopher Marlowe to be performed.

Attribution The title page attributes the play to Marlowe and Thomas Nashe, yet some scholars question how much of a contribution Nashe made to the play.[95][96]

Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play.[97]

Tamburlaine, Part I (c. 1587); Part II (c. 1587–1588)

 
Title page of the earliest published edition of Tamburlaine (1590)

First official record 1587, Part I

First published 1590, Parts I and II in one octavo, London. No author named.[98]

First recorded performance 1587, Part I, by the Admiral's Men, London.[k]

Significance Tamburlaine is the first example of blank verse used in the dramatic literature of the Early Modern English theatre.

Attribution Author name is missing from first printing in 1590. Attribution of this work by scholars to Marlowe is based upon comparison to his other verified works. Passages and character development in Tamburlane are similar to many other Marlowe works.[100]

Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play.[101] Parts I and II were entered into the Stationers' Register on 14 August 1590. The two parts were published together by the London printer, Richard Jones, in 1590; a second edition in 1592, and a third in 1597. The 1597 edition of the two parts were published separately in quarto by Edward White; part I in 1605, and part II in 1606.[85][98]

The Jew of Malta (c. 1589–1590)

 
The Jew of Malta title page from 1633 quarto

First official record 1592

First published 1592; earliest extant edition, 1633

First recorded performance 26 February 1592, by Lord Strange's acting company.[102]

Significance The performances of the play were a success and it remained popular for the next fifty years. This play helps to establish the strong theme of "anti-authoritarianism" that is found throughout Marlowe's works.

Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play.[101] The play was entered in the Stationers' Register on 17 May 1594 but the earliest surviving printed edition is from 1633.

Doctor Faustus (c. 1588–1592)

 
Frontispiece to a 1631 printing of Doctor Faustus showing Faustus conjuring Mephistophilis

First official record 1594–1597[103]

First published 1601, no extant copy; first extant copy, 1604 (A text) quarto; 1616 (B text) quarto.[104]

First recorded performance 1594–1597; 24 revival performances occurred between these years by the Lord Admiral's Company, Rose Theatre, London; earlier performances probably occurred around 1589 by the same company.[103]

Significance This is the first dramatised version of the Faust legend of a scholar's dealing with the devil. Marlowe deviates from earlier versions of "The Devil's Pact" significantly: Marlowe's protagonist is unable to "burn his books" or repent to a merciful God to have his contract annulled at the end of the play; he is carried off by demons; and, in the 1616 quarto, his mangled corpse is found by the scholar characters.

Attribution The 'B text' was highly edited and censored, owing in part to the shifting theatre laws regarding religious words onstage during the seventeenth-century. Because it contains several additional scenes believed to be the additions of other playwrights, particularly Samuel Rowley and William Bird (alias Borne), a recent edition attributes the authorship of both versions to "Christopher Marlowe and his collaborator and revisers." This recent edition has tried to establish that the 'A text' was assembled from Marlowe's work and another writer, with the 'B text' as a later revision.[103][105]

Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play.[101] The two earliest-printed extant versions of the play, A and B, form a textual problem for scholars. Both were published after Marlowe's death and scholars disagree which text is more representative of Marlowe's original. Some editions are based on a combination of the two texts. Late-twentieth-century scholarly consensus identifies 'A text' as more representative because it contains irregular character names and idiosyncratic spelling, which are believed to reflect the author's handwritten manuscript or "foul papers". In comparison, 'B text' is highly edited with several additional scenes possibly written by other playwrights.[104]

Edward the Second (c. 1592)

 
Title page of the earliest published text of Edward II (1594)

First official record 1593[106]

First published 1590; earliest extant edition 1594 octavo[106]

First recorded performance 1592, performed by the Earl of Pembroke's Men.[106]

Significance Considered by recent scholars as Marlowe's "most modern play" because of its probing treatment of the private life of a king and unflattering depiction of the power politics of the time.[107] The 1594 editions of Edward II and of Dido are the first published plays with Marlowe's name appearing as the author.[106]

Attribution Earliest extant edition of 1594.[106]

Evidence The play was entered into the Stationers' Register on 6 July 1593, five weeks after Marlowe's death.[106]

The Massacre at Paris (c. 1589–1593)

 
Title page to a rare extant printed copy of The Massacre at Paris by Christopher Marlowe; undated.
 
Alleged foul sheet from Marlowe's writing of The Massacre at Paris (1593). Reproduced from Folger Shakespeare Library Ms.J.b.8. Recent scholars consider this manuscript part of a "reconstruction" by another hand.

First official record c. 1593, alleged foul sheet by Marlowe of "Scene 19"; although authorship by Marlowe is contested by recent scholars, the manuscript is believed written while the play was first performed and with an unknown purpose.

First published undated, c. 1594 or later, octavo, London;[108] while this is the most complete surviving text, it is near half the length of Marlowe's other works and possibly a reconstruction.[101] The printer and publisher credit, "E.A. for Edward White," also appears on the 1605/06 printing of Marlowe's Tamburlaine.[108]

First recorded performance 26 Jan 1593, by Lord Strange's Men, at Henslowe's Rose Theatre, London, under the title The Tragedy of the Guise;[108] 1594, in the repertory of the Admiral's Men.[101]

Significance The Massacre at Paris is considered Marlowe's most dangerous play, as agitators in London seized on its theme to advocate the murders of refugees from the low countries of the Spanish Netherlands, and it warns Elizabeth I of this possibility in its last scene.[109][110] It features the silent "English Agent", whom tradition has identified with Marlowe and his connexions to the secret service.[111] Highest grossing play for Lord Strange's Men in 1593.[112]

Attribution A 1593 loose manuscript sheet of the play, called a foul sheet, is alleged to be by Marlowe and has been claimed by some scholars as the only extant play manuscript by the author. It could also provide an approximate date of composition for the play. When compared with the extant printed text and his other work, other scholars reject the attribution to Marlowe. The only surviving printed text of this play is possibly a reconstruction from memory of Marlowe's original performance text. Current scholarship notes that there are only 1147 lines in the play, half the amount of a typical play of the 1590s. Other evidence that the extant published text may not be Marlowe's original is the uneven style throughout, with two-dimensional characterisations, deteriorating verbal quality and repetitions of content.[113]

Evidence Never appeared in the Stationer's Register.[114]

Memorials

 
The Muse of Poetry, part of the Marlowe Memorial in Canterbury

The Muse of Poetry, a bronze sculpture by Edward Onslow Ford references Marlowe and his work. It was erected on Buttermarket, Canterbury in 1891, and now stands outside the Marlowe Theatre in the city.[115][116]

In July 2002, a memorial window to Marlowe was unveiled by the Marlowe Society at Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey.[117] Controversially, a question mark was added to his generally accepted date of death.[118] On 25 October 2011 a letter from Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells was published by The Times newspaper, in which they called on the Dean and Chapter to remove the question mark on the grounds that it "flew in the face of a mass of unimpugnable evidence". In 2012, they renewed this call in their e-book Shakespeare Bites Back, adding that it "denies history" and again the following year in their book Shakespeare Beyond Doubt.[119][120]

The Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury, Kent, UK, was named for Marlowe in 1949.[116]

Marlowe in fiction

Marlowe has been used as a character in books, theatre, film, television, games and radio.

Modern compendia

Modern scholarly collected works of Marlowe include:

  • The Complete Works of Christopher Marlowe (edited by Roma Gill in 1986; Clarendon Press published in partnership with Oxford University Press)
  • The Complete Plays of Christopher Marlowe (edited by J. B. Steane in 1969; edited by Frank Romany and Robert Lindsey, Revised Edition, 2004, Penguin)

Works of Marlowe in performance

 
Poster for the 1937, New York WPA Federal Theatre Project production of Doctor Faustus

Radio

  • BBC Radio broadcast adaptations of Marlowe's six plays from May to October 1993.[121]

Royal Shakespeare Company

Royal Shakespeare Company

Royal National Theatre

Royal National Theatre

Shakespeare's Globe

Shakespeare's Globe

  • Dido, Queen of Carthage, directed by Tim Carroll, with Rakie Ayola as Dido, 2003.[136]
  • Edward II, directed by Timothy Walker, with Liam Brennan as Edward, 2003.[137]

Malthouse Theatre

 
Poster for L6L21's The Marlowe Sessions at Canterbury's Malthouse Theatre (2022). Original art by Lorna May Wadsworth.

The Marlowe Sessions[138][139]

Other stage

Stage adaptations

Film

Notes

  1. ^ "Christopher Marlowe was baptised as 'Marlow,' but he spelled his name 'Marley' in his one known surviving signature."[1]
  2. ^ "During Marlowe's lifetime, the popularity of his plays, Robert Greene's unintentionally elevating remarks about him as a dramatist in A Groatsworth of Wit, including the designation “famous,” and the many imitations of Tamburlaine suggest that he was for a brief time considered England's foremost dramatist." Logan also suggests consulting the business diary of Philip Henslowe, which is traditionally used by theatre historians to determine the popularity of Marlowe's plays.[2]
  3. ^ No birth records, only baptismal records, have been found for Marlowe and Shakespeare, therefore any reference to a birthdate for either man probably refers to the date of their baptism.[3]
  4. ^ "…as one of the most influential current critics, Stephen Greenblatt frets, Marlowe's 'cruel, aggressive plays' seem to reflect a life also lived on the edge: 'a courting of disaster as reckless as any that he depicted on stage'."[5]
  5. ^ The earliest record of Marlowe at The King's School is their payment for his scholarship of 1578/79, but Nicholl notes this was "unusually late" to start as a student and proposes he could have begun school earlier as a "fee-paying pupil".[8]
  6. ^ It is known that some poorer students worked as labourers on the Corpus Christi College chapel, then under construction, and were paid by the college with extra food. It has been suggested this may be the reason for the sums noted in Marlowe's entry in the buttery accounts.[27]
  7. ^ He was described by Arbella's guardian, the Countess of Shrewsbury, as having hoped for an annuity of some £40 from Arbella, his being "so much damnified (i.e. having lost this much) by leaving the University."[28][29]
  8. ^ The so-called 'Remembrances' against Richard Cholmeley.[45]
  9. ^ J. R. Mulryne states in his ODNB article[clarification needed] that the document was identified in the 20th century as transcripts from John Proctour's The Fall of the Late Arian (1549).[citation needed]
  10. ^ "Useful research has been stimulated by the infinitesimally thin possibility that Marlowe did not die when we think he did. ... History holds its doors open."[81]
  11. ^ Performing company is listed on the title page of the 1590 octavo. Henslowe's diary first lists Tamburlaine performances in 1593, so the original playhouse is unknown.[99]

References

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  3. ^ Logan (2007), pp. 3, 231–235.
  4. ^ Wilson (1999), p. 3.
  5. ^ Wilson (1999), p. 4.
  6. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 22 June 2015. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
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  9. ^ Cowper, Joseph Meadows, ed. (1891). The register booke of the parish of St. George the Martyr, within the citie of Canterburie, of christenings, marriages and burials. 1538-1800. Canterbury: Cross & Jackman. p. 10. from the original on 28 July 2020. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
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  38. ^ Nicholl (1992), pp. 246–248.
  39. ^ Stanley, Thomas (1687). The History of Philosophy 1655–61. quoted in Oxford English Dictionary.
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  43. ^ "The 'Baines Note'". from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
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    • Cartelli, Thomas. "Edward II". In Cheney (2004).
    • Healy, Thomas. "Doctor Faustus". In Cheney (2004).
    • Potter, Lois. "Marlowe in theatre and film". In Cheney (2004).
    • Riggs, David. "Marlowe's life". In Cheney (2004).
    • Wilson, Richard. "Tragedy, Patronage and Power". In Cheney (2004).
  • Downie, J. A.; Parnell, J. T., eds. (2000). Constructing Christopher Marlowe. ISBN 0-521-57255-X.
  • Dyce, Alexander (1850). Dyce, Alexander (ed.). The works of Christopher Marlowe, with notes and some account of his life and writings by the Rev. Alexander Dyce (1st ed.). London: William Pickering.
  • Honan, Park (2005). Christopher Marlowe: Poet and Spy. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198186959.
  • Hotson, Leslie (1925). The Death of Christopher Marlowe.
  • Kuriyama, Constance (2002). Christopher Marlowe: A Renaissance Life. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801439787.
  • Logan, Robert A. (2007). Shakespeare's Marlowe: the influence of Christopher Marlowe on Shakespeare's artistry. Aldershot, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0754657637.
  • Nicholl, Charles (1992). The Reckoning: The Murder of Christopher Marlowe. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 978-0-224-03100-4.
  • Nicholl, Charles (2002). The Reckoning: The Murder of Christopher Marlowe (revised ed.). Vintage. ISBN 0-09-943747-3.
  • Tannenbaum, Samuel (1926). The Assassination of Christopher Marlowe. New York.
  • Wilson, Richard (1999). "Introduction". In Wilson, Richard (ed.). Christopher Marlowe. London, New York: Routledge.

Further reading

  • Bevington, David, and Eric Rasmussen, eds. Doctor Faustus and Other Plays. Oxford English Drama. Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-19-283445-2
  • Conrad, B. Der wahre Shakespeare: Christopher Marlowe. (German non-Fiction book) 5th Edition, 2016. ISBN 978-3957800022
  • Cornelius R. M. Christopher Marlowe's Use of the Bibleu. New York: P. Lang, 1984.
  • Marlowe, Christopher. Complete Works. Vol. 3: Edward II., ed. R. Rowland. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994. (pp. xxii–xxiii)
  • Oz, Avraham, ed. Marlowe. New Casebooks. Houndmills, Basingstoke and London: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003. ISBN 033362498X
  • Parker, John. The Aesthetics of Antichrist: From Christian Drama to Christopher Marlowe. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-8014-4519-4
  • Shepard, Alan. Marlowe's Soldiers: Rhetorics of Masculinity in the Age of the Armada, Ashgate, 2002. ISBN 0-7546-0229-X
  • Sim, James H. Dramatic Uses of Biblical Allusions in Marlowe and Shakespeare, Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1966.
  • Wraight A. D.; Stern, Virginia F. In Search of Christopher Marlowe: A Pictorial Biography, London: Macdonald, 1965.

External links

  • Works by Christopher Marlowe in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Christopher Marlowe at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Christopher Marlowe at Internet Archive
  • Works by Christopher Marlowe at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • The Marlowe Society
  • The works of Marlowe at Perseus Project
  • The complete works 15 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine, with modernised spelling, on Peter Farey's Marlowe page.
  • BBC audio file. In Our Time Radio 4 discussion programme on Marlowe and his work
  • The is an initiative of the Marlowe Society of America and the University of Melbourne. Its purpose is to facilitate scholarship on the works of Christopher Marlowe by providing a searchable annotated bibliography of relevant scholarship
  • "Archival material relating to Christopher Marlowe". UK National Archives.  

christopher, marlowe, this, article, about, english, dramatist, american, sportscaster, chris, marlowe, also, known, marlowe, ɑːr, baptised, february, 1564, 1593, english, playwright, poet, translator, elizabethan, marlowe, among, most, famous, elizabethan, pl. This article is about the English dramatist For the American sportscaster see Chris Marlowe Christopher Marlowe also known as Kit Marlowe ˈ m ɑːr l oʊ baptised 26 February 1564 30 May 1593 was an English playwright poet and translator of the Elizabethan era a Marlowe is among the most famous of the Elizabethan playwrights Based upon the many imitations of his play Tamburlaine modern scholars consider him to have been the foremost dramatist in London in the years just before his mysterious early death b Some scholars also believe that he greatly influenced William Shakespeare who was baptised in the same year as Marlowe and later succeeded him as the pre eminent Elizabethan playwright c Marlowe was the first to achieve critical reputation for his use of blank verse which became the standard for the era His plays are distinguished by their overreaching protagonists Themes found within Marlowe s literary works have been noted as humanistic with realistic emotions which some scholars find difficult to reconcile with Marlowe s anti intellectualism and his catering to the prurient tastes of his Elizabethan audiences for generous displays of extreme physical violence cruelty and bloodshed 4 Christopher MarloweAnonymous portrait possibly Marlowe at Corpus Christi College CambridgeBornCanterbury Kent EnglandBaptised26 February 1564Died30 May 1593 aged 29 Deptford Kent EnglandResting placeChurchyard of St Nicholas Deptford Kent England unmarked memorial plaques inside and outside churchAlma materCorpus Christi College CambridgeOccupationsPlaywrightPoetYears active1564 93EraElizabethanNotable workHero and LeanderTamburlaine the GreatEdward the SecondThe Tragical History of Doctor FaustusDido Queen of CarthageMovementEnglish RenaissanceParentsJohn Marlowe father Katherine Arthur mother Events in Marlowe s life were sometimes as extreme as those found in his plays d Differing sensational reports of Marlowe s death in 1593 abounded after the event and are contested by scholars today owing to a lack of good documentation There have been many conjectures as to the nature and reason for his death including a vicious bar room fight blasphemous libel against the church homosexual intrigue betrayal by another playwright and espionage from the highest level the Privy Council of Elizabeth I An official coroner s account of Marlowe s death was revealed only in 1925 6 and it did little to persuade all scholars that it told the whole story nor did it eliminate the uncertainties present in his biography 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Adult life and legend 2 1 Spying 2 2 Philosophy 2 3 Sexuality 2 4 Arrest and death 3 Reputation among contemporary writers 4 Shakespeare authorship theory 5 Literary career 5 1 Plays 5 2 Poetry and translations 5 3 Collaborations 5 4 Contemporary reception 6 Chronology of dramatic works 6 1 Dido Queen of Carthage c 1585 1587 6 2 Tamburlaine Part I c 1587 Part II c 1587 1588 6 3 The Jew of Malta c 1589 1590 6 4 Doctor Faustus c 1588 1592 6 5 Edward the Second c 1592 6 6 The Massacre at Paris c 1589 1593 7 Memorials 8 Marlowe in fiction 9 Modern compendia 10 Works of Marlowe in performance 10 1 Radio 10 2 Royal Shakespeare Company 10 3 Royal National Theatre 10 4 Shakespeare s Globe 10 5 Malthouse Theatre 10 6 Other stage 10 7 Stage adaptations 10 8 Film 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life Edit Marlowe was christened at St George s Church Canterbury The tower shown here is all that survived destruction during the Baedeker air raids of 1942 Christopher Marlowe the second of nine children and oldest child after the death of his sister Mary in 1568 was born to Canterbury shoemaker John Marlowe and his wife Katherine daughter of William Arthur of Dover 8 He was baptised at St George s Church Canterbury on 26 February 1564 1563 in the old style dates in use at the time which placed the new year on 25 March 9 Marlowe s birth was likely to have been a few days before 10 11 12 making him about two months older than William Shakespeare who was baptised on 26 April 1564 in Stratford upon Avon 13 By age 14 Marlowe was a pupil at The King s School Canterbury on a scholarship e and two years later a student at Corpus Christi College Cambridge where he also studied through a scholarship with expectation that he would become an Anglican clergyman 14 Instead he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1584 8 15 Marlowe mastered Latin during his schooling reading and translating the works of Ovid In 1587 the university hesitated to award his Master of Arts degree because of a rumour that he intended to go to the English seminary at Rheims in northern France presumably to prepare for ordination as a Roman Catholic priest 8 If true such an action on his part would have been a direct violation of royal edict issued by Queen Elizabeth I in 1585 criminalising any attempt by an English citizen to be ordained in the Roman Catholic Church 16 17 Large scale violence between Protestants and Catholics on the European continent has been cited by scholars as the impetus for the Protestant English Queen s defensive anti Catholic laws issued from 1581 until her death in 1603 16 Despite the dire implications for Marlowe his degree was awarded on schedule when the Privy Council intervened on his behalf commending him for his faithful dealing and good service to the Queen 18 The nature of Marlowe s service was not specified by the Council but its letter to the Cambridge authorities has provoked much speculation by modern scholars notably the theory that Marlowe was operating as a secret agent for Privy Council member Sir Francis Walsingham 19 The only surviving evidence of the Privy Council s correspondence is found in their minutes the letter being lost There is no mention of espionage in the minutes but its summation of the lost Privy Council letter is vague in meaning stating that it was not Her Majesties pleasure that persons employed as Marlowe had been in matters touching the benefit of his country should be defamed by those who are ignorant in th affaires he went about Scholars agree the vague wording was typically used to protect government agents but they continue to debate what the matters touching the benefit of his country actually were in Marlowe s case and how they affected the 23 year old writer as he launched his literary career in 1587 8 Adult life and legend EditLittle is known about Marlowe s adult life All available evidence other than what can be deduced from his literary works is found in legal records and other official documents Writers of fiction and non fiction have speculated about his professional activities private life and character Marlowe has been described as a spy a brawler and a heretic as well as a magician duellist tobacco user counterfeiter and rakehell While J A Downie and Constance Kuriyama have argued against the more lurid speculations it is the usually circumspect J B Steane who remarked it seems absurd to dismiss all of these Elizabethan rumours and accusations as the Marlowe myth 20 21 22 Much has been written on his brief adult life including speculation of his involvement in royally sanctioned espionage his vocal declaration as an atheist his possibly same sex sexual interests and the puzzling circumstances surrounding his death Spying Edit The corner of Old Court of Corpus Christi College Cambridge where Marlowe stayed while a Cambridge student and possibly during the time he was recruited as a spy Marlowe is alleged to have been a government spy 23 Park Honan and Charles Nicholl speculate that this was the case and suggest that Marlowe s recruitment took place when he was at Cambridge 23 24 In 1587 when the Privy Council ordered the University of Cambridge to award Marlowe his degree as Master of Arts it denied rumours that he intended to go to the English Catholic college in Rheims saying instead that he had been engaged in unspecified affaires on matters touching the benefit of his country 25 Surviving college records from the period also indicate that in the academic year 1584 1585 Marlowe had had a series of unusually lengthy absences from the university which violated university regulations Surviving college buttery accounts which record student purchases for personal provisions show that Marlowe began spending lavishly on food and drink during the periods he was in attendance the amount was more than he could have afforded on his known scholarship income 26 f Portrait of alleged spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham c 1585 attributed to John de Critz It has been speculated that Marlowe was the Morley who was tutor to Arbella Stuart in 1589 g This possibility was first raised in a Times Literary Supplement letter by E St John Brooks in 1937 in a letter to Notes and Queries John Baker has added that only Marlowe could have been Arbella s tutor owing to the absence of any other known Morley from the period with an MA and not otherwise occupied 30 If Marlowe was Arbella s tutor it might indicate that he was there as a spy since Arbella niece of Mary Queen of Scots and cousin of James VI of Scotland later James I of England was at the time a strong candidate for the succession to Elizabeth s throne 31 32 33 34 Frederick S Boas dismisses the possibility of this identification based on surviving legal records which document Marlowe s residence in London between September and December 1589 Marlowe had been party to a fatal quarrel involving his neighbours and the poet Thomas Watson in Norton Folgate and was held in Newgate Prison for a fortnight 35 In fact the quarrel and his arrest occurred on 18 September he was released on bail on 1 October and he had to attend court where he was acquitted on 3 December but there is no record of where he was for the intervening two months 36 In 1592 Marlowe was arrested in the English garrison town of Flushing Vlissingen in the Netherlands for alleged involvement in the counterfeiting of coins presumably related to the activities of seditious Catholics He was sent to the Lord Treasurer Burghley but no charge or imprisonment resulted 37 This arrest may have disrupted another of Marlowe s spying missions perhaps by giving the resulting coinage to the Catholic cause He was to infiltrate the followers of the active Catholic plotter William Stanley and report back to Burghley 38 Philosophy Edit Sir Walter Raleigh shown here in 1588 was the alleged centre of the School of Atheism c 1592 Marlowe was reputed to be an atheist which held the dangerous implication of being an enemy of God and the state by association 39 With the rise of public fears concerning The School of Night or School of Atheism in the late 16th century accusations of atheism were closely associated with disloyalty to the Protestant monarchy of England 40 Some modern historians consider that Marlowe s professed atheism as with his supposed Catholicism may have been no more than a sham to further his work as a government spy 41 Contemporary evidence comes from Marlowe s accuser in Flushing an informer called Richard Baines The governor of Flushing had reported that each of the men had of malice accused the other of instigating the counterfeiting and of intending to go over to the Catholic enemy such an action was considered atheistic by the Church of England Following Marlowe s arrest in 1593 Baines submitted to the authorities a note containing the opinion of one Christopher Marly concerning his damnable judgment of religion and scorn of God s word 42 Baines attributes to Marlowe a total of eighteen items which scoff at the pretensions of the Old and New Testament such as Christ was a bastard and his mother dishonest unchaste the woman of Samaria and her sister were whores and that Christ knew them dishonestly St John the Evangelist was bedfellow to Christ and leaned always in his bosom cf John 13 23 25 and that he used him as the sinners of Sodom 22 He also implied that Marlowe had Catholic sympathies Other passages are merely sceptical in tone he persuades men to atheism willing them not to be afraid of bugbears and hobgoblins The final paragraph of Baines s document reads Portrait often claimed to be Thomas Harriot 1602 which hangs in Trinity College Oxford These thinges with many other shall by good amp honest witnes be approved to be his opinions and Comon Speeches and that this Marlowe doth not only hould them himself but almost into every Company he Cometh he persuades men to Atheism willing them not to be afeard of bugbeares and hobgoblins and vtterly scorning both god and his ministers as I Richard Baines will Justify amp approue both by mine oth and the testimony of many honest men and almost al men with whome he hath Conversed any time will testify the same and as I think all men in Cristianity ought to indevor that the mouth of so dangerous a member may be stopped he saith likewise that he hath quoted a number of Contrarieties oute of the Scripture which he hath giuen to some great men who in Convenient time shalbe named When these thinges shalbe Called in question the witnes shalbe produced 43 Similar examples of Marlowe s statements were given by Thomas Kyd after his imprisonment and possible torture see above Kyd and Baines connect Marlowe with mathematician Thomas Harriot s and Sir Walter Raleigh s circle 44 Another document claimed about that time that one Marlowe is able to show more sound reasons for Atheism than any divine in England is able to give to prove divinity and that he hath read the Atheist lecture to Sir Walter Raleigh and others 22 h Some critics believe that Marlowe sought to disseminate these views in his work and that he identified with his rebellious and iconoclastic protagonists 46 Plays had to be approved by the Master of the Revels before they could be performed and the censorship of publications was under the control of the Archbishop of Canterbury Presumably these authorities did not consider any of Marlowe s works to be unacceptable other than the Amores Sexuality Edit Title page to 1598 edition of Marlowe s Hero and Leander It has been claimed that Marlowe was homosexual Some scholars argue that the identification of an Elizabethan as gay or homosexual in the modern sense is anachronistic claiming that for the Elizabethans the terms were more likely to have been applied to sexual acts rather than to what we currently understand to be exclusive sexual orientations and identities 47 Other scholars argue that the evidence is inconclusive and that the reports of Marlowe s homosexuality may be rumours produced after his death Richard Baines reported Marlowe as saying all they that love not Tobacco amp Boies were fools David Bevington and Eric C Rasmussen describe Baines s evidence as unreliable testimony and t hese and other testimonials need to be discounted for their exaggeration and for their having been produced under legal circumstances we would now regard as a witch hunt 48 J B Steane considered there to be no evidence for Marlowe s homosexuality at all 22 Other scholars point to the frequency with which Marlowe explores homosexual themes in his writing in Hero and Leander Marlowe writes of the male youth Leander in his looks were all that men desire 49 50 Edward the Second contains the following passage enumerating homosexual relationships The mightiest kings have had their minions Great Alexander loved Hephaestion The conquering Hercules for Hylas wept And for Patroclus stern Achilles drooped And not kings only but the wisest men The Roman Tully loved Octavius Grave Socrates wild Alcibiades 51 Marlowe wrote the only play about the life of Edward II up to his time taking the humanist literary discussion of male sexuality much further than his contemporaries The play was extremely bold dealing with a star crossed love story between Edward II and Piers Gaveston Though it was a common practice at the time to reveal characters as homosexual to give audiences reason to suspect them as culprits in a crime Christopher Marlowe s Edward II is portrayed as a sympathetic character 52 The decision to start the play Dido Queen of Carthage with a homoerotic scene between Jupiter and Ganymede that bears no connection to the subsequent plot has long puzzled scholars 53 Arrest and death Edit Marlowe was buried in an unmarked grave in the churchyard of St Nicholas Deptford This modern plaque is on the east wall of the churchyard In early May 1593 several bills were posted about London threatening the Protestant refugees from France and the Netherlands who had settled in the city One of these the Dutch church libel written in rhymed iambic pentameter contained allusions to several of Marlowe s plays and was signed Tamburlaine 54 On 11 May the Privy Council ordered the arrest of those responsible for the libels The next day Marlowe s colleague Thomas Kyd was arrested his lodgings were searched and a three page fragment of a heretical tract was found In a letter to Sir John Puckering Kyd asserted that it had belonged to Marlowe with whom he had been writing in one chamber some two years earlier 44 i In a second letter Kyd described Marlowe as blasphemous disorderly holding treasonous opinions being an irreligious reprobate and intemperate amp of a cruel hart 55 They had both been working for an aristocratic patron probably Ferdinando Stanley Lord Strange 55 A warrant for Marlowe s arrest was issued on 18 May when the Privy Council apparently knew that he might be found staying with Thomas Walsingham whose father was a first cousin of the late Sir Francis Walsingham Elizabeth s principal secretary in the 1580s and a man more deeply involved in state espionage than any other member of the Privy Council 56 Marlowe duly presented himself on 20 May but there apparently being no Privy Council meeting on that day was instructed to give his daily attendance on their Lordships until he shall be licensed to the contrary 57 On Wednesday 30 May Marlowe was killed Title page to the 1598 edition of Palladis Tamia by Francis Meres which contains one of the earliest descriptions of Marlowe s death Various accounts of Marlowe s death were current over the next few years In his Palladis Tamia published in 1598 Francis Meres says Marlowe was stabbed to death by a bawdy serving man a rival of his in his lewd love as punishment for his epicurism and atheism 58 In 1917 in the Dictionary of National Biography Sir Sidney Lee wrote on slender evidence that Marlowe was killed in a drunken fight His claim was not much at variance with the official account which came to light only in 1925 when the scholar Leslie Hotson discovered the coroner s report of the inquest on Marlowe s death held two days later on Friday 1 June 1593 by the Coroner of the Queen s Household William Danby 6 Marlowe had spent all day in a house in Deptford owned by the widow Eleanor Bull with three men Ingram Frizer Nicholas Skeres and Robert Poley All three had been employed by one or other of the Walsinghams Skeres and Poley had helped snare the conspirators in the Babington plot and Frizer was a servant 59 to Thomas Walsingham probably in the role of a financial or business agent as he was for Walsingham s wife Audrey a few years later 60 61 These witnesses testified that Frizer and Marlowe had argued over payment of the bill now famously known as the Reckoning exchanging divers malicious words while Frizer was sitting at a table between the other two and Marlowe was lying behind him on a couch Marlowe snatched Frizer s dagger and wounded him on the head In the ensuing struggle according to the coroner s report Marlowe was stabbed above the right eye killing him instantly The jury concluded that Frizer acted in self defence and within a month he was pardoned Marlowe was buried in an unmarked grave in the churchyard of St Nicholas Deptford immediately after the inquest on 1 June 1593 62 The complete text of the inquest report was published by Leslie Hotson in his book The Death of Christopher Marlowe in the introduction to which Prof George Kittredge said The mystery of Marlowe s death heretofore involved in a cloud of contradictory gossip and irresponsible guess work is now cleared up for good and all on the authority of public records of complete authenticity and gratifying fullness but this confidence proved fairly short lived Hotson had considered the possibility that the witnesses had concocted a lying account of Marlowe s behaviour to which they swore at the inquest and with which they deceived the jury but came down against that scenario 63 Others began to suspect that this scenario was indeed the case Writing to the Times Literary Supplement shortly after the book s publication Eugenie de Kalb disputed that the struggle and outcome as described were even possible and Samuel A Tannenbaum insisted the following year that such a wound could not have possibly resulted in instant death as had been claimed 64 65 Even Marlowe s biographer John Bakeless acknowledged that some scholars have been inclined to question the truthfulness of the coroner s report There is something queer about the whole episode and said that Hotson s discovery raises almost as many questions as it answers 66 It has also been discovered more recently that the apparent absence of a local county coroner to accompany the Coroner of the Queen s Household would if noticed have made the inquest null and void 67 One of the main reasons for doubting the truth of the inquest concerns the reliability of Marlowe s companions as witnesses 68 As an agent provocateur for the late Sir Francis Walsingham Robert Poley was a consummate liar the very genius of the Elizabethan underworld and is on record as saying I will swear and forswear myself rather than I will accuse myself to do me any harm 69 70 The other witness Nicholas Skeres had for many years acted as a confidence trickster drawing young men into the clutches of people in the money lending racket including Marlowe s apparent killer Ingram Frizer with whom he was engaged in such a swindle 71 Despite their being referred to as generosi gentlemen in the inquest report the witnesses were professional liars Some biographers such as Kuriyama and Downie take the inquest to be a true account of what occurred but in trying to explain what really happened if the account was not true others have come up with a variety of murder theories 72 73 Jealous of her husband Thomas s relationship with Marlowe Audrey Walsingham arranged for the playwright to be murdered 64 Sir Walter Raleigh arranged the murder fearing that under torture Marlowe might incriminate him 74 With Skeres the main player the murder resulted from attempts by the Earl of Essex to use Marlowe to incriminate Sir Walter Raleigh 75 He was killed on the orders of father and son Lord Burghley and Sir Robert Cecil who thought that his plays contained Catholic propaganda 76 He was accidentally killed while Frizer and Skeres were pressuring him to pay back money he owed them 77 Marlowe was murdered at the behest of several members of the Privy Council who feared that he might reveal them to be atheists 78 The Queen ordered his assassination because of his subversive atheistic behaviour 79 Frizer murdered him because he envied Marlowe s close relationship with his master Thomas Walsingham and feared the effect that Marlowe s behaviour might have on Walsingham s reputation 80 Marlowe s death was faked to save him from trial and execution for subversive atheism j Since there are only written documents on which to base any conclusions and since it is probable that the most crucial information about his death was never committed to paper it is unlikely that the full circumstances of Marlowe s death will ever be known Reputation among contemporary writers EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ben Jonson leading satirist of the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras was one of the first to acknowledge Marlowe for the power of his dramatic verse For his contemporaries in the literary world Marlowe was above all an admired and influential artist Within weeks of his death George Peele remembered him as Marley the Muses darling Michael Drayton noted that he Had in him those brave translunary things That the first poets had and Ben Jonson wrote of Marlowe s mighty line Thomas Nashe wrote warmly of his friend poor deceased Kit Marlowe as did the publisher Edward Blount in his dedication of Hero and Leander to Sir Thomas Walsingham Among the few contemporary dramatists to say anything negative about Marlowe was the anonymous author of the Cambridge University play The Return from Parnassus 1598 who wrote Pity it is that wit so ill should dwell Wit lent from heaven but vices sent from hell The most famous tribute to Marlowe was paid by Shakespeare in As You Like It where he not only quotes a line from Hero and Leander Dead Shepherd now I find thy saw of might Who ever lov d that lov d not at first sight but also gives to the clown Touchstone the words When a man s verses cannot be understood nor a man s good wit seconded with the forward child understanding it strikes a man more dead than a great reckoning in a little room 82 This appears to be a reference to Marlowe s murder which involved a fight over the reckoning the bill as well as to a line in Marlowe s Jew of Malta Infinite riches in a little room The influence of Marlowe upon William Shakespeare is evidenced by the Marlovian themes and other allusions to Marlowe found in Shakespeare s plays and sonnets Shakespeare was much influenced by Marlowe in his work as can be seen in the use of Marlovian themes in Antony and Cleopatra The Merchant of Venice Richard II and Macbeth Dido Jew of Malta Edward II and Doctor Faustus respectively In Hamlet after meeting with the travelling actors Hamlet requests the Player perform a speech about the Trojan War which at 2 2 429 32 has an echo of Marlowe s Dido Queen of Carthage In Love s Labour s Lost Shakespeare brings on a character Marcade three syllables in conscious acknowledgement of Marlowe s character Mercury also attending the King of Navarre in Massacre at Paris The significance to those of Shakespeare s audience who were familiar with Hero and Leander was Marlowe s identification of himself with the god Mercury 83 Shakespeare authorship theory EditMain articles Marlovian theory of Shakespeare authorship and Shakespeare authorship question An argument has arisen about the notion that Marlowe faked his death and then continued to write under the assumed name of William Shakespeare Academic consensus rejects alternative candidates for authorship of Shakespeare s plays and sonnets including Marlowe 84 Literary career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Edward Alleyn lead actor of Lord Strange s Men was possibly the first to play the title characters in Doctor Faustus Tamburlaine and The Jew of Malta Plays Edit Six dramas have been attributed to the authorship of Christopher Marlowe either alone or in collaboration with other writers with varying degrees of evidence The writing sequence or chronology of these plays is mostly unknown and is offered here with any dates and evidence known Among the little available information we have Dido is believed to be the first Marlowe play performed while it was Tamburlaine that was first to be performed on a regular commercial stage in London in 1587 Believed by many scholars to be Marlowe s greatest success Tamburlaine was the first English play written in blank verse and with Thomas Kyd s The Spanish Tragedy is generally considered the beginning of the mature phase of the Elizabethan theatre 85 The play Lust s Dominion was attributed to Marlowe upon its initial publication in 1657 though scholars and critics have almost unanimously rejected the attribution He may also have written or co written Arden of Faversham Ferdinando Stanley 5th Earl of Derby aka Ferdinando Lord Straunge was patron of some of Marlowe s early plays as performed by Lord Strange s Men Poetry and translations Edit Publication and responses to the poetry and translations credited to Marlowe primarily occurred posthumously including Amores first book of Latin elegiac couplets by Ovid with translation by Marlowe c 1580s copies publicly burned as offensive in 1599 86 The Passionate Shepherd to His Love by Marlowe c 1587 1588 87 a popular lyric of the time Hero and Leander by Marlowe c 1593 unfinished completed by George Chapman 1598 printed 1598 88 Pharsalia Book One by Lucan with translation by Marlowe c 1593 printed 1600 88 Collaborations Edit Modern scholars still look for evidence of collaborations between Marlowe and other writers In 2016 one publisher was the first to endorse the scholarly claim of a collaboration between Marlowe and the playwright William Shakespeare Henry VI by William Shakespeare is now credited as a collaboration with Marlowe in the New Oxford Shakespeare series published in 2016 Marlowe appears as co author of the three Henry VI plays though some scholars doubt any actual collaboration 89 90 91 92 Charles Howard 1st Earl of Nottingham Lord High Admiral shown here c 1601 in a procession for Elizabeth I of England was patron of the Admiral s Men during Marlowe s lifetime Contemporary reception Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Marlowe s plays were enormously successful possibly because of the imposing stage presence of his lead actor Edward Alleyn Alleyn was unusually tall for the time and the haughty roles of Tamburlaine Faustus and Barabas were probably written for him Marlowe s plays were the foundation of the repertoire of Alleyn s company the Admiral s Men throughout the 1590s One of Marlowe s poetry translations did not fare as well In 1599 Marlowe s translation of Ovid was banned and copies were publicly burned as part of Archbishop Whitgift s crackdown on offensive material Chronology of dramatic works Edit Patrick Cheney s 2004 Cambridge Companion to Christopher Marlowe presents an alternative timeline based upon printing dates 93 Dido Queen of Carthage c 1585 1587 Edit Title page of the 1594 first edition of Dido Queen of Carthage First official record 1594First published 1594 posthumouslyFirst recorded performance between 1587 and 1593 by the Children of the Chapel a company of boy actors in London 94 Significance This play is believed by many scholars to be the first play by Christopher Marlowe to be performed Attribution The title page attributes the play to Marlowe and Thomas Nashe yet some scholars question how much of a contribution Nashe made to the play 95 96 Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play 97 Tamburlaine Part I c 1587 Part II c 1587 1588 Edit Title page of the earliest published edition of Tamburlaine 1590 First official record 1587 Part IFirst published 1590 Parts I and II in one octavo London No author named 98 First recorded performance 1587 Part I by the Admiral s Men London k Significance Tamburlaine is the first example of blank verse used in the dramatic literature of the Early Modern English theatre Attribution Author name is missing from first printing in 1590 Attribution of this work by scholars to Marlowe is based upon comparison to his other verified works Passages and character development in Tamburlane are similar to many other Marlowe works 100 Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play 101 Parts I and II were entered into the Stationers Register on 14 August 1590 The two parts were published together by the London printer Richard Jones in 1590 a second edition in 1592 and a third in 1597 The 1597 edition of the two parts were published separately in quarto by Edward White part I in 1605 and part II in 1606 85 98 The Jew of Malta c 1589 1590 Edit The Jew of Malta title page from 1633 quarto First official record 1592First published 1592 earliest extant edition 1633First recorded performance 26 February 1592 by Lord Strange s acting company 102 Significance The performances of the play were a success and it remained popular for the next fifty years This play helps to establish the strong theme of anti authoritarianism that is found throughout Marlowe s works Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play 101 The play was entered in the Stationers Register on 17 May 1594 but the earliest surviving printed edition is from 1633 Doctor Faustus c 1588 1592 Edit Frontispiece to a 1631 printing of Doctor Faustus showing Faustus conjuring Mephistophilis First official record 1594 1597 103 First published 1601 no extant copy first extant copy 1604 A text quarto 1616 B text quarto 104 First recorded performance 1594 1597 24 revival performances occurred between these years by the Lord Admiral s Company Rose Theatre London earlier performances probably occurred around 1589 by the same company 103 Significance This is the first dramatised version of the Faust legend of a scholar s dealing with the devil Marlowe deviates from earlier versions of The Devil s Pact significantly Marlowe s protagonist is unable to burn his books or repent to a merciful God to have his contract annulled at the end of the play he is carried off by demons and in the 1616 quarto his mangled corpse is found by the scholar characters Attribution The B text was highly edited and censored owing in part to the shifting theatre laws regarding religious words onstage during the seventeenth century Because it contains several additional scenes believed to be the additions of other playwrights particularly Samuel Rowley and William Bird alias Borne a recent edition attributes the authorship of both versions to Christopher Marlowe and his collaborator and revisers This recent edition has tried to establish that the A text was assembled from Marlowe s work and another writer with the B text as a later revision 103 105 Evidence No manuscripts by Marlowe exist for this play 101 The two earliest printed extant versions of the play A and B form a textual problem for scholars Both were published after Marlowe s death and scholars disagree which text is more representative of Marlowe s original Some editions are based on a combination of the two texts Late twentieth century scholarly consensus identifies A text as more representative because it contains irregular character names and idiosyncratic spelling which are believed to reflect the author s handwritten manuscript or foul papers In comparison B text is highly edited with several additional scenes possibly written by other playwrights 104 Edward the Second c 1592 Edit Title page of the earliest published text of Edward II 1594 First official record 1593 106 First published 1590 earliest extant edition 1594 octavo 106 First recorded performance 1592 performed by the Earl of Pembroke s Men 106 Significance Considered by recent scholars as Marlowe s most modern play because of its probing treatment of the private life of a king and unflattering depiction of the power politics of the time 107 The 1594 editions of Edward II and of Dido are the first published plays with Marlowe s name appearing as the author 106 Attribution Earliest extant edition of 1594 106 Evidence The play was entered into the Stationers Register on 6 July 1593 five weeks after Marlowe s death 106 The Massacre at Paris c 1589 1593 Edit Title page to a rare extant printed copy of The Massacre at Paris by Christopher Marlowe undated Alleged foul sheet from Marlowe s writing of The Massacre at Paris 1593 Reproduced from Folger Shakespeare Library Ms J b 8 Recent scholars consider this manuscript part of a reconstruction by another hand First official recordc 1593 alleged foul sheet by Marlowe of Scene 19 although authorship by Marlowe is contested by recent scholars the manuscript is believed written while the play was first performed and with an unknown purpose First published undated c 1594 or later octavo London 108 while this is the most complete surviving text it is near half the length of Marlowe s other works and possibly a reconstruction 101 The printer and publisher credit E A for Edward White also appears on the 1605 06 printing of Marlowe s Tamburlaine 108 First recorded performance 26 Jan 1593 by Lord Strange s Men at Henslowe s Rose Theatre London under the title The Tragedy of the Guise 108 1594 in the repertory of the Admiral s Men 101 Significance The Massacre at Paris is considered Marlowe s most dangerous play as agitators in London seized on its theme to advocate the murders of refugees from the low countries of the Spanish Netherlands and it warns Elizabeth I of this possibility in its last scene 109 110 It features the silent English Agent whom tradition has identified with Marlowe and his connexions to the secret service 111 Highest grossing play for Lord Strange s Men in 1593 112 Attribution A 1593 loose manuscript sheet of the play called a foul sheet is alleged to be by Marlowe and has been claimed by some scholars as the only extant play manuscript by the author It could also provide an approximate date of composition for the play When compared with the extant printed text and his other work other scholars reject the attribution to Marlowe The only surviving printed text of this play is possibly a reconstruction from memory of Marlowe s original performance text Current scholarship notes that there are only 1147 lines in the play half the amount of a typical play of the 1590s Other evidence that the extant published text may not be Marlowe s original is the uneven style throughout with two dimensional characterisations deteriorating verbal quality and repetitions of content 113 Evidence Never appeared in the Stationer s Register 114 Memorials Edit The Muse of Poetry part of the Marlowe Memorial in Canterbury The Muse of Poetry a bronze sculpture by Edward Onslow Ford references Marlowe and his work It was erected on Buttermarket Canterbury in 1891 and now stands outside the Marlowe Theatre in the city 115 116 In July 2002 a memorial window to Marlowe was unveiled by the Marlowe Society at Poets Corner in Westminster Abbey 117 Controversially a question mark was added to his generally accepted date of death 118 On 25 October 2011 a letter from Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells was published by The Times newspaper in which they called on the Dean and Chapter to remove the question mark on the grounds that it flew in the face of a mass of unimpugnable evidence In 2012 they renewed this call in their e book Shakespeare Bites Back adding that it denies history and again the following year in their book Shakespeare Beyond Doubt 119 120 The Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury Kent UK was named for Marlowe in 1949 116 Marlowe in fiction EditMain article Christopher Marlowe in fiction Marlowe has been used as a character in books theatre film television games and radio Modern compendia EditModern scholarly collected works of Marlowe include The Complete Works of Christopher Marlowe edited by Roma Gill in 1986 Clarendon Press published in partnership with Oxford University Press The Complete Plays of Christopher Marlowe edited by J B Steane in 1969 edited by Frank Romany and Robert Lindsey Revised Edition 2004 Penguin Works of Marlowe in performance Edit Poster for the 1937 New York WPA Federal Theatre Project production of Doctor Faustus Radio Edit BBC Radio broadcast adaptations of Marlowe s six plays from May to October 1993 121 Royal Shakespeare Company Edit Royal Shakespeare Company Dido Queen of Carthage directed by Kimberly Sykes with Chipo Chung as Dido Swan Theatre 2017 122 Tamburlaine the Great directed by Terry Hands with Anthony Sher as Tamburlaine Swan Theatre 1992 Barbican Theatre 1993 123 124 Tamburlaine the Great directed by Michael Boyd with Jude Owusu as Tamburlaine Swan Theatre 2018 125 The Jew of Malta directed by Barry Kyle with Jasper Britton as Barabas Swan Theatre 1987 People s Theatre and Barbican Theatre 1988 126 127 The Jew of Malta directed by Justin Audibert with Jasper Britton as Barabas Swan Theatre 2015 128 Edward II directed by Gerard Murphy with Simon Russell Beale as Edward Swan Theatre 1990 129 Doctor Faustus directed by John Barton with Ian McKellen as Faustus Nottingham Playhouse and Aldwych Theatre 1974 and Royal Shakespeare Theatre 1975 130 131 Doctor Faustus directed by Barry Kyle with Gerard Murphy as Faustus Swan Theatre and Pit Theatre 1989 129 131 Doctor Faustus directed by Maria Aberg with Sandy Grierson and Oliver Ryan sharing the roles of Faustus and Mephistophilis Swan Theatre and Barbican Theatre 2016 132 Royal National Theatre Edit Royal National Theatre Tamburlaine directed by Peter Hall with Albert Finney as Tamburlaine Olivier Theatre 1976 123 Dido Queen of Carthage directed by James McDonald with Anastasia Hille as Dido Cottesloe Theatre 2009 133 134 Edward II directed by Joe Hill Gibbins with John Heffernan as Edward Olivier Theatre 2013 135 Shakespeare s Globe Edit Shakespeare s Globe Dido Queen of Carthage directed by Tim Carroll with Rakie Ayola as Dido 2003 136 Edward II directed by Timothy Walker with Liam Brennan as Edward 2003 137 Malthouse Theatre Edit Poster for L6L21 s The Marlowe Sessions at Canterbury s Malthouse Theatre 2022 Original art by Lorna May Wadsworth The Marlowe Sessions 138 139 Dido Queen of Carthage Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Stephen Unwin with Thalissa Teixeira as Dido 2022 140 Tamburlaine The Great Part 1 Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Phillip Breen with Alan Cox as Tamburlaine 2022 141 The Jew Of Malta Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Stephen Unwin with Adrian Schiller as Barrabus 2022 Tamburlaine The Great Part 2 Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Phillip Breen with Alan Cox as Tamburlaine 2022 Edward The Second Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Abigail Rokison with Jack Holden as Edward II 2022 The Massacre At Paris Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Abigail Rokison with Michael Maloney as Guise 2022 Dr Faustus Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Phillip Breen with Dominic West as Faustus and Talulah Riley as Mephistopheles 2022 142 The Poetry of Christopher Marlowe Directed Produced by Ray Mia Performance direction by Philip Bird read by Jack Holden Fisayo Akinade and Philip Bird 2022 Other stage Edit Tamburlaine Yale University 1919 143 Tamburlaine directed by Tyrone Guthrie with Donald Wolfit as Tamburlaine The Old Vic 1951 143 Doctor Faustus co directed by Orson Welles and John Houseman with Welles as Faustus and Jack Carter as Mephistopheles Maxine Elliott s Theatre 1937 143 Doctor Faustus directed by Adrian Noble Royal Exchange 1981 143 Edward II directed by Toby Robertson with John Barton as Edward Cambridge 1951 129 Edward II directed by Toby Robertson with Derek Jacobi as Edward Cambridge 1958 129 Edward II directed by Toby Robertson with Ian McKellen as Edward Assembly Rooms 1969 129 144 Edward II directed by Jim Stone Washington Stage Company 1993 145 Edward II directed by Jozsef Ruszt Budapest 1998 145 Edward II directed by Michael Grandage with Joseph Fiennes as Edward Crucible Theatre 2001 143 The Massacre in Paris directed by Patrice Chereau France 1972 146 Stage adaptations Edit Edward II Phoenix Society London 1923 147 Leben Eduards des Zweiten von England by Bertolt Brecht the first play he directed Munich Chamber Theatre Germany 1924 147 The Life of Edward II of England by Marlowe and Bertold Brecht directed by Frank Dunlop National Theatre 1968 147 Edward II adapted as a ballet choreographed by David Bintley Stuttgart Ballet 1995 146 Doctor Faustus additional text by Colin Teevan directed by Jamie Lloyd with Kit Harington as Faustus Duke of York s Theatre 2016 148 149 Faustus That Damned Woman by Chris Bush directed by Caroline Byrne Lyric Theatre 2020 150 Film Edit Doctor Faustus based on Nevill Coghill s 1965 production adapted for Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor 1967 143 Edward II directed by Derek Jarman 1991 143 Faust with some Marlowe dialogue directed by Jan Svankmajer 1994 143 Notes Edit Christopher Marlowe was baptised as Marlow but he spelled his name Marley in his one known surviving signature 1 During Marlowe s lifetime the popularity of his plays Robert Greene s unintentionally elevating remarks about him as a dramatist in A Groatsworth of Wit including the designation famous and the many imitations of Tamburlaine suggest that he was for a brief time considered England s foremost dramatist Logan also suggests consulting the business diary of Philip Henslowe which is traditionally used by theatre historians to determine the popularity of Marlowe s plays 2 No birth records only baptismal records have been found for Marlowe and Shakespeare therefore any reference to a birthdate for either man probably refers to the date of their baptism 3 as one of the most influential current critics Stephen Greenblatt frets Marlowe s cruel aggressive plays seem to reflect a life also lived on the edge a courting of disaster as reckless as any that he depicted on stage 5 The earliest record of Marlowe at The King s School is their payment for his scholarship of 1578 79 but Nicholl notes this was unusually late to start as a student and proposes he could have begun school earlier as a fee paying pupil 8 It is known that some poorer students worked as labourers on the Corpus Christi College chapel then under construction and were paid by the college with extra food It has been suggested this may be the reason for the sums noted in Marlowe s entry in the buttery accounts 27 He was described by Arbella s guardian the Countess of Shrewsbury as having hoped for an annuity of some 40 from Arbella his being so much damnified i e having lost this much by leaving the University 28 29 The so called Remembrances against Richard Cholmeley 45 J R Mulryne states in his ODNB article clarification needed that the document was identified in the 20th century as transcripts from John Proctour s The Fall of the Late Arian 1549 citation needed Useful research has been stimulated by the infinitesimally thin possibility that Marlowe did not die when we think he did History holds its doors open 81 Performing company is listed on the title page of the 1590 octavo Henslowe s diary first lists Tamburlaine performances in 1593 so the original playhouse is unknown 99 References Edit Kathman David The Spelling and Pronunciation of Shakespeare s Name Pronunciation shakespeareauthorship com Archived from the original on 27 November 2020 Retrieved 14 June 2020 Logan 2007 pp 4 5 21 Logan 2007 pp 3 231 235 Wilson 1999 p 3 Wilson 1999 p 4 a b Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived from the original on 22 June 2015 Retrieved 30 April 2015 Erne Lukas August 2005 Biography Mythography and Criticism The Life and Works of Christopher Marlowe Modern Philology University of Chicago Press 103 1 28 50 doi 10 1086 499177 S2CID 170152766 Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c d e Nicholl Charles 2004 Marlowe Marley Christopher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography January 2008 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18079 Retrieved 10 June 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Cowper Joseph Meadows ed 1891 The register booke of the parish of St George the Martyr within the citie of Canterburie of christenings marriages and burials 1538 1800 Canterbury Cross amp Jackman p 10 Archived from the original on 28 July 2020 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Hopkins L 29 November 2005 A Christopher Marlowe Chronology Springer p 27 ISBN 978 0 230 50304 5 Archived from the original on 4 September 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2021 Rackham Oliver 2014 The Pseudo Marlowe Portrait a wish fulfilled PDF Corpus Letter Corpus Christi College Cambridge 93 32 Archived PDF from the original on 23 October 2021 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Hilton Della 1977 Who was Kit Marlowe The story of the poet and playwright New York Taplinger Pub Co p 1 ISBN 978 0 8008 8291 4 Holland Peter 2004 Shakespeare William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography January 2013 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25200 Archived from the original on 24 October 2016 Retrieved 27 May 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Marlowe C Guy Bray S Wiggins M Lindsey R 2014 Edward II Revised Bloomsbury Publishing p 8 ISBN 978 1 4725 7540 1 Retrieved 19 January 2023 Marlowe Christopher MRLW580C A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b Collinson Patrick 2004 Elizabeth I Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography January 2012 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8636 Archived from the original on 19 August 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Act Against Jesuits and Seminarists 1585 27 Elizabeth Cap 2 Documents Illustrative of English Church History Macmillan 1896 Archived from the original on 20 September 2020 Retrieved 27 May 2020 For a full transcript see Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived 23 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 April 2015 Hutchinson Robert 2006 Elizabeth s Spy Master Francis Walsingham and the Secret War that Saved England London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 111 ISBN 978 0 297 84613 0 Kuriyama 2002 p page needed Downie amp Parnell 2000 p page needed a b c d Steane J B 1969 Introduction to Christopher Marlowe The Complete Plays Aylesbury UK Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 043037 0 a b Honan 2005 p page needed Nicholl 1992 12 This is from a document dated 29 June 1587 from the National Archives Acts of Privy Council Nicholl 1992 p page needed Riggs David 2004a The World of Christopher Marlowe Faber p 65 ISBN 978 0 571 22159 2 British Library Lansdowne MS 71 f 3 Nicholl 1992 pp 340 342 John Baker letter to Notes and Queries 44 3 1997 pp 367 8 Kuriyama 2002 p 89 Nicholl 1992 p 342 Handover P M 1957 Arbella Stuart royal lady of Hardwick and cousin to King James London Eyre amp Spottiswoode Elizabeth I and James VI and I Archived 14 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine History in Focus Archived 8 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Boas 1953 pp 101ff Kuriyama 2002 p xvi For a full transcript see Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 April 2015 Nicholl 1992 pp 246 248 Stanley Thomas 1687 The History of Philosophy 1655 61 quoted in Oxford English Dictionary Riggs David 2005 The World of Christopher Marlowe 1st American ed Henry Holt and Co p 294 ISBN 978 0805077551 Archived from the original on 28 February 2022 Retrieved 3 November 2015 Riggs 2004 p 38 For a full transcript see Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 April 2012 The Baines Note Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 April 2015 a b For a full transcript of Kyd s letter see Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived 22 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 April 2015 For a full transcript see Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived 25 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 April 2015 Waith Eugene The Herculean Hero in Marlowe Chapman Shakespeare and Dryden Chatto and Windus London 1962 The idea is commonplace though by no means universally accepted Smith Bruce R March 1995 Homosexual desire in Shakespeare s England Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 226 76366 8 Bevington David and Eric Rasmussen eds Doctor Faustus and Other Plays Oxford English Drama Oxford University Press 1998 pp viii ix ISBN 0 19 283445 2 White Paul Whitfield ed 1998 Marlowe History and Sexuality New Critical Essays on Christopher Marlowe New York AMS Press ISBN 978 0 404 62335 7 Christopher Marlowe 1885 Hero and Leander In A H Bullen ed The works of Christopher Marlowe Vol 3 London John C Nimmo pp 88 157 193 Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 21 May 2009 via Project Gutenberg Simon Barker Hilary Hinds 2003 The Routledge Anthology of Renaissance Drama Routledge ISBN 9780415187343 Archived from the original on 29 December 2019 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Marlowe Christopher Forker Charles R 15 October 1995 Edward the Second Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719030895 Archived from the original on 21 May 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2015 Williams Deanne 2006 Dido Queen of England ELH 73 1 31 59 doi 10 1353 elh 2006 0010 JSTOR 30030002 S2CID 153554373 For a full transcript see Peter Farey s Marlowe page Archived 22 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 31 March 2012 a b Mulryne J R Thomas Kyd Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press 2004 subscription required Archived 4 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine Haynes Alan The Elizabethan Secret Service London Sutton 2005 National Archives Acts of the Privy Council Meetings of the Privy Council including details of those attending are recorded and minuted for 16 23 25 29 and the morning of 31 May all of them taking place in the Star Chamber at Westminster There is no record of any meeting on either 18 or 20 May however just a note of the warrant being issued on 18 May and the fact that Marlowe entered his appearance for his indemnity therein on the 20th Palladis Tamia London 1598 286v 287r Kuriyama 2002 pp 102 103 135 156 Honan 2005 p 355 Hotson 1925 p 65 Honan 2005 p 325 Wilson Scott Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3d ed 2 Kindle Location 30125 McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers Kindle Edition Hotson 1925 pp 39 40 a b de Kalb Eugenie May 1925 The Death of Marlowe in The Times Literary Supplement Tannenbaum 1926 pp 41 42 Bakeless John 1942 The Tragicall History of Christopher Marlowe p 182 Honan 2005 p 354 Nicholl Charles 2004 Marlowe Marley Christopher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press online edn January 2008 Retrieved 24 August 2013 The authenticity of the inquest is not in doubt but whether it tells the full truth is another matter The nature of Marlowe s companions raises questions about their reliability as witnesses Boas 1953 p 293 Nicholl 2002 p 38 Nicholl 2002 pp 29 30 Kuriyama 2002 p 136 Downie J A Marlowe facts and fictions In Downie amp Parnell 2000 pp 26 27 Tannenbaum 1926 p page needed Nicholl 2002 p 415 Breight Curtis C 1996 Surveillance Militarism and Drama in the Elizabethan Era p 114 Hammer Paul E J 1996 A Reckoning Reframed the Murder of Christopher Marlowe Revisited in English Literary Renaissance pp 225 242 Trow M J 2001 Who Killed Kit Marlowe A contract to murder in Elizabethan England p 250 Riggs David 2004a The World of Christopher Marlowe Faber pp 334 337 ISBN 978 0 571 22159 2 Honan 2005 p 348 Honan 2005 p 355 Peter Alexander ed William Shakespeare The Complete Works London 1962 p 273 Wilson Richard 2008 Worthies away the scene begins to cloud in Shakespeare s Navarre In Mayer Jean Christophe ed Representing France and the French in early modern English drama Newark DE University of Delaware Press pp 95 97 ISBN 978 0 87413 000 3 Kathman David 2003 The Question of Authorship in Wells Stanley Orlin Lena C Shakespeare an Oxford Guide Oxford University Press pp 620 32 ISBN 978 0 19 924522 2 a b The Sixteenth Century Topics The Norton Anthology of English Literature W W Norton and Company Archived from the original on 10 October 2011 Retrieved 10 December 2011 See especially the middle section in which the author shows how another Cambridge graduate Thomas Preston makes his title character express his love in a popular play written around 1560 and compares that clumsy line with Doctor Faustus addressing Helen of Troy a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link Steinhoff Eirik 2010 On Christopher Marlowe s All Ovids Elegies Chicago Review 55 3 4 239 41 JSTOR 23065705 Archived from the original on 13 November 2022 Retrieved 13 November 2022 via JSTOR Cheney 2004a p xvi a b Cheney 2004a pp xviii xix Shea Christopher D 24 October 2016 New Oxford Shakespeare Edition Credits Christopher Marlowe as a Co author The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 24 October 2016 Christopher Marlowe credited as Shakespeare s co writer BBC 24 October 2016 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Reynolds 11 July 2002 Marlowe tribute puts question mark over Shakespeare The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Edmondson Paul Wells Stanley 2011 Shakespeare Bites Back PDF pp 21 22 amp 38 Archived PDF from the original on 15 February 2022 Retrieved 15 February 2022 via Blogging Shakespeare Edmondson Paul Wells Stanley 2013 Shakespeare beyond doubt evidence argument controversy Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 234 278 ISBN 9781107017597 Potter 2004 p 277 Dido Queen of Carthage rsc org uk Royal Shakespeare Company Archived from the original on 28 July 2020 Retrieved 10 June 2020 a b Tamburlaine Professional Productions Centre for the Study of the Renaissance University of Warwick Archived from the original on 15 June 2020 Retrieved 10 June 2020 Sher Anthony 7 October 2014 Antony Sher I never saw myself as a classical actor Monologue actors on acting Royal Shakespeare Company The Guardian Archived from the original on 28 July 2020 Retrieved 14 June 2020 Clapp 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2004 Riggs David Marlowe s life In Cheney 2004 Wilson Richard Tragedy Patronage and Power In Cheney 2004 Downie J A Parnell J T eds 2000 Constructing Christopher Marlowe ISBN 0 521 57255 X Dyce Alexander 1850 Dyce Alexander ed The works of Christopher Marlowe with notes and some account of his life and writings by the Rev Alexander Dyce 1st ed London William Pickering Honan Park 2005 Christopher Marlowe Poet and Spy Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0198186959 Hotson Leslie 1925 The Death of Christopher Marlowe Kuriyama Constance 2002 Christopher Marlowe A Renaissance Life Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 0801439787 Logan Robert A 2007 Shakespeare s Marlowe the influence of Christopher Marlowe on Shakespeare s artistry Aldershot England Burlington VT Ashgate ISBN 978 0754657637 Nicholl Charles 1992 The Reckoning The Murder of Christopher Marlowe London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 224 03100 4 Nicholl Charles 2002 The Reckoning The Murder of Christopher Marlowe revised ed Vintage ISBN 0 09 943747 3 Tannenbaum Samuel 1926 The Assassination of Christopher Marlowe New York Wilson Richard 1999 Introduction In Wilson Richard ed Christopher Marlowe London New York Routledge Further reading EditBevington David and Eric Rasmussen eds Doctor Faustus and Other Plays Oxford English Drama Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0 19 283445 2 Conrad B Der wahre Shakespeare Christopher Marlowe German non Fiction book 5th Edition 2016 ISBN 978 3957800022 Cornelius R M Christopher Marlowe s Use of the Bibleu New York P Lang 1984 Marlowe Christopher Complete Works Vol 3 Edward II ed R Rowland Oxford Clarendon Press 1994 pp xxii xxiii Oz Avraham ed Marlowe New Casebooks Houndmills Basingstoke and London Palgrave Macmillan 2003 ISBN 033362498X Parker John The Aesthetics of Antichrist From Christian Drama to Christopher Marlowe Ithaca Cornell University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 8014 4519 4 Shepard Alan Marlowe s Soldiers Rhetorics of Masculinity in the Age of the Armada Ashgate 2002 ISBN 0 7546 0229 X Sim James H Dramatic Uses of Biblical Allusions in Marlowe and Shakespeare Gainesville University of Florida Press 1966 Wraight A D Stern Virginia F In Search of Christopher Marlowe A Pictorial Biography London Macdonald 1965 External links EditChristopher Marlowe at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Works by Christopher Marlowe in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Christopher Marlowe at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Christopher Marlowe at Internet Archive Works by Christopher Marlowe at LibriVox public domain audiobooks The Marlowe Society The works of Marlowe at Perseus Project The complete works Archived 15 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine with modernised spelling on Peter Farey s Marlowe page BBC audio file In Our Time Radio 4 discussion programme on Marlowe and his work The Marlowe Bibliography Online is an initiative of the Marlowe Society of America and the University of Melbourne Its purpose is to facilitate scholarship on the works of Christopher Marlowe by providing a searchable annotated bibliography of relevant scholarship Archival material relating to Christopher Marlowe UK National Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christopher Marlowe amp oldid 1152068010, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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