#king henry vi
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
weirdlookindog · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Virgil Finlay (1914-1971) - Deep Night, Dark Night
Pictorial interpetation of an excerpt from Shakespeare’s "King Henry VI"
(Weird Tales - December, 1939)
195 notes · View notes
uwmspeccoll · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Shakespeare Weekend
We are halfway through Nicholas Rowe’s (1674-1718) The Work of Mr. William Shakespear; in Six Volumes! Published in London in 1709 by Jacob Tonson (1655–1736), this second edition holds an important place within Shakespearean publication history. The Work of Mr. William Shakespear; in Six Volumes is recognized as the first octavo edition, the first illustrated edition, the first critically edited edition, and the first to present a biography of the poet.  
This week, we explore the third volume of The Work of Mr. William Shakespear; in Six Volumes. The third volume encompasses historic plays including a Shakespearean Henriad depicting the rise of English kings. The volume is comprised of King John, King Richard II, Henry IV Part I, Henry IV Part II, King Henry V, King Henry VI Part I, and King Henry VI Part II. While the plays have recurring characters and settings, there is no evidence that they were written with the intention of being considered as a group. A full-page engraving, designed by the French Baroque artist and book illustrator François Boitard (1670-1715) and engraved by English engraver Elisha Kirkall (c.1682–1742), precedes each play. 
In addition to Rowe’s editorial decisions to divide the plays into scenes and include notes on the entrances and exits of the players, he also normalised the spelling of names and included a dramatis personae preceding each play. The only chronicled critique of Rowe’s momentous editorial endeavor is his choice in basing his text on the corrupt Fourth Folio. 
Tumblr media Tumblr media
View more volumes of The Works of Mr. William Shakespear; in Six Volumes here.
View more Shakespeare Weekend posts.
-Jenna, Special Collections Graduate Intern 
63 notes · View notes
babylon-crashing · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Text: As the Bard intended! More love! More Drama! More Xenomorphs! The Tragedy of King Henry VI Nachkt: the Alien Queen that brought an empire to Rack and Ruin. It's no use calling him, "good Suffolk." What? How the hell do you think I wouldn't notice that you two are having an affair at court? Maybe there's another eight foot tall alien queen that Suffolk is causing major embarrassment with?
Tumblr media
16 notes · View notes
the-fangirl-diaries · 1 year ago
Text
I think the Hollow Crown was Tom’s audition for The Sandman and no one can convince me otherwise.  
11 notes · View notes
cinnamonsparx · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
painting practice with a non tragic shakespeare couple. Henry is the real sweet guy to Richard's angry little man who wants to fight everyone.
Tumblr media
+reference photo!
8 notes · View notes
thepastisalreadywritten · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Castle Combe; often named as the ‘Prettiest Village in England.'
Castle Combe, a medieval village and civil parish within Cotswolds area of outstanding natural beauty in Wiltshire, England.
The village has a rich history and the houses are made up of the honey coloured Cotswold stone, typical for a village of this area.
The village takes its name from a castle built on the hill to the north of the village in the 12th century AD, of which little now remains except earthworks.
No new homes have been built in the historic area since 1600s AD.
During the Middle Ages, the village, along with much of the Cotswolds, enjoyed prosperity due to the growth of a thriving wool industry.
Within Castle Combe, you’ll find a Market Cross and St Andrew’s Church, which dates from the 13th century AD.
The church houses a faceless clock, which is reputed to be one of oldest working clocks in the country.
Numerous weavers’ cottages were erected from local stone, and these ancient honey-hued buildings remain one of the village’s standout features today.
The village was known in particular for manufacturing a red and white cloth known as ‘Castlecombe,’ which was renowned in the markets of Bristol, Cirencester, as well as London and abroad.
In 1440 AD, King Henry VI granted Castle Combe the right to hold a weekly market, with unmistakable Market Cross monument still standing proudly today.
Castle Combe strictly banned all modern attachments such as TV dishes and external wires to the exterior of its houses, restrictions that have been instrumental in helping the historic village to maintain its authentic appearance.
As a result, the village has become a popular location for film crews, with productions including the 1967 filmed musical Doctor Dolittle, Stardust, and The Wolf Man were all shot within the village.
Castle Combe was a key filming location for Stephen Spielberg’s War Horse.
To recreate a 1914 setting, the village’s tarmac through-road was closed and covered with a temporary muddy surface.
Its modern street lamps, signage, and post boxes were either covered or removed altogether. Its white window frames were repainted with more muted colours.
📷 : Credit to the Owner
5 notes · View notes
beardedmrbean · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
andiatas · 1 year ago
Text
Eleanor Cobham has always got what she wanted; a new dress, a place at court, somebody else's husband. But not now. In her desperation to conceive an heir, she turns to witchcraft and is soon embroiled in its throes. As she comes face to face with the dangerous side of power, will she learn if she can control the turn of fortune's wheel?
This was such an interesting & funny listen! Loved how the story was told & the tone/voice of the narrator (a.k.a. Eleanor). Cannot recommend this enough!
3 notes · View notes
countvonreutern · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Eton College holds a cherished place in the annals of His Serene Highness the Count of Münnich and Reutern’s family history, with their connection dating back to its very foundation.
The illustrious Founder of Eton College, King Henry VI, is His Highness’s seventeenth great uncle. This noble lineage traces its roots through his half-brother, The Count’s seventeenth great-grandfather, Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond. Notably, King Henry VI was also a great-grandson of His Serene Highness’s eighteenth great-grandfather, John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster.
The family’s ties to Eton College have remained steadfast across generations. Many generations of The Count’s grandfathers and extended family members were privileged attendees of this institution. From those bygone days to the present, Eton College continues to hold a special place in the hearts of His Serene Highness’s family.
2 notes · View notes
voiider · 2 years ago
Text
thinking about that jeanne d'arc video game where King Henry VI looked like this
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
sweetpondduckling · 2 years ago
Text
I started reading shakespeare, and I love the use of saucy. I hope it meant the same back then as it does now
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
theshakespeareproject · 9 months ago
Text
Thoughts on King Henry the Sixth Part II Act IV
Okay so it’s been a while. I got addicted to Dimension 20 and forgot how to read. But it’s the first of March, almost the Ides, so I’m back on my Shakespeare kick.
So Act IV opens with a sea battle. It happens almost entirely just off-screen, if only there was a camera panning left or right, you could see the battle, but alas this is a stage. Where we are introduced to… The Captain. No not the guy from How I Met Your Mother, though picturing him as Kyle MacLachlan is fun. He also has this wonderful line:
“The gaudy, blabbing, and remorseful day
Is crept into the bosom of the sea;
And now the loud-howling wolves arouse the jades
That drag the tragic melancholy night”
Which has left all of tumblr poetry shook, scared, and panicking. He’s coming for your gig.
There’s a new(?) character called Walter Whitmore, I kept reading Walter White at first. I ultimately do not care for him.
This whole scene can be summarized really easily: Everyone wants to execute the Duke of Suffolk and the Duke of Suffolk responds “Noooooo.” And then they actually fucking kill him. Legitemately so suprised. 
The best line though, because it will be the perfect band name: “And wedded be you to the hags of hell,” So… teenagers everywhere, feel free to use something from there for your garage band.
Also at some point Julius Caesar is referenced, and that just feels like Shakespeare foreshadowing his career. 
The next scene introduces a ton of characters including: George Bevis (no Butthead), John Holland, Jack Cade (his name just feels villanous), and Dick (Willy Shakespeare I see what you did there). I thought Smith and Dick were like throwing shade towards Jack Cade as he talks. He would say a line, and then the two would turn towards the camera and say some snarky one liner like “A must needs; for beggary is valiant.” But I think, based on later developments, they were actually hyping him up to the audience. 
Later on, while arguing, someone yells out “The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.” And it feels so nice to know that Shakespeare is a big fan of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.
A clerk gets introduced, it’s established that he knows how to write his name, and immediately is ordered to be executed. I think Jack Cade might be an anti-intellectual. 
Despite that, he at one point pulls out an epic moment of pownage. This one guy, Sir Humphrey Stafford, wanders in. He seems to hate Cade because Cade is claiming to be heir to the throne despite being a plasterer. And when Humphrey points that out, Cade responds to “And Adam was a gardener.” Sometimes a good biblical reference is all you need.
What follows is basically a montage. Scene after scene, almost all are sparse in lines and stage directions. In one scene both Stafford’s (there were two!?) die, but in the stage directions introducing the scene. Jace Cade casually tells Dick “You shalt have a license to kill.” Thus revealing that he is James Bond to the audience. 
The Queen wanders in cradling the Duke of Suffolk heads and the King, in his only scene, notices how the Queen is mourning Suffolk more than she will ever morun him. She denies it, I don’t believe her. Also a Messanger says “They call false caterpillars.” I have no idea what it means, but it felt notable.
This random guy Lord Scales appears and says he will send Matthew Gough, Who dies two scene later without saying a line.
In another scene, I hope it was meant to be comedic because I found it hilarious, Jack Cade claims that he should only be called Lord Mortimer, and immediately kills one of his own soilder’s when they run in calling him Jack Cade. 
Finally the Duke of Buckingham comes in, with this guy Clifford. Together they are the ambassador to the King. They offer a pardon if the rebels agree to leave. What follows is this fickleness of the masses, where they will cheer for whoever just spoke, even if it immediately contradicts what they just cheered for. Cade berates them, but Clifford seems to win out by getting the masses to part, with many abandoning Cade. Leading to him fleeing.
The King receives a message from the Duke of York, claiming that the Duke of Somerset is a traitor. It would be a dramatic moment… if it wasn’t read right in front of the Duke of Somerset. Maybe take a quick peak around the room before you speak Mr. Messenger.
The last scene. I kid you not. Is a random character named Alexander Iden killing Jack Cade. This guy, introduced (I think), in this Act, literally leads a massive rebellion that could be its own story, and is killed by a character introduced in this very scene. All because Cade hid on this guy's land. And then, like an idiot, Cade reveals his identity when he was stabbed. Instead of denying this guy the reward for his head. Because Cade is an idiot. The anti-intellectual little fuck. 
0 notes
vox-anglosphere · 6 months ago
Text
Founded by King Henry VI, it is said to be the world's finest college chapel. The daily services are renowned for their choral perfection.
Tumblr media
King’s College, Cambridge UK
(Foto©️emmaIn.interiors)
524 notes · View notes
aq2003 · 3 months ago
Text
grabbed all of the ebook versions of the folger shakespeare library's annotated versions of shakespeare's plays (+sonnets and poems) and put them all in one place in case anyone is interested
1K notes · View notes
mrs-starkgaryen · 3 months ago
Text
Favourite Shakespeare's Histories
After my other poll, I am going to be specific. There shall be a battle of the favourites!!
For the love of Shakespeare, please reblog for a better analysis
224 notes · View notes
captainsamta · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Something I had done years ago on A4 size paper. I think I skipped a few due to lack of space. Kings and Queens of England (after king Henry IV)
885 notes · View notes