Author Topic: Something different....Remains of Shakespeare's Curtain Theater Found  (Read 430 times)

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Offline SwampThing762

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Remains of Shakespeare's Curtain Theatre found     Must Read?Yes     14          Email Story Print    By JILL LAWLESS, AP
 3 hours ago
    entertainment-20120606-EU.Britain.Shakespeare's.Theater This is an image issued by Museum of London Archaeology on Wednesday June 6,...
   LONDON — Archaeologists in London have discovered the remains of an Elizabethan theater where some of William Shakespeare's plays were first performed — a venue immortalized as "this wooden O" in the prologue to "Henry V."
Experts from the Museum of London said Wednesday they had uncovered part of the gravel yard and gallery walls of the 435-year-old Curtain Theatre in Shoreditch, just east of London's business district.
The remains — of a polygonal structure, typical of 16th-century theaters — were found behind a pub on a site marked for redevelopment.
The Curtain opened in 1577 and was home to Shakespeare's company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, from 1597 until the Globe Theatre was built across the river two years later.
Plays premiered at the Curtain are thought to include Shakespeare's "Henry V" and possibly "Romeo and Juliet," as well as Ben Jonson's "Every Man in His Humour."
Shakespeare and his troupe moved to the Curtain after getting into a dispute with the landlord of their previous venue, known simply as The Theater.
Patrick Spottiswoode, director of education at Shakespeare's Globe, said the company's experience at the Curtain was not a happy one. Audiences at the venue, which staged sword fights, acrobatics and bear-baiting as well as plays, were demanding.
 "It was a different kind of house and they were probably desperate to leave," Spottiswoode said. "Crowds would flock to The Curtain to see all sorts of activities — they didn't go there to see thesps."
The Lord Chamberlain's Men decamped in 1599 to the Globe, the theater they'd built using timbers smuggled from the original Theatre.
The Curtain survived as a theater at least until the 1620s, making it the longest-lived of London's Elizabethan playhouses.
Museum archaeologists plan further excavation of the Curtain later this year, and a real estate company redeveloping the site said it intends to preserve the remains.
The Theater and the Curtain were London's first successful playhouses — previously, plays had been staged in inn yards and other makeshift spaces. There is evidence that an earlier venue, The Red Lion, was built outside the city in the 1560s but lasted only a few months.
Traces of several of the venues have survived. In 2008, archaeologists found remains of The Theater just down the road from the site of the Curtain.
On the south bank of the Thames, Shakespeare's plays are staged in a reconstruction of the Globe playhouse built near the original site. Remains of The Rose, another Elizabethan venue, have also been found nearby.
All were built outside the city walls, free from regulation by civic leaders hostile to theaters and other disreputable entertainments.
Heather Knight, a senior Museum of London archaeologist, said that despite recent discoveries there is still much to learn about the Elizabethan theater.
 "The late 16th century was a time of a theatrical arms race in London," she said. "The proprietors of these building were making improvements to attract customers. So to have the chance to look at the earliest of these buildings (The Theater), and the one that had the longest life is a real opportunity."
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Offline P.A. Myers

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Isn't it interesting how that the buildings fail, yet the words remain in the minds of men.

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Offline ironglow

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  Archaeology has always fascinated me.  So often we have labored for centuries with faulty information of the past, then an archaeological discovery is made which opens our eyes to much more direct evidence from the past.
   I subscribe to Biblical Archaeology Review...and in recent years, more and more evidence comes to light almost monthly.  The greatest share by far, reinforces the Bible as we have it today. 
   It seems almost as if God is showing all kinds of proofs so as to gather all available, just before bringing the curtain down on this act.
If you don't want the truth, don't ask me.  If you want something sugar coated...go eat a donut !  (anon)

Offline scootrd

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going on an Archaeological dig is still on my bucket list.

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Offline Conan The Librarian

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The thing I've never understood about archaelology digs is how these places end up underground. Do you happen to know?
 
I can understand it in, say, Egypt in the sandy areas where some of the pyramids are, because shifting sands will blow and pile up in new places. I can also understand some that are near bogs because they may have sunk.
 
I can understand palentological digs for stuff milliions of years old because the earth does change over that much time.
 
I can also understand things that are intentionally buried, like the terra cotta army in China.
 
But what about places like this? Do people just pile dirt on top of old stuff? I just don't get it.
 

Offline scootrd

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mankind has been building cities on top of cities for ages
"if your old flathead doesn't leak you are out of oil"
"I have strong feelings about gun control. If there is a gun around I want to be controlling it." - Clint Eastwood
"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote." - Benjaman Franklin
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Offline Conan The Librarian

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I understand the general idea, but the way we do it now is to destroy a building and put another one in its place. Is that what we're seeing with this dig? Just a basement left over that was just filled in? It looks like above ground stuff to me. 

Offline P.A. Myers

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If a building was burned or badly damaged it was leveled and the new construction built on top of what remained. No bulldozers to scrape it all off and start new. The more intact ruins are usually buried quickly by floods, earthquakes, volcanos, etc.  Some ancient structures have simply remained standing.

Streets were constantly rising. Ancient buildings often had doorways recut taller and windows raised. 
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Offline blind ear

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If a building was burned or badly damaged it was leveled and the new construction built on top of what remained. No bulldozers to scrape it all off and start new. The more intact ruins are usually buried quickly by floods, earthquakes, volcanos, etc.  Some ancient structures have simply remained standing.

Streets were constantly rising. Ancient buildings often had doorways recut taller and windows raised.
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Before storm drains/sewers the property that was low held the water. Fill the hole above grade and you are dry. Community planning regulates that in planned cities so that there are no elevation wars . ear
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