Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7596820> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7596820 subject Q8471077.
- Q7596820 abstract "By the close of the sixteenth century the term 'jig' (variously spelt 'jigg', 'jigge', 'gig', 'gigg', 'gigge', 'gigue', 'jigue', 'jeg', 'jegg') had come to refer simultaneously to 'a song', 'a dance' (see 'jig'), and 'a piece of music' (see 'gigue'),as well as taking on a specialist meaning in the early modern playhouse to refer to a relatively short drama sung to popular tunes of the day, and featuring episodes of dance, stage fighting, cross-dressing and disguisings, asides, masks, and elements of (what today would be called) 'pantomime'. These short comic dramas are often referred to by scholars and historians as a 'stage jig', 'dramatic jig' or, popularly, 'Elizabethan Jig' -- after the title of Charles Read Baskervill's seminal monograph on the subject, The Elizabethan Jig and Related Song Drama, published in 1929—to mark the dramatic form from its use as simply 'song' or 'dance'.".
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1079270.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q109548.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1120943.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134718.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q117830.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1187167.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1275841.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1282455.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q137073.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q1483612.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q16932323.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q17012889.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q182659.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q190944.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q191890.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q2028014.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q2411078.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q31241.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q336189.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q3418819.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q36192.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q443042.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q5123985.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q567915.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q665446.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q7327123.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q846848.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q8471077.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q918279.
- Q7596820 wikiPageWikiLink Q934881.
- Q7596820 comment "By the close of the sixteenth century the term 'jig' (variously spelt 'jigg', 'jigge', 'gig', 'gigg', 'gigge', 'gigue', 'jigue', 'jeg', 'jegg') had come to refer simultaneously to 'a song', 'a dance' (see 'jig'), and 'a piece of music' (see 'gigue'),as well as taking on a specialist meaning in the early modern playhouse to refer to a relatively short drama sung to popular tunes of the day, and featuring episodes of dance, stage fighting, cross-dressing and disguisings, asides, masks, and elements of (what today would be called) 'pantomime'. ".
- Q7596820 label "Stage jig".