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- Loves_Victory abstract "Love's Victory is a Jacobean era pastoral closet drama written circa 1620 by English Renaissance writer Lady Mary Wroth. The play is the first known original pastoral drama and the first original dramatic comedy written by a woman. It is written primarily in rhyming couplets. There are only two known manuscripts of Love's Victory, one of which is an incomplete version located in the Huntington Library in San Marino, California. The other version is complete, and is the Penshurst Manuscript which is owned by Viscount De L'Isle, indicating continued ownership by the Sydney family since its creation. The play is not as widely read as Wroth's prose work Urania or her romantic sonnet sequence Pamphilia to Amphilanthus, but has been receiving more attention with the increasing interest in early modern women writers.".
- Loves_Victory wikiPageID "37020781".
- Loves_Victory wikiPageLength "10049".
- Loves_Victory wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Loves_Victory wikiPageRevisionID "675829031".
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Astrophel_and_Stella.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Category:1600s_plays.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_Renaissance_plays.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Closet_drama.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Couplet.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Cupid.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Cyprus.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Diana_(mythology).
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Early_modern.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Early_modern_period.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Greek_chorus.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Huntington_Library.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Jacobean_era.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Lady_Mary_Wroth.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Pamphilia_to_Amphilanthus.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Pastoral.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Philip_Sidney.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Philip_Sydney.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink San_Marino,_California.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Sonnet_sequence.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink The_Renaissance.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Urania_(novel).
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Venus_(mythology).
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink Viscount_De_LIsle.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLink William_Herbert,_3rd_Earl_of_Pembroke.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageWikiLinkText "Love's Victory".
- Loves_Victory hasPhotoCollection Loves_Victory.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:EngvarB.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Loves_Victory wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Loves_Victory subject Category:1600s_plays.
- Loves_Victory subject Category:English_Renaissance_plays.
- Loves_Victory hypernym Drama.
- Loves_Victory type Work.
- Loves_Victory comment "Love's Victory is a Jacobean era pastoral closet drama written circa 1620 by English Renaissance writer Lady Mary Wroth. The play is the first known original pastoral drama and the first original dramatic comedy written by a woman. It is written primarily in rhyming couplets. There are only two known manuscripts of Love's Victory, one of which is an incomplete version located in the Huntington Library in San Marino, California.".
- Loves_Victory label "Love's Victory".
- Loves_Victory sameAs m.0n495yd.
- Loves_Victory sameAs Q6690027.
- Loves_Victory sameAs Q6690027.
- Loves_Victory wasDerivedFrom Loves_Victoryoldid=675829031.
- Loves_Victory isPrimaryTopicOf Loves_Victory.