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- Andromana abstract "Andromana, or The Merchant's Wife is a mid-seventeenth-century stage play, a tragedy first published in 1660. It has attracted scholarly attention for the questions of its auhorship and the influence of its sources.The play's date of authorship is unknown with certainty, and has been estimated in the 1642–60 era, during the English Civil War and the Interregnum when the theatres were officially closed. The play was reportedly performed in 1671, once the theatres had re-opened during the Restoration era. The play's May 19, 1660 entry into the Stationers' Register assigns the authorship of the work to James Shirley; the quarto published in the same year by the bookseller John Bellinger (which gives the play the subtitle The Fatal and Deserved End of Disloyalty and Ambition) attributes the play to \"J. S.\" Many critics, however, have judged the play's \"Burtonian melancholy\" atypical of Shirley's style of drama; and its perceived lack of quality has led many Shirley scholars to omit the play from Shirley's canon.Andromana is one of the many literary works of its period that draws upon Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia for its source material, both directly and through the secondary sources of the Beaumont and Fletcher play Cupid's Revenge. (The name \"Andromana\" derives from ancient Greek; the formidable women of ancient Sparta were known as \"Andromanae.\") Andromana also shows the influence of Robert Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy, as mediated through the plays of John Ford.".
- Andromana wikiPageID "10045793".
- Andromana wikiPageLength "4497".
- Andromana wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Andromana wikiPageRevisionID "675702554".
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink 1660_in_literature.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink 1671_in_literature.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Beaumont_and_Fletcher.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Book_size.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Category:1660_plays.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_Renaissance_plays.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Cupids_Revenge.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink English_Civil_War.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Interregnum_(England).
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink James_Shirley.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink John_Ford_(dramatist).
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Misogyny.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Philip_Sidney.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Restoration_(England).
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Revenge_tragedy.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Rialto.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Burton_(scholar).
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Sparta.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Stationers_Register.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink The_Anatomy_of_Melancholy.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink The_Countess_of_Pembrokes_Arcadia.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLink Tragedy.
- Andromana wikiPageWikiLinkText "Andromana".
- Andromana wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Andromana wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Andromana subject Category:1660_plays.
- Andromana subject Category:English_Renaissance_plays.
- Andromana hypernym Play.
- Andromana type Play.
- Andromana type Work.
- Andromana type Work.
- Andromana comment "Andromana, or The Merchant's Wife is a mid-seventeenth-century stage play, a tragedy first published in 1660. It has attracted scholarly attention for the questions of its auhorship and the influence of its sources.The play's date of authorship is unknown with certainty, and has been estimated in the 1642–60 era, during the English Civil War and the Interregnum when the theatres were officially closed.".
- Andromana label "Andromana".
- Andromana sameAs Q4759479.
- Andromana sameAs m.02p__2d.
- Andromana sameAs Q4759479.
- Andromana wasDerivedFrom Andromana?oldid=675702554.
- Andromana isPrimaryTopicOf Andromana.