Difference between revisions of "Archipropheta (1547 Grimald), play"

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'''  Archipropheta ''' <Latin> / ''The Archprophet'' (1547) is a play by [[Nicholas Grimald]].
'''  Archipropheta ''' <Latin> / '''The Archprophet''' (1547) is a play by [[Nicholas Grimald]].


==Abstract==
==Abstract==
This Latin tragedy in five acts, which premiered at Oxford, England, derived mainly from Josephus and was set in the court of Herod Antipas. Through this almost Renaissance court stalks John the Baptist, burning with prophetic zeal, denouncing illicit marriage, and demanding moral purity above all. Grimald provided a purely romantic motive for the catastrophe in the passionate attachment of Herodias to Herod. There are 15 characters, among them Jehovah, John the Baptist, King Herod Antipas, a court fool, Herodias, and three choruses. The daughter of Herodias is here called Tryphera (the voluptuous); two “representative” Pharisees are named Philautus and Typhlus.
This Latin tragedy in five acts, which premiered at Oxford, England, derived mainly from Josephus and was set in the court of Herod Antipas. Through this almost Renaissance court stalks John the Baptist, burning with prophetic zeal, denouncing illicit marriage, and demanding moral purity above all. Grimald provided a purely romantic motive for the catastrophe in the passionate attachment of Herodias to Herod. There are 15 characters, among them Jehovah, John the Baptist, King Herod Antipas, a court fool, Herodias, and three choruses. The daughter of Herodias is here called Tryphera (the voluptuous); two “representative” Pharisees are named Philautus and Typhlus.
    
    
==Editions, performances, translations==
==Editions==
 
The ms. is preserved at the British Museum in London.
The ms. is preserved at the British Museum in London.
==Performance history==
Premiered in Oxford, England, 1547.


==External links==
==External links==


[[Category:Fiction]] [[Category:Plays]]
[[Category:1547| Grimald]]
[[Category:Latin language]]
 
[[Category:Made in the 1540s]] [[Category:Made in the XVI century]]
[[Category:Fiction--1500s|1547 Grimald]]  
[[Category:John the Baptist (subject)]]
[[Category:Fiction--Latin|1547 Grimald]]
 
[[Category:Literature--1500s|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Literature--Latin|1547 Grimald]]
 
[[Category:Plays|1547 Grimald]]
 
[[Category:Latin language--1500s|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:English Authorship--1500s|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Made in 1540s| 1547 Grimald]]
 
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--1500s|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Latin|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Fiction|1547 Grimald]]
 
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--1500s|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--Latin|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--Fiction|1547 Grimald]]
 
 
[[Category:John the Baptist (subject)|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:John the Baptist--fiction (subject)|1547 Grimald]]
 
[[Category:John the Baptist--literature (subject)|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Herod Antipas--literature (subject)|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Herodias--literature (subject)|1547 Grimald]]
[[Category:Salome--literature (subject)|1547 Grimald]]

Latest revision as of 15:10, 14 May 2017

Archipropheta <Latin> / The Archprophet (1547) is a play by Nicholas Grimald.

Abstract

This Latin tragedy in five acts, which premiered at Oxford, England, derived mainly from Josephus and was set in the court of Herod Antipas. Through this almost Renaissance court stalks John the Baptist, burning with prophetic zeal, denouncing illicit marriage, and demanding moral purity above all. Grimald provided a purely romantic motive for the catastrophe in the passionate attachment of Herodias to Herod. There are 15 characters, among them Jehovah, John the Baptist, King Herod Antipas, a court fool, Herodias, and three choruses. The daughter of Herodias is here called Tryphera (the voluptuous); two “representative” Pharisees are named Philautus and Typhlus.

Editions

The ms. is preserved at the British Museum in London.

Performance history

Premiered in Oxford, England, 1547.

External links