Difference between revisions of "Herod and Mariamne (1673 Pordage), play"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 12: Line 12:


[[Category:Fiction--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Fiction--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Fiction--English--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Fiction--English|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Literature--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Literature--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Plays--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Literature--English|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Plays|1673 Pordage]]


[[Category:English language--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:English language--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
Line 20: Line 21:


[[Category:Second Temple Studies--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--English--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--English|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Fiction--1600s|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Fiction|1673 Pordage]]




Line 28: Line 29:
[[Category:Herod the Great (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Herod the Great (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Herod the Great--fiction (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Herod the Great--fiction (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Herod the Great--theatre (subject)|1673 Pordage]]


[[Category:Mariamne (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Mariamne (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Mariamne--fiction (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Mariamne--fiction (subject)|1673 Pordage]]
[[Category:Mariamne--theatre (subject)|1673 Pordage]]

Revision as of 09:41, 20 April 2015

Herod and Mariamne (1673) is a play by Samuel Pordage.

Abstract

By furnishing Mariamne with a noble lover (for whom there was no historical foundation), the author provided that four-cornered overlapping of triangles so beloved by the French. Herod, enamored of Mariamne, is jealous of Tyridates; while Salome, enamored of Tyridates, is jealous of Mariamme. The two noble, if illicit, lovers meet their gory death together with the villains, the male rivals swearing with their final breath to continue the duel in ghostly form.

Editions, performances, translations

Written in 1661-62, premiered in London [England]: Dorset Garden, 28 October 1673. Published in London [England]: Cademan, 1673.

External links