345:, and eventual marriage to the Princess Katherine. More specifically, C.A. Greer identified fifteen plot elements that occur in both the anonymous play and in the Henry trilogy. These included the robbery at Gad's Hill of the King's receivers, the meeting of the robbers in an Eastcheap Tavern, the reconciliation of the newly crowned King Henry V with the Chief Justice, the new King's rejection of his comic/criminal friends, the gift of tennis balls from the Dauphin, and Pistol's encounter with a French soldier (Dericke's in
29:
432:, who died in 1587, played Henry. This is because of a record of a performance in which "Knel, then playing Henry the fift, hit Tarlton a sound boxe indeed, which made the people laugh the more". Scoufus, as mentioned, places it in around 1583; Ward argued for a date circa 1576. It is certain, however, that the play significantly antedates the canonical Shakespearean treatment of the same historical materials in
358:
308:
The Chief
Justice hears about Henry's antics at the tavern, which include a drunken street brawl with drawn swords. He orders the arrest of the Prince and others. Local tradesmen comment on the events. One of them recognises a Thief, whom they take into custody. The Thief insists that he is a servant
320:
King Henry IV is dying. The Prince picks up the crown thinking that his father is dead. King Henry revives and upbraids him again. The Prince promises to be a good king. The old king dies. Now king, Henry V reneges on his promises to his old companions and banishes them. Henry discusses his claim to
304:
Prince Henry and his companions have committed a robbery, stealing £1000 from two Royal
Receivers. He meets Jocky Oldcastle and tells him of events. The Receivers, pursuing the robbers, bump into Henry who "forgives" them for losing the money, but also threatens them. They leave. He suggests to the
328:
In France Henry captures the town of
Harfleur. The French send a large army against him. Henry defies them, insisting that he will not be ransomed but would rather die than accept defeat. Before the battle, French soldiers (speaking in comically garbled English) discuss how they will divide the
312:
Prince Henry has been released. Angry at the Chief
Justice, he tells Jocky and his companions that when he is king they shall have major positions of state. The Justice is arraigning the Thief when Prince Henry and his gang arrive. The prince insists that the Thief be released. When the Justice
309:
of Prince Henry who will get him released. Meanwhile, King Henry IV laments the shameful lifestyle of his son. He questions the Chief
Justice about the arrest of the Prince. The Justice explains his actions and King Henry accepts their validity. He calls for his son to be brought to him.
340:
The play covers the same ground later traversed in significantly greater detail in the
Shakespearean trilogy, covering the wildness of the prince in several episodes, a coronation in which he dismisses the dissolute companions of his youth, and his invasion of France, victory at
329:
spoils. At the Battle of
Agincourt the English are victorious. Dericke is involved in clownish battlefield antics with a French soldier. After the battle he and John Cobler scheme to get out of the rest of the war by accompanying the deceased Duke of York's body back to England.
324:
One of the tradesmen, John Cobler, has been fighting with his wife. His friend
Dericke intervenes. A soldier arrives to force the two men to join the royal army. They are reluctantly recruited while the wife laments. The Thief is also pressed into military service.
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At his meeting with his father, Prince Henry is upbraided. His father tells him of his royal duties. Shamed, the Prince promises to reform his lifestyle. Meanwhile, the tradesmen act out a clownish version of the conflict between the Prince and the Chief
Justice.
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were probably written by
Shakespeare and that these are very close to passages in the play. This view has not received much support, but because of the play's "manifest verbal flatness", it has been widely argued that the published version of the play is a
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is disputed, so too is its chronological placement in the development of the English drama. However, as published in 1598 the play is advertised as one acted by "her Queen's Majesty's Players", referring to
142:
and his wooing of Princess Katherine. The work is of unknown authorship, and various possible authors have been proposed, including a young Shakespeare, though this view is not widely accepted by scholars.
428:, a company which, while surviving into the 1590s was in deep decline by 1590. It is generally agreed that Richard Tarlton, who died in 1588, played the clown role (Dericke) in the play and that
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Henry then travels on to Paris where he negotiates with the French court and woos Princess Katherine. The King of France agrees to make Henry his heir and to marry him to Katherine.
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the French throne with the Archbishop. The Dauphin of France sends tennis balls as a present to King Henry as an insult. Henry prepares for war with France.
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The Famous Victories of Henry the fifth: Containing the Honourable Battel of Agin-court: As it was plaide by the Queenes Maiesties Players
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388:. Scot McCrea thinks this unlikely, but argues that the author was probably trying to flatter Oxford, as the role of his ancestor
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The play covers the riotous youth of Prince Henry and his transformation into a warrior king, ending with his victory at
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A Dictionary of Actors and of Other Persons Associated with the Public Representation of Plays in England before 1642
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claimed the play for the young Shakespeare, followed by Seymour Pitcher in 1961. Pitcher argued that annotations to
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is exaggerated in the text. Alice-Lyle Scoufos argued that Welsh scrivener and theatrical producer
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in 1594, but the earliest known edition is from 1598. A second quarto was published in 1617.
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The Oldcastle Controversy: Sir John Oldcastle, Part I and The Famous Victories of Henry V
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515:." Shakespeare Association Paper, 28 February 1919. London, 1919, pp. 34-37.
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Shakespeare's Typological Satire: A Study of the Falstaff-Oldcastle Problem
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396:, who was associated with the Earl, was the most likely author.
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The Case for Shakespeare's Authorship of "The Famous Victories"
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others that they go carousing to spend the money in a tavern.
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The Case For Shakespeare: The End Of The Authorship Question
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suggested the extant version was based on an early court
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The Taming of a Shrew, The Famous Victories of Henry V
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In 1891 F. G. Fleay attributed the play to comedian
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528:: Its Place in Elizabethan Dramatic Literature."
464:Campbell, Oscar James (ed), "Famous Victories"
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597:, Manchester University Press ND, 1991, p.34.
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416:(based on memory rather than a manuscript).
558:, Ohio University Press, 1981, pp.176, 180.
496:Biographical Chronicle of the English Drama
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608:Ungentle Shakespeare: Scenes from his Life
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1227:Cultural depictions of Henry V of England
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477:Greer, Clayton A. "Shakespeare's Use of
526:The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth
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532:IV (July, 1928): 270-94, pp. 287, 294.
507:Sykes, H. Dugdale. "The Authorship of
756:The Life and Death of King Richard II
623:, Yale University Press, 1929, p.228.
246:The French Court, Officials, Military
7:
390:Richard de Vere, 11th Earl of Oxford
313:refuses, Prince Henry assaults him.
386:Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford
468:, Taylor and Francis, 1966, p.221.
336:Parallels with Shakespeare's plays
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511:, and the Additions to Marlowe's
479:The Famous Victories of Henry V,
257:Dolphin, French Prince (Dauphin)
158:Prince Henry, later King Henry V
1104:The Famous Victories of Henry V
485:. n. s. 1 (June, 1954): 238-41.
22:The Famous Victories of Henry V
74:The life of Henry V of England
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593:Peter Corbin, Douglas Sedge,
266:Lord High Constable of France
254:Katharine, Princess of France
127:). It was entered by printer
210:Jockey (Sir John Old-castle)
153:The English Court, Officials
16:Anonymous 1580s English play
569:Shakespeare's History Plays
545:, Greenwood, 2005, p.157-8.
466:A Shakespeare Encyclopaedia
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1139:The Merry Wives of Windsor
610:, Cengage, 2001. pp.29-30.
419:Just as the authorship of
882:Henry the Fourth, Part II
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571:. New York, 1944, p. 174.
530:Review of English Studies
176:Secretary to King Henry V
33:Title page of 1598 quarto
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606:Katherine Duncan-Jones,
173:Archbishop of Canterbury
823:Henry the Fouth, Part I
764:King Richard the Second
639:at Elizabethan Authors.
584:. New York, 1961, p. 6.
414:memorial reconstruction
251:Charles, King of France
213:Thief (Cuthbert Cutter)
199:Friends of Prince Henry
1097:Holinshed's Chronicles
498:. London, 1891, p. 67.
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554:Scoufos, Alice-Lyle,
426:Queen Elizabeth's Men
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235:Lawrence Costermonger
580:Pitcher, Seymour M.
347:The Famous Victories
260:Archbishop of Burges
179:Lord Mayor of London
133:Stationers' Register
1116:Thomas of Woodstock
674:William Shakespeare
483:Notes & Queries
353:Date and authorship
229:Wife of John Cobler
185:Clerk of the Office
1194:Suite from Henry V
1186:At the Boar's Head
1159:Falstaff's Wedding
1151:Sir John Oldcastle
941:Chimes at Midnight
874:Chimes at Midnight
815:Chimes at Midnight
772:Richard the Second
567:Tillyard, E. M. W
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241:An English Soldier
182:Lord Chief Justice
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401:E. M. W. Tillyard
263:Duke of Burgondie
223:Dericke, a tailor
194:Sheriff of London
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63:Original language
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965:The Hollow Crown
896:Henry IV, Part 2
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857:Henry IV, Part 2
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300:Plot summary
291:Jack Drummer
218:Tradespeople
164:Duke of York
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98:
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1222:1590s plays
1217:1580s plays
405:Edward Hall
394:Henry Evans
384:written by
226:John Cobler
1211:Categories
1075:Richard II
1046:Prince Hal
1011:Charles VI
994:Characters
952:(1979; TV)
936:(1960; TV)
885:(1979; TV)
869:(1960; TV)
840:(2012; TV)
826:(1979; TV)
810:(1960; TV)
789:(2012; TV)
786:Richard II
767:(1979; TV)
759:(1960; TV)
751:(1960; TV)
743:(1954; TV)
731:Richard II
692:Richard II
452:References
409:Chronicles
378:B. M. Ward
376:. In 1928
147:Characters
39:Written by
723:On screen
637:Full text
343:Agincourt
288:3 Soldier
285:2 Soldier
282:1 Soldier
279:Frenchman
140:Agincourt
50:1580s (?)
42:anonymous
1178:Falstaff
1036:Henry IV
1031:Fluellen
1026:Falstaff
1006:Bardolph
979:The King
904:The King
845:The King
399:In 1944
1237:Henriad
1089:Sources
1041:Henry V
971:Henry V
957:Henry V
925:Henry V
916:Henry V
713:Henry V
679:Henriad
513:Faustus
446:Henry V
131:in the
124:Henry V
106:Henriad
89:Setting
83:History
71:Subject
66:English
1197:(1963)
1189:(1925)
1181:(1913)
1162:(1760)
1154:(1599)
982:(2019)
974:(2012)
960:(1989)
944:(1966)
928:(1944)
907:(2019)
899:(2012)
877:(1966)
848:(2019)
818:(1966)
775:(2001)
444:, and
382:masque
269:Herald
188:Jailor
121:, and
58:London
1146:1597)
1123:1593)
1111:1585)
1065:Poins
79:Genre
676:'s
407:'s
349:).
207:Tom
204:Ned
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1144:c.
1121:c.
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893::
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666:e
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109:(
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