Fabulous! Well done to all involved. 

Best
Tracey

On Tue, 6 Oct 2020 at 22:49, William Ingram <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Brava!  It looks terrific!  Congratulations.  I hope the champagne is flowing.

Bill

On Tue, Oct 6, 2020 at 5:39 PM Sarah MacLean <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

The Records of Early English Drama is pleased to announce a new open access resource for teaching, research, and further development. The Rose Playhouse Prototype, edited by Sally-Beth MacLean, is an integrated digital edition of historical records relating to Philip Henslowe's Rose playhouse, the first of its kind on the south bank of the Thames. The text is linked with images of original manuscript sources from the London Metropolitan Archives and The National Archives, Kew, as well as with relevant images on the Henslowe-Alleyn Digitisation Project website. Appendix 1, 'Early Little Rose Property Records,' with an introduction and full transcriptions, has been contributed by William Ingram. The records, historical introduction, and notes include links to other open access datasets such as The Token Books of St Saviour Southwark and the Lost Plays Database. The prototype is intended to stimulate interest in the production of London area playhouse editions for the REED series. 

 

The Rose Playhouse Prototype is now available on REED Online at https://ereed.library.utoronto.ca and https://ereed.library.utoronto.ca/collections/rosep/. 

 

Byron Moldofsky, the cartographer, has developed a historically-informed GIS map of Southwark and the Bankside in the context of the wider pre-1642 London area interoperable with locations named in the Rose Playhouse text. A complementary proof of concept Rose Playhouse Timeline Demo has been uploaded to the REED Project website, also linked to records in the Rose Playhouse Prototype edition.  

 

At a future stage, funding permitting, we plan to add a user interface that will include a timeline widget to allow users to highlight and/or track changes to features referred to in the records over the active lifespan of the Rose playhouse. Features such as contemporary roads and lanes, polygons delimiting property boundaries, identifiable sewer lines, and layers to indicate manor, ward, and parish boundaries will then be accessible as the user requests.  

 

The timeline demo is now available at https://reed.utoronto.ca/rose-playhouse-timeline-demo/ 

 

 

 




--
Tracey Hill
Professor of Early Modern Literature & Culture
School of Humanities
Bath Spa University

Pageantry and Power: a cultural history of the early modern Lord Mayor's Show, 1585-1639
Winner of the David Bevington Prize, 2011
http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9780719080104

Out now: ‘The merchant as adventurer in civic pageantry’, in  J.Caitlin Finlayson and Amrita Sen, eds., Civic Performance: Pageantry and Entertainments in Early Modern London (London: Routledge, 2020), pp. 13-31


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