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17 results from Shakespeare and Beyond on

Animals

Shakespeare's much-maligned toads and frogs
Toads are described by Edward Topsell
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare's much-maligned toads and frogs

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Author
Haylie Swenson

Edward Topsell. The historie of serpents… 1608. Folger Shakespeare Library. There may not be a more insulted character in all of Shakespeare’s canon than Richard III. The woman he’s wooing, Anne, calls him a hedgehog. In the very next scene,…

"Thorny hedgehogs, be not seen": Hedgehogs in Shakespeare's plays and the early modern imagination
hedgehog illustration
Shakespeare and Beyond

"Thorny hedgehogs, be not seen": Hedgehogs in Shakespeare's plays and the early modern imagination

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Author
Haylie Swenson

Edward Topsell. The historie of foure-footed beastes. 1607. FOLGER STC 24123 copy 1 While the global population of European hedgehogs (Erinaceus europaeus) is stable, their numbers have been rapidly declining in the UK for decades, especially in rural areas. This…

Wild Things: Rats in early modern life and Shakespeare's plays
Shakespeare and Beyond

Wild Things: Rats in early modern life and Shakespeare's plays

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Author
Haylie Swenson

On Saturday, January 25, the Lunar New Year will mark the beginning of the Year of the Rat. According to legend, the Jade Emperor held a race for the twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac to determine their order. The…

Introducing Wild Things: Animals in early modern life and culture
title page
Shakespeare and Beyond

Introducing Wild Things: Animals in early modern life and culture

Posted
Author
Haylie Swenson

Edward Topsell. The historie of foure-footed beastes. 1607. Title page. Folger STC 24123 Copy 2 How many animals have you encountered today, and in what forms? From pets and urban species such as squirrels and sparrows, to meat products and…

The pelican in her piety
Richard Fox's crosier
Shakespeare and Beyond

The pelican in her piety

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Author
Esther French

If you search for the word “pelican” in Shakespeare’s plays, you come across three instances, in Hamlet, King Lear, and Richard II. All three refer to a symbolic meaning of the pelican that can feel remote to today’s reader or…

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