Ram Alley
Location
Ram Alley, a mere seven feet wide, ran southwards from Fleet Street, opposite Fetter Lane. Its end point was a footway between two legal institutions: the Inner Temple and Serjeants Inn. Edward H. Sugden also mentions that the street was well known as the rear exit from another inn, the
Mitre, which fronted onto Fleet Street.
Etymology
The alley was named after an inn, marked by the sign of the Star and Ram, which had originally belonged to the Knights Hospitallers but was confiscated by Henry VIII. It was taken in fee from the monarch for £54 by Robert Harrys, or Harris, and became the site of his brewery, which had a frontage on Fleet Street (Bell 247). The alley is now known as Hare Place, named after Hare House (Paige letter #154).
Map Views
An unlabelled alley in the correct location as Ram Alley appears on the Agas map. The alley is marked on both the Ogilby and Morgan map of 1676 and the Rocque map of 1746.
Significance
Ram Alley was a place of sanctuary for criminals. Those seeking to evade capture would run
into Ram Alley, which, like the Whitefriars nearby, still claimed right of sanctuary: that is, the immunity from arrest. A 1603 source cited by William Kent comments that
there is a door leading out of Ram Alley to the tenement called the Miter in Fleet-streete, by which means thereof such persons as do frequent the house upon search made after them are conveyed out that way(Kent 494). The freedom was requested under common law by several of the London liberties, many of which were formerly monastic land.1 In an area known from the seventeenth century as Alsatia,2 Ram Alley was particularly renowned as a place of refuge for those in debt, and was
the resort of sharpers and necessitous persons of very ill fame, and of both sexes(Nares 719). Even in 1640, a debtor taking refuge in Ram Alley was considered by his creditor beyond pursuit (Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I, 1639-40 February 20). Sugden notes,
[i]t was a place of evil reputation, inhabited chiefly by cooks, bawds, tobacco-sellers, and ale-house keepersand adds that
[t]he worst of its dens was the Maidenhead, near the Temple end of it(Sugden 426). Walter George Bell calls it
Ram Alley of evil association, perhaps the most pestilent court in London(Bell 252). Perhaps this unsavoury reputation is why it is not mentioned by John Stow in A Survey of London.
Parish records show a fear that the alley should become a refuge of the poor, with
residents taking in unwelcome lodgers—particularly foreigners—into their midst. One
such incident is noted in the wardmote inquests of St. Dunstan from 1598:
Item, we present Margaret Lylly, who came to dwell in Ram Alley within three months last past and lodgeth one Symon Dominico, a frenchman borne and his wife in her house, who [...] are like to be a charge to the p’ishe and the cittie(St. Dunstan’s parish reigsters, 1598 qtd. in Bell 244).
Literary References
The eponymous setting of a comic play, Ram Alley’s famous inns were invoked by Lording Barry, who juxtaposes them with its lawyers and prostitutes. Written in 1607-8, the play was performed by the short-lived Children of the King’s Revels company, based in the theatre at Whitefriars and funded by a group of investors including Barry.3 In the play, Throat, a dubious man of law who perhaps has his qualification from an Inn of Chancery, comments on the conjunction of food, drink and legal work:
And though Ramme ſtinks with Cookes and ale, / Yet ſay thers many a worthy lawyers chamber, / Buts vpon Rame-alley(Barry sig. C1v). Later, he makes reference to the predatory sexuality for which the area was also known, demanding,
Elizabeth Hanson comments on the play’s(Barry sig. E4v)Will you be gon directly, are you mad?Come you to ſeeke a Virgin in Ram-alleySoe neere an Inne of Court, and amongſt Cookes,Ale-men, and Landreſſes, why are you fooles?
geographical and social specificity(Hanson 233), but, in his essay on the relationship between the audience and actors in the play, Jeremy Lopez nuances this point, arguing that the play
seems to be about being in Ram Alley, but it’s really about its spectators knowing that they’re not(Lopez 202). He suggests that the play portrays the area and uses its stereotypical attributes to appeal to those playgoers who lived in the city but outside the area of the Whitefriars itself.
The alley is referred to by several other contemporary writers, who also focus on
its key associations. The alley’s reputation as a place to flee the forces of the
law is again shown in Richard Brome’s A Mad Couple Well-Match’d, where the spendthrift nephew, Careless, takes sanctuary from his uncle and other creditors in Ram Alley. Having got hold of money, he announces,
I need no more inſconſing now in Ram-alley, nor the Sanctuary of White-fryers, the Forts of Fullers-rents, and Milford-lane, whoſe walls are dayly batter’d wth the curſes of bawling creditors(Brome, A Mad Couple Well-Match’d sig. C8r), giving a list of places where men could evade pursuit. In The Damoiselle, Brome continues the association of Ram Alley with sanctuary, as Bumpsey, looking for his son-in-law, enters the alley to seek information:
Ille but ſtep up / Into Ram-Alley-Sanctuary, to Debtor, / That praies and watches there for a Protection(Brome, The Damoiselle E4r).
The Rabelaisian account of the area in The Floating Island (1673) by writer and bookseller Richard Head also focuses on the alley’s reputation as a refuge from pursuit. The supposed writer
of the work explains its origins in a period of forced inertia in Ramallia, or Villa
Franca,
a Sanctuary to all perſons whatſoever(Head sig. A2v).
It was,he tells his reader in a prefatory epistle, an account of an imaginary journey
pen’d laſt long Vacation, when all I had to do, was to hide my ſelf from the Inquiſition of my cruel Creditors; for which purpoſe I lodg’d in Ram-alley(Head sig. A2r).
Writing the satirical The Second Return from Parnassus seventy years before Richard Head’s, the students of St John’s College, Cambridge, associate the alley with the belligerence
and linguistic directness of playwright John Marston, who lived as a legal student in the Middle Temple nearby:
(The Second Part of The Return from Parnassus sig. B2v)[Marston] Cutts, thruſts, and foines at whomeſoeuer he meets,And ſtrowes about Ram-ally meditations.Tut, what cares he for modeſt cloſe coucht termes,Cleanly to gird our looſer libertines?
The association of the alley with food and drink is demonstrated by Ben Jonson’s Lickfinger, the thieving cook in The Staple of News, who is labelled
mine old hoſt of Ram-Alley(Jonson 2D2v). In Philip Massinger’s A New Way to Pay Old Debts, this connection with food is again linked to the quotidian practices of nearby lawyers when Amble says of Marrall, the attorney:
[t]he knaue thinkes ſtill hee’s at the cookes ſhop in Ramme-alley, / Where the Clarkes diuide and the Elder is to chooſe(Massinger sig. E2v). Thomas Nashe, in his Prognostication, shows that the association with food could be combined with the alley’s reputation for roguery:
but let the fiſh-wiues take heede, for if moſt of them proue not ſcoldes [...] they ſhall weare out more ſhooes in Lent then in anie two months beſide through the whole yeere, and get their liuing by walking and crying, becauſe they ſlaundered Ram alley with ſuch a tragical infamie(Nash sig. B4v). Sugden suggests the fishwives may have harangued the cooks of Ram Alley because they illicitly sold flesh on Fridays or in Lent.
The provision of food is connected with the area’s predatory sexuality, which had
been referred to so casually in Barry’s play, in a salacious pamphlet of 1681 called Whipping Tom. In the account made of Tom’s sexual attacks upon London women, there features one on
the Woman that cries hot Gray Peaſe about the Streets, coming up Ram Alley in Fleete-ſtreet(Whipping Tom sig. A1v). Having laid on her his
cold hand,she
loſt all power of Reſiſtance,and along with it her peas, which she had afterwards to
ſcrape up her Ware as well as ſhe could, for the uſe of ſuch longing Ladies as are affected with ſuch Diet(Whipping Tom sig. A1v).
As well as food and drink, the area was also known for another popular vice in the
early modern capital, the smoking of tobacco—the supplying or indulgence of which
habit was often found unacceptable by the members of the legal profession whose property
abutted the alley. The St. Dunstan’s wardmote register of 1630 records one such offence:
Item, we present Timothy Howe (of Ram Alley, Fleet Street) and Humfry Fenne for annoying the Judges at Serjeants Inn with the stench and smell of their tobacco(St. Dunstan’s parish reigsters, 1630 qtd. in Bell 274). Bell continues to quote the wardmote from 1618 which combined complaints about drink with those against tobacco. The register
laid complaint against Timothy Louse and John Barker, of Ram Alley,(St. Dunstan’s parish reigsters, 1618 qtd. in Bell 274).for keeping their tobacco shoppes open all night and fyers in the same without any chimney and suffering hot waters [spirits] and selling also without licence, to the great disquietness and annoyance of that neighbourhood
Finally, in The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green, John Day and his collaborator, Henry Chettle, make use of the alley’s fame as a place of popular recreation. Disguised as a
Maſter of the Motionor puppet-master, Canby promises his customers, Tom Strowd and Swash,
you ſhall likewiſe ſee the amorous conceits and Love ſongs betwixt Captain Pod of Py-corner, and Mrs. Rump of Ram-alley(Day sig. G1v-G2r). Sugden notes that Captain Pod was a well-known exhibitor of puppet shows, and that it may be presumed Mrs. Rump was equally historical.
The modern day Hare Place remains an alleyway cutting through to the Inner Temple from Fleet Street, and appropriately emerging next to a wine merchant.
Notes
- Mary Bly discusses right of sanctuary granted to the monastic liberties by Henry VIII. (JW)↑
- See
Chapter XIII
of Bell’s Fleet Street in Seven Centuries, which examines the area’s history as a place of sanctuary and the use of this cant name. In 1688, Thomas Shadwell wrote a popular play set in the area called The Squire of Alsatia. See also John Levin’s Alsatia: The Debtor Sanctuaries of London blog. (JW)↑ - For more information about the Children of the King’s Revels, and the typicality of Ram Alley in that company’s repertoire, see Bly (2000). (JW)↑
References
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Barry, Lording. Ram-Alley: Or Merrie-Trickes. London: Printed by G. Eld. for Robert Wilson, 1611. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Bell, Walter George. Fleet Street in Seven Centuries: Being a History of the Growth of London Beyond the Walls into the Western Liberty, and of Fleet Street to Our Time. London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons, 1912. Internet Archive. Open.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Beresford, Edwin. The Annals of Fleet Street. London: Chapman & Hall Limited, 1912. Open.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Bly, Mary. Queer Virgins and Virgin Queans on the Early Modern Stage. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2000.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Bly, Mary.Playing the Tourist in Early Modern London: Selling the Liberties Onstage.
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Brome, Richard. The Demoiselle, or the New Ordinary. London: T[homas] R[oycroft] for Richard Marriot, and Thomas Dring, 1653. Reprint. Richard Brome Online. Ed. Richard Cave. Royal Holloway, University of London and Humanities Research Institute, University of Sheffield. Web. Open.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Brome, Richard. A Mad Couple Well-Match’d. Five New Playes. London: Humphrey Moseley, Richard Marriot, and Thomas Dring, 1653. Sig. A5v-H2r. Reprint. Richard Brome Online. Ed. Richard Cave. Royal Holloway, University of London and Humanities Research Institute, University of Sheffield. Web. Open.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I, 1639-40. Ed. Wiliam Douglas Hamilton. London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1877.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Day, John [and Henry Chettle]. The Blind-beggar of Bednal Green. London: R. Pollard and Tho. Dring, 1659. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Hanson, Elizabeth.
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Head, Richard. The Floating Island, or a New Discovery. London: Published by Franck Careless [i.e., Richard Head], 1673. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Jonson, Ben. The Staple of Newes. The Works. Vol. 2. London: Printed by I.B. for Robert Allot, 1631. Sig. 2A1r-2J2v. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Kent, William. An Encyclopedia of London. 1937. Rev. Godfrey Thompson. London: J.M. Dent, 1970.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Levin, John. Alsatia: The Debtor Sanctuaries of London. Web. Open.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Lopez, Jeremy.Success the Whiitefriars Way: Ram Alley and the Negative Force of Acting.
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Massinger, Philip. A New Way to Pay Old Debts. London: Printed by E[lizabeth] P[urslowe] for Henry Seyle, 1633. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Nares, Robert. A Glossary; Or, Collection of Words, Phrases, Names, and Allusions to Customs, Proverbs, etc., which have been Thought to Require Illustration in the Words of English Authors, Particularly Shakespeare and His Contemporaries. New ed. Ed. James O. Halliwell and Thomas Wright. Vol. 2. London: John Russell Smith, 1867.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Nashe, Thomas. A Wonderfull Strange and Miraculous Astrologicall Prognostication for this Yeere 1591. London: Thomas Scarlet, 1591. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Ogilby, John and William Morgan. A Large and Accurate Map of the City of London Ichnographically Describing All the Streets, Lanes, Alleys, Courts, Yards, Churches, Halls and Houses, &c. Actually Surveyed and Delineated by John Ogilby, esq., His Majesties Cosmographer. London, 1676. Reprint. The A to Z of Restoration London. Introduced by Ralph Hyde. Indexed by John Fisher and Roger Cline. London: London Topographical Society, 1992.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Paige, John. The Letters of John Paige, London Merchant, 1648-58. Ed. G.F. Steckley. London Record Society 21. London: London Record Society, 1984. British History Online. London: London Record Society, 1984. Open.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Rocque, John. A Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster, and Borough of Southwark with Contiguous Buildings. London: Printed by John Rocque, 1746. Reprint. The A to Z of Georgian London. Introduced by Ralph Hyde. London: London Topographical Society, 1982. [We cite by index label thus: Rocque 15Db.]This item is cited in the following documents:
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Shadwell, Thomas. The Squire of Alsatia. London: Printed for James Knapton, at the Queen’s Head in St. Paul’s Churchyard, 1688. Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Stapleton, Alan. London Alleys, Byways, and Courts. London: John Lane The Bodley Head Ltd., 1924.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Stow, John. A suruay of London· Conteyning the originall, antiquity, increase, moderne estate, and description of that city, written in the yeare 1598. by Iohn Stow citizen of London. Since by the same author increased, with diuers rare notes of antiquity, and published in the yeare, 1603. Also an apologie (or defence) against the opinion of some men, concerning that citie, the greatnesse thereof. VVith an appendix, contayning in Latine Libellum de situ & nobilitate Londini: written by William Fitzstephen, in the raigne of Henry the second. London: John Windet, 1603. STC 23343. University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign Campus) copy Reprint. Early English Books Online. Web.This item is cited in the following documents:
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Sugden, Edward. A Topographical Dictionary to the Works of Shakespeare and His Fellow Dramatists. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1925. Open. Internet Archive.This item is cited in the following documents:
Cite this page
MLA citation
Ram Alley.The Map of Early Modern London, edited by , U of Victoria, 20 Jun. 2018, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm.
Chicago citation
Ram Alley.The Map of Early Modern London. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed June 20, 2018. http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm.
APA citation
The Map of Early Modern London. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm.
, & 2018. Ram Alley. In (Ed), RIS file (for RefMan, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Watson, Jacqueline A1 - Takeda, Joey ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - Ram Alley T2 - The Map of Early Modern London PY - 2018 DA - 2018/06/20 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/xml/standalone/RAMA1.xml ER -
RefWorks
RT Web Page SR Electronic(1) A1 Watson, Jacqueline A1 Takeda, Joey A6 Jenstad, Janelle T1 Ram Alley T2 The Map of Early Modern London WP 2018 FD 2018/06/20 RD 2018/06/20 PP Victoria PB University of Victoria LA English OL English LK http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#WATS2"><surname>Watson</surname>, <forename>Jacqueline</forename></name></author>, and <author><name ref="#TAKE1"><forename>Joey</forename> <surname>Takeda</surname></name></author>. <title level="a">Ram Alley</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>, <publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2018-06-20">20 Jun. 2018</date>, <ref target="http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/RAMA1.htm</ref>.</bibl>Personography
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Janelle Jenstad
JJ
Janelle Jenstad, associate professor in the department of English at the University of Victoria, is the general editor and coordinator of The Map of Early Modern London. She is also the assistant coordinating editor of Internet Shakespeare Editions. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), and Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, forthcoming). She is currently working on an edition of The Merchant of Venice for ISE and Broadview P. She lectures regularly on London studies, digital humanities, and on Shakespeare in performance.Roles played in the project
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Kim McLean-Fiander
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Director of Pedagogy and Outreach, 2015–present; Associate Project Director, 2015–present; Assistant Project Director, 2013-2014; MoEML Research Fellow, 2013. Kim McLean-Fiander comes to The Map of Early Modern London from the Cultures of Knowledge digital humanities project at the University of Oxford, where she was the editor of Early Modern Letters Online, an open-access union catalogue and editorial interface for correspondence from the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. She is currently Co-Director of a sister project to EMLO called Women’s Early Modern Letters Online (WEMLO). In the past, she held an internship with the curator of manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, completed a doctorate at Oxford on paratext and early modern women writers, and worked a number of years for the Bodleian Libraries and as a freelance editor. She has a passion for rare books and manuscripts as social and material artifacts, and is interested in the development of digital resources that will improve access to these materials while ensuring their ongoing preservation and conservation. An avid traveler, Kim has always loved both London and maps, and so is particularly delighted to be able to bring her early modern scholarly expertise to bear on the MoEML project.Roles played in the project
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Jackie Watson completed her PhD at Birkbeck College, London, in 2015, with a thesis looking at the life of the Jacobean courtier, Sir Thomas Overbury, and examining the representations of courtiership on stage between 1599 and 1613. She is co-editor of The Senses in Early Modern England, 1558–1660 (Manchester UP, 2015), to which she contributed a chapter on the deceptive nature of sight. Recent published articles have looked at the early modern Inns of Court and at Innsmen as segments of playhouse audiences. She is currently working on a monograph with a focus on Overbury’s letters, courtiership and the Jacobean playhouse.Roles played in the project
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Amble
Character in Philip Massinger’s A New Way to Pay Old Debts.Amble is mentioned in the following documents:
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Lording Barry is mentioned in the following documents:
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Richard Brome is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry Chettle is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Day is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VIII is mentioned in the following documents:
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Ben Jonson is mentioned in the following documents:
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Lickfinger
Character in Ben Jonson’s The Staple of News.Lickfinger is mentioned in the following documents:
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Marrall
Character in Philip Massinger’s A New Way to Pay Old Debts.Marrall is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Marston is mentioned in the following documents:
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Philip Massinger is mentioned in the following documents:
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Thomas Nashe is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Stow is mentioned in the following documents:
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Bumpsey
Character in Richard Brome’s The Damoiselle.Bumpsey is mentioned in the following documents:
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Careless
Character in Richard Brome’s A Mad Couple Well-Match’d.Careless is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Harris
Brewery owner who purchased the Star and Ram Inn from Henry VIII, which later became the site of Ram Alley.Robert Harris is mentioned in the following documents:
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Thomas Shadwell is mentioned in the following documents:
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Margaret Lilly
Resident of Ram Alley charged with harbouring foreigners.Margaret Lilly is mentioned in the following documents:
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Simon Dominico
French foreigner who lodged in the residence of Margaret Lilly in Ram Alley.Simon Dominico is mentioned in the following documents:
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Throat
Character in Lording Barry’s Ram Alley.Throat is mentioned in the following documents:
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Richard Head is mentioned in the following documents:
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Whipping Tom
Nickname given to an unidentified sexual predator who frequented the alleys around Fleet Street in 1681.Whipping Tom is mentioned in the following documents:
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Timothy How
Resident of Ram Alley described in a 1630 wardmote register as annyoing the judges of Serjeants Inn with the stench of his tobacco.Timothy How is mentioned in the following documents:
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Humphrey Fenne
Possible resident of Ram Alley described in a 1630 wardmote register as annyoing the judges of Serjeants Inn with the stench of his tobacco.Humphrey Fenne is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Barker
Shopkeeper in Ram Alley charged with selling tabacco and alcohol throughout night without a lisence. Not to be confused with John Barker, the ballad writer.John Barker is mentioned in the following documents:
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Timothy Louse
Shopkeeper in Ram Alley charged with selling tabacco and alcohol throughout night without a lisence.Timothy Louse is mentioned in the following documents:
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Canby is mentioned in the following documents:
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Tom Strowd is mentioned in the following documents:
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Swash is mentioned in the following documents:
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Captain Pod
Well-known exhibitor of puppet shows in early modern London. Alluded to in John Day and Henry Chettle’s The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green.Captain Pod is mentioned in the following documents:
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Mrs. Rump
Resident of Ram Alley. Alluded to in John Day and Henry Chettle’s The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green.Mrs. Rump is mentioned in the following documents:
Locations
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Fleet Street
Fleet Street runs east-west from Temple Bar to Fleet Hill (Ludgate Hill), and is named for the Fleet River. The road has existed since at least the 12th century (Sugden 195) and known since the 14th century as Fleet Street (Beresford 26). It was the location of numerous taverns including the Mitre and the Star and the Ram.Fleet Street is mentioned in the following documents:
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Fetter Lane
Fetter Lane ran north-south between Holborn Street and Fleet Street, in the ward of Farringdon Without, past the east side of the church of Saint Dunstan’s in the West. Stow consistently calls this streetFewtars Lane,
Fewter Lane,
orFewters Lane
(2:21, 2:22), and claimed that it wasso called of Fewters (or idle people) lying there
(2:39).Fetter Lane is mentioned in the following documents:
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Inner Temple
Inner Temple was one of the four Inns of CourtInner Temple is mentioned in the following documents:
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Serjeants’ Inn (Fleet Street) is mentioned in the following documents:
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Mitre Tavern is mentioned in the following documents:
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The Star and the Ram is mentioned in the following documents:
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Hare House is mentioned in the following documents:
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Whitefriars
This page points to the district known as Whitefriars. For the theatre, see Whitefriars Theatre.Whitefriars is mentioned in the following documents:
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The Maidhead (Ram Alley) is mentioned in the following documents:
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St. Dunstan in the West (Parish) is mentioned in the following documents:
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Whitefriars Theatre
One of the lesser known halls or private playhouses of Renaissance London, the Whitefriars, was home to two different boy playing companies, each of which operated under several different names. Whitefriars produced many famous boy actors, some of whom later went on to greater fame in adult companies. At the Whitefriars playhouse in 1607–1608, the Children of the King’s Revels catered to a homogenous audience with a particular taste for homoerotic puns and situations, which resulted in a small but significant body of plays that are markedly different from those written for the amphitheatres and even for other hall playhouses.Whitefriars Theatre is mentioned in the following documents:
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Fuller Rents is mentioned in the following documents:
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Milford Lane is mentioned in the following documents:
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Middle Temple
Middle Temple was one of the four Inns of CourtMiddle Temple is mentioned in the following documents:
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Pie Corner is mentioned in the following documents:
Organizations
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The King’s Revels Children
The King’s Revels Children (also known as the Children of the King’s Revels) was a playing company of boy actors in early modern London. It appears to have emerged in early 1607, and its history is closely linked to the Blackfriars Boys after 1609. See Gurr 361-62, 365.This organization is mentioned in the following documents:
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Knights Hospitallers
Roman Catholic military order that originated in the Mediterranean region during the eleventh century. Also known as the Order of the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem, Order of the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem. (TL)This organization is mentioned in the following documents:
Variant spellings
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Documents using the spelling
Hare Place
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Documents using the spelling
Ram Alley
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Documents using the spelling
Ram alley
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Documents using the spelling
Ram-alley
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Documents using the spelling
Ram-Alley
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Documents using the spelling
Ram-Alley-Sanctuary
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Documents using the spelling
Ram-ally
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Documents using the spelling
Rame-alley
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Documents using the spelling
Ramme
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Documents using the spelling
Ramme-alley