Name |
Example |
Gloss |
Adam |
MA I.i.239 |
Adam Bell, famous archer |
Amurath |
2H4 V.ii.48 |
16th-c Turkish sultan, Murad III, who killed all his brothers on ascending the throne; as did his successor |
Andrew |
MV I.i.27 |
the Saint Andrew; name of a Spanish galleon captured at Cadiz in 1596 |
Basilisco |
KJ I.i.244 |
knight character in a contemporary play, Solyman and Perseda |
Brownist |
TN III.ii.30 |
follower of Robert Browne, founder of a 16th-c religious sect advocating a new form of church government |
Calipolis |
2H4 II.iv.174 |
mother of Muly Mahamet, character in a contemporary play by George Peele, The Battle of Alcazar |
Cambyses |
1H4 II.iv.380 |
6th-c BC king of the Medes and Persians, as represented in a 16th-c play by Thomas Preston, Cambyses |
Dowland |
PP.8.5 |
John Dowland; English composer and musician, 16th-c |
Hiren |
2H4 II.iv.155 |
character [thought to be a seductress] in a lost contemporary play by George Peele, The Turkish Mahomet and Hyrin the Fair Greek |
Iniquity |
1H4 II.iv.441 |
comic character representing vice in morality plays |
Jeronimy, Saint |
TS induction.1.7 |
Jerome; but here a confusion with Hieronimo from Thomas Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy
Jeronimy, Saint in RELIGIOUS PERSONALITIES AND BEINGS |
Mall, Mistress |
TN I.iii.120 |
Mary; several contemporary figures possible, such as Mary Fitton, lady-in-waiting involved in a scandal of 1601 |
Monarcho |
LLL IV.i.100 |
contemporary fantastical character at court |
Peg-a-Ramsey |
TN II.iii.74 |
spying wife in a contemporary ballad |
Quinapalus |
TN I.v.32 |
imaginary name for a learned authority |
Ringwood |
MW II.i.111 |
traditional name for an English hound |
Ruffian |
1H4 II.iv.442 |
character of a fiend in morality plays |
Sackerson |
MW I.i.275 |
famous bear from the bear-baiting ring at Paris Garden, London |
Solyman |
MV II.i.26 |
Suleiman, 16th-c sultan who fought against Persia |
Sophy |
TN II.v.174 |
Shah of Persia, possibly Abbas the Great, 16th-c |
Spenser |
PP.8.7 |
Edmund Spenser; English poet, 16th-c |
Termagant |
Ham III.ii.13 |
noisy and overbearing character in mystery plays |
Vanity |
1H4 II.iv.442 |
character in morality plays |
Vice |
1H4 II.iv.441 |
buffoon character in morality plays |