Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T10:06:28.869Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

B. J. Sokol
Affiliation:
Goldsmiths, University of London
Mary Sokol
Affiliation:
University College London
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adams, J. (1946). ‘Nullius Filius’, University of Toronto Law Journal 6: 361–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adelman, Janet (1989). ‘Bed Tricks: on Marriage as the End of Comedy in All's Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure’, in Shakespeare's Personality. Ed. Norman N. Holland, Sidney Homan, and Bernard J. Paris. 151–74. Berkeley: University of California Press
Alleman, Gellert Spencer (1942). Matrimonial Law and the Materials of Restoration Comedy. Philadelphia: University of Pensylvania
Amussen, Susan Dwyer (1994). ‘Violence and Domestic Violence in Early Modern England’, Journal of Women's History 6,1: 69–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Archer, Rowena E. (1984). ‘Rich Old Ladies: the Problem of Late Medieval Dowagers’, in Property and Politics: Essays in Later Medieval English History. Ed. Tony Pollard. 13–31. Gloucester: Alan Sutton
Ariès, Philippe (1973). Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life. In French, 1960. Reprint of translation by Robert Baldick, first published by Jonathan Cape, London, 1962. Harmondsworth: Penguin
Atkinson, David (1986). ‘Marriage Under Compulsion in English Renaissance Drama’, English Studies 67: 483–504CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aubrey, John (1983). Brief Lives. Ed. Richard Barber. London: Book Club Associates
Aveling, Hugh (1963). ‘The Marriage of Catholic Recusants, 1559–1642’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 14: 68–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Babula, William (1977). ‘The Character and the Conclusion: Bertram and the Ending of All's Well That Ends Well’, South Atlantic Review 42: 94–100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (ed.) (1978). The Reports of Sir John Spellman. Vol. 94. London: Selden Society
Baker, J. H. (1985). ‘Law and Legal Institutions’, in William Shakespeare: His World, His Work, His Influence. Ed. Andrews, John F.. 3 vols. Vol 1. 41–54. New York: Scribner'sGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (1986). ‘Criminal Courts and Procedure, 1550–1800’, in The Legal Profession and the Common Law. 259–301. London: Hambledon
Baker, J. H. (1990a). ‘The English Law of Sanctuary’, Ecclesiastical Law Journal 2: 8–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (1990b). An Introduction to English Legal History. Third edition. London: Butterworths
Baker, J. H. (1993). ‘Famous English Canon Lawyers: Henry Swinburne’, Ecclesiastical Law Journal 3: 5–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (2000). ‘Why the History of English Law Has Not Been Finished’, Cambridge Law Review 59: 62–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bald, R. C. (1986). John Donne: A Life. Corrected edition, originally 1970. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Barnes, Thomas G. (1977). ‘Star Chamber and the Sophistication of the Criminal Law’, Criminal Law Review: 316–26
Barton, Anne (1994). Essays, Mainly Shakespearean. Cambridge University Press
Bashar, Nazife (1983). ‘Rape in England between 1550 and 1700’, in The Sexual Dynamics of History. Ed. London Feminist History Group. 28–42. London: Pluto Press
Bassnett-McGuire, Susan (1984). ‘An Ill Marriage in an Ill Government: Patterns of Unresolved Conflict in All's Well That Ends Well’, Shakespeare-Jahrbuch (Weimar) 120: 97–102Google Scholar
Bate, Jonathan (ed.) (1995). William Shakespeare, Titus Andronicus. Third Arden edition. London: Routledge
Bateson, Mary (ed.) (1906). Borough Customs II. Vol. 21. London: The Selden Society
Bean, J. M. W. (1968). The Decline of English Feudalism. Manchester University Press
Bean, John C. (1974). ‘Passion versus Friendship in the Tudor Matrimonial Handbooks and Some Shakespearean Implications’, Wascana Review 9: 231–40Google Scholar
Bean, John C. (1980). ‘Comic Structure and the Humanizing of Kate in The Taming of the Shrew’, in The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare. Ed. Carolyn R. S. Lenz, Gayle Greene, and Carol Thomas Neely. 65–78. Urbana: University of Illinois Press
Beauregard, David N. (1999). ‘“Inspired merit”: Shakespeare's Theology of Grace in All's Well That Ends Well’, Renascence 51: 219–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, H. E. (1953). An Introduction to the History and Records of the Court of Wards and Liveries. Cambridge University Press
Bellamy, John (1970). The Law of Treason in England in the Later Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press
Bellamy, John (1973). Crime and Public Order in England in the Later Middle Ages. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul
Bellamy, John (1979). The Tudor Law of Treason. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul
Belsey, Catherine (1999). Shakespeare and the Loss of Eden: The Construction of Family Values in Early Modern Culture. Houndsmill: Macmillan
Bennett, Robert B. (1993). ‘The Law Enforces Itself: Richard Hooker and the Law against Fornication in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare and Renaissance Association of West Virginia: Selected Papers 16: 43–51Google Scholar
Berger, Harry Jr (1981). ‘Marriage and Mercifixation in The Merchant of Venice: The Casket Scene Revisited’, Shakespeare Quarterly 22: 155–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, Harry Jr (1982). ‘Against the Sink-a-Pace: Sexual and Family Politics in Much Ado about Nothing’, Shakespeare Quarterly 33: 302–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernthal, Craig A. (1991). ‘Treason in the Family: the Trial of Thumpe v Horner’, Shakespeare Quarterly 42: 44–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernthal, Craig A. (1992). ‘Staging Justice: James I and the Trial Scenes of Measure for Measure’, SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 32: 247–69Google Scholar
Berry, Edward (1984). Shakespeare's Comic Rites. Cambridge University Press
Biancalana, Joseph (1988). ‘Widows at Common Law: the Development of Common Law Dower’, Irish Jurist 23: 255–329Google Scholar
Black, James (1991). ‘The Latter End of Prospero's Commonwealth’, Shakespeare Survey 43: 29–41Google Scholar
Blackstone, William (1766). Commentaries on the Laws of England. 4 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Blayney, Glenn H. (1956). ‘Wardship in English Drama (1600–1650)’, Studies in Philology 53: 470–84Google Scholar
Bonfield, Lloyd (1983). Marriage Settlements, 1601–1740: The Adoption of the Strict Settlement. Cambridge University Press
Bonfield, Lloyd (1986). ‘Normative Rules and Property Transmission: Reflections on the Link between Marriage and Inheritance in Early Modern England’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 155–76. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Boone, Joseph Allen (1987). Tradition Counter Tradition: Love and the Form of Fiction. University of Chicago Press
Boose, Lynda E. (1982). ‘The Father and the Bride in Shakespeare’, PMLA 97: 325–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boose, Lynda E. (1988). ‘The Comic Contract and Portia's Golden Ring’, Shakespeare Studies 20: 241–54Google Scholar
Booty, John E. (ed.) (1976). The Book of Common Prayer 1559. Washington: Folger Library
Bowen, Catherine Drinker (1957). The Lion and the Throne: The Life and Times of Sir Edward Coke 1552–1634. London: Hamish Hamilton
Bowers, Roger (2000). ‘The Chapel Royal, the First Edwardian Prayer Book, and Elizabeth's Settlement of Religion, 1559’, The Historical Journal 43: 317–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bracton (1968). On the Laws and Customs of England. Trans. Samuel E. Thorne. Ed. George E. Woodbine. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
Bradshaw, Graham (1992). ‘Obeying the Time in Othello: a Myth and the Mess It Made’, English Studies 73: 211–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bray, Gerald (ed.) (1994). Documents of the English Reformation. Cambridge: James Clark
Bray, Gerald (2000). Tudor Church Reform: The Henrician Canons of 1535 and the Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum. London: Church of England Record Society
Brennan, Michael G. (1990). ‘“Now gods, stand up for bastards” (King Lear, i.ii.22) and the Epistle to the Hebrews 12:5–8’, Notes and Queries 37: 186–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brinkworth, E. R. C. (1972). Shakespeare and the Bawdy Court of Stratford. London: Phillmore
Britton (1865). Ed. Francis Morgan Nichols. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Brodsky, Vivien (1986). ‘Widows in Late Elizabethan London: Remarriage, Economic Opportunity and Family Orientation’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 122–54. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Brooke, Christopher N. L. (1981). ‘Marriage and Society in the Central Middle Ages’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 17–34. London: Europa
Brown, Roger Lee (1981). ‘The Rise and Fall of the Fleet Marriages’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 117–36. London: Europa
Brundage, James A. (1987). Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe. University of Chicago Press
Brundage, James A. (1992). ‘Widows as Disadvantaged Persons in Medieval Canon Law’, in Upon my Husband's Death: Widows in the Literature and Histories of Medieval Europe. Ed. Louise Mirrer. 193–206. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Brundage, James A. (1993). Sex, Law and Marriage in the Middle Ages. Aldershot: Variorum
Bullard, J. V. (ed.) (1934). Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical 1604: Latin and English. London: Faith Press
Cacicedo, Alberto (1995). ‘“She is fast my wife”: Sex, Marriage, and Ducal Authority in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Studies 23: 187–209Google Scholar
Cairncross, Andrew S. (ed.) (1992). William Shakespeare, King Henry VI, Part 1. London: Routledge
Camden, Caroll (1952). The Elizabethan Woman: A Panorama of English Womanhood, 1540 to 1640. London: Cleaver-Hume Press
Cameron, A. (1978). ‘Complaint and Reform in Henry VII's Reign: the Origins of the Statute of 3 Henry VII, c.2?’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research: 83–9CrossRef
Campbell, John Lord (1859). Shakespeare's Legal Acquirements Considered. London: John Murray
Campbell, Julie D. (1997). ‘Love's Victory and La Mirtilla in the Canon of Renaissance Tragicomedy: an Examination of the Influence of Salon and Social Debates’, Women's Writing 4: 103–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, Ruth (1985). ‘Sentence of Death by Burning for Women’, The Journal of Legal History 5: 44–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, Cindy (1996). ‘Trials of Marriage in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Yearbook 6: 355–81Google Scholar
Carlson, Eric Josef (1990). ‘Marriage Reform and the Elizabethan High Commission’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 21: 437–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, Eric Josef (1992). ‘Clerical Marriage and the English Reformation’, The Journal of British Studies 31: 1–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, Eric Josef (1994). Marriage and the English Reformation. Oxford: Blackwell
Carter, John Marshall (1985). Rape in Medieval England. Lanham, MD: University Press of America
Catty, Jocelyn (1999). Writing Rape, Writing Women in Early Modern England. Manchester University Press
Churches, Christine (1998). ‘Women and Property in Early Modern England: a Case Study’, Social History 23: 165–250CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cioni, Maria L. (1982). ‘The Elizabethan Chancery and Women’, in Tudor Rule and Revolution: Essays for G. R. Elton. Ed. John W. McKenna and Delloyd J. Guth. 159–82. Cambridge University Press
Cioni, Maria L. (1985). Women and Law in Elizabethan England with Particular Reference to the Court of Chancery. New York: Garland Publishing
Clare, Janet (1999). ‘Art made tongue-tied by authority’: Elizabethan and Jacobean Dramatic Censorship. Manchester University Press
Clark, Elaine (1985). ‘The Custody of Children in English Manor Courts’, Law and History Review 3: 333–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, W. K. L. (1936). Liturgy and Worship. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
Clarkson, Paul S., and Clyde T. Warren (1942). The Law of Property in Shakespeare and the Elizabethan Drama. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press
Cockburn, J. S. (1977). ‘The Nature and Incidence of Crime in England 1559–1625: a Preliminary Survey’, in Crime in England. Ed. J. S. Cockburn. 49–71. London: Methuen
Cohen, Eileen Z. (1986). ‘“Virtue is bold”: the Bed-trick and Characterization in All's Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure’, Philological Quarterly 65: 71–86Google Scholar
Coke, Edward (1628). A Commentarie upon Littleton (The First Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England). London
Coke, Edward (1747). The Fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England. London
Coke, Edward (1797). Second, Third, and Fourth Parts of the Institutes of the Laws of England. 3 vols. London: E. and R. Brooke
Collinson, Patrick (1967). The Elizabethan Puritan Movement. London: Jonathan Cape
Collinson, Patrick (1988). The Birthpangs of Protestant England: Religious and Cultural Change in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Houndsmill: Macmillan
Collinson, Patrick (1994). Elizabethan Essays. London: Hambledon Press
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1977). ‘The Mode of Marriage in Shakespearean England’, Southern Humanities Review 11: 126–32Google Scholar
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1981). ‘Wooing and Wedding: Shakespeare's Dramatic Distortion of the Customs of His Time’, in Shakespeare's Art from a Comparative Perspective. Ed. Wendell M. Aycock. 83–101. Lubbock: Texas Tech Press
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1990). ‘The Transformation of Stage Courtship’, in The Elizabethan Theatre Ⅺ. Papers Given at the Eleventh International Conference on Elizabethan Theatre Held at the University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, in July 1985. Ed. A. L. Magnusson and C. E. McGee. 155–75. Port Credit, Ontario: Meany
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1991). Making a Match: Courtship in Shakespeare and his Society. Princeton University Press
Cornish, W. R., and G. de N. Clark (1989). Law and Society in England, 1750–1950. London: Sweet and Maxwell
Crankshaw, D. J. (1998). ‘Preparations for the Canterbury Provincial Convocation of 1562–63: a Question of Attribution’, in Belief and Practice in Reformation England: A Tribute to Patrick Collinson from his Students. Ed. S. Wabuda and C. Litzenberger. 60–94. Aldershot: Ashgate
Crawford, Patricia, and Sara H. Mendelson (1998). Women in Early Modern England. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Cressy, David (1997). Birth, Marriage and Death: Ritual, Religion and the Life-Cycle in Tudor and Stuart England. Oxford University Press
Croft, Pauline (1983). ‘Wardship in the Parliament of 1604’, Parliamentary History 2: 39–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunningham, Karen (1994). ‘Female Fidelities on Trial’, Renaissance Drama 25: 1–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalton, Michael (1635). The Countrey Justice, Containing the Practice of the Justices of the Peace out of their Sessions, Gathered for the Better Helpe of such Justices of the Peace as have not been much conversant in the Studie of the Lawes of this Realme. London
Daniell, David (1984). ‘The Good Marriage of Katherine and Petruchio’, Shakespeare Survey 37: 23–31Google Scholar
Dash, Irene G. (1981). Wooing, Wedding, and Power: Women in Shakespeare's Plays. New York: Columbia University Press
Davies, J. Conway (1954). ‘Elizabethan Plans and Proposals for Education’, Durham Research Review 2: 1–5Google Scholar
Davies, Kathleen M. (1981). ‘Continuity and Change in Literary Advice on Marriage’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 58–80. London: Europa
Dickens, A. G. (1967). The English Reformation. London: Fontana Collins
Doggett, Maeve E. (1992). Marriage, Wife-Beating and Law in Victorian England. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Dolan, Frances E. (1992a). ‘Home Rebels and House-Traitors: Murderous Wives in Early Modern England’, Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities 4: 1–31Google Scholar
Dolan, Frances E. (1992b). ‘The Subordinate('s) Plot: Petty Treason and the Forms of Domestic Rebellion’, Shakespeare Quarterly 43: 317–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolan, Frances E. (1994). Dangerous Familiars: Representations of Domestic Crime in England 1500–1700. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Donaghue, Charles (1983). ‘The Canon Law on the Formation of Marriage and Social Practice in the Later Middle Ages’, Journal of Family History 8: 144–58CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donne, John (1960). Poems. Ed. Sir Herbert Grierson. Oxford University Press
Doyle, Sheila (1998). ‘An Uncompleted Work by Henry Swinburne on Matrimony’, The Journal of Legal History 19: 162–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Draper, J. W. (1938). ‘Bastardy in Shakespeare's Plays’, Shakespeare Jahrbuch 74: 123–36Google Scholar
Dreher, Diane Elizabeth (1986). Domination and Defiance: Fathers and Daughters in Shakespeare. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky
Dubrow, Heather (1999). Shakespeare and Domestic Loss. Cambridge University Press
Durant, David N. (1999). Bess of Hardwick: Portrait of an Elizabethan Dynast. London: Peter Owen
Dusinberre, Juliet (1975). Shakespeare and the Nature of Women. London: Macmillan
Elliott, Vivien Brodsky (1981). ‘Single Women in the London Marriage Market: Age, Status and Mobility, 1598–1619’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 81–100. London: Europa
Elton, William R. (1966). King Lear and the Gods. San Marino, CA: The Huntington Library
Emmison, F. G. (1973). Elizabethan Life: Morals and the Church Courts. Chelmsford: Essex County Council
Emmison, F. G. (1976). Elizabethan Life: Home, Work and Land. Chelmsford: Essex County Council
Emmison, F. G. (1978). Elizabethan Life: Wills of Essex Gentry and Merchants. Chelmsford: Essex County Council
Empson, William (1952). The Structure of Complex Words. London: Chatto & Windus
Erickson, Amy Louise (1993). Women and Property in Early Modern England. London: Routledge
Ernst, D. R. (1984). ‘The Moribund Appeal of Death’, American Journal of Legal History 28: 164–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farrer, F. E. (1917). ‘The Bastard Eigne’, Law Quarterly Review 33: 135–53Google Scholar
Finch, Andrew J. (1990). ‘Parental Authority and the Problem of Clandestine Marriage in the Later Middle Ages’, Law and History Review 8: 189–204CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Findlay, Alison (1994). Illegitimate Power: Bastardy in English Renaissance Drama. Manchester University Press
Finn, Margot (1996). ‘Women, Consumption and Coverture in England, c. 1760–1860’, The Historical Journal 39: 703–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Firth, C. H., and R. S. Rait (eds.) (1911). Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum 1642–1660. 3 vols. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office
Fisch, Harold (1974). ‘Shakespeare and the Puritan Dynamic’, Shakespeare Survey 27: 81–92Google Scholar
Fitzherbert, Anthony (1652). New Natura Brevium. London
Flandrin, Jean-Louis (1979). Families in Former Times. Trans. Richard Southern. London: Cambridge University Press
Forker, Charles R. (1990). Fancy's Images: Contexts, Settings, and Perspectives in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press
Fortier, Mark (1996). ‘Married with Children: The Winter's Tale and Social History; or, Infanticide in Earlier Seventeenth-Century England’, Modern Language Quarterly 57: 579–603CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foyster, Elizabeth (1996). ‘Male Honour, Social Control and Wife Beating in Late Stuart England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 6: 215–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foyster, Elizabeth (1999a). Manhood in Early Modern England: Honour, Sex and Marriage. Harlow: Longman
Foyster, Elizabeth (1999b). ‘Marrying the Experienced Widow in Early Modern England: the Male Perspective’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lyndan Warner. 108–24. Harlow: Longman
Foyster, Elizabeth (2001). ‘Parenting Was for Life, Not Just for Childhood: the Role of Parents in the Married Lives of their Children in Early Modern England’, History 283: 313–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, Michael D. (1995). ‘ “Service is no heritage” : Bertram and the Ideology of Procreation’, Studies in Philology 92: 80–101Google Scholar
Furnivall, Frederick J. (ed.) (1887). Child-Marriages, Divorces, and Ratifications, &c in the Diocese of Chester, A. D. 1561–6. EETS o.s. 108. London: Kegan, Paul Trench, Trubner
Gillis, John R. (1985). For Better, For Worse: British Marriages 1600 to the Present. Oxford University Press
Glanvill (1993). The Treatise on the Laws and Customs of the Realm of England Commonly Called Glanvill. Ed. G. D. G. Hall. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Gloucester, Edgar C. S. (ed.) (1910). The First and Second Prayer Books of King Edward the Sixth. London: J. M. Dent
Gossett, Suzanne (1991). ‘“I'll look to like”: Arranged Marriages in Shakespeare's Plays’, in Sexuality and Politics in Renaissance Drama. Ed. Carole Levin and Karen Robertson. 57–74. Lampeter: Mellen
Gouge, William (1622). Of Domesticall Duties. London
Gowing, Laura (1994). ‘Language, Power and the Law: Women's Slander Litigation in Early Modern London’, in Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England. Ed. Jenny Kermode and Garthine Walker. 26–47. London: UCL Press
Gowing, Laura (1996). Domestic Dangers: Women, Words, and Sex in Early Modern London. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Grivelet, Michel (1987). ‘“Word of Fear”’, in KM 80: A Birthday Album for Kenneth Muir. 58–9. Liverpool University Press for Private Circulation
Gurr, Andrew (1997). ‘Measure for Measure's Hoods and Masks: the Duke, Isabella, and Liberty’, English Literary Renaissance 27: 89–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagstrum, Jean H. (1992). Esteem Enlivened by Desire. London: University of Chicago Press
Haigh, Christopher (ed.) (1987). The English Reformation Revised. Cambridge University Press
Hamilton, Donna B. (1992). Shakespeare and the Politics of Protestant England. Louisville: University of Kentucky Press
Hammond, Paul (1986). ‘The Argument of Measure for Measure’, English Literary Renaissance 16: 496–519CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harding, Davis P. (1950). ‘Elizabethan Betrothal and Measure for Measure’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 49: 139–58Google Scholar
Hawkins, Harriett (1974). ‘What Kind of Pre-Contract Had Angelo? A Note on Some Non-problems in Elizabethan Drama’, College English 36: 173–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayne, Victoria (1993). ‘Performing Social Practice: the Example of Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Quarterly 44: 1–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Head, David (1982). ‘ “Beyng Ledde and Seduced by the Devyll” : the Attainder of Lord Thomas Howard and the Tudor Law of Treason’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 13: 3–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
H[eale], W[illiam] (1609). An Apologie for Women or An Opposition to Mr. Dr. G. his assertion. Who held in the Act of Oxforde. Anno. 1608. That it was lawfull for husbands to beate their wives. Oxford
Heffernan, Carol F. (1985). ‘The Taming of the Shrew: the Bourgeoisie in Love’, Essays in Literature 12: 3–14Google Scholar
Helmholz, R. H. (1969). ‘Bastardy Litigation in Medieval England’, American Journal of Legal History 12: 360–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmholz, R. H. (1974). Marriage Litigation in Medieval England. Cambridge University Press
Helmholz, R. H. (1977). ‘Support Orders, Church Courts, and the Role of Filius Nullius: a Reassessment of the Common Law’, University of Virginia Law Review 63: 431–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmholz, R. H. (1987a). Canon Law and the Law of England. London: Hambledon
Helmholz, R. H. (1987b). ‘Canonists and Standards of Impartiality for Papal Judges Delegate’, in Canon Law and the Law of England. 21–40. London: Hambledon
Helmholz, R. H. (1987c). ‘Legitim in English Legal History’, in Canon Law and the Law of England. 247–62. London: Hambledon
Helmholz, R. H. (1990). Roman Canon Law in Reformation England. Cambridge University Press
Helmholz, R. H. (1993). ‘Married Women's Wills in Later Medieval England’, in Wife and Widow in Medieval England. Ed. Sue Sheridan Walker. 165–82. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Hennings, Thomas P. (1986). ‘The Anglican Doctrine of the Affectionate Marriage in The Comedy of Errors’, Modern Language Quarterly 47: 91–107CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, W. Speed (1975). ‘Marriage as Destiny: an Essay on All's Well That Ends Well’, English Literary Renaissance 5: 344–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoby, Lady Margaret (1998). The Private Life of an Elizabethan Lady: The Diary of Lady Margaret Hoby 1599–1605. Ed. Joanna Moody. Stroud: Sutton Publishing
Holdsworth, Sir William (1903–). A History of English Law. 14 vols. London: Methuen
An Homilie of the State of Matrimonie (1968), in Certaine Sermons or Homilies. Ed. Mary Ellen Rickey and Thomas B. Stroup. Fac. 1623 edn. 239–48. Gainsville: Scholars' Facsimiles and Reprints
Hopkins, Lisa (1998). The Shakespearean Marriage: Merry Wives and Heavy Husbands. Basingstoke: Macmillan
Horwich, Richard (1992). ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor and the Conventions of Companionate Marriage’, Shakespeare Yearbook 3: 31–43Google Scholar
Hotine, Margaret (1990). ‘Measure for Measure: Further Contemporary Notes’, Notes and Queries 37: 186–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hotson, Leslie (1937). I, William Shakespeare. London: Jonathan Cape
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1979). Church Courts and the People during the English Reformation. Oxford University Press
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1984). The English Family 1450–1700. Harlow, Essex: Longman
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1985). ‘The Making of Marriage in Mid-Tudor England: Evidence from the Records of Matrimonial Contract Litigation’, Journal of Family History 10: 339–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1998). Death, Religion and the Family in England 1480–1750. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Hunt, Maurice (1997). ‘Slavery, English Servitude and The Comedy of Errors’, English Literary Renaissance 27: 29–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, G. K. (ed.) (1959). Shakespeare, All's Well that Ends Well. London: Methuen
Hurstfield, Joel (1958). The Queen's Wards: Wardship and Marriage under Elizabeth I. London: Longmans Green
Ingram, Martin (1981). ‘Spousals Litigation in the English Ecclesiastical Courts, c.1350–c.1640’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 35–57. London: Europa
Ingram, Martin (1985). ‘The Reform of Popular Culture?: Sex and Marriage in Early Modern England’, in Popular Culture in Seventeenth-Century England. Ed. Barry Reay. 129–65. Beckenham: Croom Helm
Ingram, Martin (1987). Church Courts, Sex and Marriage in England, 1570–1640. Cambridge University Press
Ingram, Martin (1996). ‘Reformation of Manners in Early Modern England’, in The Experience of Authority in Early Modern England. Ed. P. Griffiths, A. Fox, and S. Hindle. 47–88. Basingstoke: Macmillan
Ives, E. W. (1978). ‘“Agaynst taking awaye of Women”: the Inception and Operation of the Abduction Act of 1487’, in Wealth and Power in Tudor England. Ed. E. W. Ives, R. J. Knecht, and J. J. Scarisbrick. 21–44. London: Athlone Press
Jardine, Lisa (1983). Still Harping on Daughters: Women and Drama in the Age of Shakespeare. Hemel Hempstead: Harvester
Jardine, Lisa (1991). ‘“No offence i’ th' world”: Hamlet and Unlawful Marriage', in Uses of History: Marxism, Postmodernism, and the Renaissance. Ed. Francis Barker, Peter Hulme, and Margaret Iversen. 123–39. Manchester University Press
Jeaffreson, John Cordy (1872). Brides and Bridals. 2 vols. London
Johnson, James T. (1971). ‘The Covenant Idea and the Puritan View of Marriage’, The Journal of the History of Ideas 32: 117CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, Emrys (1971). Scenic Form in Shakespeare. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Jones, W. J. (1967). The Elizabethan Court of Chancery. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Jonson, Ben (1925–52). Works. Ed. C. H. Herford, P. and E. Simpson. 11 vols. Oxford University Press
Jordan, Constance (1994). ‘Contract and Conscience in Cymbeline’, Renaissance Drama 25: 33–58CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kahn, Coppélia (1975). ‘The Taming of the Shrew: Shakespeare's Mirror of Marriage’, Modern Language Studies 5: 88–102CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keeton, George W. (1930). Shakespeare and his Legal Problems. London: A. & C. Black
Kegl, Rosmary (1994). The Rhetoric of Concealment. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Kent, Joan (1973). ‘Attitudes of Members of the House of Commons to Regulation of Personal Conduct’, University of London Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 46: 41–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerrigan, William (1999). Shakespeare's Promises. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
Kirsch, Arthur (1981). Shakespeare and the Experience of Love. Cambridge University Press
Kliman, Bernice W. (1982). ‘Isabella in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Studies 15: 137–48Google Scholar
Knafla, Louis A. (1983). ‘ “Sin of all Sorts Swarmeth” : Criminal Litigation in an English County in the Early Seventeenth Century’, in Law, Litigants and the Legal Profession. Ed. E. W. Ives and A. H. Manchester. 50–67. London: Royal Historical Society
Kreps, Barbara (1999). ‘When All Is True: Law, History, and Problems of Knowledge in Henry VIII’, Shakespeare Survey 52: 166–82Google Scholar
Kreps, Barbara (2002). ‘The Paradox of Women: the Legal Position of Early Modern Wives and Thomas Dekker's The Honest Whore’, ELH 69: 83–102CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kusunoki, Akiko (1995). ‘“Oh most pernicious woman”: Gertrude in the Light of Ideas on Remarriage in Early Seventeenth-Century England’, in Hamlet and Japan. Ed. Yoshiko Ueno. 169–84. New York: AMS Press
Lambard, William (1592). Eirenarcha: or the Offices of the Justices of the Peace revised, corrected and enlarged. London
Laslett, Peter (1965). The World We Have Lost. London: Methuen
Laslett, Peter (1977). Family Life and Illicit Love in Earlier Generations: Essays in Historical Sociology. Cambridge University Press
Laslett, Peter (1983). The World We Have Lost: Further Explored. Revised, first edition 1965. London: Methuen
Latham, Agnes (ed.) (1975). Shakespeare, As You Like It. Second Arden edition. London: Methuen
Laurence, Anne (1994). Women in England 1500–1760. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
The Lawes Resolutions of Womens Rights: or, the Lawes Provision for Women (1632). London
Lerner, Lawrence (1979). Love and Marriage: Literature in its Social Context. London: Edward Arnold
Levin, Richard (1997). ‘The Opening of All's Well that Ends Well’, Connotations: A Journal for Critical Debate 7: 18–32Google Scholar
Levine, David, and Keith Wrightson (1980). ‘The Social Context of Illegitimacy in Early Modern England’, in Bastardy and its Comparative History. Ed. Peter Laslett, Karla Oosterveen, and Richard M. Smith. 158–75. London: Edward Arnold
Levine, Nina (1994). ‘Lawful Symmetry: the Politics of Treason in 2 Henry VI’, Renaissance Drama 25: 197–218CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lieblein, Leanore (1983). ‘The Context of Murder in English Domestic Plays, 1590–1610’, SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 23: 181–96Google Scholar
Lindley, David (1993). The Trials of Frances Howard. London: Routledge
Liston, William T. (1991). ‘Paradoxical Chastity in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, University of Dayton Review 21: 153–60Google Scholar
Loengard, Janet Senderowitz (1985). ‘ “Of the Gift Of her Husband” : English Dower and its Consequences in the Year 1200’, in Women of the Medieval World. Ed. Julius Kirshner and Suzanne F. Wemple. 215–55. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Loengard, Janet Senderowitz (1993). ‘Rationabilis Dos: Magna Carta and the Widow's “Fair Share” in the Earlier Thirteenth Century’, in Wife and Widow in Medieval England. Ed. Sue Sheridan Walker. 59–80. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Lowenthal, David (1996). ‘The Portrait of Athens in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, in Shakespeare's Political Pageant: Essays in Literature and Politics. Ed. Joseph Alulis and Vickie Sullivan. 77–88. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield
MacCulloch, Diarmaid (1996). Thomas Cranmer: A Life. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press
Macfarlane, Alan (1970). The Family Life of Ralph Josselin: A Seventeenth-Century Clergyman. Cambridge University Press
Macfarlane, Alan (1979). ‘Review of The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500–1800 by Lawrence Stone’, History and Theory 18: 103–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macfarlane, Alan (1986). Marriage and Love in England: Modes of Reproduction 1300–1840. Oxford: Blackwell
Maguire, Laurie E. (1995). ‘Cultural Control in The Taming of the Shrew’, Renaissance Drama 26: 83–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maine, Henry Sumner (1930). Ancient Law: Its Connection with the Early History of Society and its Relation to Modern Ideas. London: John Murray
Manning, Roger B. (1993). Poachers and Hunters: A Cultural and Social History of Unlawful Hunting in England 1485–1640. Oxford University Press
Marcus, Leah S. (1988). Puzzling Shakespeare: Local Reading and its Discontents. London: University of California Press
Marienstras, Richard (1981). New Perspectives on the Shakespearean World. Cambridge University Press
Martin, Randall (1991). ‘Kates for the Table and Kates of the Mind: a Social Metaphor in The Taming of the Shrew’, English Studies in Canada 17: 1–20Google Scholar
Matchinske, Megan (1998). Writing, Gender, and State in Early Modern England. Cambridge University Press
McCabe, Richard A. (1993). Incest, Drama and Nature's Law 1500–1700. Cambridge University Press
McFeely, Maureen Connolly (1995). ‘ “This day my sister should the cloister enter” : the Convent as Refuge in Measure for Measure’, in Subjects on the World Stage: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Ed. David G. Allen and Robert A. White. 200–16. Newark: University of Delaware Press
McGlynn, Mary (1999). ‘Buyer Beware: the Business of Marriage Contracts in Shakespeare's Much Ado about Nothing’, in Proceedings of the Seventh Northern Plains Conference on Early British Literature. Ed. Jay Ruud. 90–100. Aberdeen, SD: Northern State University Press
McGuire, Philip C. (1985). ‘Silence and Genre: the Example of Measure for Measure’, Iowa State Journal of Research 59: 241–51Google Scholar
McGuire, Philip C. (1989). ‘Egeus and the Implications of Silence’, in Shakespeare and the Sense of Performance: Essays in the Tradition of Performance Criticism in Honor of Bernard Beckerman. Ed. Ruth Thompson and Marvin Thompson. 103–15. Newark: University of Delaware Press
McIlwain, Charles H. (ed.) (1918). The Political Works of James I. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
McLuskie, Kathleen (1989). Renaissance Dramatists. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf
Mendelson, Sara H. (2002). ‘Women and Work’, in Early Modern Women's Writing. Ed. Anita Pacheco. 58–76. Oxford: Blackwell
Metzger, Michael M. (1991). ‘Of Princes and Poets: Lohenstein's Verse Epistles on the Divorce of the Elector Palatine Carl Ludwig’, in Literary Culture in the Holy Roman Empire, 1550–1720. Ed. James A. Parente Jr, Richard Erich Schade, and George C. Schoolfield. 159–75. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press
Middleton, Thomas (1995). A Mad World My Masters, and Other Plays. Ed. Michael Taylor. Oxford University Press
Mikesell, Margaret Lael (1989). ‘“Love wrought these miracles”: Marriage and Genre in The Taming of the Shrew’, Renaissance Drama 20: 141–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milsom, S. F. C. (1976). The Legal Framework of English Feudalism. Cambridge University Press
Montaigne, Michel, Lord of (1942). Essays. Trans. John Florio. 3 vols. London: J. M. Dent & Sons
Mukherji, Subha (1996). ‘“Lawful deed”: Consummation, Custom and Law in All's Well that Ends Well’, Shakespeare Survey 49: 181–200Google Scholar
Munden, R. C. (1978). ‘James I and “the growth of mutual distrust”: King, Commons, and Reform, 1603–4’, in Faction and Parliament: Essays on Early Stuart History. Ed. Kevin Sharpe. 43–72. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Murphy, Patrick M. (1997). ‘Wriothesley's Resistance: Wardship Practices and Ovidian Narratives in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis’, in ‘Venus and Adonis’: Critical Essays. Ed. Philip C. Kolin. 323–40. New York: Garland
Nagarajan, S. (1963). ‘Measure for Measure and Elizabethan Betrothals’, Shakespeare Quarterly 14: 115–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nass, Barry (1996). ‘The Law and Politics of Treason in Shakespeare's Lucrece’, in Shakespeare Yearbook 7. Ed. Holger Klein, Peter Davidhazi, and B. J. Sokol. 291–311. Lewistown, NY: Edwin Mellen Press
Nathan, Norman (1988). ‘Othello's Marriage Is Consummated’, Cahiers Elisabethains: Etudes sur la Pre-Renaissance et la Renaissance Anglaises 34: 79–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neale, J. E. (1976). The Elizabethan House of Commons. London: Fontana
Neely, Carol Thomas (1985). Broken Nuptials in Shakespeare's Plays. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press
Neill, Michael (1993). ‘“In Everything Illegitimate”: Imagining the Bastard in Renaissance Drama’, Yearbook of English Studies 23: 270–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, T. G. A. (1998). ‘Doing Things with Words: Another Look at Marriage Rites and Spousals in Renaissance Drama and Fiction’, Studies in Philology 95: 351–73Google Scholar
Nelson, T. G. A., and Haines, Charles (1983). ‘Othello's Unconsummated Marriage’, Essays in Criticism 33: 1–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nevo, Ruth (1980). Comic Transformations in Shakespeare. London: Methuen
Nicholls, Mark (1992). ‘“As Happy a Fortune as I Desire”: the Pursuit of Financial Security by the Younger Brothers of Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland’, Historical Review 65: 296–314CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norsworthy, Laura (1935). The Lady of Bleeding Heart Yard: Lady Elizabeth Hatton 1578–1646. London: John Murray
Notestein, Wallace (1971). The House of Commons 1604–1610. London: Yale University Press
Nuttall, A. D. (1975). ‘Measure for Measure: the Bed-Trick’, Shakespeare Survey 28: 51–6Google Scholar
O'Hara, Diana (2000). Courtship and Constraint: Rethinking the Making of Marriage in Tudor England. Manchester University Press
Osborne, Bertram (1960). Justices of the Peace 1361–1848. Shaftesbury, Dorset: Sedgehill Press
Outhwaite, R. B. (1995). Clandestine Marriage in England, 1500–1850. London: Hambledon
Panek, Jennifer (2000). ‘“My Naked Weapon”: Male Anxiety and the Violent Courtship of the Jacobean Stage Widow’, Comparative Drama 34: 321–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearson, D'Orsay W. (1983). ‘Renaissance Adolescent Marriage: Another Look at Hymen’, Cithara 1: 17–27Google Scholar
Pearson, D'Orsay W. (1987). ‘Male Sovereignty, Harmony and Irony in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, The Upstart Crow 7: 24–35Google Scholar
Pedersen, Frederik (2000). Marriage Disputes in Medieval England. London: Hambledon and London
Pelling, Margaret (1999). ‘Finding Widowers: Men Without Women in English Towns Before 1700’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lydan Warner. 37–54. Harlow: Longman
Perret, Marion (1983). ‘Petruchio: the Model Wife’, SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 23: 223–35Google Scholar
Pettet, E. C. (1945). ‘The Merchant of Venice and the Problem of Usury’, Essays and Studies 31: 19–33Google Scholar
Phillips, O. Hood (1967). ‘The Law Relating to Shakespeare 1564–1964’, Law Quarterly Review 80: 172–202Google Scholar
Philips, O. Hood (1972). Shakespeare and the Lawyers. London: Methuen
Phillips, Roderick (1988). Putting Asunder: A History of Divorce in Western Society. Cambridge University Press
Plucknett, T. F. T. (1956). A Concise History of the Common Law. Fifth edition. London: Butterworth
Pollock, Sir Frederick, and F. W. Maitland (1898). The History of English Law Before the Reign of Edward I. Second edition, reissued 1968. 2 vols. Cambridge University Press
Poole, Kristen (1995). ‘Saints Alive! Falstaff, Martin Marprelate, and the Staging of Puritanism’, Shakespeare Quarterly 46: 47–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poos, L. R. (1995). ‘The Heavy-Handed Marriage Counsellor: Regulating Marriage in Some Later-Medieval Ecclesiastical-Court Jurisdictions’, American Journal of Legal History 39: 291–309CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, J. B. (1978). ‘Ravishment of Women and the Statutes of Westminster’, in Legal Records and the Historian. Ed. J. H. Baker. 150–64. London: Royal Historical Society
Post, J. B. (1980). ‘Sir Thomas West and the Statute of Rapes, 1382’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 53: 24–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, Chilton Latham (1917). English Domestic Relations 1487–1653. New York: Columbia University Press
Powers, Alan (1988). ‘“Meaner Parties”: Spousal Conventions and Oral Culture in Measure for Measure and All's Well That Ends Well’, The Upstart Crow 8: 28–41Google Scholar
Powers, Alan (1996). ‘Measure for Measure and Law Reform in 1604’, The Upstart Crow 15: 35–47Google Scholar
Prest, Wilfred R. (1991). ‘Law and Women's Rights in Early Modern England’, The Seventeenth Century 6: 169–87Google Scholar
Prichard, R. E. (ed.) (1996). Lady Mary Wroth, Poems, A Modernized Edition. Keele University Press
Priest, Dale G. (1980). ‘Rosalind's Child's Father’, Notes and Queries 27 (225): 166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proctor, F. (1955). A New History of the Book of Common Prayer with a Rationale of its Offices. Revised by Walter Howard Frere. London: Macmillan
Purkiss, Diane (1992). ‘Material Girls: the Seventeenth-Century Woman Debate’, in Women, Texts and Histories 1575–1760. Ed. Clare Brant and Diane Purkiss. 69–101. London: RoutledgeCrossRef
Quaife, G. R. (1979). Wanton Wenches and Wayward Wives: Peasants and Illicit Sex in Early Seventeenth-Century England. London: Croom Helm
Ranald, Margaret Loftus (1963). ‘The Betrothals of All's Well that Ends Well’, Huntington Library Quarterly 26: 179–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranald, Margaret Loftus (1979). ‘As Marriage Binds and Blood Breaks: English Marriage and Shakespeare’, Shakespeare Quarterly 30: 68–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranald, Margaret Loftus (1987). Shakespeare and His Social Context: Essays in Osmotic Knowledge and Literary Interpretation. New York: AMS Press
Read, Conyers (1962). William Lambarde and Local Government. Ithaca, NY: Folger Shakespeare Library and Cornell University Press
Reilley, Terry (2001). ‘King Lear: the Kentish Forest and the Problem of Thirds’, Oklahoma City Law Review 26: 379–401Google Scholar
Reynolds, Simon (1996). ‘The Lawful Name of Marrying: Contracts and Stratagems in The Merry Wives of Windsor’, in Shakespeare Yearbook 7. Ed. Holger Klein, Peter Davidhazi, and B. J. Sokol. 313–31. Lewistown, NY: Edwin Mellen Press
Roberts, Josephine A. (ed.) (1983). The Poems of Lady Mary Wroth. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press
Roscelli, William John (1962). ‘Isabella, Sin and Civil Law’, University of Kansas City Review 28: 215–27Google Scholar
Rose, Mark (1989). ‘Conjuring Caesar: Ceremony, History, and Authority in 1599’, English Literary Renaissance 19: 291–304CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rose, Mary Beth (1988). The Expense of Spirit: Love and Sexuality in English Drama. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Russell, M. J. (1980). ‘2 Trial by Battle and the Appeals of Felony’, The Journal of Legal History 1: 135–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scarisbrick, J. J. (1974). Henry VIII. Harmondsworth: Penguin
Schanzer, Ernest (1960). ‘Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Survey 13: 81–9Google Scholar
Schoenbaum, S. (1985). ‘William Bott, the Widow's Portion, and Shakespearean Biography’, in Shakespeare and Others. Ed. S. Schoenbaum. 47–53. London: Scolar Press
Schoenbaum, S. (1986). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Reprint of Oxford University Press edition, 1977. New York: New American Library
Schofield, Roger (1986). ‘Did the Mothers Really Die? Three Centuries of Maternal Mortality in “The World we have Lost”’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 231–60. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Scott, Margaret (1982). ‘“Our City's Institutions”: Some Further Reflections on the Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure’, ELH 49: 790–804CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scouten, Arthur (1975). ‘An Historical Approach to Measure for Measure’, Philological Quarterly 54: 68–84Google Scholar
Selden Society (1987). A Centenary Guide to the Publications of the Selden Society. London: The Selden Society
Shaheen, Naseeb (1987). Biblical References in Shakespeare's Tragedies. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shaheen, Naseeb (1989). Biblical References in Shakespeare's History Plays. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shaheen, Naseeb (1993). Biblical References in Shakespeare's Comedies. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shaheen, Naseeb (1997). ‘A Note on Troilus and Cressida, ii.iii.1–37’, Notes and Queries 44: 503–5Google Scholar
Shaheen, Naseeb (1999). Biblical References in Shakespeare's Plays. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shakespeare, William (1968). The First Folio. Facsimile of 1623 prepared by Charlton Hinman. New York: W. W. Norton
Shakespeare, William (1989). The Complete Works. Ed. Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor. Electronic edition. Oxford University Press
Shakespeare, William (2001). King Lear (Third Arden Edition). Ed. R. A. Foakes. London: Thomson Learning
Sharpe, J. A. (1980). Defamation and Sexual Slander in Early Modern England: The Church Courts at York. Borthwick Papers No. 58. York: University of York Borthwick Institute of Historical Research
Sheehan, Michael M. (1996). Marriage, Family, and Law in Medieval Europe: Collected Studies. University of Toronto Press
Shorter, Edward (1976). The Making of the Modern Family. London: Collins
Simonds, Peggy Munoz (1989). ‘Sacred and Sexual Motifs in All's Well That Ends Well’, Renaissance Quarterly 42: 33–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simpson, A. W. B. (1986). A History of the Land Law. Second edition. Oxford: Clarendon PressCrossRef
Smith, Richard M. (1986). ‘Marriage Processes in the English Past: Some Continuities’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 43–99. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Sokol, B. J. (1985). ‘A Spenserian Idea in The Taming of the Shrew’, English Studies 66: 310–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J. (1991). ‘Figures of Repetition in Sidney's Astrophil and Stella and in the Scenic Form of Measure for Measure’, Rhetorica 9: 131–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J. (1993). ‘The Tempest, “All torment trouble, wonder and amazement”: a Kleinian reading’, in The Undiscover'd Country. Ed. B. J. Sokol. 179–216. London: Free Association Books
Sokol, B. J. (1994a). Art and Illusion in ‘The Winter's Tale’. Manchester University Press
Sokol, B. J. (1994b). ‘Numerology in the Time Scheme of The Tempest’, Notes and Queries 41: 53–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J. (1995). ‘Constitutive Signifiers or Fetishes in The Merchant of Venice?’, International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. 76: 373–87Google ScholarPubMed
Sokol, B. J. (1998). ‘Prejudice and Law in The Merchant of Venice’, in Shakespeare Survey 51. Ed. Stanley Wells. 159–73. Cambridge University Press
Sokol, B. J., and Sokol, Mary (1996). ‘The Tempest and Legal Justification of Plantation in Virginia’, Shakespeare Yearbook 7: 353–80Google Scholar
Sokol, B. J., and Sokol, Mary (1999a). ‘Legal Terms Implying Extended Meanings in As You Like Itiii.ii.331–2 and Troilus and Cressidaiii.ii.89–91’, Notes and Queries 46: 236–8Google Scholar
Sokol, B. J., and Sokol, Mary (1999b). ‘Shakespeare and the English Equity Jurisdiction: The Merchant of Venice and the Two Texts of King Lear’, Review of English Studies 50: 417–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J., and Mary Sokol (2000). Shakespeare's Legal Language. London: Athlone
Sokol, B. J., and Mary Sokol (2002). ‘Where are We in Legal–Historical Studies of Shakespeare?: The Case of Marriage and Property’, in Shakespearean International Yearbook 2. Ed. John M. Mucciolo and W. R. Elton. 249–71. Burlington: Ashgate
Sommerville, Margaret R. (1995). Sex and Subjection: Attitudes to Women in Early Modern Society. London: Arnold
Spotswood, Jerald W. (1994). ‘Isabella's ‘Speechless Dialect’: Subversive Silence in Measure for Measure’, Explorations in Renaissance Culture 20: 107–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spring, Eileen (1984). ‘The Family, Strict Settlement and Historians’, in Law, Economy and Society, 1750–1914: Essays in the History of English Law. Ed. G. R. Rubin and David Sugarman. 168–91. Abingdon: Professional Books
Spring, Eileen (1993). Law, Land and Family: Aristocratic Inheritance in England 1300–1800. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press
Starkey, David (1985). The Reign of Henry VIII. London: George Philip
The Statutes at Large of England (1811). 20 vols. London
Staves, Susan (1990). Married Women's Separate Property in England, 1660–1833. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
Steadman, John M. (1996). ‘ “Respects of Fortune” : Dowries and Inheritances in Shakespeare, Spenser, and Marvell – an Overview’, in Shakespeare's Universe: Renaissance Ideas and Conventions: Essays in Honour of W. R. Elton. Ed. John M. Mucciolo. 71–94. Aldershot: Scolar Press
Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames (1883). A History of the Criminal Law of England. Vol. 3. London: Macmillan
Stone, Lawrence (1977). The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500–1800. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Stone, Lawrence (1979). The Crisis of the Aristocracy, 1558–1641. Revised, originally 1965. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Stone, Lawrence (1990). Road to Divorce: England 1530–1987. Oxford University Press
Stone, Lawrence (1992). Uncertain Unions: Marriage in England 1660–1753. Oxford University Press
Stone, Lawrence (1993). Broken Lives: Separation and Divorce in England 1660–1857. Oxford University Press
Stretton, Tim (1994). ‘Women, Custom and Equity in the Court of Requests’, in Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England. Ed. Jenny Kermode and Garthine Walker. 170–89. London: UCL Press
Stretton, Tim (1998). Women Waging Law in Elizabethan England. Cambridge University Press
Stretton, Tim (1999). ‘Widows at Law in Tudor and Stuart England’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lydan Warner. 193–208. Harlow: Longman
Stretton, Tim (2002). ‘Women, Property and Law’, in Early Modern Women's Writing. Ed. Anita Pacheco. 40–57. Oxford: Blackwell
Swinburne, Henry (1590). A Briefe Treatise of Testaments and Last Willes. London
Swinburne, Henry (1686). A Treatise of Spousals or Matrimonial Contracts. London
Temkin, Jennifer (1987). Rape and the Legal Process. London: Sweet and Maxwell
Thomas, Keith (1959). ‘The Double Standard’, The Journal of the History of Ideas 20: 195–216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, Keith (1983). Man and the Natural World: Changing Attitudes in England 1500–1800. London: Allen Lane
Thurston, Herbert (1904). ‘The Canon Law of the Divorce’, English Historical Review 19: 632–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tiffany, Grace (1998). ‘Puritanism in Comic History: Exposing Royalty in the Henry Plays’, Shakespeare Studies 26: 256–87Google Scholar
Tilney, Edmunde (1568). A Briefe and Pleasaunt Discourse of the Duties of Marriage. London
Titlestad, P. J. H. (1988). ‘Religion, Politics and Literature: the Elizabethan Background New Modelled’, Shakespeare in Southern Africa 2: 42–50Google Scholar
Todd, Barbara J. (1999). ‘The Virtous Widow in Protestant England’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lydan Warner. 66–83. London: Pearson
Turner, Victor (1967). The Forest of Symbols: Aspects of Ndembu Ritual. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1982). ‘Free Consent and Marriage of Feudal Wards in Medieval England’, Journal of Medieval History 8: 123–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1987). ‘Punishing Convicted Ravishers: Statutory Strictures and Actual Practice in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England’, Journal of Medieval History 13: 237–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1988). ‘Wrongdoing and Compensation: the Pleas of Wardship in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England’, The Journal of Legal History 9: 267–307CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1993). ‘Litigation as Personal Quest: Suing for Dower in the Royal Courts, circa 1272–1350’, in Wife and Widow in Medieval England. Ed. Sue Sheridan Walker. 81–108. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Walton, Izaak (1966). The Lives of Doctor John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, etc. Introduction by George Saintsbury. London: Oxford University Press
Walzer, Michael (1965). The Revolution of the Saints. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Ward, Ian (1995). Law and Literature: Possibilities and Perspectives. Cambridge University Press
Ward, Ian (1996). ‘The Political Context of Shakespeare's Constitutionalism’, in Shakespeare Yearbook 7. Ed. Holger Klein, Peter Davidhazi, and B. J. Sokol. 275–90. Lewistown, NY: Edwin Mellen Press
Ward, Ian (1999). Shakespeare and the Legal Imagination. London: Butterworth
Ward, Jennifer (1995). Women of the English Nobility and Gentry, 1066–1500. Manchester University Press
Webster, John (1927). The Complete Works. Ed. F. L. Lucas. 4 vols. London: Chatto and Windus
Webster, John (1974). The Duchess of Malfi. Ed. John Russell Brown. Manchester University Press
Webster, John (1975). The Devil's Law-Case. Ed. Elizabeth M. Brennan. London: Ernest Benn
Welsh, Alexander (1978). ‘The Loss of Men and Getting of Children: All's Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure’, The Modern Language Review 73: 17–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wentersdorf, Karl P. (1979). ‘The Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure: a Reconsideration’, Shakespeare Survey 32: 129–44Google Scholar
Wentersdorf, Karl P. (1985). ‘The Time Problem in Othello: a Reconsideration’, Shakespeare-Jahrbuch (Bochum): 63–77
Whately, William (1619). A Bride-Bush: or a Direction for Married Persons, Plainely Describing the Duties common to both, and peculiar to each of them. London
Whittick, Christopher (1984). ‘The Role of the Criminal Appeal in the Fifteenth Century’, in Law and Social Change in British History. Ed. J. A. Guy and H. G. Beale. 55–72. London: Royal Historical Society
Wickham, Glynne (1980). ‘The Two Noble Kinsmen or A Midsummer Night's Dream, Part II?’, in The Elizabethan Theatre VII. Papers Given at the Seventh International Conference on Elizabethan Theatre Held at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, in July 1977. Ed. G. R. Hibbard. 167–96. Hamden, CT: Archon Books
Widmayer, Martha (1995). ‘Mistress Overdone's House’, in Subjects on the World Stage: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Ed. David G. Allen and Robert A. White. 181–99. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Wilkins, George (1964). The Miseries of Enforced Marriage. 1607. London: Malone Society Reprints
Williamson, Marilyn L. (1986). The Patriarchy of Shakespeare's Comedies. Detroit: Wayne State University Press
Wrightson, Keith (1980). ‘The Nadir of English Illegitimacy in the Seventeenth Century’, in Bastardy and its Comparative History. Ed. Peter Laslett, Karla Oosterveen, and Richard M. Smith. 176–91. London: Edward Arnold
Wrightson, Keith (1982). English Society 1500–1680. London: Hutchinson
Wrightson, Keith (1986). ‘The Social Order of Early Modern England: Three Approaches’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 179–202. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Young, Bruce W. (1988). ‘Haste, Consent, and Age at Marriage: Some Implications of Social History for Romeo and Juliet’, Iowa State Journal of Research 62: 459–74Google Scholar
Adams, J. (1946). ‘Nullius Filius’, University of Toronto Law Journal 6: 361–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adelman, Janet (1989). ‘Bed Tricks: on Marriage as the End of Comedy in All's Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure’, in Shakespeare's Personality. Ed. Norman N. Holland, Sidney Homan, and Bernard J. Paris. 151–74. Berkeley: University of California Press
Alleman, Gellert Spencer (1942). Matrimonial Law and the Materials of Restoration Comedy. Philadelphia: University of Pensylvania
Amussen, Susan Dwyer (1994). ‘Violence and Domestic Violence in Early Modern England’, Journal of Women's History 6,1: 69–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Archer, Rowena E. (1984). ‘Rich Old Ladies: the Problem of Late Medieval Dowagers’, in Property and Politics: Essays in Later Medieval English History. Ed. Tony Pollard. 13–31. Gloucester: Alan Sutton
Ariès, Philippe (1973). Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life. In French, 1960. Reprint of translation by Robert Baldick, first published by Jonathan Cape, London, 1962. Harmondsworth: Penguin
Atkinson, David (1986). ‘Marriage Under Compulsion in English Renaissance Drama’, English Studies 67: 483–504CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aubrey, John (1983). Brief Lives. Ed. Richard Barber. London: Book Club Associates
Aveling, Hugh (1963). ‘The Marriage of Catholic Recusants, 1559–1642’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 14: 68–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Babula, William (1977). ‘The Character and the Conclusion: Bertram and the Ending of All's Well That Ends Well’, South Atlantic Review 42: 94–100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (ed.) (1978). The Reports of Sir John Spellman. Vol. 94. London: Selden Society
Baker, J. H. (1985). ‘Law and Legal Institutions’, in William Shakespeare: His World, His Work, His Influence. Ed. Andrews, John F.. 3 vols. Vol 1. 41–54. New York: Scribner'sGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (1986). ‘Criminal Courts and Procedure, 1550–1800’, in The Legal Profession and the Common Law. 259–301. London: Hambledon
Baker, J. H. (1990a). ‘The English Law of Sanctuary’, Ecclesiastical Law Journal 2: 8–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (1990b). An Introduction to English Legal History. Third edition. London: Butterworths
Baker, J. H. (1993). ‘Famous English Canon Lawyers: Henry Swinburne’, Ecclesiastical Law Journal 3: 5–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, J. H. (2000). ‘Why the History of English Law Has Not Been Finished’, Cambridge Law Review 59: 62–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bald, R. C. (1986). John Donne: A Life. Corrected edition, originally 1970. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Barnes, Thomas G. (1977). ‘Star Chamber and the Sophistication of the Criminal Law’, Criminal Law Review: 316–26
Barton, Anne (1994). Essays, Mainly Shakespearean. Cambridge University Press
Bashar, Nazife (1983). ‘Rape in England between 1550 and 1700’, in The Sexual Dynamics of History. Ed. London Feminist History Group. 28–42. London: Pluto Press
Bassnett-McGuire, Susan (1984). ‘An Ill Marriage in an Ill Government: Patterns of Unresolved Conflict in All's Well That Ends Well’, Shakespeare-Jahrbuch (Weimar) 120: 97–102Google Scholar
Bate, Jonathan (ed.) (1995). William Shakespeare, Titus Andronicus. Third Arden edition. London: Routledge
Bateson, Mary (ed.) (1906). Borough Customs II. Vol. 21. London: The Selden Society
Bean, J. M. W. (1968). The Decline of English Feudalism. Manchester University Press
Bean, John C. (1974). ‘Passion versus Friendship in the Tudor Matrimonial Handbooks and Some Shakespearean Implications’, Wascana Review 9: 231–40Google Scholar
Bean, John C. (1980). ‘Comic Structure and the Humanizing of Kate in The Taming of the Shrew’, in The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare. Ed. Carolyn R. S. Lenz, Gayle Greene, and Carol Thomas Neely. 65–78. Urbana: University of Illinois Press
Beauregard, David N. (1999). ‘“Inspired merit”: Shakespeare's Theology of Grace in All's Well That Ends Well’, Renascence 51: 219–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, H. E. (1953). An Introduction to the History and Records of the Court of Wards and Liveries. Cambridge University Press
Bellamy, John (1970). The Law of Treason in England in the Later Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press
Bellamy, John (1973). Crime and Public Order in England in the Later Middle Ages. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul
Bellamy, John (1979). The Tudor Law of Treason. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul
Belsey, Catherine (1999). Shakespeare and the Loss of Eden: The Construction of Family Values in Early Modern Culture. Houndsmill: Macmillan
Bennett, Robert B. (1993). ‘The Law Enforces Itself: Richard Hooker and the Law against Fornication in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare and Renaissance Association of West Virginia: Selected Papers 16: 43–51Google Scholar
Berger, Harry Jr (1981). ‘Marriage and Mercifixation in The Merchant of Venice: The Casket Scene Revisited’, Shakespeare Quarterly 22: 155–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, Harry Jr (1982). ‘Against the Sink-a-Pace: Sexual and Family Politics in Much Ado about Nothing’, Shakespeare Quarterly 33: 302–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernthal, Craig A. (1991). ‘Treason in the Family: the Trial of Thumpe v Horner’, Shakespeare Quarterly 42: 44–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernthal, Craig A. (1992). ‘Staging Justice: James I and the Trial Scenes of Measure for Measure’, SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 32: 247–69Google Scholar
Berry, Edward (1984). Shakespeare's Comic Rites. Cambridge University Press
Biancalana, Joseph (1988). ‘Widows at Common Law: the Development of Common Law Dower’, Irish Jurist 23: 255–329Google Scholar
Black, James (1991). ‘The Latter End of Prospero's Commonwealth’, Shakespeare Survey 43: 29–41Google Scholar
Blackstone, William (1766). Commentaries on the Laws of England. 4 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Blayney, Glenn H. (1956). ‘Wardship in English Drama (1600–1650)’, Studies in Philology 53: 470–84Google Scholar
Bonfield, Lloyd (1983). Marriage Settlements, 1601–1740: The Adoption of the Strict Settlement. Cambridge University Press
Bonfield, Lloyd (1986). ‘Normative Rules and Property Transmission: Reflections on the Link between Marriage and Inheritance in Early Modern England’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 155–76. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Boone, Joseph Allen (1987). Tradition Counter Tradition: Love and the Form of Fiction. University of Chicago Press
Boose, Lynda E. (1982). ‘The Father and the Bride in Shakespeare’, PMLA 97: 325–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boose, Lynda E. (1988). ‘The Comic Contract and Portia's Golden Ring’, Shakespeare Studies 20: 241–54Google Scholar
Booty, John E. (ed.) (1976). The Book of Common Prayer 1559. Washington: Folger Library
Bowen, Catherine Drinker (1957). The Lion and the Throne: The Life and Times of Sir Edward Coke 1552–1634. London: Hamish Hamilton
Bowers, Roger (2000). ‘The Chapel Royal, the First Edwardian Prayer Book, and Elizabeth's Settlement of Religion, 1559’, The Historical Journal 43: 317–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bracton (1968). On the Laws and Customs of England. Trans. Samuel E. Thorne. Ed. George E. Woodbine. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
Bradshaw, Graham (1992). ‘Obeying the Time in Othello: a Myth and the Mess It Made’, English Studies 73: 211–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bray, Gerald (ed.) (1994). Documents of the English Reformation. Cambridge: James Clark
Bray, Gerald (2000). Tudor Church Reform: The Henrician Canons of 1535 and the Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum. London: Church of England Record Society
Brennan, Michael G. (1990). ‘“Now gods, stand up for bastards” (King Lear, i.ii.22) and the Epistle to the Hebrews 12:5–8’, Notes and Queries 37: 186–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brinkworth, E. R. C. (1972). Shakespeare and the Bawdy Court of Stratford. London: Phillmore
Britton (1865). Ed. Francis Morgan Nichols. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Brodsky, Vivien (1986). ‘Widows in Late Elizabethan London: Remarriage, Economic Opportunity and Family Orientation’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 122–54. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Brooke, Christopher N. L. (1981). ‘Marriage and Society in the Central Middle Ages’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 17–34. London: Europa
Brown, Roger Lee (1981). ‘The Rise and Fall of the Fleet Marriages’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 117–36. London: Europa
Brundage, James A. (1987). Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe. University of Chicago Press
Brundage, James A. (1992). ‘Widows as Disadvantaged Persons in Medieval Canon Law’, in Upon my Husband's Death: Widows in the Literature and Histories of Medieval Europe. Ed. Louise Mirrer. 193–206. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Brundage, James A. (1993). Sex, Law and Marriage in the Middle Ages. Aldershot: Variorum
Bullard, J. V. (ed.) (1934). Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical 1604: Latin and English. London: Faith Press
Cacicedo, Alberto (1995). ‘“She is fast my wife”: Sex, Marriage, and Ducal Authority in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Studies 23: 187–209Google Scholar
Cairncross, Andrew S. (ed.) (1992). William Shakespeare, King Henry VI, Part 1. London: Routledge
Camden, Caroll (1952). The Elizabethan Woman: A Panorama of English Womanhood, 1540 to 1640. London: Cleaver-Hume Press
Cameron, A. (1978). ‘Complaint and Reform in Henry VII's Reign: the Origins of the Statute of 3 Henry VII, c.2?’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research: 83–9CrossRef
Campbell, John Lord (1859). Shakespeare's Legal Acquirements Considered. London: John Murray
Campbell, Julie D. (1997). ‘Love's Victory and La Mirtilla in the Canon of Renaissance Tragicomedy: an Examination of the Influence of Salon and Social Debates’, Women's Writing 4: 103–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, Ruth (1985). ‘Sentence of Death by Burning for Women’, The Journal of Legal History 5: 44–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, Cindy (1996). ‘Trials of Marriage in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Yearbook 6: 355–81Google Scholar
Carlson, Eric Josef (1990). ‘Marriage Reform and the Elizabethan High Commission’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 21: 437–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, Eric Josef (1992). ‘Clerical Marriage and the English Reformation’, The Journal of British Studies 31: 1–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, Eric Josef (1994). Marriage and the English Reformation. Oxford: Blackwell
Carter, John Marshall (1985). Rape in Medieval England. Lanham, MD: University Press of America
Catty, Jocelyn (1999). Writing Rape, Writing Women in Early Modern England. Manchester University Press
Churches, Christine (1998). ‘Women and Property in Early Modern England: a Case Study’, Social History 23: 165–250CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cioni, Maria L. (1982). ‘The Elizabethan Chancery and Women’, in Tudor Rule and Revolution: Essays for G. R. Elton. Ed. John W. McKenna and Delloyd J. Guth. 159–82. Cambridge University Press
Cioni, Maria L. (1985). Women and Law in Elizabethan England with Particular Reference to the Court of Chancery. New York: Garland Publishing
Clare, Janet (1999). ‘Art made tongue-tied by authority’: Elizabethan and Jacobean Dramatic Censorship. Manchester University Press
Clark, Elaine (1985). ‘The Custody of Children in English Manor Courts’, Law and History Review 3: 333–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, W. K. L. (1936). Liturgy and Worship. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
Clarkson, Paul S., and Clyde T. Warren (1942). The Law of Property in Shakespeare and the Elizabethan Drama. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press
Cockburn, J. S. (1977). ‘The Nature and Incidence of Crime in England 1559–1625: a Preliminary Survey’, in Crime in England. Ed. J. S. Cockburn. 49–71. London: Methuen
Cohen, Eileen Z. (1986). ‘“Virtue is bold”: the Bed-trick and Characterization in All's Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure’, Philological Quarterly 65: 71–86Google Scholar
Coke, Edward (1628). A Commentarie upon Littleton (The First Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England). London
Coke, Edward (1747). The Fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England. London
Coke, Edward (1797). Second, Third, and Fourth Parts of the Institutes of the Laws of England. 3 vols. London: E. and R. Brooke
Collinson, Patrick (1967). The Elizabethan Puritan Movement. London: Jonathan Cape
Collinson, Patrick (1988). The Birthpangs of Protestant England: Religious and Cultural Change in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Houndsmill: Macmillan
Collinson, Patrick (1994). Elizabethan Essays. London: Hambledon Press
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1977). ‘The Mode of Marriage in Shakespearean England’, Southern Humanities Review 11: 126–32Google Scholar
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1981). ‘Wooing and Wedding: Shakespeare's Dramatic Distortion of the Customs of His Time’, in Shakespeare's Art from a Comparative Perspective. Ed. Wendell M. Aycock. 83–101. Lubbock: Texas Tech Press
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1990). ‘The Transformation of Stage Courtship’, in The Elizabethan Theatre Ⅺ. Papers Given at the Eleventh International Conference on Elizabethan Theatre Held at the University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, in July 1985. Ed. A. L. Magnusson and C. E. McGee. 155–75. Port Credit, Ontario: Meany
Cook, Ann Jennalie (1991). Making a Match: Courtship in Shakespeare and his Society. Princeton University Press
Cornish, W. R., and G. de N. Clark (1989). Law and Society in England, 1750–1950. London: Sweet and Maxwell
Crankshaw, D. J. (1998). ‘Preparations for the Canterbury Provincial Convocation of 1562–63: a Question of Attribution’, in Belief and Practice in Reformation England: A Tribute to Patrick Collinson from his Students. Ed. S. Wabuda and C. Litzenberger. 60–94. Aldershot: Ashgate
Crawford, Patricia, and Sara H. Mendelson (1998). Women in Early Modern England. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Cressy, David (1997). Birth, Marriage and Death: Ritual, Religion and the Life-Cycle in Tudor and Stuart England. Oxford University Press
Croft, Pauline (1983). ‘Wardship in the Parliament of 1604’, Parliamentary History 2: 39–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunningham, Karen (1994). ‘Female Fidelities on Trial’, Renaissance Drama 25: 1–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalton, Michael (1635). The Countrey Justice, Containing the Practice of the Justices of the Peace out of their Sessions, Gathered for the Better Helpe of such Justices of the Peace as have not been much conversant in the Studie of the Lawes of this Realme. London
Daniell, David (1984). ‘The Good Marriage of Katherine and Petruchio’, Shakespeare Survey 37: 23–31Google Scholar
Dash, Irene G. (1981). Wooing, Wedding, and Power: Women in Shakespeare's Plays. New York: Columbia University Press
Davies, J. Conway (1954). ‘Elizabethan Plans and Proposals for Education’, Durham Research Review 2: 1–5Google Scholar
Davies, Kathleen M. (1981). ‘Continuity and Change in Literary Advice on Marriage’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 58–80. London: Europa
Dickens, A. G. (1967). The English Reformation. London: Fontana Collins
Doggett, Maeve E. (1992). Marriage, Wife-Beating and Law in Victorian England. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Dolan, Frances E. (1992a). ‘Home Rebels and House-Traitors: Murderous Wives in Early Modern England’, Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities 4: 1–31Google Scholar
Dolan, Frances E. (1992b). ‘The Subordinate('s) Plot: Petty Treason and the Forms of Domestic Rebellion’, Shakespeare Quarterly 43: 317–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolan, Frances E. (1994). Dangerous Familiars: Representations of Domestic Crime in England 1500–1700. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Donaghue, Charles (1983). ‘The Canon Law on the Formation of Marriage and Social Practice in the Later Middle Ages’, Journal of Family History 8: 144–58CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donne, John (1960). Poems. Ed. Sir Herbert Grierson. Oxford University Press
Doyle, Sheila (1998). ‘An Uncompleted Work by Henry Swinburne on Matrimony’, The Journal of Legal History 19: 162–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Draper, J. W. (1938). ‘Bastardy in Shakespeare's Plays’, Shakespeare Jahrbuch 74: 123–36Google Scholar
Dreher, Diane Elizabeth (1986). Domination and Defiance: Fathers and Daughters in Shakespeare. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky
Dubrow, Heather (1999). Shakespeare and Domestic Loss. Cambridge University Press
Durant, David N. (1999). Bess of Hardwick: Portrait of an Elizabethan Dynast. London: Peter Owen
Dusinberre, Juliet (1975). Shakespeare and the Nature of Women. London: Macmillan
Elliott, Vivien Brodsky (1981). ‘Single Women in the London Marriage Market: Age, Status and Mobility, 1598–1619’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 81–100. London: Europa
Elton, William R. (1966). King Lear and the Gods. San Marino, CA: The Huntington Library
Emmison, F. G. (1973). Elizabethan Life: Morals and the Church Courts. Chelmsford: Essex County Council
Emmison, F. G. (1976). Elizabethan Life: Home, Work and Land. Chelmsford: Essex County Council
Emmison, F. G. (1978). Elizabethan Life: Wills of Essex Gentry and Merchants. Chelmsford: Essex County Council
Empson, William (1952). The Structure of Complex Words. London: Chatto & Windus
Erickson, Amy Louise (1993). Women and Property in Early Modern England. London: Routledge
Ernst, D. R. (1984). ‘The Moribund Appeal of Death’, American Journal of Legal History 28: 164–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farrer, F. E. (1917). ‘The Bastard Eigne’, Law Quarterly Review 33: 135–53Google Scholar
Finch, Andrew J. (1990). ‘Parental Authority and the Problem of Clandestine Marriage in the Later Middle Ages’, Law and History Review 8: 189–204CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Findlay, Alison (1994). Illegitimate Power: Bastardy in English Renaissance Drama. Manchester University Press
Finn, Margot (1996). ‘Women, Consumption and Coverture in England, c. 1760–1860’, The Historical Journal 39: 703–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Firth, C. H., and R. S. Rait (eds.) (1911). Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum 1642–1660. 3 vols. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office
Fisch, Harold (1974). ‘Shakespeare and the Puritan Dynamic’, Shakespeare Survey 27: 81–92Google Scholar
Fitzherbert, Anthony (1652). New Natura Brevium. London
Flandrin, Jean-Louis (1979). Families in Former Times. Trans. Richard Southern. London: Cambridge University Press
Forker, Charles R. (1990). Fancy's Images: Contexts, Settings, and Perspectives in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press
Fortier, Mark (1996). ‘Married with Children: The Winter's Tale and Social History; or, Infanticide in Earlier Seventeenth-Century England’, Modern Language Quarterly 57: 579–603CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foyster, Elizabeth (1996). ‘Male Honour, Social Control and Wife Beating in Late Stuart England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 6: 215–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foyster, Elizabeth (1999a). Manhood in Early Modern England: Honour, Sex and Marriage. Harlow: Longman
Foyster, Elizabeth (1999b). ‘Marrying the Experienced Widow in Early Modern England: the Male Perspective’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lyndan Warner. 108–24. Harlow: Longman
Foyster, Elizabeth (2001). ‘Parenting Was for Life, Not Just for Childhood: the Role of Parents in the Married Lives of their Children in Early Modern England’, History 283: 313–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, Michael D. (1995). ‘ “Service is no heritage” : Bertram and the Ideology of Procreation’, Studies in Philology 92: 80–101Google Scholar
Furnivall, Frederick J. (ed.) (1887). Child-Marriages, Divorces, and Ratifications, &c in the Diocese of Chester, A. D. 1561–6. EETS o.s. 108. London: Kegan, Paul Trench, Trubner
Gillis, John R. (1985). For Better, For Worse: British Marriages 1600 to the Present. Oxford University Press
Glanvill (1993). The Treatise on the Laws and Customs of the Realm of England Commonly Called Glanvill. Ed. G. D. G. Hall. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Gloucester, Edgar C. S. (ed.) (1910). The First and Second Prayer Books of King Edward the Sixth. London: J. M. Dent
Gossett, Suzanne (1991). ‘“I'll look to like”: Arranged Marriages in Shakespeare's Plays’, in Sexuality and Politics in Renaissance Drama. Ed. Carole Levin and Karen Robertson. 57–74. Lampeter: Mellen
Gouge, William (1622). Of Domesticall Duties. London
Gowing, Laura (1994). ‘Language, Power and the Law: Women's Slander Litigation in Early Modern London’, in Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England. Ed. Jenny Kermode and Garthine Walker. 26–47. London: UCL Press
Gowing, Laura (1996). Domestic Dangers: Women, Words, and Sex in Early Modern London. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Grivelet, Michel (1987). ‘“Word of Fear”’, in KM 80: A Birthday Album for Kenneth Muir. 58–9. Liverpool University Press for Private Circulation
Gurr, Andrew (1997). ‘Measure for Measure's Hoods and Masks: the Duke, Isabella, and Liberty’, English Literary Renaissance 27: 89–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagstrum, Jean H. (1992). Esteem Enlivened by Desire. London: University of Chicago Press
Haigh, Christopher (ed.) (1987). The English Reformation Revised. Cambridge University Press
Hamilton, Donna B. (1992). Shakespeare and the Politics of Protestant England. Louisville: University of Kentucky Press
Hammond, Paul (1986). ‘The Argument of Measure for Measure’, English Literary Renaissance 16: 496–519CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harding, Davis P. (1950). ‘Elizabethan Betrothal and Measure for Measure’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 49: 139–58Google Scholar
Hawkins, Harriett (1974). ‘What Kind of Pre-Contract Had Angelo? A Note on Some Non-problems in Elizabethan Drama’, College English 36: 173–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayne, Victoria (1993). ‘Performing Social Practice: the Example of Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Quarterly 44: 1–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Head, David (1982). ‘ “Beyng Ledde and Seduced by the Devyll” : the Attainder of Lord Thomas Howard and the Tudor Law of Treason’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 13: 3–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
H[eale], W[illiam] (1609). An Apologie for Women or An Opposition to Mr. Dr. G. his assertion. Who held in the Act of Oxforde. Anno. 1608. That it was lawfull for husbands to beate their wives. Oxford
Heffernan, Carol F. (1985). ‘The Taming of the Shrew: the Bourgeoisie in Love’, Essays in Literature 12: 3–14Google Scholar
Helmholz, R. H. (1969). ‘Bastardy Litigation in Medieval England’, American Journal of Legal History 12: 360–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmholz, R. H. (1974). Marriage Litigation in Medieval England. Cambridge University Press
Helmholz, R. H. (1977). ‘Support Orders, Church Courts, and the Role of Filius Nullius: a Reassessment of the Common Law’, University of Virginia Law Review 63: 431–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmholz, R. H. (1987a). Canon Law and the Law of England. London: Hambledon
Helmholz, R. H. (1987b). ‘Canonists and Standards of Impartiality for Papal Judges Delegate’, in Canon Law and the Law of England. 21–40. London: Hambledon
Helmholz, R. H. (1987c). ‘Legitim in English Legal History’, in Canon Law and the Law of England. 247–62. London: Hambledon
Helmholz, R. H. (1990). Roman Canon Law in Reformation England. Cambridge University Press
Helmholz, R. H. (1993). ‘Married Women's Wills in Later Medieval England’, in Wife and Widow in Medieval England. Ed. Sue Sheridan Walker. 165–82. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Hennings, Thomas P. (1986). ‘The Anglican Doctrine of the Affectionate Marriage in The Comedy of Errors’, Modern Language Quarterly 47: 91–107CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, W. Speed (1975). ‘Marriage as Destiny: an Essay on All's Well That Ends Well’, English Literary Renaissance 5: 344–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoby, Lady Margaret (1998). The Private Life of an Elizabethan Lady: The Diary of Lady Margaret Hoby 1599–1605. Ed. Joanna Moody. Stroud: Sutton Publishing
Holdsworth, Sir William (1903–). A History of English Law. 14 vols. London: Methuen
An Homilie of the State of Matrimonie (1968), in Certaine Sermons or Homilies. Ed. Mary Ellen Rickey and Thomas B. Stroup. Fac. 1623 edn. 239–48. Gainsville: Scholars' Facsimiles and Reprints
Hopkins, Lisa (1998). The Shakespearean Marriage: Merry Wives and Heavy Husbands. Basingstoke: Macmillan
Horwich, Richard (1992). ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor and the Conventions of Companionate Marriage’, Shakespeare Yearbook 3: 31–43Google Scholar
Hotine, Margaret (1990). ‘Measure for Measure: Further Contemporary Notes’, Notes and Queries 37: 186–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hotson, Leslie (1937). I, William Shakespeare. London: Jonathan Cape
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1979). Church Courts and the People during the English Reformation. Oxford University Press
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1984). The English Family 1450–1700. Harlow, Essex: Longman
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1985). ‘The Making of Marriage in Mid-Tudor England: Evidence from the Records of Matrimonial Contract Litigation’, Journal of Family History 10: 339–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlbrooke, Ralph A. (1998). Death, Religion and the Family in England 1480–1750. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Hunt, Maurice (1997). ‘Slavery, English Servitude and The Comedy of Errors’, English Literary Renaissance 27: 29–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, G. K. (ed.) (1959). Shakespeare, All's Well that Ends Well. London: Methuen
Hurstfield, Joel (1958). The Queen's Wards: Wardship and Marriage under Elizabeth I. London: Longmans Green
Ingram, Martin (1981). ‘Spousals Litigation in the English Ecclesiastical Courts, c.1350–c.1640’, in Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of Marriage. Ed. R. B. Outhwaite. 35–57. London: Europa
Ingram, Martin (1985). ‘The Reform of Popular Culture?: Sex and Marriage in Early Modern England’, in Popular Culture in Seventeenth-Century England. Ed. Barry Reay. 129–65. Beckenham: Croom Helm
Ingram, Martin (1987). Church Courts, Sex and Marriage in England, 1570–1640. Cambridge University Press
Ingram, Martin (1996). ‘Reformation of Manners in Early Modern England’, in The Experience of Authority in Early Modern England. Ed. P. Griffiths, A. Fox, and S. Hindle. 47–88. Basingstoke: Macmillan
Ives, E. W. (1978). ‘“Agaynst taking awaye of Women”: the Inception and Operation of the Abduction Act of 1487’, in Wealth and Power in Tudor England. Ed. E. W. Ives, R. J. Knecht, and J. J. Scarisbrick. 21–44. London: Athlone Press
Jardine, Lisa (1983). Still Harping on Daughters: Women and Drama in the Age of Shakespeare. Hemel Hempstead: Harvester
Jardine, Lisa (1991). ‘“No offence i’ th' world”: Hamlet and Unlawful Marriage', in Uses of History: Marxism, Postmodernism, and the Renaissance. Ed. Francis Barker, Peter Hulme, and Margaret Iversen. 123–39. Manchester University Press
Jeaffreson, John Cordy (1872). Brides and Bridals. 2 vols. London
Johnson, James T. (1971). ‘The Covenant Idea and the Puritan View of Marriage’, The Journal of the History of Ideas 32: 117CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, Emrys (1971). Scenic Form in Shakespeare. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Jones, W. J. (1967). The Elizabethan Court of Chancery. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Jonson, Ben (1925–52). Works. Ed. C. H. Herford, P. and E. Simpson. 11 vols. Oxford University Press
Jordan, Constance (1994). ‘Contract and Conscience in Cymbeline’, Renaissance Drama 25: 33–58CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kahn, Coppélia (1975). ‘The Taming of the Shrew: Shakespeare's Mirror of Marriage’, Modern Language Studies 5: 88–102CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keeton, George W. (1930). Shakespeare and his Legal Problems. London: A. & C. Black
Kegl, Rosmary (1994). The Rhetoric of Concealment. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Kent, Joan (1973). ‘Attitudes of Members of the House of Commons to Regulation of Personal Conduct’, University of London Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 46: 41–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerrigan, William (1999). Shakespeare's Promises. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
Kirsch, Arthur (1981). Shakespeare and the Experience of Love. Cambridge University Press
Kliman, Bernice W. (1982). ‘Isabella in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Studies 15: 137–48Google Scholar
Knafla, Louis A. (1983). ‘ “Sin of all Sorts Swarmeth” : Criminal Litigation in an English County in the Early Seventeenth Century’, in Law, Litigants and the Legal Profession. Ed. E. W. Ives and A. H. Manchester. 50–67. London: Royal Historical Society
Kreps, Barbara (1999). ‘When All Is True: Law, History, and Problems of Knowledge in Henry VIII’, Shakespeare Survey 52: 166–82Google Scholar
Kreps, Barbara (2002). ‘The Paradox of Women: the Legal Position of Early Modern Wives and Thomas Dekker's The Honest Whore’, ELH 69: 83–102CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kusunoki, Akiko (1995). ‘“Oh most pernicious woman”: Gertrude in the Light of Ideas on Remarriage in Early Seventeenth-Century England’, in Hamlet and Japan. Ed. Yoshiko Ueno. 169–84. New York: AMS Press
Lambard, William (1592). Eirenarcha: or the Offices of the Justices of the Peace revised, corrected and enlarged. London
Laslett, Peter (1965). The World We Have Lost. London: Methuen
Laslett, Peter (1977). Family Life and Illicit Love in Earlier Generations: Essays in Historical Sociology. Cambridge University Press
Laslett, Peter (1983). The World We Have Lost: Further Explored. Revised, first edition 1965. London: Methuen
Latham, Agnes (ed.) (1975). Shakespeare, As You Like It. Second Arden edition. London: Methuen
Laurence, Anne (1994). Women in England 1500–1760. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
The Lawes Resolutions of Womens Rights: or, the Lawes Provision for Women (1632). London
Lerner, Lawrence (1979). Love and Marriage: Literature in its Social Context. London: Edward Arnold
Levin, Richard (1997). ‘The Opening of All's Well that Ends Well’, Connotations: A Journal for Critical Debate 7: 18–32Google Scholar
Levine, David, and Keith Wrightson (1980). ‘The Social Context of Illegitimacy in Early Modern England’, in Bastardy and its Comparative History. Ed. Peter Laslett, Karla Oosterveen, and Richard M. Smith. 158–75. London: Edward Arnold
Levine, Nina (1994). ‘Lawful Symmetry: the Politics of Treason in 2 Henry VI’, Renaissance Drama 25: 197–218CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lieblein, Leanore (1983). ‘The Context of Murder in English Domestic Plays, 1590–1610’, SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 23: 181–96Google Scholar
Lindley, David (1993). The Trials of Frances Howard. London: Routledge
Liston, William T. (1991). ‘Paradoxical Chastity in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, University of Dayton Review 21: 153–60Google Scholar
Loengard, Janet Senderowitz (1985). ‘ “Of the Gift Of her Husband” : English Dower and its Consequences in the Year 1200’, in Women of the Medieval World. Ed. Julius Kirshner and Suzanne F. Wemple. 215–55. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Loengard, Janet Senderowitz (1993). ‘Rationabilis Dos: Magna Carta and the Widow's “Fair Share” in the Earlier Thirteenth Century’, in Wife and Widow in Medieval England. Ed. Sue Sheridan Walker. 59–80. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Lowenthal, David (1996). ‘The Portrait of Athens in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, in Shakespeare's Political Pageant: Essays in Literature and Politics. Ed. Joseph Alulis and Vickie Sullivan. 77–88. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield
MacCulloch, Diarmaid (1996). Thomas Cranmer: A Life. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press
Macfarlane, Alan (1970). The Family Life of Ralph Josselin: A Seventeenth-Century Clergyman. Cambridge University Press
Macfarlane, Alan (1979). ‘Review of The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500–1800 by Lawrence Stone’, History and Theory 18: 103–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macfarlane, Alan (1986). Marriage and Love in England: Modes of Reproduction 1300–1840. Oxford: Blackwell
Maguire, Laurie E. (1995). ‘Cultural Control in The Taming of the Shrew’, Renaissance Drama 26: 83–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maine, Henry Sumner (1930). Ancient Law: Its Connection with the Early History of Society and its Relation to Modern Ideas. London: John Murray
Manning, Roger B. (1993). Poachers and Hunters: A Cultural and Social History of Unlawful Hunting in England 1485–1640. Oxford University Press
Marcus, Leah S. (1988). Puzzling Shakespeare: Local Reading and its Discontents. London: University of California Press
Marienstras, Richard (1981). New Perspectives on the Shakespearean World. Cambridge University Press
Martin, Randall (1991). ‘Kates for the Table and Kates of the Mind: a Social Metaphor in The Taming of the Shrew’, English Studies in Canada 17: 1–20Google Scholar
Matchinske, Megan (1998). Writing, Gender, and State in Early Modern England. Cambridge University Press
McCabe, Richard A. (1993). Incest, Drama and Nature's Law 1500–1700. Cambridge University Press
McFeely, Maureen Connolly (1995). ‘ “This day my sister should the cloister enter” : the Convent as Refuge in Measure for Measure’, in Subjects on the World Stage: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Ed. David G. Allen and Robert A. White. 200–16. Newark: University of Delaware Press
McGlynn, Mary (1999). ‘Buyer Beware: the Business of Marriage Contracts in Shakespeare's Much Ado about Nothing’, in Proceedings of the Seventh Northern Plains Conference on Early British Literature. Ed. Jay Ruud. 90–100. Aberdeen, SD: Northern State University Press
McGuire, Philip C. (1985). ‘Silence and Genre: the Example of Measure for Measure’, Iowa State Journal of Research 59: 241–51Google Scholar
McGuire, Philip C. (1989). ‘Egeus and the Implications of Silence’, in Shakespeare and the Sense of Performance: Essays in the Tradition of Performance Criticism in Honor of Bernard Beckerman. Ed. Ruth Thompson and Marvin Thompson. 103–15. Newark: University of Delaware Press
McIlwain, Charles H. (ed.) (1918). The Political Works of James I. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
McLuskie, Kathleen (1989). Renaissance Dramatists. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf
Mendelson, Sara H. (2002). ‘Women and Work’, in Early Modern Women's Writing. Ed. Anita Pacheco. 58–76. Oxford: Blackwell
Metzger, Michael M. (1991). ‘Of Princes and Poets: Lohenstein's Verse Epistles on the Divorce of the Elector Palatine Carl Ludwig’, in Literary Culture in the Holy Roman Empire, 1550–1720. Ed. James A. Parente Jr, Richard Erich Schade, and George C. Schoolfield. 159–75. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press
Middleton, Thomas (1995). A Mad World My Masters, and Other Plays. Ed. Michael Taylor. Oxford University Press
Mikesell, Margaret Lael (1989). ‘“Love wrought these miracles”: Marriage and Genre in The Taming of the Shrew’, Renaissance Drama 20: 141–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milsom, S. F. C. (1976). The Legal Framework of English Feudalism. Cambridge University Press
Montaigne, Michel, Lord of (1942). Essays. Trans. John Florio. 3 vols. London: J. M. Dent & Sons
Mukherji, Subha (1996). ‘“Lawful deed”: Consummation, Custom and Law in All's Well that Ends Well’, Shakespeare Survey 49: 181–200Google Scholar
Munden, R. C. (1978). ‘James I and “the growth of mutual distrust”: King, Commons, and Reform, 1603–4’, in Faction and Parliament: Essays on Early Stuart History. Ed. Kevin Sharpe. 43–72. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Murphy, Patrick M. (1997). ‘Wriothesley's Resistance: Wardship Practices and Ovidian Narratives in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis’, in ‘Venus and Adonis’: Critical Essays. Ed. Philip C. Kolin. 323–40. New York: Garland
Nagarajan, S. (1963). ‘Measure for Measure and Elizabethan Betrothals’, Shakespeare Quarterly 14: 115–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nass, Barry (1996). ‘The Law and Politics of Treason in Shakespeare's Lucrece’, in Shakespeare Yearbook 7. Ed. Holger Klein, Peter Davidhazi, and B. J. Sokol. 291–311. Lewistown, NY: Edwin Mellen Press
Nathan, Norman (1988). ‘Othello's Marriage Is Consummated’, Cahiers Elisabethains: Etudes sur la Pre-Renaissance et la Renaissance Anglaises 34: 79–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neale, J. E. (1976). The Elizabethan House of Commons. London: Fontana
Neely, Carol Thomas (1985). Broken Nuptials in Shakespeare's Plays. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press
Neill, Michael (1993). ‘“In Everything Illegitimate”: Imagining the Bastard in Renaissance Drama’, Yearbook of English Studies 23: 270–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, T. G. A. (1998). ‘Doing Things with Words: Another Look at Marriage Rites and Spousals in Renaissance Drama and Fiction’, Studies in Philology 95: 351–73Google Scholar
Nelson, T. G. A., and Haines, Charles (1983). ‘Othello's Unconsummated Marriage’, Essays in Criticism 33: 1–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nevo, Ruth (1980). Comic Transformations in Shakespeare. London: Methuen
Nicholls, Mark (1992). ‘“As Happy a Fortune as I Desire”: the Pursuit of Financial Security by the Younger Brothers of Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland’, Historical Review 65: 296–314CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norsworthy, Laura (1935). The Lady of Bleeding Heart Yard: Lady Elizabeth Hatton 1578–1646. London: John Murray
Notestein, Wallace (1971). The House of Commons 1604–1610. London: Yale University Press
Nuttall, A. D. (1975). ‘Measure for Measure: the Bed-Trick’, Shakespeare Survey 28: 51–6Google Scholar
O'Hara, Diana (2000). Courtship and Constraint: Rethinking the Making of Marriage in Tudor England. Manchester University Press
Osborne, Bertram (1960). Justices of the Peace 1361–1848. Shaftesbury, Dorset: Sedgehill Press
Outhwaite, R. B. (1995). Clandestine Marriage in England, 1500–1850. London: Hambledon
Panek, Jennifer (2000). ‘“My Naked Weapon”: Male Anxiety and the Violent Courtship of the Jacobean Stage Widow’, Comparative Drama 34: 321–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearson, D'Orsay W. (1983). ‘Renaissance Adolescent Marriage: Another Look at Hymen’, Cithara 1: 17–27Google Scholar
Pearson, D'Orsay W. (1987). ‘Male Sovereignty, Harmony and Irony in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, The Upstart Crow 7: 24–35Google Scholar
Pedersen, Frederik (2000). Marriage Disputes in Medieval England. London: Hambledon and London
Pelling, Margaret (1999). ‘Finding Widowers: Men Without Women in English Towns Before 1700’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lydan Warner. 37–54. Harlow: Longman
Perret, Marion (1983). ‘Petruchio: the Model Wife’, SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 23: 223–35Google Scholar
Pettet, E. C. (1945). ‘The Merchant of Venice and the Problem of Usury’, Essays and Studies 31: 19–33Google Scholar
Phillips, O. Hood (1967). ‘The Law Relating to Shakespeare 1564–1964’, Law Quarterly Review 80: 172–202Google Scholar
Philips, O. Hood (1972). Shakespeare and the Lawyers. London: Methuen
Phillips, Roderick (1988). Putting Asunder: A History of Divorce in Western Society. Cambridge University Press
Plucknett, T. F. T. (1956). A Concise History of the Common Law. Fifth edition. London: Butterworth
Pollock, Sir Frederick, and F. W. Maitland (1898). The History of English Law Before the Reign of Edward I. Second edition, reissued 1968. 2 vols. Cambridge University Press
Poole, Kristen (1995). ‘Saints Alive! Falstaff, Martin Marprelate, and the Staging of Puritanism’, Shakespeare Quarterly 46: 47–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poos, L. R. (1995). ‘The Heavy-Handed Marriage Counsellor: Regulating Marriage in Some Later-Medieval Ecclesiastical-Court Jurisdictions’, American Journal of Legal History 39: 291–309CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, J. B. (1978). ‘Ravishment of Women and the Statutes of Westminster’, in Legal Records and the Historian. Ed. J. H. Baker. 150–64. London: Royal Historical Society
Post, J. B. (1980). ‘Sir Thomas West and the Statute of Rapes, 1382’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 53: 24–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, Chilton Latham (1917). English Domestic Relations 1487–1653. New York: Columbia University Press
Powers, Alan (1988). ‘“Meaner Parties”: Spousal Conventions and Oral Culture in Measure for Measure and All's Well That Ends Well’, The Upstart Crow 8: 28–41Google Scholar
Powers, Alan (1996). ‘Measure for Measure and Law Reform in 1604’, The Upstart Crow 15: 35–47Google Scholar
Prest, Wilfred R. (1991). ‘Law and Women's Rights in Early Modern England’, The Seventeenth Century 6: 169–87Google Scholar
Prichard, R. E. (ed.) (1996). Lady Mary Wroth, Poems, A Modernized Edition. Keele University Press
Priest, Dale G. (1980). ‘Rosalind's Child's Father’, Notes and Queries 27 (225): 166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proctor, F. (1955). A New History of the Book of Common Prayer with a Rationale of its Offices. Revised by Walter Howard Frere. London: Macmillan
Purkiss, Diane (1992). ‘Material Girls: the Seventeenth-Century Woman Debate’, in Women, Texts and Histories 1575–1760. Ed. Clare Brant and Diane Purkiss. 69–101. London: RoutledgeCrossRef
Quaife, G. R. (1979). Wanton Wenches and Wayward Wives: Peasants and Illicit Sex in Early Seventeenth-Century England. London: Croom Helm
Ranald, Margaret Loftus (1963). ‘The Betrothals of All's Well that Ends Well’, Huntington Library Quarterly 26: 179–192CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranald, Margaret Loftus (1979). ‘As Marriage Binds and Blood Breaks: English Marriage and Shakespeare’, Shakespeare Quarterly 30: 68–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranald, Margaret Loftus (1987). Shakespeare and His Social Context: Essays in Osmotic Knowledge and Literary Interpretation. New York: AMS Press
Read, Conyers (1962). William Lambarde and Local Government. Ithaca, NY: Folger Shakespeare Library and Cornell University Press
Reilley, Terry (2001). ‘King Lear: the Kentish Forest and the Problem of Thirds’, Oklahoma City Law Review 26: 379–401Google Scholar
Reynolds, Simon (1996). ‘The Lawful Name of Marrying: Contracts and Stratagems in The Merry Wives of Windsor’, in Shakespeare Yearbook 7. Ed. Holger Klein, Peter Davidhazi, and B. J. Sokol. 313–31. Lewistown, NY: Edwin Mellen Press
Roberts, Josephine A. (ed.) (1983). The Poems of Lady Mary Wroth. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press
Roscelli, William John (1962). ‘Isabella, Sin and Civil Law’, University of Kansas City Review 28: 215–27Google Scholar
Rose, Mark (1989). ‘Conjuring Caesar: Ceremony, History, and Authority in 1599’, English Literary Renaissance 19: 291–304CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rose, Mary Beth (1988). The Expense of Spirit: Love and Sexuality in English Drama. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Russell, M. J. (1980). ‘2 Trial by Battle and the Appeals of Felony’, The Journal of Legal History 1: 135–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scarisbrick, J. J. (1974). Henry VIII. Harmondsworth: Penguin
Schanzer, Ernest (1960). ‘Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure’, Shakespeare Survey 13: 81–9Google Scholar
Schoenbaum, S. (1985). ‘William Bott, the Widow's Portion, and Shakespearean Biography’, in Shakespeare and Others. Ed. S. Schoenbaum. 47–53. London: Scolar Press
Schoenbaum, S. (1986). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Reprint of Oxford University Press edition, 1977. New York: New American Library
Schofield, Roger (1986). ‘Did the Mothers Really Die? Three Centuries of Maternal Mortality in “The World we have Lost”’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 231–60. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Scott, Margaret (1982). ‘“Our City's Institutions”: Some Further Reflections on the Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure’, ELH 49: 790–804CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scouten, Arthur (1975). ‘An Historical Approach to Measure for Measure’, Philological Quarterly 54: 68–84Google Scholar
Selden Society (1987). A Centenary Guide to the Publications of the Selden Society. London: The Selden Society
Shaheen, Naseeb (1987). Biblical References in Shakespeare's Tragedies. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shaheen, Naseeb (1989). Biblical References in Shakespeare's History Plays. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shaheen, Naseeb (1993). Biblical References in Shakespeare's Comedies. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shaheen, Naseeb (1997). ‘A Note on Troilus and Cressida, ii.iii.1–37’, Notes and Queries 44: 503–5Google Scholar
Shaheen, Naseeb (1999). Biblical References in Shakespeare's Plays. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Shakespeare, William (1968). The First Folio. Facsimile of 1623 prepared by Charlton Hinman. New York: W. W. Norton
Shakespeare, William (1989). The Complete Works. Ed. Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor. Electronic edition. Oxford University Press
Shakespeare, William (2001). King Lear (Third Arden Edition). Ed. R. A. Foakes. London: Thomson Learning
Sharpe, J. A. (1980). Defamation and Sexual Slander in Early Modern England: The Church Courts at York. Borthwick Papers No. 58. York: University of York Borthwick Institute of Historical Research
Sheehan, Michael M. (1996). Marriage, Family, and Law in Medieval Europe: Collected Studies. University of Toronto Press
Shorter, Edward (1976). The Making of the Modern Family. London: Collins
Simonds, Peggy Munoz (1989). ‘Sacred and Sexual Motifs in All's Well That Ends Well’, Renaissance Quarterly 42: 33–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simpson, A. W. B. (1986). A History of the Land Law. Second edition. Oxford: Clarendon PressCrossRef
Smith, Richard M. (1986). ‘Marriage Processes in the English Past: Some Continuities’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 43–99. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Sokol, B. J. (1985). ‘A Spenserian Idea in The Taming of the Shrew’, English Studies 66: 310–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J. (1991). ‘Figures of Repetition in Sidney's Astrophil and Stella and in the Scenic Form of Measure for Measure’, Rhetorica 9: 131–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J. (1993). ‘The Tempest, “All torment trouble, wonder and amazement”: a Kleinian reading’, in The Undiscover'd Country. Ed. B. J. Sokol. 179–216. London: Free Association Books
Sokol, B. J. (1994a). Art and Illusion in ‘The Winter's Tale’. Manchester University Press
Sokol, B. J. (1994b). ‘Numerology in the Time Scheme of The Tempest’, Notes and Queries 41: 53–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J. (1995). ‘Constitutive Signifiers or Fetishes in The Merchant of Venice?’, International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. 76: 373–87Google ScholarPubMed
Sokol, B. J. (1998). ‘Prejudice and Law in The Merchant of Venice’, in Shakespeare Survey 51. Ed. Stanley Wells. 159–73. Cambridge University Press
Sokol, B. J., and Sokol, Mary (1996). ‘The Tempest and Legal Justification of Plantation in Virginia’, Shakespeare Yearbook 7: 353–80Google Scholar
Sokol, B. J., and Sokol, Mary (1999a). ‘Legal Terms Implying Extended Meanings in As You Like Itiii.ii.331–2 and Troilus and Cressidaiii.ii.89–91’, Notes and Queries 46: 236–8Google Scholar
Sokol, B. J., and Sokol, Mary (1999b). ‘Shakespeare and the English Equity Jurisdiction: The Merchant of Venice and the Two Texts of King Lear’, Review of English Studies 50: 417–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokol, B. J., and Mary Sokol (2000). Shakespeare's Legal Language. London: Athlone
Sokol, B. J., and Mary Sokol (2002). ‘Where are We in Legal–Historical Studies of Shakespeare?: The Case of Marriage and Property’, in Shakespearean International Yearbook 2. Ed. John M. Mucciolo and W. R. Elton. 249–71. Burlington: Ashgate
Sommerville, Margaret R. (1995). Sex and Subjection: Attitudes to Women in Early Modern Society. London: Arnold
Spotswood, Jerald W. (1994). ‘Isabella's ‘Speechless Dialect’: Subversive Silence in Measure for Measure’, Explorations in Renaissance Culture 20: 107–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spring, Eileen (1984). ‘The Family, Strict Settlement and Historians’, in Law, Economy and Society, 1750–1914: Essays in the History of English Law. Ed. G. R. Rubin and David Sugarman. 168–91. Abingdon: Professional Books
Spring, Eileen (1993). Law, Land and Family: Aristocratic Inheritance in England 1300–1800. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press
Starkey, David (1985). The Reign of Henry VIII. London: George Philip
The Statutes at Large of England (1811). 20 vols. London
Staves, Susan (1990). Married Women's Separate Property in England, 1660–1833. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
Steadman, John M. (1996). ‘ “Respects of Fortune” : Dowries and Inheritances in Shakespeare, Spenser, and Marvell – an Overview’, in Shakespeare's Universe: Renaissance Ideas and Conventions: Essays in Honour of W. R. Elton. Ed. John M. Mucciolo. 71–94. Aldershot: Scolar Press
Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames (1883). A History of the Criminal Law of England. Vol. 3. London: Macmillan
Stone, Lawrence (1977). The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500–1800. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Stone, Lawrence (1979). The Crisis of the Aristocracy, 1558–1641. Revised, originally 1965. Oxford: Clarendon Press
Stone, Lawrence (1990). Road to Divorce: England 1530–1987. Oxford University Press
Stone, Lawrence (1992). Uncertain Unions: Marriage in England 1660–1753. Oxford University Press
Stone, Lawrence (1993). Broken Lives: Separation and Divorce in England 1660–1857. Oxford University Press
Stretton, Tim (1994). ‘Women, Custom and Equity in the Court of Requests’, in Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England. Ed. Jenny Kermode and Garthine Walker. 170–89. London: UCL Press
Stretton, Tim (1998). Women Waging Law in Elizabethan England. Cambridge University Press
Stretton, Tim (1999). ‘Widows at Law in Tudor and Stuart England’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lydan Warner. 193–208. Harlow: Longman
Stretton, Tim (2002). ‘Women, Property and Law’, in Early Modern Women's Writing. Ed. Anita Pacheco. 40–57. Oxford: Blackwell
Swinburne, Henry (1590). A Briefe Treatise of Testaments and Last Willes. London
Swinburne, Henry (1686). A Treatise of Spousals or Matrimonial Contracts. London
Temkin, Jennifer (1987). Rape and the Legal Process. London: Sweet and Maxwell
Thomas, Keith (1959). ‘The Double Standard’, The Journal of the History of Ideas 20: 195–216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, Keith (1983). Man and the Natural World: Changing Attitudes in England 1500–1800. London: Allen Lane
Thurston, Herbert (1904). ‘The Canon Law of the Divorce’, English Historical Review 19: 632–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tiffany, Grace (1998). ‘Puritanism in Comic History: Exposing Royalty in the Henry Plays’, Shakespeare Studies 26: 256–87Google Scholar
Tilney, Edmunde (1568). A Briefe and Pleasaunt Discourse of the Duties of Marriage. London
Titlestad, P. J. H. (1988). ‘Religion, Politics and Literature: the Elizabethan Background New Modelled’, Shakespeare in Southern Africa 2: 42–50Google Scholar
Todd, Barbara J. (1999). ‘The Virtous Widow in Protestant England’, in Widowhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. Ed. Sandra Cavallo and Lydan Warner. 66–83. London: Pearson
Turner, Victor (1967). The Forest of Symbols: Aspects of Ndembu Ritual. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1982). ‘Free Consent and Marriage of Feudal Wards in Medieval England’, Journal of Medieval History 8: 123–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1987). ‘Punishing Convicted Ravishers: Statutory Strictures and Actual Practice in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England’, Journal of Medieval History 13: 237–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1988). ‘Wrongdoing and Compensation: the Pleas of Wardship in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England’, The Journal of Legal History 9: 267–307CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Sue Sheridan (1993). ‘Litigation as Personal Quest: Suing for Dower in the Royal Courts, circa 1272–1350’, in Wife and Widow in Medieval England. Ed. Sue Sheridan Walker. 81–108. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
Walton, Izaak (1966). The Lives of Doctor John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, etc. Introduction by George Saintsbury. London: Oxford University Press
Walzer, Michael (1965). The Revolution of the Saints. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Ward, Ian (1995). Law and Literature: Possibilities and Perspectives. Cambridge University Press
Ward, Ian (1996). ‘The Political Context of Shakespeare's Constitutionalism’, in Shakespeare Yearbook 7. Ed. Holger Klein, Peter Davidhazi, and B. J. Sokol. 275–90. Lewistown, NY: Edwin Mellen Press
Ward, Ian (1999). Shakespeare and the Legal Imagination. London: Butterworth
Ward, Jennifer (1995). Women of the English Nobility and Gentry, 1066–1500. Manchester University Press
Webster, John (1927). The Complete Works. Ed. F. L. Lucas. 4 vols. London: Chatto and Windus
Webster, John (1974). The Duchess of Malfi. Ed. John Russell Brown. Manchester University Press
Webster, John (1975). The Devil's Law-Case. Ed. Elizabeth M. Brennan. London: Ernest Benn
Welsh, Alexander (1978). ‘The Loss of Men and Getting of Children: All's Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure’, The Modern Language Review 73: 17–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wentersdorf, Karl P. (1979). ‘The Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure: a Reconsideration’, Shakespeare Survey 32: 129–44Google Scholar
Wentersdorf, Karl P. (1985). ‘The Time Problem in Othello: a Reconsideration’, Shakespeare-Jahrbuch (Bochum): 63–77
Whately, William (1619). A Bride-Bush: or a Direction for Married Persons, Plainely Describing the Duties common to both, and peculiar to each of them. London
Whittick, Christopher (1984). ‘The Role of the Criminal Appeal in the Fifteenth Century’, in Law and Social Change in British History. Ed. J. A. Guy and H. G. Beale. 55–72. London: Royal Historical Society
Wickham, Glynne (1980). ‘The Two Noble Kinsmen or A Midsummer Night's Dream, Part II?’, in The Elizabethan Theatre VII. Papers Given at the Seventh International Conference on Elizabethan Theatre Held at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, in July 1977. Ed. G. R. Hibbard. 167–96. Hamden, CT: Archon Books
Widmayer, Martha (1995). ‘Mistress Overdone's House’, in Subjects on the World Stage: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Ed. David G. Allen and Robert A. White. 181–99. Newark: University of Delaware Press
Wilkins, George (1964). The Miseries of Enforced Marriage. 1607. London: Malone Society Reprints
Williamson, Marilyn L. (1986). The Patriarchy of Shakespeare's Comedies. Detroit: Wayne State University Press
Wrightson, Keith (1980). ‘The Nadir of English Illegitimacy in the Seventeenth Century’, in Bastardy and its Comparative History. Ed. Peter Laslett, Karla Oosterveen, and Richard M. Smith. 176–91. London: Edward Arnold
Wrightson, Keith (1982). English Society 1500–1680. London: Hutchinson
Wrightson, Keith (1986). ‘The Social Order of Early Modern England: Three Approaches’, in The World We Have Gained. Ed. Lloyd Bonfield, Richard M. Smith, and Keith Wrightson. 179–202. Oxford: Basil Blackwell
Young, Bruce W. (1988). ‘Haste, Consent, and Age at Marriage: Some Implications of Social History for Romeo and Juliet’, Iowa State Journal of Research 62: 459–74Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • B. J. Sokol, Goldsmiths, University of London, Mary Sokol, University College London
  • Book: Shakespeare, Law, and Marriage
  • Online publication: 22 September 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511484001.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • B. J. Sokol, Goldsmiths, University of London, Mary Sokol, University College London
  • Book: Shakespeare, Law, and Marriage
  • Online publication: 22 September 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511484001.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • B. J. Sokol, Goldsmiths, University of London, Mary Sokol, University College London
  • Book: Shakespeare, Law, and Marriage
  • Online publication: 22 September 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511484001.013
Available formats
×