Shakespeare's first theatre found »

Posted By engineer 8 months, 1 week ago in Arts & Entertainment

Archaeologists in London believe they have unearthed the remains of the theatre where Romeo and Juliet had its premiere. This is the first Shakespearean theatre built in 1567

Read Full Story at news.bbc.co.uk »

183 Views Share Story 3 Comments Report

Submitted By:
engineer

Hi

My background is Biomedical engineering with an MBA As you know from all my comments where I almost stand politically. I have loads of ...

Who Also Submitted:
Other Related Articles:

RSS Join the Discussion

+ Add Comment
Comments So Far: 3 (view all)
- Display
  • Neutral
    sarahturner8 months, 1 week ago

    This comment is below the standard viewing threshold View It »

    Interesting information engineer. Thank you.........

    (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (comment depth : 2) (recursion depth : 1) (max_comment_reply_depth : 40) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
    Reply
    loading loading ...
    • Neutral
      sarahturner8 months, 1 week ago

      This comment is below the standard viewing threshold View It »

      Interesting information engineer. Thank you.........

      (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (comment depth : 2) (recursion depth : 1) (max_comment_reply_depth : 40) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
      Reply
      loading loading ...
      • Neutral
        chevydog8 months, 1 week ago

        This comment is below the standard viewing threshold View It »

        Pretty cool, though my clunky ISP couldn't pull up the story.

        By coincidence, I'd just finished reading Marchette Chute's little biography of Shakespeare. A fascinating man, whose works remain an English treasure.

        (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (comment depth : 2) (recursion depth : 1) (max_comment_reply_depth : 40) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
        Reply
        loading loading ...
        View All 3 Comments

        Add a Comment

        Sign In With Your Propeller Account

        Forgot your password?

        Please keep your comments relevant to this story.

        To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.