[172] A Chronicle History of the London Stage, p. 152.

[173] Cunningham, Extracts from the Accounts of the Revels, p. xxxviii.

[174] Nichols, The Progresses of James, iv, 1073.

[175] Shakespeare and his London Associates, p. 80.

[176] Ibid., p. 95.

[177] "Pingues tauri cornupetæ, seu vrsi immanes, cum obiectis depugnant canibus."

[178] The map is reproduced in facsimile by Rendle as a frontispiece to Old Southwark and its People.

[179] Or Parish Garden, possibly the more correct form. For the early history of the Manor see William Bray, The History and Antiquities of the County of Surrey, iii, 530; Wallace, in Englische Studien (1911), xliii, 341, note 3; Ordish, Early London Theatres, p. 125.

[180] Blount, in his Glossographia (1681), p. 473, says of Paris Garden: "So called from Robert de Paris, who had a house and garden there in Richard II.'s time; who by proclamation, ordained that the butchers of London should buy that garden for receipt of their garbage and entrails of beasts, to the end the city might not be annoyed thereby."

[181] See Gilpin's Life of Cranmer for a description of a bear-baiting before the King held on or near the river's edge. See also the proclamation of Henry VIII in 1546 against the stews, which implies the non-existence of regular amphitheatres.