DEEP: Database of Early English Playbooks

1602 Marston, John Antonio's Revenge (2 Antonio and Mellida)

Reference Information

DEEP #: 326
Greg #: 185a
STC/Wing #: 17474
Record Type: Single-Play Playbook
Play Type: Boys Professional
Genre (Annals): Tragedy
 
Book Edition: 1
Play Edition: 1
Format: Quarto
Leaves: 40
Date of First Publication: 1602
Date of First Production: 1600 [1600-1601]
Company of First Production: Children of Paul's (second)
Company Attribution: Children of Paul's (second)
 
Total Editions: 1 quarto (bibliographically independent and in collection), 1 octavo in collection
 

Title-Page Features

Title: ANTONIOS Reuenge. The Second part.
Author: Written by I. M.
Performance: As it hath beene sundry times acted, by the children of Paules.
Imprint: LONDON Printed for Thomas Fisher, and are to be soulde in Saint Dunstans Church-yarde. 1602.

Paratextual Material

Explicit: Antonij vindictæ. FINIS. [K4v]

Stationer Information

Printer: Bradock, Richard
Publisher: Fisher, Thomas
Bookseller: Lownes, Matthew
Imprint Location: W.9 (Fleet St. - St. Dunstan's Church / Clifford's Inn)
Entries in Stationers' Register: Oct 24, 1601: Entered to Matthew Lownes and Thomas Fisher: "a booke called / The ffyrst and second partes of the play called Anthonio and melida provided that the [sic] gett laufull licence for yt".
Apr 10, 1627: Transferred from Matthew Lownes decd. to Thomas Lownes (4): "His parte of Anthonie Melida".
May 30, 1627: Transferred from Thomas Lownes (4) to Humphrey Lownes (1) and Robert Young: "his parte of Anthonie Melida".
Nov 6, 1628: Transferred from Humphrey Lownes (2) to George Cole and George Latham: "His parte of Anthony and Melida."
Dec 6, 1630: Transferred from George Cole and George Latham to Robert Young: "Antony & Melida his part".
Jul 22, 1644: Transferred from Robert Young decd. to James Young: "(Salvo iure cuiuscunque) ... his part of Anthonio & Melida."
 
Additional Notes: Greg calls this edition a quarto and quarto-form octavo [4° and (4°-form) 8°], but it is better described as a quarto printed on sheets of two different sizes; see G.T. Tanselle, "The Concept of Format," Studies in Bibliography 53 (2000): 67-115. The bookseller attribution is from STC.