Judith Quiney (Norwegian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Judith Quiney" in Norwegian language version.

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  • Chambers, Edmund Kerchever (1930). William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. I. p. 18. «A daughter Susanna was baptized on 26 May 1583, and followed by twins, Hamnet and Judith, on 2 February 1585. Guesses at godparents are idle where common names, such as Shakespeare's own, are concerned. But those of the twins, which are unusual, point to Hamnet or Hamlet Sadler, a baker of Stratford, and his wife Judith.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 94. «[…] the twins were christened […] on 2 February 1585. Richard Barton of Coventry […] officiated[.]» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1970). Shakespeare's Lives. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p.28. OCLC 94533. «In 1611 she twice made her mark as witness to a deed for the sale of a house belonging to Elizabeth Quiney and her eldest son Adrian.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 318. «[Judith] was even less of a scholar, if we may judge from the fact that when in 1611 she witnessed a deed of Elizabeth Quiney and her son Adrian, she twice signed by mark.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 292. «[Thomas] came from an unexceptionable family. […] On 10 February 1616 ‘Tho[mas] Queeny’ was wed ‘to Judith Shakspere’, the assistant vicar Richard Watts probably officiating—he signed the marriage register this month. (Watts later married Quiney's sister Mary.) […] Because the ceremony took place during the Lenten prohibited season that in 1616 began on 28 January (Septuagesima Sunday) and ended on April 7 (the Sunday after Easter), the couple should have secured a special licence from the Bishop of Worcester. They did not do so, although presumably they published banns in the parish church.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 293. «Without a license the minister was at fault in conducting the service. […] Thomas and Judith were cited to the consistory court in Worcester Cathedral. Thomas did not come on the appointed day, and was excommunicated. Possibly Judith suffered the same fate […]. The offence was not serious. Others married in Lent—three weddings took place in Holy Trinity that February—and the Quineys may have just [fallen] victim to an apparitor hungry for a fee. Walter Nixon, who summoned them, [later faced] accusations in Star Chamber of taking bribes and [forgery]. The excommunication […] lasted only a short while, for before the year was out the Quineys were at the font to have their first-born christened in Stratford church.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. pp. 293-294. «Before marrying, [Thomas] had got a Margaret Wheeler with child […]. [A] month after the […] wedding, the unfortunate woman died in childbirth, and her infant with her. The parish register records both burials on 15 March. […] ‘whoredom and uncleanness’ […] fell within the purview of the […] bawdy court […]. [The] apparitor Richard Greene […] summoned [Thomas]. The act book records the hearing and sentence on Tuesday, 26 March. In open court Thomas confessed to having had carnal copulation with [Margaret Wheeler], and submitted himself to correction. The judge, vicar John Rogers, sentenced [him] to perform open penance in a white sheet, according to custom, in the church on three successive Sundays before the whole congregation. But the penalty was remitted. In effect Thomas got off for 5s […] for the use of the poor of the parish, and the vicar ordered him to acknowledge his crime, in ordinary attire, before the minister of Bishopton. […] Bishopton had no church of its own, only a chapel; so Quiney was spared public humiliation.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 292. «Thomas became a vintner in Stratford; we hear of him selling wine to the corporation in 1608. Three years later he leased, for use as a tavern, the little house called ‘Atwood's’ near the top of the High Street, next door to his mother.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 294. «In July 1616 Thomas exchanged houses with his brother-in-law William Chandler, and moved into the more spacious and imposing structure called The Cage at the corner of the High Street and Bridge Street. There, in the upper half, Quiney set up his vintner's shop, and also dealt in tobacco.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 5. 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 295. «Around 1630 he tried to sell the lease of The Cage, but his kinsmen stopped him, and in 1633 assigned the lease in trust to a triumvirate consisting of Dr. Hall, Hall's son-in-law Thomas Nash, and Richard Watts, now Quiney's brother-in-law and the vicar of Harbury. This move protected the interests of Judith and the children. Obviously Thomas was not to be trusted. In November 1652 The Cage lease was made over to Richard Quiney, the London grocer.» 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 297. «During the winter of 1616 Shakespeare summoned his lawyer Francis Collins […]. […] Revisions were necessitated by the marriage of Judith, with its aftermath of the Margaret Wheeler affair. The lawyer came on 25 March. […] Shakespeare was dying that March, although he would linger for another month.» 
  • Chambers, Edmund Kerchever (1930). William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. ii. pp. 169-180. 
  • Chambers, Edmund Kerchever (1930). William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. ii. pp. 8,11,104. 
  • Chambers, Edmund Kerchever (1930). William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. ii. p. 179. «Judith Quiney's last child died in February 1639. Steps were taken to bar the entail. A settlement of ‘the inheritance of William Shakespeere gent. deceased’ was made by Susanna [Hall] and the Nashs on 27 May 1639, and was followed by fines and a fictitious legal action. Possibly Judith was compensated. Her expectation was small, and in fact she predeceased Elizabeth [Hall].» 
  • Chambers, Edmund Kerchever (1930). William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. i. p. 13. 
  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1977). William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p. 318. «Judith lived on into the Restoration. On 9 February 1662, less than two weeks after her seventy-seventh birthday, ‘Judith, uxor Thomas Quiney, Gent.’ was buried, presumably in the churchyard. She had survived her twin brother Hamnet by sixty-six years. […] Dowdall in 1693 reports a tradition that Shakespeare's ‘wife and daughters did earnestly desire to be laid in the same grave with him’, but ‘for fear of the curse’ nobody dared ‘touch his gravestone’.» 

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  • Schoenbaum, Samuel (1970). Shakespeare's Lives. Oxford: Clarendon Press. s. p.28. OCLC 94533. «In 1611 she twice made her mark as witness to a deed for the sale of a house belonging to Elizabeth Quiney and her eldest son Adrian.»