Online Encyclopedia

EDWARD ALLEYN (1566-1626)

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 694 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDWARD ALLEYN (1566-1626)  ,
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English actor and founder of
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Dulwich College, was born in
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London on the 1st of September 1566, the son of an innkeeper . It is not known at what date he began to act, but he certainly gained distinction in his calling while a young man, for in 1586 his name was on the list of the
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earl of Worcester's players, and he was eventually rated by
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common consent as the foremost actor of his time . Ben
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Jonson, a critic little prone to exalt the merits of men of mark among his contemporaries, bestowed unstinted praise on Alleyn's acting (Epigrams, No . 89) . Nash expresses in
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prose, in Pierce Penniless, his admiration of him, while Heywood calls him 'Egerton
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MSS., Brit .
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Mus . 2807 f . 197 b;
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Life of Dr John Barwick, ed. by G . F . Barwick (1903), pp . 107, 129, 134." inimitable," " the best of actors," " Proteus for shapes and Roscius for a tongue." Alleyn inherited house
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property in Bishopsgate from his
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father . His
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marriage on the 22nd of
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October 1592 with
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Joan Woodward, stepdaughter of Philip Henslowe; brought him eventually more
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wealth .

He became

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part owner in Henslowe's ventures, and in the end
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sole proprietor of several
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play-houses and other profitable pleasure resorts . Among these were the Rose Theatre at Bankside, the Paris Garden and the Fortune Theatre in St Luke's—the latter occupied by the earl of Nottingham's
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company, of which Alleyn was the head . He filled, too, in conjunction with Henslowe, the
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post of " master of the king's games of bears, bulls and
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dogs." On some occasions he directed the sport in person, and Stow in his Chronicles gives an account of how Alleyn baited a lion before James I. at the Tower . Alleyn's connexion with Dulwich began in 16o5, when he bought the
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manor of Dulwich from
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Sir Francis Calton . The landed property, of which the entire estate had not passed into Alleyn's hands earlier than 1614, stretched from the crest of that range of Surrey hills on whose
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summit now stands the Crystal Palace, to the crest of the parallel ridge, three miles nearer London, known in its several portions as Herne Hill, Denmark Hill and Champion Hill . Alleyn acquired this large property for little more than £1o,000 . He had barely got full possession, however, before the question how to dispose of it began to occupy him . He was still childless, after twenty years of wedded life . Then it was that the prosperous player-the man " so acting to the life that he made any part to become him " (Fuller, Worthies)—began the task of
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building and endowing in his own lifetime the College of
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God's Gift at Dulwich . All was completed in 1617 except the charter or deed of in-corporation for setting his lands in mortmain . Tedious delays occurred in the
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Star Chamber, where Lord Chancellor Bacon was scheming to bring the pressure of kingly authority to bear on Alleyn with the aim of securing a large portion of the proposed endowment for the maintenance of lectureships at Oxford and Cambridge . Alleyn finally carried his point and the College of God's Gift at Dulwich was founded, and endowed under letters patent of James I., dated the 21st of
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June 1619 .

The building had been already begun in 1613 (see Du1.wlcn) . Alleyn was never a member of his own

foundation, but he continued to the close of his life to guide and control its affairs under powers reserved to himself in the letters patent . His
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diary shows that he mixed much and intimately in the life of the college . Many of the jottings in that curious record of daily doings and incidents favour the inference that he was a genial, kind, amiable and religious man . His fondness for his old profession is indicated by the fact that he engaged the boys in occasional theatrical performances . At a festive gathering on the 6th of
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January 1622 " the boyes play'd a playe." Alleyn's first wife died in 1623 . The same
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year he married Constance, daughter of John Donne, the poet and dean of St Paul's . Alleyn died in November 1626 and was buried in the
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chapel of the college which he had founded . His gravestone fixes the day of his
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death as the 21st, but there are grounds for the belief that it was the 25th . A portrait of the actor is preserved at Dulwich . Alleyn was a member of the corporation of wardens of St Saviour's,
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Southwark, in 161o, and there is a memorial window to him in the
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cathedral .

End of Article: EDWARD ALLEYN (1566-1626)
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