Credits

The Armidale Globe Theatre Project

UNEMA (UNE) - CAPA (ASC)

Credits

The Armidale Globe Project is a collaborative heritage project between the UNE Museum of Antiquities (UNEMA) and the Department of Creative and Performing Arts (CAPA) of Armidale Secondary College (ASC). The project explores Armidale’s model of the Globe Theatre from conservation to digitisation and the development of digital resources for teaching and community engagement.

The Team

Dr Bronwyn Hopwood (Curator & Collections Manager, UNEMA)

Bruce Myers (CAPA Department, ASC)

Raphael Roberts and Jackson Shoobert (Learning Media Team, UNE)

Diana Barnes and Emma Simpson (English, UNE).

Julie Shearer (Theatre Studies, UNE).

The Conservation Project

About The Project

The Digitisation Project

About The Project

The Timeline Project

About The Project

The Heavens Project

About The Project

The 360 Explore Project

About The Project

The Making Of Project

About The Project

Reference Works

Boaistuau, P., Histoires Prodigieuses, Paris 1560, Ch XX. Prodigious apparitions in the sky, three Suns.

British Library, Catalogues and Collections of the British Library, London 2022, https://www.bl.uk/catalogues-and-collections

Caklais, I., Globe Theatre, Paperlandmarks Ltd., Cheltenham, United Kingdom, www.paperlandmarks.com

Catherine de Pizan, Book of the Queens, France 1410-1414; Harley MS 4431, f.189v, British Library.

Chiari, S. & Popelard, M., eds., Spectacular Science, Technology and Superstition in the Age of Shakespeare, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh 2017.

Edward, G., Planets, Stars, and Orbs: The Medieval Cosmos, 1200-1687, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, New York & Melbourne 1996.

Gower, J., Confessio Amantis, England ca.1470, Book 7, part iv; MS. M.126, fol. 153v, Morgan Library, New York.

Heritage Models, The Globe Theatre Model Kit: a scale model of the reconstructed Globe Theatre, Shakespeare’s Globe, London.

Hudson, A., Toth, P., McCall, T., Miolo, L., & Westwell, C., eds., “Stars in their Eyes: Art and Medieval Astronomy,” in Medieval Manuscripts Blog, British Library, British Library board, 24 January 2017, CC-BY 4.0, accessed 2/11/2022 @ 5:15pm, https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2017/01/stars-in-their-eyes.html

James, E.O., Creation and Cosmology: A Historical and Comparative Inquiry, Brill, Leiden 1969.

LitCharts, Shakescleare, 2022, https://www.litcharts.com/shakescleare/shakespeare-translations

Mulryne, J.R. & Shewring, M., eds., Shakespeare’s Globe Rebuilt, Cambridge University Press, New York 1997.

Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, “Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre: Third time’s a charm: the when, how, and why behind Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre,” in Shakespedia, accessed 01/11/2022 @ 12:22am, https://www.shakespeare.org.uk/explore-shakespeare/shakespedia/shakespeares-globe-theatre/#:~:text=By%20May%201599%2C%20the%20new,their%20backs%20across%20the%20Thames.

Von Ziegler, A., “Track 18: 1 Hour of Celtic Harp Improvisation,” in von Ziegler, A., Relaxing Music Collection, Bandcamp, 11 November 2022, with permission.

Wilton, D., “Chaucer’s Astronomy & Treatise on the Astrolabe,” in 365 Days of Astronomy, 15 August 2009, accessed 31/10/2022 @ 4:32pm, https://cosmoquest.org/x/365daysofastronomy/2009/08/15/august-15th-chaucers-astronomy-treatise-on-the-astrolabe/

Younker, R.W. & Davidson, R.M., “The Myth of the Solid Heavenly Dome: another look at the Hebrew רָ קִ יעַ HEBREW (RĀQÎAʿ),” AUSS 49, no. 1 (2011): 125–147.