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  1. Oct 18, 2016 · 19 October 2016. Simon Collison. The ruin of Newark Castle, where John died, possibly in the gatehouse on the far left. By Greig Watson. BBC News. It is 800 years since one of England's most...

  2. Scene by Scene Synopsis. Scene: England. Act I, Scene 1 : King John and his mother, Queen Eleanor, receive a French ambassador, Chatillon, who delivers a demand from King Philip of France: John must relinquish the crown of England to his young nephew Arthur. John replies defiantly that he will invade France, and Chatillon departs.

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  4. King John's Death Scene: Act 3, Scene 3, corresponding to Act 5, Scene 7 in the original play. King John (in the throne, center stage) lays dead as Faulconbridge (rear center) crowns Prince Henry (front left of Faulconbridge) while the kneeling Pembroke , and Salisbury looks on.

  5. englishhistory.net › middle-ages › john-iJohn I - English History

    Jan 16, 2022 · King John I died on April 19, 1216 after being struck by a fever following a battle near Newark Castle. He was buried in Worcester Cathedral. King John I was succeeded by his son Henry III .

  6. Act 5, Scene 1: KING JOHN'S palace. Act 5, Scene 2: LEWIS's camp at St. Edmundsbury. Act 5, Scene 3: The field of battle. Act 5, Scene 4: Another part of the field. Act 5, Scene 5: The French camp. Act 5, Scene 6: An open place in the neighbourhood of Swinstead Abbey. Act 5, Scene 7: The orchard in Swinstead Abbey.

  7. The BBC first broadcast the play on 20 January 1952 in a production starring Sir Donald Wolfit (King John), Una Venning (Queen Elinor), Sonia Dresdel (Constance) and Joseph O'Conor (Philip the Bastard), and directed by Stephen Harrison. As with all Shakespeare television productions of the period, it was a live broadcast and does not appear to ...

  8. Oct 4, 2017 · When John refuses to be swayed by this message, he is threatened with war; John counters with a warning that he will attack France first. John then judges a quarrel between Robert and Philip Faulconbridge that concludes with Philip’s decision to acknowledge the dead King Richard I as his natural father.

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