The Chamberlain's Men were a prominent theatrical company in England during the late 16th and early 17th centuries, named after their patron, Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon, who was the Lord Chamberlain. The title reflected their association with the royal court and the patronage system that supported the arts during that time. The company, which included William Shakespeare as a key member, benefited from this patronage, allowing them to perform at venues like the Globe Theatre. The name signified their status and connection to influential figures in the Elizabethan era.
Their patron was the Lord Chamberlain, a wealthy noble that allowed them to use his name so that they would be permitted to travel to the country during plague closings of the theater to perform and get paid. later, they recived the patronage of King James, becoming the King's Men.
They are more commonly remembered as the King's Men.
He joined the Lord Chamberlains men which later changed their name to the Kings Men.
Chippewa woman and men call themselves Anishinabe.
They did not. They were formed as the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594. Their name changed to the King's Men (they did not have any choice in their name) when the King became their patron nine years later in 1603.
The Lord Chamberlain's men changed their name because they gained the patronage of the reigning monarch King James I thus becoming The King's Men.
Lord Chamberlains men
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Lord Chamberlains Men
They were a theatre company. They put on plays.
They were the acting company with which he was associated for nearly twenty years.
Their correct name is Lenni Lenape, often shortened to just Lenape. The "lenni" means something like genuine, real or original and "lenape" means men or people.