A cannon in the middle of Henry VIII misfired and burned the building down
the original Globe Theater burned due due to a cannon malfunction during a King Henry VIII performance
the globe theater was closed down when it got burned down
On June 29, 1613, The Globe Theatre burned down during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII. Sparks or wadding that flew from a cannon used during the production ignited a thatched roof of the gallery, resulting in the fire. The theater was rebuilt with a tile roof and reopened a year later. The second Globe was torn down about 1644.
The original Globe Theater burned down in the early 1600s, however there is a replica in London today.
The first Globe Theatre burned down during a performance of Henry VIII.
the original Globe Theater burned due due to a cannon malfunction during a King Henry VIII performance
the globe theater was closed down when it got burned down
It burned down during a performance of Henry VIII in 1613 when a cannon blast set the roof on fire.
On June 29, 1613, The Globe Theatre burned down during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII. Sparks or wadding that flew from a cannon used during the production ignited a thatched roof of the gallery, resulting in the fire. The theater was rebuilt with a tile roof and reopened a year later. The second Globe was torn down about 1644.
The original Globe had no sprinkler system in case of fire, which is why it burned down. It also had no washrooms for the patrons. These have been remedied in the modern Globe.
The original Globe Theater burned down in the early 1600s, however there is a replica in London today.
The first Globe Theatre burned down during a performance of Henry VIII.
On June 29, 1613, The Globe Theater burned down during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII. Sparks or wadding that flew from a cannon used during the production ignited a thatched roof of the gallery, resulting in the fire. The theater was rebuilt with a tile roof and reopened a year later. The second Globe was torn down about 1644.
It was made of TImber. That's why it burned down. When they rebuilt it they made the roof out of tiles
The Globe Theatre, which was not Shakespeare's by the way, since he was only a part owner, burned down on June 29, 1613 during a performance of Henry VIII.
No. The Globe Theatre burned down by accident during a performance of Shakespeare's play Henry VIII. A cannon was being fired as part of one of the ceremonial scenes in which that play abounds and the wadding landed in the thatched roof by accident.
Only once, on June 29, 1613. Of course there have been other Globe Theatres which didn't burn down, including Shakespeare's Globe, the one standing today.