they were mostly in London!
they were mostly in London!
stratford upon Avon
The theatres in Tudor times were open, in the sense that they had no roof.
in the Tudor times the theatres develpoed by people having sexual intercourse whilst on stage, and screaming ohh yes harder baby !!!
chips
no, Big Ben was built between 1858-1859.:)
No. The Trojan horse wasa supposedly built in the Greek times, in a war over Helen Of Troy.
people lived in small hut that they built themselves
people lived in small hut that they built themselves
The first theatres which were open were built during the barbarian times to effect executions as public warnings. Theatres then became terraced amphi theatres such as the Rome's Collesium where cruel games of lesser blood and gore between man and beast were conducted till one's death. Proper theatres for staging plays existed during the time of Sophocles.
Elizabethan Theatres were open roofed play houses built in the Renaissance
In Elizabethan times there were actually city ordinances prohibiting the building of theatres within the city (there were no city walls around sixteenth-century London). Think of it as a zoning ordinance. The city fathers thought that theatres created traffic problems and contributed to the spread of crime and disease (although they did not worry about churches, strangely enough). Therefore the theatres were built in the suburbs.