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Robert Greene (1558–1592) was an English author popular in his day, and now best known for a posthumous pamphlet attributed to him, Greene's Groats-Worth of Witte, bought with a million of Repentance, widely believed to contain an attack on William Shakespeare. Greene was a popular Elizabethan dramatist and pamphleteer known for ...
23. Juni 2015 · 6.23.15 | Humanities, Research, Podcast. Hold That Thought – The Upstart Crow: Shakespeare's feud with Robert Greene. In 1592, the writer and critic Robert Greene accused the budding playwright William Shakespeare of plagiarism, and this stung the Bard deeply.
Robert Greene (born July 1558?, Norwich, Eng.—died Sept. 3, 1592, London) was one of the most popular English prose writers of the later 16th century and Shakespeare’s most successful predecessor in blank-verse romantic comedy. He was also one of the first professional writers and among the earliest English autobiographers.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
18. Sept. 2017 · In Elton’s drama an ultra-snooty Robert Greene is presented as Shakespeare’s nemesis. Indeed, when Shakespeare arrived in Elizabethan London and tried to break into the capital’s cultural...
Robert Greene was a contemporary and rival of Shakespeare, who attacked him in a pamphlet. He wrote historical and comic plays, some of which may have influenced Shakespeare's works.
An Upstart Crow. Robert Greene achieved immortality by ridiculing the greatest writer in the English language. Greene's A Groats-worth of Witte, posthumously published in 1592, also marked the first mention of William Shakespeare working in London as a playwright and actor.
Its title quotes "an upstart Crow, beautified with our feathers", a critique of Shakespeare by his rival Robert Greene in the latter's Groats-Worth of Wit. [2] The show is set from 1592 (the year of Greene's quotation) onwards.