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Today we're looking at two pamphlets, published within days of each other in February 1620 - "Hic Mulier" and "Haec Vir"... I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting! Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos. Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: / katrina.marchant Twitter: / kat_marchant Email: [email protected] Intro / Outro song: Silent Partner, "Greenery" [ • Greenery – Silent Partner (No Copyright Mu... ] Images: Frontispieces for Hic Mulier and Haec Vir (1620) – reproduced in the online facsimile edition mentioned in this video (link: https://archive.org/details/hicmulier...) Other sections of these texts (shown later in the video) are from this source too. Frontispiece to Joseph Swetnam. The Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women (1615). From https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibr... and Wikimedia Commons. Paul van Somer I’s portrait of James I of England in state robes (circa 1620). Held by the Royal Collection. Frontispiece for The firste volume of the chronicles of England, Scotlande, and Irelande (1577), containing William Harrison’s Description of England. Held by the British Library. Image of the “Great Chain of Being”, taken from Retorica Christiana, published by Diego Valdes (signed as F. Didacus in the bottom left) in 1579. From Wikimedia Commons. Elizabeth I's Proclamation Against Excess (1577). Held by the British Library. Woodcut showing the alchemic approach to four humours in relation to the four elements and zodiacal signs. Book illustration in “Quinta Essentia” by Leonhart Thurneisser zum Thurn (gen. Leonhard Thurneysser). Inscriptions (clockwise): Flegmat, Sanguin, Coleric, Melang. Person is androgyne (1574). Held in a private collection, from Wikimedia Commons. Production photographs from Shakespeare’s Globe’s As You Like It (2018). Jack Laskey plays Rosalind and Bettrys Jones plays Orlando. Photographs © Tristram Kenton. Hosted at https://www.shakespearesglobe.com/wha... Quoted texts: L. B. Wright, Middle-class culture in Elizabethan England (1935) Stephen Gosson, The School of Abuse (1579)