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 in September 1573, when a reward was 'gevin to the Italyans for serteyne pastymes that they shewed before Maister Meare and his brethren'. In 1574 the Revels Accounts include expenditure 'for the Italyan players that ffollowed the progresse and made pastyme fyrst at Wynsor and afterwardes at Reading'. Elizabeth was at Windsor on 11 and 12 July; on 15 July she removed to Reading and remained there to 22 July. At Windsor the Italians used 'iij devells cotes and heades & one olde mannes fries cote'; at Reading, where they performed on 15 July, the provisions included staves, hooks, and lambskins for shepherds, arrows for nymphs, a scythe for Saturn, and 'horstayles for the wylde mannes garment'. Professor Feuillerat appears to suggest that they may have been playing Tasso's Aminta, produced at Ferrara on 31 July 1573. But there were other pastorals. The Italians are probably the comedians commended to the Lord Mayor on 22 July, and in November Thomas Norton calls special attention to 'the unchaste, shamelesse and unnaturall tomblinge of the Italian weomen'. How long this company remained in England is unknown. There was an Italian acrobat at the Kenilworth festivities on 14 July 1575, but the description suggests that he was a solitary performer. The Treasurer of the Chamber paid 'Alfruso Ferrabolle and the rest of the Italian players' for a play at Court on 27 February 1576, to the consideration of which I shall return. In April 1577 there was an Italian play before the Council at Durham Place. Finally, on 13 January 1578, the Privy Council addressed a letter to the Lord Mayor, requiring him to permit 'one Drousiano, an Italian, a commediante and his companye', to play until the first week of the coming Lent. I take it that the company was also at Court, since the Chamber Accounts for 1577-8 include an item 'for a mattres hoopes and boardes with tressells for the Italian Tumblers'. The company to which the visit of 1573-4 was due cannot be identified with any certainty. Presumably it came through France, and ought to have left signs there. There seem to have been three Italian companies in France during 1571. The first, in February, was that of Giovanni Tabarin. The second, that seen by Lord Buckhurst in Paris, was the famous Compagnia de' Gelosi, of which one Signora Vittoria, of Ferrara, known on the stage as Fioretta, was the prima donna. This, however, had returned to Milan by the spring of 1572 and its subsequent movements hardly render a visit to England in 1573 plausible. A third