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 several plays on Caesar, extant and lost, which are upon record. C. Crawford (M. S. C. i. 290) indicates some parallels which suggest a date of authorship between 1592 and 1596. Charlemagne or The Distracted Emperor c. 1600

[MS.] Egerton MS. 1994. At the end is the note, 'Nella [Greek: ph d ph n r] la B' = 'Nella fedeltà finirò la vita'. Editions by A. H. Bullen (1884, O. E. P. iii) and F. L. Schoell (1920).—Dissertation: F. L. Schoell, Un Drame Élisabéthain Anonyme C (1912, Revue Germanique, viii. 155). Bullen suggests that the author was Chapman, and also thinks Tourneur or Marston conceivable. He quotes Fleay's opinion in favour of Field. Fleay, ii. 319, withdraws Field and substitutes Dekker. He identifies the play with the 'King Charlemagne' of Peele's Farewell of 1589 (cf. s.v. Peele, Battle of Alcazar). Schoell makes an elaborate case for Chapman, and thinks that the play might be The Fatall Love, a French Tragedy, entered as his in S. R. on 29 June 1660, and included, without author's name, in Warburton's list of burnt plays (3 Library, ii. 231). A date later than 1584 is indicated by the use of Du Bartas's Seconde Semaine of that year. It may be added that the style points to c. 1600 rather than c. 1590. Claudius Tiberius Nero > 1607

S. R. 1607, April 10 (Buck). 'A booke called the tragicall Life and Death of Claudius Tiberius Nero.' Francis Burton (Arber, iii. 346). 1607. The Tragedie of Claudius Tiberius Nero, Rome's greatest Tyrant. Truly represented out of the purest Records of those Times. For Francis Burton. [Epistle to Sir Arthur Mannering, son of Sir George of Eithfield, Shropshire; Verses Ad Lectores.] 1607. The Statelie Tragedie of Claudius Tiberius Nero For Francis Burton. [Another issue.] Edition by J. S. Farmer (S. F. T.). The play, which is on Tiberius, not Nero, is to be distinguished from Nero (1624). The epistle, not apparently by the author, says that the play's 'Father was an Academician'. ''Club Law. 1599-1600''

[MS.] St. John's College, Cambridge, MS. S. 62. [Without t.p. and imperfect; probably identical with a MS. of the play owned by Richard Farmer.]

Edition by G. C. Moore Smith (1907). [Epilogue.]—Dissertation: G. C. Moore Smith, The Date of C. L. (1909, M. L. R. iv. 268).

The play is described by Fuller, ''Hist. of Cambridge'' (1655), 156, as given at Clare Hall in 1597-8. But J. S. Hawkins, in his edition of Ruggle's Ignoramus (1787), xvi, gives the alternative date 1599, and this has now been confirmed by the discovery of manuscript annals of Cambridge, probably by Fuller himself, with the entry, under the