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Christopher Marlow Books

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Books number: 3

Explore all available books and works by Christopher Marlow , including popular novels, complete collections, and translated titles. This page is regularly updated with new releases and featured works.

Christopher Marlowe (February 26, 1564 - May 30, 1593) was an English playwright, poet, and translator of the Elizabethan era. The most famous English tragedian after William Shakespeare, and is known for his sent poetry. Christopher Marlowe (Marlene) was born in 1564, in the same year as Shakespeare, and was baptized on February 26 in the suburb of Canterbury in the British city of Kent, and taught in its most famous schools, such as the King's School. His father was a cobbler and Marlo learned from him and that strength is a symbol of existence and inherited from his father strength in his plays. Marlo was known as a quarrelsome in his youth and with two notorious sisters in the town. After his school studies, he joined the University of Cambridge in 1580, where the study was for three years, but it continues for another three years if the learner intends to obtain a priestly degree. The university inquired about his activities and seemed suspicious of his gift, as he had been absent from Cambridge for a long time, and his matter seemed terrifying to the authorities, who suspected that he was in the French city of Reims and that he was a spy for the British Protestant Queen Elizabeth, transmitting news about Catholics. The story says that Marlucan was a writer and an actor on the stage, but outside he was a professional spy, and that his play (The Jew of Malta) was taken from his own experience, meaning that he was a spy for ships and was imprisoned in Malta, so he wrote his play there.