Christopher Marlowe: Poet, Playwright, Spy
Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593), or Kit Marlowe, was a poet and playwright of the English Renaissance who wrote during the Elizabethan Era (1558-1603). His mastery of the blank verse – unrhymed iambic pentameter – transformed the way plays were written for Elizabethan theatre and influenced many other dramatists, including William Shakespeare (1564-1616). Marlowe's plays were known for their overambitious and morally ambiguous protagonists, realistic portrayals of emotion, and their use of crowd-pleasing violence; his most significant works include Tamburlaine the Great (circa 1587), Doctor Faustus (circa 1592), and Edward II (circa 1592), as well as the narrative poem Hero and Leander. His personal life was as dramatic as his work – an alleged atheist and homosexual man with ties to the queen's secret service, Marlowe was killed in a mysterious tavern brawl in May 1593.
Early Life & Education
Marlowe was born in Canterbury, England, sometime in February 1564, and was baptized there on 26 February, exactly two months before Shakespeare was baptized in Stratford-upon-Avon. His father, John Marlowe, had come to Canterbury in the mid-1550s in search of work. In 1561, John Marlowe married Katherine Arthur, the daughter of a peasant family from Dover. The marriage produced nine children, of whom Christopher was the second – tragically, four of these children would die before reaching adulthood, including the eldest, Mary. To compound the difficulty of these losses, the Marlowes were a poor family who constantly had to rely on welfare assistance from local charities.
At the age of 8, Marlowe entered grammar school – this was an unusual trajectory, since the sons of tradesmen often abandoned their formal educations around that age to begin apprenticeships. He attended King's School in Canterbury, where he studied Latin, classical literature, rhetoric, and oratory, as well as the hexametric verses of the ancient Roman literature by poets Ovid and Virgil. As scholar David Riggs explains, Marlowe "internalized the basic principles of Latin prosody (figures of speech, metrical resolution rules, relative stress) that underlaid his great contributions to the art of English poetry" (Cheney, 27). In 1580, 16-year-old Marlowe won a scholarship to Corpus Christi College at Cambridge – this scholarship was awarded to students of lower-class status who had proven adept at writing in verse, with the expectation that they would go on to become Anglican clergymen. Marlowe arrived on campus in December to find a student body that included a mix of "fee-paying gentlemen" and "baseborn scholars" like himself; the division between these two groups, according to Riggs, would lay "the groundwork for many scenes of social conflict that arise in Marlowe's works" (ibid).
Read More
⇒ Christopher Marlowe: Poet, Playwright, Spy











