May 10 – London theatres close, and remain almost continuously closed until the end of the year (and on to October 1637), due to an outbreak of
bubonic plague.
Playing companies are profoundly impacted; the
King's Revels Men dissolve and other companies tour the countryside to survive.[1]
June –
Tommaso Campanella, having left Italy for France, because of his pro-French views, gives a speech in front of Cardinal Richelieu; he teaches at the
Sorbonne.[4]
August – King
Charles I and Queen
Henrietta Maria visit the
University of Oxford. They are entertained with college theatricals, including William Strode's allegory The Floating Island (with music by
Henry Lawes), which mocks
William Prynne as the play-hating Melancholico; George Wilde's Love's Hospital; and William Cartwright's The Royal Slave (also with Lawes' music and design by
Inigo Jones). Henrietta Maria enjoys the last so much that she brings it to be performed at
Hampton Court by her
Queen Henrietta's Men.[1]
Abraham Cowley – Sylva (in the 2nd edition of his collection Poetical Blossoms)
William Sampson – Virtus post Funera vivit, or Honour Tryumphing over Death, being true Epitomes of Honorable, Noble, Learned, and Hospitable Personages
^R. H. Shepherd, ed., The Plays and Poems of Henry Glapthorne: Now first collected with illustrative notes and a memoir of the Author, 2 volumes, London, J. Pearson, 1874.
^John R. Elliott, Jr and John Buttrey (1985). The Royal Plays at Christ Church in 1636: A New Document. Theatre Research International, 10, pp. 93–106.
doi:
10.1017/S0307883300010646.