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Associated Press  (click to enlarge)
An archaeologist works on uncovering the remains of one of London's earliest theaters, where a young William Shakespeare is thought to have trodden the boards.
 
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Published: Thursday, August 7, 2008

Site of Bard's stage unearthed

LONDON -- What may be the theater where "The Merchant of Venice" and "Romeo and Juliet" likely debuted and where William Shakespeare himself may have trodden the boards has been discovered in east London, archaeologists at the Museum of London said Wednesday.

The possible foundations of what is known as simply The Theatre were unearthed by builders excavating the site for another structure. Museum archaeologists were called to the location to make sure nothing was destroyed, and they had a eureka moment.

"We were there, scratching our heads, looking into the trenches, thinking, 'This could be it,' " said Jo Lyon, a senior archaeologist at the museum. "So we did some more research, and then we found the angled walls. And we all went, 'Oh my gosh, this should be it.' "

Archaeologists had known for a long time there was a high probability for The Theatre to be on this particular site. But there are no maps that show its location, no images to show what it might have looked like, and only a vague description of it.

"It's in the right place, it's at the right angle to be a polygonal shape," Lyon said.

The possible discovery of The Theatre, built in 1576 and where Shakespeare's troupe performed in the 1590s, could complete the set of open-air theaters where the Bard's plays were staged. The Rose theater's location was discovered in 1989 in Bankside, just south of the River Thames in central London, and the Globe theater is nearby. A replica of the Globe was built on a site close to the original and opened in 1997.

Shakespeare's company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, moved into The Theatre in the 1590s. Until then, they had been performing at the Rose, but a shakeup in the London theater scene necessitated the move, said Martin Wiggins, a fellow at the Shakespeare Institute at the University of Birmingham.

And in 1597, a dispute with the landlord forced the company to move again, Wiggins said. The company didn't own the ground The Theatre was built on, but Lord Chamberlain's Men did own the material it was built with, so they simply dismantled the entire theater and moved it south across the River Thames, where it was rebuilt and renamed the Globe.

But The Theatre's foundations remained in east London, and that's what archaeologists believe they have found.

"The first thing I want to know about it is what the foundations can tell us about the architecture," Wiggins said. "How big was it? How does it compare with the Rose? How does it compare with the Globe?"

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