太子探花

New discovery solves mystery of the location of Shakespeare’s London house

LONDON (AP) 鈥 Fans of know that the great playwright came from , the riverside English town where tourists still throng to see his childhood home.

But he made his name in London 鈥 though few traces of him remain in the British capital.

A newly discovered 17th-century map sheds new light on the Bard鈥檚 London life, pinpointing for the first time the exact location of the only home Shakespeare bought in the city, and where he may have worked on .

Shakespeare scholar Lucy Munro, who found the document, said that it supplies 鈥渆xtra bits of the jigsaw puzzle鈥 of Shakespeare’s life. And as with so many discoveries, it was partly due to luck.

鈥淚 came across it in the London Archives when I was looking for other things,” Munro said.

New evidence of the building’s location

Historians have long known that Shakespeare bought property in 1613 near the Blackfriars Theatre, but the exact location was a mystery. A plaque on a 19th-century building records only that the playwright had lodgings 鈥渘ear this site.鈥

A plan of the Blackfriars precinct found by Munro and disclosed Thursday by King’s College London shows in detail Shakespeare鈥檚 house, a substantial L-shaped dwelling carved from a former medieval monastery, including its gatehouse.

The 13th-century Dominican friary had been redeveloped for more secular uses after the dissolution of the monasteries by King Henry VIII in the mid-16th century. The precinct included the Blackfriars playhouse, which Shakespeare part-owned.

Munro, professor of Shakespeare and early modern literature at King鈥檚 College London, said it was a desirable area moving slightly down-market 鈥 due to people like Shakespeare, who was affluent but associated with the slightly d茅class茅 world of the stage.

鈥淎fter the dissolution of the monasteries, a lot of the nobility, quite high-ranking courtiers, court officials are living in the Blackfriars,鈥 Munro said. By the time Shakespeare bought his property, 鈥渢here are still a lot of important people living there, people who make protests against the playhouses at various points, because they see the playhouses as a bit of a public nuisance.鈥

Shakespeare used the profits of his plays to build a fine family house, now demolished, in Stratford, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northwest of London. He died there in 1616 at the age of 52.

It鈥檚 not certain whether Shakespeare lived in his London property or just rented it out. But Munro said that the size of the house and its location a five-minute walk from the Blackfriars Theatre suggest he may have spent more time in London toward the end of his life than is widely assumed. She said that he may have worked here on his final plays, 鈥淗enry VIII鈥 and 鈥淭he Two Noble Kinsmen,鈥 both co-written with John Fletcher.

Will Tosh, director of education at Shakespeare鈥檚 Globe 鈥 a reconstruction of the open-air Elizabethan playhouse where many of the Bard鈥檚 plays were first performed 鈥 said that Munro鈥檚 discovery provides a 鈥渄azzling new sense of Shakespeare the London writer. She鈥檚 helped us to understand how much the city meant to our greatest ever dramatist, as a professional and personal home.鈥

Destroyed in the Great Fire

Shakespeare left the property to his daughter Susanna, and it remained in the family for another half-century. Munro also found two archival documents detailing its sale by the playwright鈥檚 granddaughter Elizabeth Hall Nash Barnard in 1665. A year later, the building burned to the ground in the Great Fire of London, which destroyed much of the medieval city.

Only a few remnants of Shakespeare鈥檚 London remain in the area, now part of the city’s financial district, including a fragment of wall from the medieval friary. Nearby, the name Playhouse Yard is a reminder that a theater once stood here.

And visitors can have a pint in the Cockpit pub across the street from the site of Shakespeare鈥檚 house. The 1600s map shows it as a building called the Sign of the Cock, likely a tavern. It鈥檚 not difficult to imagine Shakespeare and his colleagues carousing there.

鈥淭here are certainly complaints in the period about the playhouses leading to the opening of more and more drinking houses 鈥 鈥榟ouses for tippling,鈥 as they call them in one of the documents I was looking at,鈥 Munro said.

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

Federal 太子探花 Network Logo
Log in to your WTOP account for notifications and alerts customized for you.