• February –
Pembroke's Men contract with
Francis Langley to play the next year at his new
Swan Theatre in London. • By March –
Romeo and Juliet becomes the first of Shakespeare's plays to be published as a "
bad quarto". •
March 17 – After the death of
William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham on March 5, his place as
Lord Chamberlain of England is taken by
George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, son of a previous Lord Chamberlain. Lord Hunsdon reverses Cobham's policy of hostility toward the actors in
English Renaissance theatre and returns to his father's policy of general tolerance and patronage. The
playing company under his patronage, which includes
William Shakespeare and
Richard Burbage, becomes the
Lord Chamberlain's Men. •
April 23 – The feast for the
Order of the Garter at the
Palace of Whitehall in London is a likely occasion for the first performance of Shakespeare's comedy
The Merry Wives of Windsor. • c.
May 1 – The first performance of
George Chapman's ''
An Humorous Day's Mirth'' is the first
comedy of humours played by the
Admiral's Men at
The Rose Theatre in London. • July – The season goes disastrously wrong for
Pembroke's Men, when they stage the scandalous play
The Isle of Dogs in London. This provokes the authorities to close all of the London theatres for the remainder of the summer.
Ben Jonson, co-writer of the play with
Thomas Nashe, is arrested on the orders of Queen
Elizabeth I of England's "interrogator",
Richard Topcliffe, briefly jailed in
Marshalsea Prison, and charged with "Leude and mutynous behavior". • December –
Miguel de Cervantes is jailed in
Seville for discrepancies in his accounts as a
tax collector. ==New books==