There are four complete or nearly complete extant English biblical collections of plays. A collection is the
York cycle of forty-eight pageants; there are also the
Towneley plays of thirty-two pageants; the
Ludus Coventriae; and the
Chester cycle of twenty-four pageants, now generally agreed to be an Elizabethan reconstruction of older medieval traditions. Also extant are two pageants from a New Testament
cycle acted at Coventry. Additionally, a fifteenth-century play of the life of
Mary Magdalene,
The Brome Abraham and Isaac and a sixteenth-century play of the
Conversion of Saint Paul exist. Besides the
Middle English drama, there are a few surviving plays in
Cornish: namely, the
Ordinalia (which is a cycle of three plays) and
Pascon Agan Aruth which both tell biblical stories, and
Bewnans Ke and
Bewnans Meriasek, which tell the stories of the lives of saints. These biblical plays differ widely in content. Most contain episodes such as the
Fall of Lucifer, the
Creation and Fall of Man,
Cain and Abel,
Noah and the Flood,
Abraham and Isaac, the
Nativity, the
Raising of Lazarus, the
Passion, and the
Resurrection. Other pageants included the story of
Moses, the
Procession of the Prophets, ''Christ's Baptism
, the Temptation in the Wilderness
, and the Assumption and Coronation of the Virgin
. In given cycles, the plays came to be sponsored by the newly emerging Medieval craft guilds. The York mercers, for example, sponsored the Doomsday'' pageant. Other guilds presented scenes appropriate to their trade: the building of the
Ark from the carpenters' guild; the
five loaves and fishes miracle from the bakers; and the
visit of the Magi, with their offerings of gold, frankincense and myrrh, from the goldsmiths. The guild associations are not, however, to be understood as the method of production for all towns. While the Chester pageants are associated with guilds, there is no indication that the N-Town plays are either associated with guilds or performed on
pageant wagons. Perhaps the most famous of the mystery plays, at least to modern readers and audiences, are those of Wakefield. Unfortunately, we cannot know whether the plays of the Towneley manuscript are actually the plays performed at Wakefield but a reference in the ''Second Shepherds' Play'' to
Horbery Shrogys is strongly suggestive. In "The London Burial Grounds" by Mrs Basil Holmes (1897), the author claims that the Holy Priory Church, next to
St Katherine Cree on Leadenhall Street, London was the location of miracle plays from the tenth to the sixteenth century.
Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London (c 1500 - 1569) stopped this in 1542. ==Spanish mystery plays==