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William Danby (coroner) : ウィキペディア英語版 | William Danby (coroner)
William Danby (''fl.'' 1542–1593) was a sixteenth-century lawyer and Coroner of the Queen's Household towards the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. He is particularly noted for having presided over the inquest into the controversial death at Deptford in 1593 of the poet/dramatist Christopher Marlowe, who probably exerted a greater influence upon William Shakespeare than any other playwright did.〔See a selection of quotations from Shakespearian scholars concerning Marlowe's influence on Shakespeare on the (website ) of the International Marlowe-Shakespeare Society.〕 ==Lincoln's Inn==
Although the date of Danby's birth is unknown, he is most probably the William Danby who entered Lincoln's Inn on 1 August 1542.〔Discovered by William Urry () and supported by Charles Nicholl () and Park Honan ().〕 If so, his exact contemporary there was the father of Marlowe's friend and patron Thomas Walsingham, another Thomas, who was born in 1526.〔''The Records of the Honorable Society of Lincoln's Inn. The Black Books, Vol. I, 1422–1586'' (London, 1897). A William Danby is also mentioned in the ''Black Books'' as having, on 8 May 1553, agreed with Thomas Hardwick "to be responsible for the debts of Miles Sticke, late Steward."〕 Danby was therefore probably in his late sixties at the time of Marlowe's inquest.
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