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      • Ruggle may have been inspired in his choice of name for his character by a proceeding in the English judicial system. The term "ignoramus" was written on bills of indictment when the evidence presented seemed insufficient to justify prosecution.
      www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day/ignoramus-2011-03-10
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  2. Nov 20, 2018 · According to contemporary observers, George Ruggle's Ignoramus, first staged at Cambridge in March 1614, enjoyed an immense success, or notoriety, both at the university and at “Whitehall while it sent shockwaves through the Inns of Court and infuriated Sir Edward Coke, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench. The comedy was apparently ...

  3. Ignoramus a comedy as it was several times acted with extraordinary applause before the Majesty of King James : with a supplement which, out of respect to the students of the common law, was hitherto wanting / written in Latine by R. Ruggles ... ; and translated into English by R. C. ...

  4. Apr 20, 2013 · How this abstruse foreign form from the specialised language of the law became an English word is due to George Ruggle. He wrote a play called Ignoramus, mostly in Latin, which was performed on 8 March 1615 at Trinity College, Cambridge, before an audience of some 2,000 which included King James I of England and the future Charles I. It ...

  5. Nobody would care to deny that Ignoramus is a generic parody of common lawyers, and it is likely enough that Ruggle was provoked into writing his comedy by a particularly irritating local specimen of the breed.

    • Dana Sutton
  6. We must wonder why Ruggle did this: for its success, after all, the plan Trico devises to gain possession of Rosabella only requires only himself and a single confederate who is unknown to Ignoramus and Torcol, Cupes.

  7. philological.cal.bham.ac.uk › stephens › introintro

    intro. 1. There exists a strangely persistent modern belief that George Ruggle’s comed Igynoramus, produced at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1615 and the most popular and longest-lived play in the entire repertory of English academic drama, was written as a lampoon of Cambridge’s municipal government, or at least one member thereof.

  8. Ignoramus is a college farce, a 1615 academic play by George Ruggle. Written in Latin (with passages in English and French), it was arguably the most famous and influential academic play of English Renaissance drama .

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