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The son of Arthur Massinger or Messenger, he was baptized at St Thomas's Salisbury on November 24, 1583. He apparently belonged to an old Salisbury family, for the name occurs in the city records as early as 1415. He is described in his matriculation entry at St Alban Hall, Oxford ( 1602), as the son of a gentleman. His father, who had also been educated at St Alban Hall, was a member of parliament, and was attached to the house hold of Henry Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke. Herbert recommended Arthur in 1587 for the office of examiner in the Court of the Marches .
The 3rd Earl of Pembroke, the William Herbert whose name has been connected with Shakespeare's sonnets, succeeded to the title in 1601. It has been suggested that he supported Massinger at Oxford, but the omission of any reference to him any of Massinger's prefaces points to the contrary. Massinger left Oxford without a degree in 1606. His father had died in 1603, and that may have left him without financial assistance. The lack of a degree and the want of patronage from Lord Pembroke nay both be explained on the supposition that he had become Roman Catholic. On leaving the university he went to London to make his living as a dramatist, but his name cannot be definitely affixed to any play until fifteen years later, when The Virgin Martyr (ent. at Stationers' Hall, December 7, 1621) appeared as the work of Massinger and Thomas Dekker.
During these years he worked in collaboration with other dramatists. A joint letter, from Nathaniel FieldNathaniel Field ( 1587 1620), was an English dramatist and actor; his father was the Puritan preacher John Field and his brother became the Bishop of Llandaff. Field was one of "the children of the Queen's Revels," who performed in Ben Jonson's Cynthia's, Robert Daborne and Philip Massinger, to Philip HenslowePhilip Henslowe (c 1550 January 6, 1616) was an Elizabethan theatrical entrepreneur. Henslowe was born in Lindfield, Sussex, England. By 1577, he was living in Southwark, London, and around that time he married a wealthy widow, which allowed him to invest, begs for an immediate loan of five pounds to release them from their "unfortunate extremitie," the money to be taken from the balance due for the "play of Mr Fletcher's and ours." A second document shows that Massinger and Daborne owed Henslowe £3 on July 4July 4 is the 185th day of the year (186th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 180 days remaining. Events 993 Saint Ulrich of Augsburg canonized. 1054 A supernova is observed by the Chinese and Amerindians near the star ζ Tauri. For severa 1615Events June 2 First Recollet missionaries arrive at Quebec City, from Rouen, France. June 4 Forces under the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu took Osaka Castle in Japan. The second volume of Miguel Cervantes' Don Quixote is published. End of the Sengoku Period in J. The earlier note probably dates from 1613, and from this time Massinger apparently worked regularly with John FletcherJohn Fletcher was born December, 1579 (baptized December 20) in Rye, Sussex, and died in August 1625 (buried August 29 in St. Saviour's, Southwark. After William Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, John Fletcher was the most gifted and influential of the Jacobean, although in editions of Beaumont and Fletcher's works his co-operation is usually unrecognized. Sir Aston Cokayne, Massinger's constant friend and patron, refers in explicit terms to this collaboration in a sonnet addressed to Humphrey Moseley on the publication of his folio edition of Beaumont and Fletcher (Small Poems of Divers Sorts, 1658), and in an epitaph on the two poets he says: "Plays they did write together, were great friends, And now one grave includes them in their ends."