For a time, only two survived: the Lord Chamberlain's Men (named for its royal patron, the lord chamberlain Henry Carey, Queen Elizabeth's powerful cousin) and the Lord Admiral's Men.
The actor, born Maurice Micklewhite Jnr in Rotherhithe, south-east London, was presented with his award during a special service conducted by the Clerk of the Chamberlain's Court at the Museum's City Gallery.
Names include Sir Thomas Denys - a notable figure at Elizabeth I's court and George Carey, Baron Hunsdon, who later became patron of the Chamberlain's Men theatre company of which William Shakespeare was a member.
She is one of many prominent UK figures to be honoured by the city, but Murray Craig, the clerk of the Chamberlain's Court at the City of London, says that this is a "symbolic" modern version of a tradition which began in the 13th Century as an "economic transaction".
He received the gold master-keys of the Tower from the Lord Chamberlain, symbolising his responsibility for the royal palace.
In 1603, when Queen Elizabeth died and James I took over, James made the Lord Chamberlain's Men his own, renaming them the King's Men.
November 1958: The Lord Chamberlain's ban on plays with homosexual themes is lifted, allowing representation in theatre and cinema.
He said the open-air theatre was one of London's first dedicated playhouses and it was here that a young William Shakespeare performed as part of The Lord Chamberlain's Men company of players, and had his first plays performed.
To help pay the increase the Lord Chamberlain's Men had to do something theater companies usually were loath to: They sold publication rights to four of their most popular plays, all by Shakespeare--Richard III, Richard II, Henry IV and Love's Labour's Lost.
While Great Britain's embrace of isolationism and appeasement under the Baldwin and Chamberlain governments was a disaster for the British, who were high on Germany's target list, it is possible to argue that isolationism was a sensible policy for America.
In a debate on Europe in Westminster Hall, Conservative MP Edward Leigh warned against greater fiscal unity in the eurozone and compared agreements reached at EU summits to the return of former Neville Chamberlain to the UK declaring "peace in our time", the year before World War II began.
The camerlengo, or chamberlain, helps administer the Vatican bureaucracy in the period between Benedict's resignation and the election of a new pope.
Neiman "has the journalistic talent, as well as the artistic ability, to convey the essence of a game or contestant with great impact, from the Kentucky Derby to Wilt Chamberlain, from the America's Cup to Muhammad Ali, from the Super Bowl to Bobby Hull, " sports writer Nick Seitz said.
The Yankees also have hard-throwing Joba Chamberlain in the bullpen.
The poster boy for off-the-rails, disastrous optimism is Neville Chamberlain, the British prime minister who met with Hitler in 1938 and handed him a big chunk of Czechoslovakia in exchange for the Fuhrer's word.
Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 points in the era of Bill Russell is different from Chamberlain having a 100-point game in the era of Patrick Ewing, David Robinson and Shaquille O'Neal.
This season is an important one in the pitching life of Chamberlain, who'd shown such promise in the early moments of his career, but had become something much less promising, undone by injury and other distractions.
In the Warriors' locker room, Vathis wanted a photograph that would tell the story of Chamberlain's Bunyanesque accomplishment.
Control of the Palace of Westminster and its precincts was for centuries exercised by the Queen's representative, the Lord Great Chamberlain.
Certain ceremonial rooms continue to be controlled by the Lord Great Chamberlain.
It represents a remarkable turnaround, considering the severity of Chamberlain's injury.
Not to mention that, at the time, Chamberlain was already rehabbing from Tommy John elbow ligament replacement surgery, with an anticipated return date around June or July.
Once the two have finally and officially buried the hatchet, Chamberlain can get to work re-establishing himself as a top bullpen option after two years cut short by injuries.
WSJ: New York Yankee Reliever Joba Chamberlain Trying To Bury the Hatchet
The Yankees announced Chamberlain's injury on their off-day Thursday.
It could be viewed without assistance from the upper deck, and surely at home plate, where the unimpressed Red Sox pounded Chamberlain for another three ugly runs and rendered the Stadium silent.
Once the framework of a tune was in place, Frisell and Chamberlain returned to the studio to add simple melodies and more layers.
Their numbers and their performances are so out of kilter with what the game is used to that they are the soccer equivalent of Wilt Chamberlain and Wayne Gretzky players whose domination of the sport is so thorough that it's difficult to digest.
Rooney laid the ball back to Oxlade-Chamberlain, who cracked a shot along the ground that nestled into the bottom right corner of the goal.
WSJ: Brazil 2, England 2: Brazil's Maracan? Stadium, National Team Need Work
The Lakers, even with Chamberlain's outsized personality, didn't face nearly the level of media interest.
Three times premier and minister of war, he signed the Munich pact with British prime minister Chamberlain which gave Hitler posession of the Sudetenland.
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