giaconda's avatarGiaconda's Blog

Following on from my recent post about the reception of the Agincourt campaign by later generations and the associated ‘myth-making’ which has informed our view of those events, I wanted to look at the character of the central figure in Shakespeare’s play and compare and contrast it with the ‘real’ Henry in the evidence that comes down to us today and the interpretations of some modern historians.

Hen Sha

Shakespeare makes his hero a paragon of virtue in so many respects that it would be well nigh impossible for the real, historical figure of King Henry to live up to his alter ego. Firstly, Shakespeare’s Hal is both stern and commanding yet also approachable and affable with his men. He is intelligent and charismatic, displaying all the qualities of a great leader and yet disarmingly gauche and awkward with Princess Catherine as he stumbles over his school boy French and tries to woo her in…

View original post 3,784 more words


Subscribe to my newsletter

  1. […] conceived this article as a defence of King Henry V against the accusation that he was a war criminal. It became apparent, however, that my research […]

    Like

  2. […] However, the castle conveniently passed into the real possession of Edward, Duke of York. In 1403 he obtained the wardship of his nephew, Richard Despenser. (He displaced his sister, who had previously been promised that she could hold the wardship even if others offered to pay more for it.) He may also, perhaps by way of lease, have got hold of part of Elizabeth’s dower lands before her death in July 1409. Certainly, from September that year, Edward was living there for several months, accompanied by his wife, Philippa, and for at least part of the time by no less a person than Henry, Prince of Wales! […]

    Like

  3. […] 16 to the much older, extremely rich and powerful John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford, a brother to Henry V.  Her husband dying quite soon after their childless marriage she promptly married Richard […]

    Like

  4. […] let Isabella leave England (he wanted to keep her dowry and marry her off to his son and heir, Henry of Monmouth) and it wasn’t until two years later that Charles VI’s diplomatic envoys (who included […]

    Like

  5. […] Richard and Anne remained throughout Henry’s reign, until Henry V, the usurper’s son, ascended the throne. At this point Richard and Anne and their gilded […]

    Like

Leave a reply to THE THREE HUNDRED YEARS WAR – Part 1: the Devil’s brood | murreyandblue Cancel reply