List of historical figures dramatised by Shakespeare

This list contains the biographies of historical figures who appear in the plays of William Shakespeare. (Note that it does not contain articles for characters; see instead Category:Shakespearean characters.) It should be possible to cross-reference historical characters to their dramatic counterpart at List of Shakespearean characters (A–K) and (L–Z).

In the following list, figures are listed by the name of the character, as it appears in Shakespeare's plays, and includes a narrative of the role of the character in the play: which may, or may not, reflect the role of the figure in history. The list contains duplicates: for example, Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland will be found listed under N and P. To avoid unnecessary duplication of entries, various names will all redirect to one source, usually the most common name used in the actual texts, with links that direct to the proper initial.

A

For Aenobarbus (or AEnobarbus or Ænobarbus) see Enobarbus.
  • Agrippa is a follower of Caesar in Antony and Cleopatra who proposes that the widowed Antony should marry Octavia.
  • Alcibiades is a soldier who turns renegade when one of his junior officers is sentenced to death; he is a true friend to the title character in Timon of Athens.
  • The Duke of Alençon is one of the French leaders in Henry VI, Part 1.
For Alexander Iden see Iden.
  • Anne:
    • Anne Bullen is a maid of Honour to Katherine who later becomes King Henry's second wife in Henry VIII.
    • Lady Anne is the widow of Prince Edward, wooed by Richard over the corpse of her late father-in-law (Henry VI) in Richard III.
  • Mark Antony (often just Antony, and sometimes Marcus Antonius) turns the mob against Caesar's killers and becomes a Triumvir in Julius Caesar. His romance with Cleopatra drives the action of Antony and Cleopatra.
For Sir Anthony Denny see Denny.
  • Archbishop:
    • Archbishop of Canterbury:
      • The Archbishop of Canterbury is an important character in the first act of Henry V. He expounds Henry's claim to the French throne.
      • Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury is a major character in the last act of Henry VIII, hauled before the privy council by his enemies and threatened with imprisonment, but protected by the king.
      • See also Cardinal Bourchier, who was Archbishop of Canterbury at the time dramatised in Richard III.
    • Archbishop of York:
      • The Archbishop of York (1) is one of the rebel leaders in Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry IV, Part 2.
      • The Archbishop of York (2) assists Queen Elizabeth and the little Duke of York to obtain sanctuary in Richard III.
  • Arthur is a child, the nephew of the king in King John. He persuades Hubert not to put out his eyes, but dies in an attempt to escape captivity.
  • Aumerle is a companion and cousin of Richard in Richard II.
For Duke of Austria see Limoges.
  • The Countess of Auvergne (Jacquette du Peschin) receives Talbot after his capture in Henry VI, Part 1.

B

For Beaufort see Bishop of Winchester.
For Bedford see Prince John of Lancaster, who was the Duke of Bedford.
  • Lord Berkeley acts as messenger from York to Bolingbroke in Richard II.
  • The Duke of Berry is a French leader in Henry V.
  • Bishop:
    • The Bishop of Carlisle supports Richard in Richard II.
    • Bishop of Ely:
      • The Bishop of Ely (1) conspires with the Archbishop of Canterbury in the opening scene of Henry V.
      • The Bishop of Ely (2) ultimately shows his opposition to Richard in Richard III.
    • Bishop of Winchester:
For The Bishop of Lincoln see Bishop of Lincoln.
  • Blanche is King John's niece, married (by arrangement among the kings, to seal an alliance) to the Dauphin.
  • Blunt:
    • Sir James Blunt is a supporter of Richmond in Richard III.
    • Sir John Blunt is a supporter of the king in Henry IV, Part 2.
    • Sir Walter Blunt is a soldier and messenger to the king in Henry IV, Part 1. He is killed by Douglas while wearing the king's armour.
  • Roger Bolingbroke is chaplain to the Duchess of Gloucester and orchestrates the demon-summoning in Henry VI, Part 2.
  • Lady Bona is King Lewis's sister-in-law, whose hopes to marry Edward are thwarted in Henry VI, Part 3.
  • The Duke of Bourbon fights on the French side in Henry V.
For Cardinal Bourchier see Cardinal.
For Anne Bullen see Anne.
  • Burgundy:
  • Bushy is a favourite of Richard in Richard II.
  • Doctor Butts is the king's physician in Henry VIII. He alerts the king to Cranmer's humiliation in refused admittance to the council chamber.

C

For Cardinal Campeius see Cardinal.
For Canterbury see Archbishop of Canterbury.
  • Lord Caputius is an ambassador from the Holy Roman Emperor in Henry VIII.
  • Cardinal:
    • Cardinal Bourchier delivers the little Duke of York from sanctuary, and into the hands of Richard and Buckingham, in Richard III.
    • Cardinal Campeius is the papal legate at the trial of Katherine in Henry VIII.
    • Cardinal Wolsey orchestrates the fall from grace of Buckingham and Katherine, but himself falls from grace and dies, in Henry VIII.
    • See also the Bishop of Winchester, who becomes a Cardinal in the course of Henry VI, Part 1.
For The Bishop of Carlisle see Bishop.
  • Casca is one of the conspirators against Caesar in Julius Caesar. He has an important role in the early parts of the play, reporting offstage events.
  • Caius Cassius, usually known just as Cassius, is a central character in Julius Caesar. He incites the conspiracy against Caesar, and recruits Brutus to the conspirators' ranks.
  • Catesby is a double agent—seemingly loyal to Lord Hastings but actually reporting to Buckingham and Richard—in Richard III.
For Lord Chamberlain and Lord Chancellor see Lord Chamberlain and Lord Chancellor.
For King Charles VII of France see Dauphin.
For The Lord Chief Justice see Lord Chief Justice.
  • Christopher Urswick is a minor character: a priest acting as messenger for Lord Stanley in Richard III.
  • Cinna:
    • Cinna is one of the conspirators against Caesar in Julius Caesar.
    • Cinna is a poet, mistaken for the conspirator Cinna in Julius Caesar. Realising they have the wrong man, the mob "kill him for his bad verses".
  • Clarence:
  • Cleopatra is the lover of Antony in Antony and Cleopatra. She commits suicide using a poisonous asp.
  • Clifford:
  • The Constable of France leads the French forces in Henry V.
  • Constance is Arthur's mother in King John and a fierce advocate for her son's right to the English throne.
  • Caius Martius Coriolanus, usually known just as Coriolanus, is the central character of Coriolanus, who earns the title "Coriolanus" in recognition of his skill at smiting Volscians in Coriolai.
For Thomas Cranmer see Archbishop of Canterbury.
  • Thomas Cromwell is secretary to Wolsey, and later to the Privy Council, in Henry VIII.
  • Cymbeline, the title character of Cymbeline, is king of the Britons, and father to Imogen, Guiderus and Arviragus.

D

  • Dauphin (sometimes Dolphin in older texts):
  • Sir Anthony Denny is a minor character in Henry VIII, who brings Cranmer to the King.
  • Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby is a military leader who ultimately reveals his loyalty to the Richmond faction, in spite of his son being a hostage to Richard, in Richard III.
For Doctor (title) see William Butts or John Caius.
  • Dorset and Grey are the two sons of Queen Elizabeth (wife of Edward IV) from her first marriage, who are arrested and executed on the orders of Buckingham and Richard in Richard III.
  • Donablain is the brother of Malcolm and a minor character in Macbeth.
  • Duchess:
For Duke see Duke of Austria (under Limoges), Duke of Bedford (under Prince John of Lancaster), Duke of Berry, Duke of Bourbon, Duke of Britain (or Brittany), Duke of Buckingham, Duke of Burgundy, Duke of Clarence, Duke of Exeter, Duke of Gloucester, Duke of Lancaster, Duke of Norfolk, Duke of Orleans, Duke of Somerset, Duke of Suffolk, Duke of Surrey or Duke of York.
  • King Duncan is the former Scottish king, preceding Macbeth, before being killed in Macbeth by Macbeth.

E

For Earl see Earl of Cambridge, Earl of Derby, Earl of Essex, Earl of Huntingdon, Earl of Northumberland, Earl of Oxford, Earl of Pembroke, Earl of Richmond (under King Henry VII), Earl Rivers, Earl of Salisbury, Earl of Surrey, Earl of Warwick, Earl of Westmoreland or Earl of Worcester.
For Edmund Mortimer see Mortimer.

F

For France see King Charles VI, King Charles VII, The Constable of France, King Lewis XI, King Philip II

G

For Gaunt see John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster.
For George see George, Duke of Clarence.

H

  • Hal, later King Henry V (sometimes called The Prince of Wales, Prince Henry or just Harry) is a central character in Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry IV, Part 2 and is the title character of Henry V. He has a closer relationship with Falstaff than with his father (Henry IV), but he eventually ascends the throne, rejects Falstaff, and leads the English to victory at Agincourt.
For Harfleur see Governor of Harfleur.
For Harry see Hotspur, Bolingbroke or Henry.
  • Lord Hastings is the prime minister, beheaded on Richard's orders in Richard III.
  • Henry:
  • Sir Walter Herbert is a follower of Richmond in Richard III.
  • Hotspur or Harry Percy, brave and chivalrous but hot-headed and sometimes comical, is an important foil to Hal, and leader of the rebel forces, in Henry IV, Part 1.
  • Hubert is a henchman in King John. He resolves to put out Arthur's eyes, on John's orders, but eventually relents.
For Sir Hugh Mortimer see Mortimer.
For Humphrey see Gloucester.

I

J

K

For Kate see Lady Percy.
  • Katharine/Katherine:
    • Katharine is the French princess who marries Henry in Henry V.
    • Queen Katherine of Aragon is the first wife of King Henry in Henry VIII. She falls from grace, is divorced and dies.
For King see King Charles of France, King Duncan, King Edward, King Henry, King John, King Lewis of France, King Philip of France or King Richard.

L

For Lancaster see John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, Prince John of Lancaster or King Henry IV (aka Bolingbroke). Other members of the House of Lancaster include King Henry V, King Henry VI, Queen Margaret, Prince Edward and Lady Anne.
  • Lepidus is one of the Triumvirs, the three rulers of Rome after Caesar's death, in Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra.
  • Lewis:[N 1]
    • King Lewis XI of France, insulted by Edward IV's marriage to Lady Grey, allies himself with Warwick and Margaret in Henry VI, Part 3.
    • Lewis is the Dauphin in King John. He marries John's niece, Blanche, to cement an alliance with England. Later he leads forces against John.
  • Caius Ligarius is one of the conspirators against Caesar in Julius Caesar.
  • Limoges is the Duke of Austria in King John. He is intimidated—and eventually beheaded in battle—by the Bastard. The character is a composite of Aimar V of Limoges and Leopold V, Duke of Austria.
  • The Bishop of Lincoln speaks in favour of Henry's divorce in the trial scene of Henry VIII.
  • The Lord Mayor of London (historically Edmund Shaa, although not identified as such in the play) is fooled by Richard and Buckingham, and supports Richard's succession, in Richard III.
  • The Lord Chamberlain in Henry VIII is a conflation of two historical Lords Chamberlain, one of them Lord Sandys, who is also a character in the play. (The other is the Earl of Worcester.)
  • The Lord Chancellor (historically Sir Thomas More, although not identified as such in the play) is among the Privy Counsellors who accuse Cranmer in Henry VIII.
  • The Lord Chief Justice is a dramatic foil to Falstaff in Henry IV, Part 2.
  • Sir Thomas Lovell is a courtier of King Henry in Henry VIII.
For Louis see Lewis.

M

For Marcus see (Marcus) Brutus, (Marcus Aurelius) Lepidus, and Mark, which is often interchangeable with Marcus.
  • Malcolm is a son of Duncan that appears in the play Macbeth.
  • Queen Margaret is a fairly epic character, one of the greatest in that respect in Shakespeare. She appears as a naive girl in Henry VI, Part 1 and as an embittered old woman in Richard III. She is a central character of the two intervening plays, Henry VI, Part 2 and Henry VI, Part 3, in which she is the wife of Henry VI and a leader of his armies. In her most notable scene she supervises the murder/execution of Richard Duke of York.
For Mark Antony see Mark Antony.
For Marquess see Marquess of Dorset, Marquess of Montagu and Marquess of Suffolk (under Duke of Suffolk).

N

O

  • Octavia, sister of Octavius, marries Mark Antony when he is widowed in Antony and Cleopatra. Their marriage causes great distress to Antony's lover, Cleopatra.
  • Octavius Caesar is one of the Triumvirs, the three rulers of Rome after Caesar's death, in Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra.
For Old Clifford see Clifford.
For Owen Glendower see Glendower.

P

For Percy see Northumberland, Lady Percy, Worcester or Lady Northumberland.
For Prince see Edward, Henry and John of Lancaster.
  • Proculeius is a follower of Caesar in Antony and Cleopatra.

Q

For Queen see Queen Eleanor, Queen Elizabeth, Queen Isabel(la), Queen Katherine or Queen Margaret.
  • The Queen in Richard II is unnamed and seems to be a conglomerate of Isabella of Valois, Richard's child bride, and his previous (deceased but adult) wife Anne of Bohemia.

R

  • Sir Richard Ratcliffe is a confidant of Richard in Richard III.
  • René or Regnier is the impoverished king of Naples and Jerusalem, and father to Queen Margaret, in Henry VI, Part 1.
  • Richard:
  • The Earl of Richmond, later King Henry VII, leads the rebellion against the cruel rule of Richard III, and eventually succeeds him as king.
  • Earl Rivers is the brother to Queen Elizabeth in Henry VI, Part 3 and Richard III. He is arrested and executed on the orders of Richard and Buckingham.
  • Lord Ross is a supporter of Bolingbroke in Richard II.
  • Rutland is the youngest son of Richard Duke of York (1), killed in battle while still a boy, by Clifford, in Henry VI, part 3. (Historically, Rutland was not the youngest of the four York brothers depicted in the plays. Shakespeare made him so using dramatic licence.)

S

For Sextus Pompey see Pompey.

T

V

  • Sir Thomas Vaughan is executed, alongside Rivers and Grey, in Richard III.
  • Vaux:
    • Sir Nicholas Vaux is a minor character in the scene leading to Buckingham's execution in Henry VIII.
    • Vaux is a minor character of the Lancastrian party in Henry VI, Part 2.
  • Ventidius is a follower of Antony in Antony and Cleopatra.
  • Sir Richard Vernon is a follower of the rebel forces in Henry IV, Part 1.
  • Virgilia is the title character's wife in Coriolanus.
  • Volumnia is the title character's mother in Coriolanus. She persuades her son not to attack Rome, leading to his destruction.

W

For Winchester see Bishop of Winchester.

Y

Notes

  1. ^ "Lewis" in Shakespeare is equivalent to a historical "Louis".

See also

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