Henry IV, Part 1: Difference between revisions
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Explore the curated [https://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/e9k9nv | Explore the curated [https://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/e9k9nv image group] for ''Henry IV, Part 1'' in the Folger digital image collection. | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == |
Latest revision as of 12:08, 10 August 2020
This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see Henry IV, Part 1 (disambiguation).
Family relationships are at the center of Henry IV, Part 1, one of William Shakespeare's plays. King Henry IV and Prince Hal form one major father-son pair, with Henry in despair because Hal lives a dissolute life. The father-son pair of Hotspur (Lord Henry Percy) and his father, the Earl of Northumberland, is in seeming contrast; the king envies Northumberland “his Harry,” wishing he could claim the gallant Hotspur as his own. Meanwhile, Hal has entered into a quasi-father-son relationship with a disreputable but amusing knight, Sir John Falstaff.
Another strand of action centers on still more family relationships. Hotspur’s stand against Henry focuses on Hotspur’s brother-in-law, Mortimer. Mortimer, who fought against the Welsh magician Owen Glendower, was defeated and captured and has married Glendower’s daughter. King Henry pronounces Mortimer a traitor whom he will not ransom. Hotspur, in declaring war on Henry, sees himself as fighting for Mortimer, his wife’s brother.
Several of the details in the play that make these relationships prominent were created by Shakespeare; they are not found in the chronicles of English history that provide the play’s historical narrative. This rewriting and the resulting focus on relationships pulls us in: rather than distant historical figures, Henry, Hal, and Hotspur become characters caught up in relationships that resemble family situations today. The emphasis on relationships also reminds us that the wars for control of England, Scotland, and Wales in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries were basically family struggles. Brothers, cousins, and nephews fought for the tantalizing prize of the crown.
Scholars believe that Shakespeare wrote Henry IV, Part I in 1596-97. It was published as a quarto in 1598.[1]
Productions at the Folger
- 1 Henry IV (Folger Theatre, 2019)
- 1 Henry IV (Folger Theatre, 2008)
- Henry IV, Part I (Shenandoah Shakespeare Express, 1997)
Early editions
First Folio
- LUNA: First Folio: d5v -f6r
- Hamnet: STC 22273 Fo. 1 no. 68
Second Folio
- LUNA: Second Folio: d5v - f6r
- Hamnet: STC 22274 Fo. 2 no. 07
Second Quarto
- LUNA: Second Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22281 Copy 1
Third Quarto
- LUNA: Third Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22282
Fourth Quarto
- LUNA: Fourth Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22283 Copy 1
Fifth Quarto
- LUNA: Fifth Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22284 Copy 1
Sixth Quarto
- LUNA: Sixth Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22285 Copy 1
Seventh Quarto
- LUNA: Seventh Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22286 Copy 1
Eighth Quarto
- LUNA: Eighth Quarto
- Hamnet: STC 22287 Copy 6
Modern editions
Henry IV, Part 1 can be read online with Folger Digital Texts and purchased from Simon and Schuster.
Hamnet link to Folger Edition: PR2753 .M6 v2003 copy 2 v.09
In popular culture
Translations
Performance materials
Characters in the Play
- King Henry IV, formerly Henry Bolingbroke
- Prince Hal, Prince of Wales and heir to the throne (also called Harry and Harry Monmouth)
- Lord John of Lancaster, younger son of King Henry
- Earl of Westmoreland
- Sir Walter Blunt
- Hotspur (Sir Henry, or Harry, Percy)
- Lady Percy (also called Kate)
- Earl of Northumberland,
- Henry Percy, Hotspur’s father
- Earl of Worcester, Thomas Percy, Hotspur’s uncle
- Edmund Mortimer, earl of March
- Lady Mortimer (also called “the Welsh lady”)
- Owen Glendower, a Welsh lord, father of Lady Mortimer
- Douglas (Archibald, earl of Douglas)
- Archbishop (Richard Scroop, archbishop of York)
- Sir Michael, a priest or knight associated with the archbishop
- Sir Richard Vernon, an English knight
- Sir John Falstaff
- Poins (also called Edward, Yedward, and Ned)
- Bardolph
- Peto
- Gadshill, setter for the robbers
- Hostess of the tavern (also called Mistress Quickly)
- Vintner, or keeper of the tavern
- Francis, an apprentice tapster
- Carriers, Ostlers, Chamberlain, Travelers, Sheriff, Servants, Lords, Attendants, Messengers, Soldiers
Other media
Image Group
Explore the curated image group for Henry IV, Part 1 in the Folger digital image collection.
Notes
- ↑ Adapted from the Folger Library Shakespeare edition, edited by Barbara A. Mowat and Paul Werstine. © 1994 Folger Shakespeare Library.