Richard the Confessor: Difference between revisions
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==For What It's Worth== | ==For What It's Worth== | ||
Information welcome. | |||
==Works Cited== | ==Works Cited== |
Revision as of 10:11, 9 September 2016
Historical Records
Performance Records (Henslowe's Diary)
F. 8v (Greg, I.16)
In a listing headed as follows:
- "In the name of god Amen begninge the 27 of
- desember 1593 the earle of susex his men
Res at Richard the confeser the 31 of desembʒ 1593 . . . ………. xxxviijs Res at Richard the confeser the 16 of Jenewarye 1593 [i.e., 1594] ………. xjs
Theatrical Provenance
Sussex's Men at the Rose Playhouse. The play is not marked "ne". No other records of it are known apart from these two performances by Sussex's Men, one earning a very respectable 38 shillings,the second taking only 11 shillings.
Probable Genre(s)
History (Harbage)
Saints play (Wiggins, Steggle)
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
The life of St. Richard of Chichester (c.1197-1253), a twelfth-century British saint famous, primarily, for continuing to practise his ministry as a bishop even when Henry III had deprived him of all the assets of the bishopric. Richard continued to minister and to work, in particular, on behalf of the poor, until eventually Henry restored his possessions. A number of miracles were attributed to Richard's intervention, both during his life and after his death, and in the medieval era a sizeable cult grew up around him, centered at Chichester.
Francis Godwin provides a good summary of his reputation in the early modern period:
- Richard de la Wich. After the death of Ralf Neuil, the Canons of Chichester to curry fauour with the king, chose a Chaplaine of his for their Bishop, one Robert Passelew, a man wise inough, and one that had done the king much good seruice, but so vnlearned, as the Bishops of the realme… procured his election to be disanulled, and Richard de Wiche to be chosen. This Richard de Wiche was borne at Wiche in Worcetershire, of which place he tooke his surname, and was brought vp in the vni|uersities of Oxford first, and Paris afterward. Being come to mans state, he trauailed to Bononia where hauing studied the Canon Law seuen yéeres, he became publique reader of the same. After that, he spent some time at Orleans in France, and then returning home, was made Chauncellour vnto Saint Edmund Archbishop of Canterbury as also of the vniuersity of Oxford. He was consecrate by the Pope him selfe at Lyons 1245. and so gouerned the charge committed to him, as all men greatly reuerenced him, not onely for his great learning, but much more for his diligence in preaching, his manifold vertues, and aboue all his integrity of life and conuersation. In regard of these things, as also of many mi|racles that are fathered vpon him, he was canonised and made a Saint some seuen yéeres after his death. He deceased Aprill 2. 1253. the ninth yeere after his consecration, and of his age the fifty sixt. He was buried in his owne church, and the yeere 1276 his body was remooued from the first place of buriall and laid in a sumptnous shrine. (Godwin, 386-7).
For a brief online overview of St. Richard's life, see Huddleston; for a full-length biography, see Capes; for a more specific discussion of early modern accounts of St Richard, see Steggle.
References to the Play
None known.
Critical Commentary
For discussion of the run by Sussex's Men of which these performances formed part, see the LPD entry on The Fair Maid of Italy.
Malone assumed that Henslowe makes an error in recording the play with this apparently nonsensical title. Joseph Ritson disagreed, citing John Wilson's anthology The English Martyrology (1608) to conclude that Malone "does not know that there is such a personage as Richard the Confessor: whereas there are no less than Four Confessors of that name, any of whom might have been, and one certainly was, the hero of the above play." (Ritson, 29).
Collier, seemingly unaware of Ritson's work, makes a different guess:
- [p]robably an error, although afterwards repeated, unless it were a play upon a story not historical. It might be in some way connected with the preceding entry of a play called Buckingham, which perhaps was founded upon the rise and fall of that favourite and dupe of Richard III. (31).
Collier's guess that this might have been a play about Richard III was widely influential.
W. C. Hazlitt, also seemingly unaware of Ritson's work, believed the play must have dealt with the reign of King Edward the Confessor:
- A play recorded by Henslowe under the doubtless erroneous title of Richard the Confessor, as having been performed by the Earl of Sussex's men, December 31, 1593. It immediately precedes a notice of the presentation of William the Conqueror. (70)
F. G. Fleay (BCED, 2.298) proposed that Richard the Confessor was simply a variant title for another, extant, play: "Query Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany." Fleay offers no supporting evidence.
Greg (2.158)rejects both Fleay's and Hazlitt's interpretations, and adds, "Nothing whatever is known of this play." Harbage, nevertheless, continues to list the genre as "History".
Wiggins and Steggle both independently argue that the eponymous character is St Richard of Chichester, a thirteenth-century bishop-saint. See Wiggins serial number 917.
Steggle adduces numerous other early modern uses of the phrase Richardus Confessor, and its variants, to describe St. Richard. He was one of the relatively few saints whose feast-days survived into the protestant liturgical calendar, something which made him "one of the elite group of prominent Elizabethan saints," and distinguishes him from the three other, comparatively obscure, Saint Richards discussed by Ritson. Steggle discusses the early modern reception of St. Richard of Chichester, and links Richard the Confessor to other extant and lost plays about British saints including Rowley's A Shoemaker, a Gentleman and the anonymous and lost "England’s First Happiness, or The Life of St. Austin".
For What It's Worth
Information welcome.
Works Cited
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