Harry of Cornwall

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Historical Records


Performance Records


Philip Henslowe recorded the following performances of "Harry of Cornwall" in his book of accounts (familiarly known as "Henslowe's diary") in the spring of 1592:

Fol. 7 (Greg I, 13)

Res at harey of cornwell the 25 of febreary 1591 ………………. xxxijs
Res at harey of cornwell the 23 of marche 1591 ………………. xiijs vjd

Fol. 7 v (Greg I, 14)

Res at harey of cornwell the 29 of aprell 159[1]2 ….……………. xxvjs
Res at harey of cornwell the 18 of maye 1592 ….……………. xxvjs



Correspondence


Edward Alleyn and Philip Henslowe exchanged letters in 1592-3 while Alleyn was touring with Lord Strange's men and Henslowe was holding the business (and household) together during plague closures in London. Alleyn had married Joan Woodward, Henslowe's stepdaughter, on 22 October 1592; and in the following letter addressed to her (undated, but assigned by Greg, Papers, 35-6 and Foakes, 276-7 to 1 August 1593), he gives information on his touring itinerary so that her letters will reach him: "send to me by the cariers of shrowsbery or to west/ chester or to york to be keptt till my lord/ stranges players com" (Foakes. 276). Alleyn then mentions an upcoming performance of "Harry of Cornwall" at Bristol, where he and the company currently are:

… and thus sweett hartt
wt my harty comenda[tions] to all or frends I sess
from bristo this wensday after saynt Jams his day
being redy to begin the playe of hary of cornwall …
Greg, Papers, 35-6




Theatrical Provenance


Lord Strange's men performed "Harry of Cornwall" at the Rose in 1592 and on the road at Bristol in August 1593. Unfortunately, the civic records from Bristol make no mention of that performance, though they do record the presence of the company at that time.


Probable Genre(s)


History (Harbage)


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues


Manley and MacLean identify the sources of "Harry of Cornwall" as "the obvious chronicle sources in English as well as the Historia maior of Matthew Paris (1571) and the Flores historiarum of Matthew of Westminster (1570)" (135).



References to the Play




Critical Commentary


Neither Malone, Collier, nor Fleay commented on "Harry of Cornwall," except that Malone formalized the name in parentheses (Henry of Cornwall). Greg II flirted with Henslowe's entry as a mistake for "Richard of Cornwall" (and thus another name for Alphonsus of Germany), but decided that "nothing is known of this piece" (#6, p. 151).

Manley and MacLean provide a detailed identification of the title character. Henry of Cornwall (who inherited the earldom from his father, Richard), also known as Henry of Almaine (a title he received due to his father's becoming king of the Germans), "was raised at court as a companion to his cousin, the young Prince Edward, and the fortunes of the two were to remain intertwined throughout the Barons' War" (135). In that war, he reversed allegiance more than once. Simon de Montfort, "leader of the barons," showed him mercy at one stage and was rewarded by Henry's taking up arms against him again, but he did not participate in de Montfort's defeat at the battle of Evesham in 1265 (136). Edward "Longshanks," not yet Edward I, killed de Montfort and his son, dismembering and desecrating de Montfort's corpse. Henry of Cornwall paid for this dishonorable act with his life: sons of de Montford (Simon and Guy) murdered Henry at the cathedral in Viterbo as he knelt in prayer ""'afore the high altar'" (136). The sons are themselves "immortalized" in ignominy in Dante's Inferno, where Guy suffers "in the fiery Phlegeton" (136).

Manley and MacLean also suggest a repertorial context for "Harry of Cornwall." They include it in a category of plays staged by Lord Strange's Men that were "designed to complement, by way of prequel or sequel, preexisting plays, some of which were in the possession of other companies" (94). One of these was Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany," in which Henry's father figured prominently; however, the apparent stage life of the play was much later (ownership by the King's men). A contemporary (and perhaps sequel) was Edward I" (S. R. 8 October 1593, Q 1593, 1599. company affiliation unknown), which opens with a "coronation procession" that includes Guy and Charles Montfort as prisoners (136-7). Manley and MacLean interpret this staging as "some unexplained business" from "Harry of Cornwall," observing further that the brothers' display "achieves a poetic justice that history denied, as Edward enters London holding captive the two murderers of his beloved companion Henry" (137). Manley and MacLean consider it likely that "Harry of Cornwall" was "a large-scale chronicle play" not unlike "harey the vj" current also in Strange's repertory; in its own thirteenth century, "Harry of Cornwall" had ties to The Troublesome Reign of King John, Q1591, in the repertory of the Queen's men (138).

Manley and MacLean include the detail that one of de Montfort's supporters, Robert de Ferrers, Earl of Derby, lost his life and title in continued rebellion against Edward (specifically in a battle led, ignominiously, by Henry of Cornwall), implying a certain historical piquancy in Cornwall's play having been acquired and staged by the company whose patron would become the earl of Derby in September 1593 (136)

For What It's Worth




Works Cited


Knutson, Roslyn L. "Edward II in Repertory" in Edward II: A Critical Reader, The Arden Shakespeare (London: Bloomsbury), 2017. 119-44.
——— "Marlowe in Repertory, 1587-1593" in Kirk Melnikoff and Roslyn L. Knutson, eds., Christopher Marlowe, Theatrical Commerce and the Book Trade. Cambridge: CUP, 2018. 26-40.



Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson, Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; updated 11 July 2020.