Pompey

Anon. (1581)


Historical Records

Court Records

Accounts of the Office of the Revels

The children of Pawles { A storie of Pompey enacted in the hall on twelf nighte wheron was ymploied newe one great citty, A senate howse and eight ells of dobble sarcenet for curtens and .xviij. paire of gloves.
(Feuillerat 336)


* The duble Sarcenett maid
into Curtyns and Implowid
aboute Storie of pompay plaid
by the Childring of powles/
*Thomas Skiner
Orendge taffeta sarcenet at the xs the ell
viij. ells
} iiijli.
(Feuillerat 338)



Theatrical Provenance

Performed at Whitehall Palace by the Children of Paul's on Friday 6 January 1581.


Probable Genre(s)

Classical history (Harbage).


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

The play must have depicted some portion of the life of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, usually known in English as Pompey or Pompey the Great. His life and exploits were handed down to the English Renaissance by a variety of sources, especially Plutarch, Appian and Dio Cassius.
Pompey (106–48BCE) was a Roman military and political leader. He obtained a number of resounding military successes in the civil war between Sulla and Gaius Marius the younger in Sicily and Africa in his early twenties. Because of these victories, Sulla was forced to allow him to enter Rome with the army and celebrate a triumph. He also officially granted him the title magnus (“great”). After Sulla’s abdication (79) and death (78), Pompey was sent to Spain by the Senate to defeat the army led by Sertorius, who had reorganised the Marian movement. Pompey subdued Spain and returned to Italy (71), where he joined the very last phase of the war against Spartacus and managed to share the honour of victory with Marcus Licinius Crassus. Hence, he could celebrate a second triumph. The relentless series of his military successes, together with the menacing presence of his troops outside the city, enabled Pompey to advance directly to his first consulship without having to follow the proper cursus honorum (he had not even been quaestor when he became consul for the first time in 70).
In order to gain further popular support, he proceeded to dismantle Sulla’s constitution. Subsequently, he took advantage of another opportunity to increase his power, namely the fight against the pirates, whose raids were seemingly arousing concerns for maritime communications and Rome’s grain supply. Through the lex Gabinia of 67, Pompey gained control over the Mediterranean Sea and its coasts for 50 miles inland, with 500 ships, 20 legions and 5,000 cavalry. He defeated the pirates in a mere forty days; this umpteenth success enabled him to be entrusted with the command of the war against Mithridates VI of Pontus, whom he brilliantly defeated, thereby annexing as many as four new provinces to the republic: Bithynia et Pontus, Syria, Cilicia and Crete. He returned to Italy in 62, celebrated his third and last triumph and dismissed his armies.
However, as both Pompey and Crassus were not satisfied with the Senate’s hesitating to meet some of their requests, they decided to form an unofficial political alliance with Julius Caesar, later known as the First Triumvirate. Caesar secured the consulship for 59 and the proconsulship in Gaul for the ensuing five years, while Pompey obtained the ratification of the measures he had taken in Asia and the distribution of public lands to his veterans. He also married Caesar’s daughter, Julia. Caesar’s appointment in Gaul was renewed for five more years in 55, when Pompey and Crassus became consuls; one year later, Crassus secured the governorship of Syria and Pompey that of Spain, which he ruled through legates while remaining in Rome. Crassus’s untimely death in Parthia in 53 upset the political balance and left Pompey alone against Caesar, who was now very popular after his conquest of Gaul.
Pompey disputed Caesar’s right to hold Gaul until the end of 49 and to stand for the consulship in absentia for 48. More importantly, he would not allow Caesar to run for consulship unless he relinquished his armies. When Caesar and his troops crossed the Rubicon and marched on Rome in 49, Pompey fled to Macedonia, followed by the Senate. From there, he levied a considerable army and obtained some successes against Caesar’s troops after their landing in Dyrrachium. Yet, by failing to pursue at such a critical moment for Caesar’s much smaller army, Pompey threw away the opportunity to crush them. Eventually, he let himself be led into a pitched battle at Pharsalus, where he was defeated (48). He then sought refuge in Egypt, whose independence he had always championed, but he was killed by Achillas, Septimius and Salvius by order of King Ptolemy XIII, who hoped to gain favour with Caesar by murdering his rival.


References to the Play

(Under construction.)



Critical Commentary

Gair (81) suggests that the "orange double silk curtains, costing over £4 and 10 yards long, may conceivably have been used either to enclose the Senate house or perhaps the tents of Caesar and Pompey before the battle of Pharsal[us], which is likely to have figured largely in any account of Pompeius Magnus."

Cox Jensen (134) deems it "inconceivable that this drama, now lost, did not include Caesar, altough it is remarkable for the focus of its title."


For What It's Worth

Pompey was a very well-known historical personality in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England, and frequently appeared in the dramatic writings of the period, such as the anonymous Caesar's Revenge (c. 1595) and George Chapman's Caesar and Pompey (c. 1604), as well as the lost "Caesar and Pompey", "Caesar and Pompey, Part 1" and "Caesar and Pompey, Part 2".
However, with very few exceptions, in the culture of "the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Poimpey represented little more than an anti-Caesar, a figure who served as a paragon on occasions when Caesar was a model of iniquity, and a providentially necessary anatgonist in he conflict which brought the republic to an end" (Cox Jensen, 94).
To be sure, in all the extant early modern English plays featuring him as a character, Pompey mainly serves as a foil for Caesar, and if his name appears in the title of a play, Caesar's also does -- and this is also true of the lost plays.
This particular play may have therefore constituted an interesting exception to the dominant trend by making Pompey the focal point of attention, or even granting him individual treatment, although it seems quite improbable that Caesar did not make an appearance.
It is also tantalising to wonder what kind of Pompey the audience may have encountered here, whether the glorious leader the republicans lamentably miss in Thomas Kyd's Cornelia (1594, whose alternative title on the 1595 reprint interstingly was Pompey the Great His Fair Cornelia's Tragedy, a further demonstration of Pompey's poularity in the period) or the much more hesitant and weaker figure appearing in both Caesar's Revenge (Lovascio, ) and Chapman's Caesar and Pompey (Lovascio, 92-95). Given that he is the title character, one would expect him to have been portrayed much more positively, perhaps against a hostile depiction of his nemesis Caesar, particularly if the play encompassed Pompey's defeat at Pharsalus and his subsequent death.


Works Cited

Cox Jensen, Freyja. Reading the Roman Republic in Early Modern England. Leiden: Brill, 2012.
Gair, W. Reavley. The Children of Paul's: The Story of a Theatre Company, 1553-1608. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.


Site created and maintained by Domenico Lovascio, University of Genoa; updated 15 July 2015.