Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek, The

George Peele (1589?)


Historical Records

In The Merrie Conceited Iests of George Peele Gentleman (1607), one jest is entitled, "How George Read a Play-book to a Gentleman." It recounts that the playwright entertained a dull-witted dandy at his lodgings of an evening with a reading of his latest play, which is named as The Turkish Mahamet and Hyrin the fair Greek. In the jest, Peele finishes the reading at a late hour. He therefore persuades the listener to bed down in his lodging. But when the man falls asleep, Peele dresses him in clothes of his own and slips away, leaving the hapless gentleman now mistaken for Peele to pay the four nobles owed on the rent of the room.


Theatrical Provenance

The date of the original run and the company owners are unknown. The link with Peele is the only clue about the debut of the play, and it is not much help. Peele's plays appear in the holdings of the Children of the Chapel (The Arraignment of Paris), the Queen's men (Old Wives Tale, Q1595) and Admiral's men (The Battle of Alcazar, Q1594; Plot, 1598-1601?). The debuts of these plays, too, are uncertain.

However, if The Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek is the Mahomet in Henslowe's Diary introduced without "ne" on 14 August 1594, running through 5 February 1595, it can be located in 1594 with the Admiral's men (see Critical Commentary, below). On 22 August 1601, the Admiral's men bought the text of Mahomet from Edward Alleyn for 40s. At that time, they evidently mounted a revival based on purchases of a crown, apparel, and various other things. There is a property in Henslowe's Diary for "owld Mahemetes head," which scholarly tradition associates with the play of Mahomet.

Probable Genre(s)

Romantic tragedy

Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

In The Palace of Pleasure (1566), William Painter appropriates the story of "Hyrenee the faier Greke" from Matteo Bandello's Novelle, Book I, #10. Painter prefaces the narration with this blurb: "Mahomet one of the Turkishe Emperours executeth curssed crueltie vpon a Greke maiden whom he toke prisoner, at the winning of Constantinople." EEBO, Project Gutenberg

Richard Knolles published The Generall History of the Turkes in 1603, too late to be literally a source for Peele, but the story is obviously not new to Knolles, and some details of his telling might have been "in the air," so to speak, for Peele's use.

William Barksted's poem, "Hiren: or, the Fair Greek," 1611, is even later, but Barksted's history as a player locates him in the theatrical community and thereby lends his account special interest in regard to the lost play.

The basic narrative consists of the following episodes, summarized here from Painter, EEBO:

Mahomet acquires Hiren: During the conquest of Constantinople in 1453 in which Mahomet defeated Constantine, one of Mahomet's captains takes prisoner a beautiful young Greek woman of sixteen or seventeen; the captain, "to gratifie his Lorde," presents this "Iewell" to Mahomet, who has her put aside until the battle is concluded (107v). Then at leisure, Mahomet, who is "young and wanton beyonde measure" sends for her (f. 107v). He is soon so enamoured that he wants only "to plaie and dallie with her, in suche sorte, that his spirities beyng in Loues full possession, Loue dealt with hym so cruellie, that he could take no rest daie nor night" (f. 108). This state of affairs goes on for three years (f. 108).

Mustapha confronts Mahomet about his obsession with Hiren: After a time, the Janissaries, "a warlike people," complained among themselves about the neglect of the kingdom; they charged that Mahomet was behaving "like an effeminate persone" (f. 108). Yet they hesitated to confront Mahomet because they knew from his "nature terrible, cruell, and rigorous" that he wouldn't hesitate to put to death whoever "went about to withdrawe him from his desire" (f. 108v). Mahomet, they know, is "so dronke with the beautie of the Greeke" and "so bewitched" that they see a change in allegiance to a more martial emperor as their only remedy (f. 208v). Mustapha, who had been brought up with Mahomet, and who was "a gentle personage franke of talke, and so nere to his maiestie, that he might goe into his chamber, although the Greke was present," assumes the task of addressing Mahomet (f. 208v). Mustapha goes to Mahomet, and while walking in his garden, he lays out the argument that Mahomet should no longer "bee a spoile and praie to a simple woman" (f. 209). He speaks of the military unrest, and challenges Mahomet to honor the conquests of his predecessors by continuing as a warrior. He appeals to Mahomet's previously stated ambition "to make Italie tribatarie vnto [him], and to cause [him] selfe to be crouned at Rome, Emperour aswel of Thorient, as of the Occident" (f. 209v). Raising explicitly the issue of manhood, Mustapha challenges Mahomet to consider the result had any one of his predecessors been "idle in his pallaice, emonges the ladies" as Mahomet has been (f. 110). In his peroration, Mustapha summons Mahomet "gather [his] wits then together ..., call again Reason, ..., awake out of the deep slepe ..." and "follow the trade of [his] auncestors" who loved 'one day of honour" over one hundred of 'shame and reproch" (f. 110v). Mustapha offers one sop: that if Mahomet can not "cutte of & remoue all that amourous heate" at once, he could moderate it "little by little," perhaps even taking Hiren on his military expeditions (f. 110v). He suggests that the pleasure will be all the greater to come to her from the heat of the battlefield.

Mahomet is moved by Mustapha's plea. Though the thought of leaving Hiren is "as though his harte had been torne out of his bellie" (f. 111v), Mahomet ordered Mustapha to assemble his officers and men of war in the great hall of his palace the next day. He then returned to Hiren, requested that she dress herself after dinner in her finest clothes and "most precious Iewelles" (f. 111v). Painter adds in an aside: "the poore wench obeied, not knowying that it was her funerall apparell" (f. 111v).

Mahomet resolves the conflict:

Richard Knolles, in The Generall Historie of the Turks (1603, tells essentially the same story as Painter, but with some different flourishes. • Hiren put in the care of Mahomet's eunuch
• emphasis on Love supplanting War: "his fierce nature was now by her well tamed, and his wonted care of armes quiete neglected: Mars slept in Venus lap, and now the soldiors might go play" (350). Knolles adds, "reason ruleth not the reine" (350) says this went on a couple of years
• Mustapha's arguments
• beheading


William Barksted, in "Hiren: or, the Fair Greek (1611), makes significant changes in the narrative.

• Mahomet discovers Hiren himself during the seige, Hiren in chapel

• debate about Hiren's chastity, Mahomet promises her she may exercise her own free will
• debate continues, they kiss, she yields
• Mustapha's arguments
• The elaborate courtship does not deter Mahomet from making his decision


References to the Play

<List any known or conjectured references to the lost play here.>


Critical Commentary

Barksted would have no standing on the characterization of Hiren in Peele’s play but for his career as a player. Chew, who finds the style of Barksted’s poem so “unimaginative and pedestrian” that it is “unlikely that he invented anything himself”, is inclined to believe that Barksted copied Peele’s play in making Hiren virtuous (1937: 486)


For What It's Worth

Hiren's virtue One conflict between the sources before 1588 and those later is the virtue of Hiren. Painter (1566) and Knolles (1603) do not comment on Hiren's feelings in the affair with Mahomet. Barksted (1611), in contrast, has Hiren vigorously defend her virtue through lengthy epyllionic foreplay until she at last surrenders her maidenhead. Yet The Merrie Jests of George Peele (1607) tag the title of the play with a litany of slang terms for "Greek": “in Italian called a curtezan, in Spain, a margerite, in French, une curtain, in England, among the barbarous, a whore, but among the gentle, their usual associates, a punk … [and] croshabell” (1607: 394-5). In 1 Henry IV (1597) Shakespeare links Hiren and Doll, making Pistol and Doll into debased versions of Mahomet and Hiren, who are then aligned with other warriors and their female champions (Tamburlaine [and by implication, Zenocrate]; Muly Mahamet and Calipolis).

Mustapha's version of the outcome of Tamburlaine's confrontation with Bajazeth, Mahomet's predecessor (Painter f.110) As part of his motivational speech, Mustapha in Painter's version says to Mahomet, "And Baiazet ... did not he cut of the head of the greate Tamburlain, which called himself the scourge of God...?"

Works Cited

Barksted, William. "Hiren, or The Fair Greek." 1611 Project Gutenberg Painter, William. The Palace of Pleasure. 1566. (vol. 1, #40, fols. 107v-112). EEBO



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