Thursday, December 9, 2010

Richard III

Most recently, I auditioned and got cast in a local college's production of Richard III, and (being the type of anal-retentive, detail-oriented* person I am) have spent an inordinate amount of time researching background details of the time period, history & lineage of every character in the play. SO, since I already spent the time researching, I figured it might be beneficial to others if I posted my resulting compiled information.

This is a simple family tree diagram showing what the "House of York" and "House of Lancaster" mean. Edward III had 5 sons, and the houses are the descendants of those sons. As you can see in the diagram, the descendants of Lionel & Edmund eventually intermarried, causing theYorkist reunion line, otherwise known as the House of York. Descendants of John of Gaunt are of the House of Lancaster. Edward's line died out, and Thomas's line simply remain considered part of the House of Pantagenet (which York & Lancaster are offshoots from).
House of Plantagenet, York & Lancaster Family Tree; Richard III lineage

The following chart may be hard to read unless you view the full version, but it shows the relationships of (most) of the characters in the play. To add to the confusion, the play references some characters by their given name, and some by their title, so I have listed both where applicable.

During my research, I also found that many of the spouses of play characters had the last name Neville, so I did research into that and added a smaller family tree for the House of Neville (which are also descendants of John of Gaunt... see above diagram) to explain the relationship between them.

Richard III & House of Neville Family Tree; character relationships

Other notes about the above diagram: Margaret of Anjou / Mad Margaret is also known as Queen Margaret, and similarly Elizabeth Woodville / Lady Grey is also known as Queen Elizabeth, and her daughter Elizabeth of York is also called Princess Elizabeth.

The characters I haven't listed on the above charts are due to my difficulty in finding their connection to the throne. Every person with a title should be of the peerage (nobility, related to the royal bloodline), but information on little known persons is hard to come by. The one relationship that I was able to ascertain is that the Duke of Norfolk (John Howard) is the father of the Earl of Surrey (Thomas Howard).

Here is a list of the historical personages I have been able to connect with the characters of the play. Surname P stands for Plantagenet, character names listed within parentheses are dead, and links are to the relevant Wikipedia page.


Given NameTitleSpouse
Richard PDuke of Gloucester
King Richard III
Anne Neville
Henry StaffordDuke of BuckinghamCatherine Woodville
Edward IV PKing Edward IVElizabeth Woodville
George PDuke of ClarenceIsabella Woodville
Elizabeth WoodvilleLady Gray
Queen Elizabeth
Edward IV
Anthony WoodvilleEarl of Rivers
Thomas GreyMarquess of Dorset
Richard GreyLord Grey
Anne NevilleLady Anne
Queen Anne
(Edward)
Richard III
Cecily NevilleDuchess of York(Richard
Duke of York)
Margaret d’AnjouQueen Margaret
Mad Margaret
(Henry VI)
Edward PPrince of Wales
King Edward V

Richard PYoung York
Duke of York

Elizabeth PPrincess Elizabeth
Elizabeth of York
Henry VII / Richmond
Sir Richard Ratcliffe
Sir William Catesby
Sir James Tyrrel
Henry TudorEarl of Richmond
King Henry VII
Pr. Elizabeth of York
Sir William HastingsLord Hastings
Baron of Hastings
Katherine Neville
Sir Thomas StanleyLord Stanley
Earl of Derby
Margaret Beaufort
Edward PlantagenetBoy
Margaret PlantagenetGirl
Thomas BourchierArchbishop of Canterbury
John HowardDuke of NorfolkKatherine Moleyns/
Margaret Chedworth
Thomas HowardEarl of SurreyElizabeth Tilney
John de VereEarl of OxfordMargaret Neville
Sir Robert BrackenburyLieutenant Brackenbury
Sir Walter HerbertMary Woodville
Sir James Blount
Elizabeth "Jane" ShoreMistress Shore-annulled-
(King Henry VI)(King Henry VI)Margaret of Anjou
Francis LovellViscount LovellAnne Fitzhugh

There were also several characters we cut out of the play, who are not included above.

I would also like to thank Corinna Archer's Richard III Casebook blog as it was very helpful for research & inspiration for me posting my findings. richardiiicasebook.blogspot.com



*Yes, I realize that's redundant, however, since most people aren't familiar with the term "anal retentive," I felt it was necessary. Congratulations for being intelligent enough to catch it.

3 comments:

  1. You have Lancaster and York mixed up. Beaufort is Lancaster. Edward IV is York.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What's mixed up is just the colours in the legend of the second image. York is red in both images, Lancaster is blue. With that change, all is well.

      Delete
  2. You have Lancaster and York mixed up. Beaufort is Lancaster. Edward IV is York.

    ReplyDelete