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Cultural depictions of John, King of England

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Cultural depictions of John, King of England
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John of England has been portrayed many times in fiction, generally reflecting the overwhelmingly negative view of his reputation.

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King John as shown in Cassell's History of England (1902)

Art

The North Wall Frieze in the courtroom of the Supreme Court of the United States depicts King John granting Magna Carta.[1]

Literature

  • King John is the protagonist of John Bale's sixteenth-century Protestant play King Johan, in which he is depicted positively as a bulwark against the papacy.[2]
  • John was the subject of an anonymous Elizabethan play, The Troublesome Reign of King John, in 1591. The play reflects the sympathetic view of King John during the English Reformation; it depicts John as "a fearless resister of the Papacy".[3] This play is believed by many Shakespeare scholars to have been a source for Shakespeare's play.[3]
  • King John appears in the plays The Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntington and The Death of Robert Earl of Huntington (1598) by Anthony Munday. Munday's two plays feature the exploits of Robin Hood, and John is depicted as Robin's enemy in these plays. Munday's work thus incorporated King John into the Robin Hood legends.[4] As a result of this, John and one of his Justices in Eyre, the Sheriff of Nottingham, are frequently portrayed as villain and henchman in later versions Robin Hood legends. These usually place the Robin Hood stories in the latter part of Richard I's reign, when Richard was in captivity and John was acting as unofficial regent.[4]
  • John was the subject of a Shakespearean play, King John (written c. 1595, and published in 1623).[3]
  • Prince John is a central figure in the 1819 historical romance Ivanhoe, by Sir Walter Scott, and is depicted in subsequent adaptations. Ivanhoe helped popularize the image of King John as cruel and villainous.[5] The novel also calls John a "Norman", although contemporary documents from the period of John's reign do not refer to the monarch as a Norman.[5]
  • King John features in the three-decker novel Forest Days (1843) by G. P. R. James, about the First Barons' War.[6]
  • The children's novel The Constable's Tower: or the Times of Magna Charta (1891) by Charlotte Mary Yonge, revolves around John signing Magna Carta, and also features the Siege of Dover during the First Barons' War.[7]
  • The novel Uncanonized (1900) by Margaret Horton Potter features King John.[6]
  • King John is the subject of A. A. Milne's poem for children, King John's Christmas (1927), which begins "King John was not a good man", but slowly builds sympathy for him as he fears not getting anything for Christmas, when all he really wants is a rubber ball.[8]
  • In the comic parody 1066 and All That (1930) John is depicted as "an Awful King".
  • The Devil and King John by Philip Lindsay (1943) is a highly speculative but relatively sympathetic account.[9]
  • Philip José Farmer, a science fiction author, featured King John as one of several historical figures in his Riverworld saga.
  • Below the Salt (1957) by Thomas B. Costain depicts the First Baron's War and John's signing of Magna Carta.[10]
  • John is a character in James Goldman's 1966 play The Lion in Winter, which dramatises Henry II's struggles with his wife and sons over the rule of his empire. John is portrayed as a spoiled, simple-minded pawn in the machinations of his brothers and Philip II of France.[11]
  • James Goldman also wrote a novel called Myself As Witness (1979), a fictional record of the later years of John's reign purportedly kept by the chronicler Gerald of Wales.[12]
  • John is a character in Maureen Peters' 1983 novel Lackland's Bride, which deals with his marriage to Isabella, Countess of Gloucester.
  • Sharon Penman's Here Be Dragons deals with the reign of John, the development of Wales under Llewelyn's rule, and Llewelyn's marriage to John's illegitimate daughter, Joan, who is depicted in the novel as "Joanna". Other novels of hers which feature John as a prominent character are The Queen's Man, Cruel as the Grave, The Dragon's Lair, and Prince of Darkness, a series of fictional mysteries set during the time of Richard's imprisonment.
  • John is featured in several books by Elizabeth Chadwick, including Lords of the White Castle, The Champion, and The Scarlet Lion.
  • Judith Tarr features a sympathetic Prince John as the protagonist of her fantasy novel Pride of Kings (2001).[13]
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Film

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John has been portrayed on film by:

Television

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John has been portrayed on television by:

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Radio

John has been portrayed on radio by:

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Comics

King John was depicted in a 1955 Classics Illustrated adaption of Scott's Ivanhoe.[20]

References

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