Cultural depictions of William II of England

William II of England has been depicted in various cultural media.

William II appears in Knight's Fee (1960), a children's historical novel by Rosemary Sutcliff. Sutcliff's novel depicts William as secretly being a pagan.[1] Knight's Fee was influenced by Sutcliff's reading of the essay "The Arrow and the Sword" (1947) by Hugh Ross Williamson and the book The Divine King in England (1954) by Margaret Murray, which both argued that William was covertly an adherent of a pre-Christian religion.[2]

William II is indirectly the subject of two historical novels by George Shipway, The Paladin and The Wolf Time. The main character of the novels is Walter Tirel (or Tyrell), his supposed assassin, and the main thrust of the plot of the novels is that the assassination was engineered by Henry I.[3]

The death of William Rufus is portrayed in Edward Rutherfurd's 2000 fictionalised history of the New Forest, The Forest. In Rutherfurd's version of events, the king's death takes place nowhere near the Rufus Stone, and Walter Tyrrell is framed for it by the powerful Clare family. Also, Purkiss is a clever story teller who manages (much later) to convince Charles II of England that one of his ancestors had been involved.

William Rufus is a major character in Valerie Anand's 1989 historical novel, King of the Wood (1989). He is also a major character in Parke Godwin's Robin and the King (1993), the second volume in Godwin's reinterpretation of the Robin Hood legend. [4] William Rufus and his relationship with Tyrell is mentioned and the manner of his death is included in Lammas Night by Katherine Kurtz. He is a character in Stephen R. Lawhead's King Raven Trilogy about Robin Hood. [5] William Rufus' life is the focus of Judith Tarr's historical fantasy novel, King's Blood (2005).[6] William is one of several British monarchs featured in Heir to a Prophecy (2014) by Mercedes Rochelle.[7] William also appears briefly in The Rufus Spy (2018), one of the Aelf Fen historical mystery novels by Alys Clare.[8]

On television, William was portrayed by Peter Firth in the 1990 play Blood Royal: William the Conqueror, directed by Peter Jefferies.[9]

Singer Frank Turner told the story of the death of William II in the song "English Curse" from his 2011 album England Keep My Bones.

Citations

  1. ^ Talcraft, Barbara (1995). Death of the Corn King: King and Goddess in Rosemary Sutcliff's Historical Fiction for Young Adults. Scarecrow Press. p. 110. ISBN 0810829827.
  2. ^ Callow, John (2017). Embracing the Darkness:A Cultural History of Witchcraft. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 204. ISBN 9781786732613.
  3. ^ "A clear and convincing indication of the mediaeval nuances comes not from an historian in the accepted sense but from novelist George Shipway, who makes his contribution to the Tirel/Rufus tie-up via two books, The Paladin and The Wolf Time" Tate, Peter. The New Forest, 900 years after. London : Macdonald and Jane's, 1979. ISBN 9780354043625 (pg.124 )
  4. ^ Pam Spencer Holley, What Do Young Adults Read Next?: A Reader's Guide to Fiction for Young Adults, Volume 2. Detroit, Gale Research, 1994 ISBN 9780810364493 (p.571)
  5. ^ "Review: "Hood: Book One of the King Raven Trilogy" Review by Bethany Skaggs". Historical Novel Society. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Review: "King's Blood" Review by Ilysa Magnus". Historical Novel Society. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  7. ^ "Review: Heir To A Prophecy" "Review by Frank Flaherty. Historical Novel Society. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  8. ^ "Review: The Rufus Spy" Review by Kristen Hannum. Historical Novel Society. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  9. ^ Roberts, Jerry, "Peter Jefferies", in Encyclopedia of Television Film Directors. Scarecrow Press, Lanham, Md., 2009 ISBN 978081086378 Parameter error in {{ISBN}}: length (p. 282).

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