Macbeth is arguably the world's most famous monarch. Both the historical king and the literary character have fascinated writers and audiences for centuries, beginning with the poets who recited their verses at the medieval monarch's court. Macbeth's legend began almost immediately after his death as medieval and Renaissance writers gradually replaced the king with a semi-literary character developed and embroidered to suit their own political and cultural agenda. The process of transformation culminated in playwright William Shakespeare's The Tragedie of Macbeth.
Investigating the man and the legend, Benjamin Hudson traces the eleventh-century prince's rise to prominence from local warlord to international ruler. Battling Vikings, English, and his fellow Scots, Macbeth was involved in a Dano-Norwegian conflict, made a pilgrimage to Rome, and gave refuge to Norman knights. He was more than a mere warlord. With his queen, Gruoch, the widow of a man who killed Macbeth's father, he was a benefactor of churches. The historical prince was an important innovator who used new fighting tactics, developed an international outlook to government, and encouraged intellectual pursuits. Hudson also tracks the ways in which popularizers developed the women behind the fictional Lady Macbeth and the weird sisters.
Drawing on centuries of Celtic and Scandinavian sources, popular entertainment, political theory, folklore, and art, Macbeth before Shakespeare recovers the genuine king from the historical record and shows how he was replaced by the legendary monster of ambition.
Author(s): Benjamin Hudson
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 311
City: New York
Cover
Macbeth before Shakespeare
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Note on Methodology
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction: A Man and a Legend
1. Macbeth: Place and Past
2. Macbeth Emerges
3. King of All the Scots
4. Fame and Defamation
5. Not the Beginning of the Legend
6. Weird Sisters and the Prior of Loch Leven
7. Macbeth and Renaissance Scotland
8. The Literary Scot in Tudor England
9. Macbeth before Shakespeare
Conclusion
Appendix 1. The Children of Macbeth?
Appendix 2. Andrew of Wyntoun’s Macbeth Episode: A Translation
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index