Between Family And Duty: Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part 1, As A Reflection Of The Medieval English Dynasty Disputes

Yazarlar

Anahtar Kelimeler:

Tudor historiography- legitimacy, kingship- medieval dynasty

Öz

English history has long been shaped by its royal dynasties and families whose lives have always been a topic of interest for historians, literary critics, and more. Their lives today are the main point of interest in magazines, but history records their decision, family relationships, and disputes as important as the politics of that nation and country. Shakespeare was a favourite writer of Queen Elizabeth I, and his history plays were also popular in his time. He depicted the struggles of the houses of the dynasties: Tudors, Plantagenets, and Stuarts. His play Henry IV, Part 1, stages the problems, conflicts, and tensions between royal families, houses, and political responsibility within the framework of medieval English sovereignty. The tense, dramatic narrative that unfolds in King Henry IV’s relationship with his son, Prince Hal, and the challenge to royal authority posed by the Percy Rebellion, interrogates questions of legitimacy and rule, the burdens monarchs carry, as well as the personal costs to their pursuit of empire. It argues that by situating King Henry VI within the historical context of the War of the Roses and the ensuing turmoil following King Henry VI’s deposition, Shakespeare imbues family squabbles with broader aspects of succession, legitimacy, and the struggle to maintain power. The article suggests that the play is not only a study of individual character but also a literary criticism of dynastic rivalry that agitated Tudor England.

Yazar Biyografileri

  • ASIM AYDIN, KARABÜK ÜNİVERSİTESİ

    Assistant Professor Dr. Asım Aydın is an academician at Karabük University, specializing in English Language and Literature. He serves in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, within the Department of Western Languages and Literatures. Dr. Aydın's scholarly work includes presentations at international conferences and publications in academic books. His notable works explore themes of identity and postcolonial perspectives in literature.

  • Mustafa CANLI, KARABÜK ÜNİVERSİTESİ

    Mustafa Canlı is a department member at the Department of Western Languages and Literatures at Karabuk University. He got his BA from Kafkas University, MA from Lancaster University, UK, and PhD from Karabuk University. His selected publications include Neocolonialism in Graham Greene’s Fiction, Unbelonging of the Author: Graham Greene’s Alienation to the Colonial Ideas in His Novels, and “Revelation and Unfolding of a Dystopian Novel: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro”. His research areas include postcolonial literature, the English novel, and 17th-century English literature.

İndir

Yayınlanmış

2025-12-28

Nasıl Atıf Yapılır

Between Family And Duty: Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part 1, As A Reflection Of The Medieval English Dynasty Disputes. (2025). Müellif Uluslararası Sosyal Ve Beşeri Bilimler Dergisi, 2(4), 81-88. https://www.muellif.org/index.php/muellif/article/view/28