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      • Mortimer is a character in William Shakespeare's play, Henry IV, Part 1. He is a nobleman and a loyal supporter of the Percy family, particularly Hotspur. Mortimer's full name is Edmund Mortimer, and he holds the title of Earl of March. He is also the nephew of the Earl of Worcester and the cousin of Hotspur.
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  2. Events in the life of Sir Edmund Mortimer were dramatised by Shakespeare in Henry IV, Part 1 (c. 1597). In the play, Shakespeare accurately identifies him as Hotspur's brother-in-law, but simultaneously conflates him with his nephew by referring to him as "Earl of March".

  3. There is much confusion with the character of Edmund Mortimer within Shakespeare. Partly due to misinformation within his sources (namely from Holinshed), and partly for dramatic purposes, Shakespeare combines the figures of Edmund Mortimer and his young nephew into one figure.

  4. Events in the life of Sir Edmund Mortimer, uncle of Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March, were dramatized by Shakespeare in Henry IV, Part 1. In the play, Shakespeare accurately identifies the former as Hotspur's brother-in-law, but simultaneously conflates him with his nephew by referring to him as "Earl of March".

  5. Edmund Mortimer was a member of the prestigious Mortimer family of the Welsh marshes. The Mortimers had been powerful lords on the English-Welsh border for many years, and Edmund's great-great-grandfather Roger Mortimer was King of England in all but name during the minority reign of Edward III.

  6. Aug 4, 2022 · The figure of Edmund Mortimer, dramatised in Shakespeares Henry V, has fascinated historians ever since. But who was he? He was a significant claimant to the throne from a young age. Edmund’s story is fascinating, particularly with reference to the Princes in the Tower later in the century.

  7. Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March Mortimer is an English nobleman captured in battle by Glendower, whose claim to the throne is better than Henry IV’s. The King refuses to believe that he did not go over to the Welsh willingly, possibly as an excuse to be rid of a rival.

  8. Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March The Welsh rebel Owen Glendower’s son-in-law. Mortimer is a conflation of two separate historical figures: Mortimer and the Earl of March.

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