Archimago

Archimago is a sorcerer in The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser. In the narrative, he is continually engaged in deceitful magics, as when he makes a false Una to tempt the Red-Cross Knight into lust, and when this fails, conjures another image, of a squire, to deceive the knight into believing that Una was false to him.[1]

Etymology

His name is an amalgam of the Greek words ἄρχων and μάγος. Archon (Greek: ἄρχων, romanized: árchōn, plural: ἄρχοντες, árchontes) means "ruler", frequently used as the title of a specific public office. It is the masculine present participle of the verb stem αρχ-, meaning "to be first, to rule", derived from the same root as words such as monarch and hierarchy. Magos (Greek: μάγος, romanized: mágos, plural: μάγοι, magœ), also of Grecian extraction, means "wizard" or "conjurer", not infrequently employed to describe a nefarious sage or a practitioner of the dark arts. Ultimately the origin of the word can be traced to Old Iranian, therewith, according to Herodotus, it is the title of Zoroastrian priests. The Grecian word was transliterated into Latin "magus", and, later, into the English "magician".

The spelling archimage appears occasionally throughout the poem's text, however as an alternate form of the character's name, rather than a title.[2] Percy Bysshe Shelley would later use archimage as a synonym for wizard in his poem "Letter to Maria Gisborne".[3][4] This in turn led to Ursula K. Le Guin using the variant "archmage" in her novel A Wizard of Earthsea to describe the leader of a group of wizards. The term has since become common place in fantasy literature and media.[5]

Critical interpretation

One of the character's most prominent appearances is when he disguises himself as a reverend hermit, and with the assistance of Duessa (Deceit) seduces the Red-Cross Knight from Una (truth).[6] Archimago has thus been interpreted as a symbol of religious hypocrisy,[2]:88 especially the rampant hypocrisy which Spenser perceived within the leadership of the Catholic church.[7] He has also been cited as emblematic of temptation itself[8] and as a character who presents a mutated worldview which causes the knight to doubt the reality of their faith -- the very source of their strength.[9][10]

References

  1. Colin Manlove, Christian Fantasy: from 1200 to the Present p 59-60 ISBN 0-268-00790-X
  2. E. Cobham Brewer (1894). The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable: New and Enlarged Edition. p. 88.
  3. Everest, Michael Rossington (2011). The Poems of Shelley: Volume Three: 1819 - 1820. Pearson Education. p. 445.
  4. "Posthumous Poems of Percy Bysshe Shelley: Letter to Maria Gisborne". English Poetry 1579-1830: Spenser and the Tradition. Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  5. Clute, John; Westfahl (1999). The Encyclopedia of Fantasy (1st ed.). New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 1027. ISBN 0312198698.
  6. Craik, George L. (1845). Spenser and His Poetry, vol. 1. Charles Griffin & Co. p. 127–132.
  7. Waters, Douglas D. (1970). Critical Essays on Spenser from ELH. p. 158–177.
  8. Beaumont, Joseph (1912). Spenser, the Fletchers, and Milton. University of California Publications. p. 336.
  9. Waters, Douglas D. (1970). Critical Essays on Spenser from ELH. p. 158–177.
  10. Allen, Marillene (1980). Literary and Historical Gardens in Selected Renaissance Poetry. University of Edinburgh. p. 162.
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