Home > King Lear Summary & Study Guide > Character Analysis > Edmund (Character Analysis)
King Lear | Edmund (Character Analysis)
Edmund, the bastard son of Gloucester and half-brother to Edgar, commits a number of villainous acts throughout the course of the play: he forces his brother, Edgar, into hiding, telling Gloucester that Edgar means to kill him; he betrays his father and leaves him to the barbarous treatment of Cornwall and Regan; he encourages both Goneril and Regan to believe he loves the one to the exclusion of the other, causing them to quarrel and, ultimately, die as a consequence; and he orders the execution of Lear and Cordelia.
At the beginning of the play, Gloucester acknowledges to Kent...
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- King Lear: Introduction
- King Lear: Summary
- King Lear: William Shakespeare Biography
- King Lear: Reading Shakespeare
- King Lear: List of Characters
- King Lear: Historical Background
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King Lear: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 5: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scenes 2 and 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 5: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 6: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 7: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 5: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 6: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 7: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scenes 1 and 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
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King Lear: Quizzes
- Act I, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 5: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scenes 2 and 3: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 5: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 6: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 7: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 5: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 6: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 7: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scenes 1 and 2: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- King Lear: Essential Passages
- King Lear: Themes
- King Lear: Character Analysis
- King Lear: Principal Topics
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King Lear: Essays
- Is Lear a Tragic Hero?
- The Power of Language and the Language of Power in King Lear
- King Lear and Comedy
- A Brief Critical History of King Lear
- King Lear: Saints and Sinners
- The Tragic Ending of King Lear
- Good and Evil Children in King Lear and Henry IV
- Textual and Contextual Analysis of the Opening Scene in Shakespeare's King Lear
- Contrast in Character in The Tragedy of King Lear
- Kingship and the Themes of Shakespeare's Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth
- Madness in King Lear
- Two Critical Episodes in Shakespeare's King Lear
- King Lear: Criticism
- King Lear: Selected Quotes
- King Lear: Suggested Essay Topics
- King Lear: Sample Essay Outlines
- King Lear: Modern Connections
- King Lear: FAQs
- King Lear: Bibliography and Further Reading
- King Lear: Pictures
- Copyright
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