Honor
In the brutal ascent of its protagonist, Tamburlaine explores what it means to live with honor. The play traces Tamburlaine’s unswerving path from his humble origins as a Scythian shepherd to becoming the most powerful emperor on Earth. The quality of honor is central to Tamburlaine’s meteoric rise: he himself remains fixated on it from beginning to end, and even his bitterest enemies seem unable to deny that he possesses it. For such a merciless…
read analysis of HonorFortune and Destiny
Tamburlaine depicts a low-born nomadic shepherd’s progressive conquest of a large part of the known world. Tamburlaine’s staggering confidence in his own success, from the very beginning, is nearly as unbelievable as his actual uninterrupted string of victories. His ambition is plainly to conquer the world, and the total certainty with which he sets about his task (in the face of impossible odds, at the beginning) proves instrumental in winning him crucial allies like Theridamas …
read analysis of Fortune and DestinyBeauty and Violence
Throughout Tamburlaine, beauty and violence show themselves to be surprisingly connected. Though the merciless Tamburlaine seems to exemplify hypermasculine violence, the audience’s first glimpse of him finds Tamburlaine sweetly wooing the beautiful captive Zenocrate. The tenderness and genuine love he exhibits towards her from beginning to end undermine the brutality that is his hallmark. Tamburlaine himself takes up this problem in a long soliloquy towards the end of Part One, his only moment…
read analysis of Beauty and ViolenceReligion and Blasphemy
Gods and religion dominate the talk in Tamburlaine. One of the play’s most striking features is its expansive depiction and willful blending of different religions. Tamburlaine’s enemies are generally either Muslim or Christian, while the Scythian warlord himself seems to acknowledge some form of Greco-Roman paganism. Yet the boundaries between these belief systems are not always solid, with both Christians and Muslims at times invoking the pagan Jove, and Tamburlaine occasionally making positive reference…
read analysis of Religion and Blasphemy