". The gifts left in Whittington's will made him well known and he became a character in an English story that was adapted for the stage as a play,
The History of Richard Whittington, of his lowe byrth, his great fortune, in February 1604. In the 19th century this became popular as a
pantomime called
Dick Whittington and His Cat, very loosely based on Richard Whittington. There are several versions of the traditional story, which tells how Dick, a boy from a poor Gloucestershire family, sets out for London to make his fortune, accompanied by, or later acquiring, his cat. At first he meets with little success, and is tempted to return home. However, on his way out of the city, whilst climbing
Highgate Hill from modern-day
Archway, he hears the
Bow Bells of London ringing, and believes they are sending him a message. There is now a large hospital on Highgate Hill, named the
Whittington Hospital, after this supposed episode. A traditional rhyme associated with this tale is: On returning to London, Dick embarks on a series of adventures. In one version of the tale, he travels abroad on a ship, and wins many friends as a result of the rat-catching activities of his cat; in another he sends his cat and it is sold to make his fortune. Eventually he does become prosperous, marries his master's daughter Alice Fitzwarren (the name of the real Whittington's wife), and is made
Lord Mayor of London three times. The common belief that he served three rather than four times as Lord Mayor stems from the City's records 'Liber Albus' compiled at his request by the City Clerk John Carpenter wherein his name appears only three times as the remainder term of his deceased predecessor Adam Bamme and his own consequent term immediately afterwards appear as one entry for 1397. As the son of gentry, Whittington was never very poor and there is no evidence that he kept a cat. Whittington may have become associated with a thirteenth-century
Persian folktale about an orphan who gained a fortune through his cat; the tale was common throughout Europe at that time. Folklorists have suggested that the most popular legends about Whittington—that his fortunes were founded on the sale of his cat, who was sent on a
merchant vessel to a rat-beset Eastern emperor—originated in a popular 17th-century engraving by
Renold Elstracke in which his hand rested on a cat, but the picture only reflects a story already in wide circulation. Elstracke's oddly-shaped cat was in fact a later replacement by printseller
Peter Stent for what had been a
skull in the original, with the change being made to conform to the story already in existence, to increase sales. There was also known to be a painted portrait of Whittington shown with a cat, hanging at Mercer Hall, but it was reported that the painting had been trimmed down to smaller size, and the date "1572" that appears there was something painted after the cropping, which raises doubt as to the authenticity of the date, though
Malcolm who witnessed it felt the date should be taken in good faith. The print published in
The New Wonderful Museum (vol. III, 1805, pictured above) is presumably a replica of this painting. == Notes ==