In this section, brief descriptions of the various Edmund Blackadders who have appeared in their own series or in another notable
Blackadder production are provided.
Prince Edmund, Duke of Edinburgh/The Black Adder (Late Medieval England) Prince Edmund (1461–1498) is the first man in the dynasty to refer to himself as "The Black Adder", a suggestion of the first Baldrick. He appears in the first series, set shortly after
The Wars of the Roses. He is the second son of the fictional
King Richard IV of England (
Brian Blessed), who, it is claimed at the beginning, was cast from all historical references by his successor,
Henry Tudor (
Peter Benson). Prince Edmund is a very different character from his descendants: he is slow-witted, cowardly, and the butt of the other characters' jokes. While he is as devious and amoral as his descendants, his
Machiavellian schemes are usually spurred on by other characters. For all this he is determined and driven to power: his primary concern is to seize the English throne and become the king himself. After the death of Richard IV and Edmund's older brother
Harry (
Robert East), he is briefly King of England; a lyric from one of the
closing credits for
Black Adder II describes him as "a king / Although for only thirty seconds". Prince Edmund is one of the many Blackadders to be killed on screen: he dies after accidentally drinking poisoned wine, although he had already been severely mutilated by his childhood nemesis, the Duke of Burgundy (
Patrick Allen).
Edmund, Lord Blackadder (Elizabethan England) (Series 2) Edmund, Lord Blackadder, is the next-seen member of the dynasty, appearing in
Elizabethan England. He is the central character of
Black Adder II and is a
nobleman in the court of
Elizabeth I of England. Although his "great-grandfather" was Prince Edmund, he is much more intelligent, charismatic, acerbic, handsome and respected than his ancestor. Despite that fact, Edmund's aristocratic title has lowered; he is now simply a lord, rather than a prince. His main concerns are pleasing his
Queen (
Miranda Richardson), a childish, spoiled tyrant who usually threatens to execute anyone who displeases her, usually by decapitation, and in outwitting his various contemporary rivals, usually in the form of
Lord Melchett (
Stephen Fry), for her favour. At the end of "Blackadder II", specifically the final episode, "Chains", Blackadder and Melchett are captured by two guards on the orders of the psychopathic Prince Ludwig the Indestructible of Germany (
Hugh Laurie) who Blackadder had met in the past while Ludwig was disguised as a waitress named "Big Sally". The two men are confined to a dungeon with Ludwig giving Queenie a week to decide who she will rescue. When Queenie ignores the two of them in favour of holding a big costume party, Blackadder and Melchett work together to outwit the two guards after Ludwig has departed to infiltrate the palace, arriving in time to expose Ludwig, who then attempts to flee, prompting Blackadder to throw a dagger at Ludwig that presumably either kills him or leaves him badly wounded. However, after the end credits have aired, it is shown that Ludwig has returned and murdered Blackadder, the real Queenie, Melchett, Nursie, Percy and Baldrick. Ludwig then poses as Queenie after the assassination. The character shift from Prince Edmund in the first series to Lord Blackadder in the second is credited to the involvement of
Ben Elton, who joined as the show's co-writer alongside
Richard Curtis. The latter Edmund became the
de facto archetype; nearly all subsequent Blackadders in the series were modelled after Edmund, Lord Blackadder - the exception being Ebenezer Blackadder, who initially began as the nicest man in England to the point of naivete but who gradually fell back into the standard persona after being abused by almost everyone around him.
Sir Edmund Blackadder (English Civil War) Sir Edmund Blackadder appears in the
Comic Relief special
Blackadder: The Cavalier Years; with the honorific of "Sir", this Blackadder is either a
Baronet or a
Knight. Set during the
English Civil War, Sir Edmund is (apparently) a loyal
royalist and friend of
Charles I, played by
Stephen Fry. This Blackadder also appeared in an introductory sequence for
Charles, Prince of Wales' fiftieth birthday Gala Performance, in which he was supposedly organising a birthday show for Charles II (also Fry).
Mr. Edmund Blackadder Esq. (Regency Britain) Mr. Edmund Blackadder,
Esq., is the Blackadder appearing in the
Regency period of British history. His family having fallen on hard times, he is reduced to a life of servitude, a fall made even more insufferable by his position as
butler to the oafish and uncouth
George (Laurie), the
Prince Regent. Despite this, he remains very intelligent (by far sharper than most of the people he associates with), and is usually found stealing from his employer. This Blackadder is the one who is most in control of his own affairs, so he is able to be more arrogantly confident than other Blackadders. This Blackadder is the only one of the main four incarnations not to be killed onscreen (the first one accidentally poisoned himself, the second was murdered, whilst the fourth is presumed to have died in battle). While history records this version of Blackadder as having been shot dead by the
Duke of Wellington (Fry), in actuality Prince George was masquerading as Blackadder and vice versa, which results in Blackadder assuming the Prince Regent's identity and later becoming
King George IV.
Mr. Ebenezer Blackadder (Victorian London) Mr. Ebenezer Blackadder, the Victorian Blackadder, appears in ''
Blackadder's Christmas Carol. Unlike his cold-hearted, cynical ancestors and the Dickens character Ebenezer Scrooge he is a parody of, he is by repute the nicest man in Victorian England. Unfortunately, this only serves to make him a target for the cynical crooks and cheats he is surrounded by, and a Christmas Carol''-like encounter with the "Ghost of Christmas" sees him greatly inspired by his snide-yet-triumphant ancestors; he learns that if he reverts to their ways his descendants will rule the universe, otherwise they will end up as Baldrick's slaves in the same time period. Upon the departure of the Ghost, Blackadder renounces his compassion and reverts to type on the spot.
Captain Edmund Blackadder (World War I) Captain Edmund Blackadder appears in
Blackadder Goes Forth, set in 1917, as an officer of the
Suffolk Regiment during
World War I. A long-time soldier, early in his career Blackadder was "The Hero of Umboto Gorge", a fictional battle that took place in
French Sudan in 1892, during which he saved the life of
Douglas Haig. He also served in the 1898
Mahdist War and makes reference to having spent most of his career away from Britain. His medals suggest him fighting in the
Second Boer War, though no mention of this is made in the show. Historically, the Suffolk Regiment only garrisoned in the Northern Cape, so it is plausible he saw no actual fighting against the Boers. Prior to the outbreak of World War I, Blackadder found life in the British Army agreeable, as he had enjoyed a relatively danger-free existence. His main responsibility was to maintain the
British Empire, or as he personally put it: fighting natives who were usually "two feet tall and armed with dried grass." However, in World War I, Blackadder is astute to the gravity and slaughter of
trench warfare, and unlike his superior officers, realises that the earlier colonial battles produced wildly unrealistic expectations about future conflict. Characteristically reluctant to meet his end in the mud of the trenches of the
Western Front, Blackadder's sole goal is to escape his inevitable fate. His attempts to escape are thwarted by the idiotic
General Melchett (Fry), and Melchett's assistant Captain
Kevin Darling (McInnerny), Blackadder's nemesis. Blackadder shares his trench with
Private S. Baldrick (Robinson), and
Lt. The Hon. George Colthurst St Barleigh (Laurie). Also shown from afar is Douglas Haig (
Geoffrey Palmer), whom Blackadder had previously saved from death. In the series finale, "
Goodbyeee", Captain Blackadder and his company are sent "over the top" in an offensive. After trying and failing to get out of the battle, Blackadder's company charges into machine gun fire, before the scene fades to a field of poppies with only birdsong to be heard, symbols of the fate of the company. In the alternative ending of the finale, it is shown that Blackadder survives by pretending to be dead, after the entire company perishes, and diving back to the trench for safety, surviving the war.
Awards and decorations In the series, Captain Blackadder is seen wearing the following ribbons:
Lord Edmund Blackadder / King Edmund III (Turn-of-the-Millennium) In
Blackadder: Back & Forth, Lord Edmund Blackadder is the modern representative of the Blackadder family. He intends to play a turn-of-the-
millennium-prank on his friends by claiming that he has a
time machine – only to be unpleasantly surprised that the device that Baldrick has actually built (following
Leonardo da Vinci's instructions to the letter, except for marking values on the instrument display) actually
is a working time machine. He manages to alter time by: • Beating up
William Shakespeare (
Colin Firth) and telling him that his plays are just people "wearing stupid tights" who are "talking total crap". When Blackadder also leaves his
ballpoint pen behind, he causes Shakespeare to be viewed by history not as the great playwright, but as the pen's "inventor". • Convincing
Robin Hood's (
Rik Mayall) men that robbing from the rich is fine, but giving to the poor makes them look like complete lunatics, causing them to shoot Robin full of arrows. • Causing the time machine to land on top of the
Duke of Wellington (Fry) during the
Battle of Waterloo, allowing
Napoleon Bonaparte to win the battle and conquer the United Kingdom. He restores history but then has the idea of changing history in his favour. In the present day, a news report shows the popular King Edmund III and his queen, Marian of Sherwood (
Kate Moss), being greeted by the prime minister, Baldrick. With Baldrick working as his prime minister and
Parliament dissolved, the Blackadder and Baldrick families have finally triumphed and become rulers of the UK. ==Other Blackadders==