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The Three Musketeers

The Three Musketeers (French: Les Trois Mousquetaires, [le tʁwɑ muskətɛːʁ]) is a French historical adventure novel written in 1844 by French author Alexandre Dumas. It is in the swashbuckler genre, which has heroic, chivalrous swordsmen who fight for justice.

The Three Musketeers
D'Artagnan, Athos, Aramis, and Porthos
Image by Maurice Leloir
AuthorAlexandre Dumas
Original titleLes Trois Mousquetaires
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
GenreHistorical novel, adventure novel, swashbuckler
Publication date
March–July 1844 (serialised)
Pagesc. 700 (depending on edition)
Followed byTwenty Years After, The Vicomte of Bragelonne 
Les Trois Mousquetaires, by Alexandre Dumas, in French. LibriVox recording by Jc Guan. Chapter 1. Les trois présents de M. d'Artagnan père.

Set between 1625 and 1628, it recounts the adventures of a young man named d'Artagnan (a character based on Charles de Batz-Castelmore d'Artagnan) after he leaves home to travel to Paris, hoping to join the Musketeers of the Guard. Although d'Artagnan is not able to join this elite corps immediately, he is befriended by three of the most formidable musketeers of the age – Athos, Porthos and Aramis, "the three musketeers" or "the three inseparables" – and becomes involved in affairs of state and at court.

The Three Musketeers is primarily a historical and adventure novel. However, Dumas frequently portrays various injustices, abuses and absurdities of the Ancien Régime, giving the novel an additional political significance at the time of its publication, a time when the debate in France between republicans and monarchists was still fierce. The story was first serialised from March to July 1844, during the July Monarchy, four years before the French Revolution of 1848 established the Second Republic.

The story of d'Artagnan is continued in Twenty Years After and The Vicomte of Bragelonne: Ten Years Later.

Origin

Dumas presents his novel as one of a series of recovered manuscripts, turning the origins of his romance into a little drama of its own. In the preface, he tells of being inspired by a scene in Mémoires de Monsieur d'Artagnan (1700), a historical novel by Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras, printed by Pierre Rouge in Amsterdam, which Dumas discovered during his research for his history of Louis XIV.[1][2] According to Dumas, the incident where d'Artagnan tells of his first visit to M. de Tréville, captain of the Musketeers, and how, in the antechamber, he encountered three young Béarnese with the names Athos, Porthos and Aramis, made such an impression on him that he continued to investigate. That much is true – the rest is fiction: He finally found the names of the three musketeers in a manuscript titled Mémoire de M. le comte de la Fère, etc. Dumas "requested permission" to reprint the manuscript; permission was granted:

Now, this is the first part of this precious manuscript which we offer to our readers, restoring it to the title which belongs to it, and entering into an engagement that if (of which we have no doubt) this first part should obtain the success it merits, we will publish the second immediately.

In the meanwhile, since godfathers are second fathers, as it were, we beg the reader to lay to our account and not to that of the Comte de la Fère, the pleasure or the ennui he may experience.

This being understood, let us proceed with our story.[3]

The Three Musketeers was written in collaboration with Auguste Maquet, who also worked with Dumas on its sequels (Twenty Years After and The Vicomte of Bragelonne: Ten Years Later), as well as The Count of Monte Cristo. Maquet would suggest plot outlines after doing historical research; Dumas then expanded the plot, removing some characters, including new ones and imbuing the story with his unmistakable style.

The Three Musketeers was first published in serial form in the newspaper Le Siècle between March and July 1844.

Plot

 
Depiction of the Cardinal's musketeers, the great rivals of the King's musketeers.

In 1625 France, D'Artagnan leaves his family in Gascony and travels to Paris to join the Musketeers of the Guard. At a house in Meung-sur-Loire, an older man derides D'Artagnan's horse. Insulted, D'Artagnan demands a duel. But the older man's companions instead beat D'Artagnan unconscious with a cooking pot and a metal tong that breaks his sword. His letter of introduction to Monsieur de Tréville, the commander of the musketeers, is also stolen. D'Artagnan resolves to avenge himself upon the older man, who is later revealed to be the Comte de Rochefort, an agent of Cardinal Richelieu, who is passing orders from the cardinal to his spy, Lady de Winter, usually called Milady de Winter or simply "Milady". In Paris, D'Artagnan visits Monsieur de Tréville at the headquarters of the musketeers, but without the letter, Tréville politely refuses his application. He does, however, write a letter of introduction to an academy for young gentlemen which may prepare his visitor for recruitment at a later time. From Tréville's window, D'Artagnan sees Rochefort passing in the street below and rushes out of the building to confront him, but, in doing, so he offends three musketeers, Athos, Porthos and Aramis, who each demand satisfaction; D'Artagnan must fight a duel with all of them that afternoon.

As D'Artagnan prepares himself for the first duel, he realizes that Athos's seconds are Porthos and Aramis, who are astonished that the young Gascon intends to duel them all. As D'Artagnan and Athos begin, Cardinal Richelieu's guards appear and attempt to arrest D'Artagnan and the three musketeers for illegal dueling. Although they are outnumbered four to five, the four men win the battle. D'Artagnan seriously wounds Jussac, one of the cardinal's officers and a renowned fighter. After learning of this, King Louis XIII appoints D'Artagnan to Des Essart's company of the King's Guards and gives him forty pistoles. D'Artagnan hires a servant named Planchet, finds lodgings and reports to Monsieur des Essart, whose company is a less prestigious regiment in which he will have to serve for two years before being considered for the musketeers. Shortly after, his landlord speaks to him about the kidnapping of his wife, Constance Bonacieux. When she is presently released, D'Artagnan falls in love at first sight with her. She works for Queen Anne of France, who is secretly having an affair with the English duke of Buckingham. The king, Louis XIII, gave the queen a gift of diamond studs, but she gives them to her lover as a keepsake.

Cardinal Richelieu, who wants war between France and England, plans to expose the tryst and persuades the king to demand that the queen wear the diamonds to a soirée that the cardinal is sponsoring. Constance tries to send her husband to London to fetch the diamonds from Buckingham, but the man is instead manipulated by Richelieu and thus does not go, so D'Artagnan and his friends intercede. En route to England, the Cardinal's henchmen repeatedly attack them and only D'Artagnan and Planchet reach London. Before arriving, D'Artagnan is compelled to assault and nearly to kill, the Comte de Wardes, a friend of the Cardinal, cousin of Rochefort and Milady's lover. Although Milady stole two of the diamond studs, Buckingham provides replacements while delaying the thief's return to Paris. D'Artagnan is thus able to return a complete set of jewels to Queen Anne just in time to save her honour. In gratitude, she gives him a beautiful ring. Shortly afterward, D'Artagnan begins an affair with Madame Bonacieux. Arriving for an assignation, he sees signs of a struggle and discovers that Rochefort and M. Bonacieux, acting under the orders of the Cardinal, have assaulted and imprisoned Constance. D'Artagnan and his friends, now recovered from their injuries, return to Paris. D'Artagnan meets Milady de Winter officially and recognizes her as one of the Cardinal's agents, but becomes infatuated with her until her maid reveals that Milady is indifferent toward him.

Entering her quarters in the dark, he pretends to be the Comte de Wardes and trysts with her. He finds a fleur-de-lis branded on Milady's shoulder, marking her as a felon. Discovering his identity, Milady attempts to kill him but D'Artagnan eludes her. He is later ordered to the Siege of La Rochelle. He is informed that the queen has rescued Constance from prison. At an inn, the musketeers overhear the Cardinal asking Milady to murder Buckingham, a supporter of the Protestant rebels at La Rochelle who has sent troops to assist them. Richelieu gives her a letter that excuses her actions as under orders from the Cardinal himself, but Athos takes it. The next morning, Athos bets that he, D'Artagnan, Porthos and Aramis and their servants can hold the recaptured St. Gervais bastion against the rebels for an hour, for the purpose of discussing their next course of action. They resist for an hour and a half before retreating, killing 22 Rochellese in total; D'Artagnan is made a musketeer as a result of this feat. They warn Lord de Winter and the duke of Buckingham. Milady is imprisoned on arrival in England, but she seduces her guard, Felton (a fictionalization of the real John Felton) and persuades him to allow her to escape and to kill Buckingham himself. Upon her return to France, Milady hides in a convent where Constance is also staying.

The naïve Constance clings to Milady, who sees a chance for revenge on D'Artagnan and fatally poisons Constance before D'Artagnan can rescue her. The musketeers arrest Milady before she reaches Cardinal Richelieu. They bring an official executioner, put her on trial, sentence her to death, and execute her. After her execution, the four friends return to the Siege of La Rochelle. The Cardinal's Guards arrest D’Artagnan and take him to the cardinal. When questioned about Milady's execution, D'Artagnan presents her letter of pardon as his own. Impressed with D'Artagnan's wilfulness and secretly glad to be rid of Milady, the Cardinal destroys the letter and writes a new order, giving the bearer a promotion to lieutenant in the Tréville company of musketeers, leaving the name blank. D'Artagnan offers the letter to Athos, Porthos and Aramis in turn but each refuses it; Athos because it is beneath him, Porthos because he is retiring to marry his wealthy mistress and Aramis because he is joining the priesthood. D'Artagnan, though heartbroken and full of regrets, finally receives the promotion he had coveted.

Characters

 
Sculpture of d'Artagnan, Athos, Porthos and Aramis in Condom, France.
Musketeers
  • Athos – Comte de la Fère: he has never recovered from his marriage to Milady and seeks solace in wine. He becomes a father figure to d'Artagnan.
  • Porthos – M. du Vallon: a dandy, fond of fashionable clothes and keen to make a fortune for himself. The least cerebral of the quartet, he compensates with his homeric strength of body and character.
  • Aramis – René d'Herblay, a handsome young man who hesitates between his religious calling and his fondness for women and scheming.
  • D'Artagnan – Charles de Batz de Castelmore D'Artagnan: a young, foolhardy, brave and clever man seeking to become a musketeer in France.
Musketeers' servants
  • Planchet – a young man from Picardy, he is seen by Porthos on the Pont de la Tournelle spitting into the river below. Porthos takes this as a sign of good character and hires him on the spot to serve d'Artagnan. He turns out to be a brave, intelligent and loyal servant.
  • Grimaud – a Breton. Athos is a strict master and only permits his servant to speak in emergencies; he mostly communicates through sign language.
  • Mousqueton – originally a Norman named Boniface; Porthos, however, changes his name to one that sounds better. He is a would-be dandy, just as vain as his master. In lieu of pay, he is clothed and lodged in a manner superior to that usual for servants, dressing grandly in his master's old clothes.
  • Bazin – from the province of Berry, Bazin is a pious man who waits for the day his master (Aramis) will join the church, as he has always dreamed of serving a priest.
Others
  • Milady de Winter – a beautiful and evil spy of the Cardinal, she is also Athos's ex-wife. D'Artagnan impersonates a rival to spend a night with her, attracting her deadly hatred.
  • Rochefort is a more conventional agent of the Cardinal. Following their duel on the road to Paris, d'Artagnan swears to have his revenge. He loses several opportunities, but their paths finally cross again towards the end of the novel.
  • Constance Bonacieux – the queen's seamstress and confidante. After d'Artagnan rescues her from the cardinal's guard, he immediately falls in love with her. She appreciates his protection, but the relationship is never consummated.
  • Monsieur Bonacieux – Constance's husband. He initially enlists d'Artagnan's help to rescue his wife from the Cardinal's Guards, but when he himself is arrested, he and the Cardinal discover they have an understanding. Richelieu turns Monsieur Bonacieux against his wife and he goes on to play a role in her abduction.
  • Kitty – a servant of Milady de Winter. She dislikes her mistress and adores d'Artagnan.
  • Lord de Winter – brother of Milady's second husband, who died of a mysterious disease (apparently poisoned by Milady). He imprisoned Milady upon her arrival in England and decided to send her overseas in exile. Later, he took part in Milady's trial.
Historical characters
  • King Louis XIII of France – presented by Dumas as a fairly weak monarch often manipulated by his chief minister.
  • Queen Anne of Austria – the unhappy queen of France.
  • Cardinal Richelieu – Armand Jean du Plessis, the king's chief minister, who plots against the queen in resentment at having his advances rebuffed. Dumas describes him as being "36 or 37" though in 1625 Richelieu was 40.
  • M. de Tréville – captain of the musketeers and something of a mentor to d'Artagnan, though he has only a minor role.
  • George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham – a handsome and charismatic man used to getting his way: he thinks nothing of starting a war between England and France for his personal convenience. His courtship of Anne of Austria gets her in trouble.
  • John Felton – a Puritan officer assigned to guard Milady and warned about her ways, he is nonetheless seduced and fooled by her in a matter of days and assassinates Buckingham at her request.

Editions

Les Trois Mousquetaires was translated into three English versions by 1846. One of these, by William Barrow (1817–1877),[4] is still in print and fairly faithful to the original, available in the Oxford World's Classics 1999 edition. To conform to 19th-century English standards, all of the explicit and many of the implicit references to sexuality were removed, adversely affecting the readability of several scenes, such as the scenes between d'Artagnan and Milady.

There are 3 modern translations as well. One recent English translation is by Will Hobson in 2002.

Another is by Richard Pevear (2006),[5] who, though applauding Barrow's work, states that most of the modern translations available today are "textbook examples of bad translation practices" which "give their readers an extremely distorted notion of Dumas' writing."[6]

The most recent translation is by the American translator Lawrence Ellsworth (Lawrence Schick) published by Pegasus Books in February 2018 from the 1956 French edition.

Ellsworth decided to translate the full trilogy of The d'Artagnan Romances as well as the two novels of The Count of Moret for 21st century readers in 9 volumes, making it the first complete translation in over a century and a half. 6 out of 9 volumes have been published and the 7th volume is in progress in a serialized translation on Substack. [7]

Adaptations

Film

Television

The novel has been adapted also for television in live action and animation.

Live action

The BBC has adapted the novel on three occasions.

Young Blades is an American/Canadian television series that aired on PAX in 2005. The series serves as a sequel to the novels, centered on the son of d'Artagnan, played by Tobias Mehler.

A series adapted for Korean history aired in 2014.

Animation

Walt Disney Productions produced a Silly Symphony cartoon called, Three Blind Mouseketeers, which is loosely based on the novel in 1936, in which the characters are depicted as anthropomorphic animals.

A two-part adaptation aired on The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo, with Magoo portraying D'Artagnan.

The Three Musketeers was a series of animated shorts produced by Hanna-Barbera as part of The Banana Splits Comedy-Adventure Hour and The Banana Splits & Friends show.

The Three Musketeers was a Hanna-Barbera animated special from 1973. It was part of the 1970s-80s CBS anthology series Famous Classic Tales that was produced by Hanna-Barbera's Australian division and often aired around the holidays between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day.

Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds is a 1981 Spanish–Japanese anime adaptation, where the characters are anthropomorphic dogs. A sequel, The Return of Dogtanian, was released in 1989 by BRB Internacional, Thames Television and Wang Film Productions. Set 10 years after the original, it is loosely based on the novel The Vicomte de Bragelonne. A key difference between the two Dogtanian adaptions and Dumas' novel is that the character traits of Athos and Porthos were interchanged, making Athos the extrovert and Porthos the secretive noble of the group.

In 1989, Gakken produced a new anime adaptation called The Three Musketeers Anime, this time with human characters, which features several departures from the original.

Albert the Fifth Musketeer is a 1994 French animated series featuring a new musketeer, the titular Albert.

Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers, a direct-to-video animated movie produced by Walt Disney Pictures and the Australian office of DisneyToon Studios, directed by Donovan Cook and released on 17 August 2004.

The Backyardigans had a 2009 episode in its third season by the name of The Two Musketeers; a third musketeer joins by the end of the episode.

A Barbie adaption of the tale by the name of Barbie and the Three Musketeers was released in 2009.

Stage

The first stage production was in Dumas' own lifetime as the opera Les Trois Mousquetaires with a libretto by Dumas himself and music by Albert Visetti.

The Three Musketeers is a musical with a book by William Anthony McGuire, lyrics by Clifford Grey and P. G. Wodehouse and music by Rudolf Friml. The original 1928 production ran on Broadway for 318 performances. A 1984 revival ran for 15 previews and 9 performances.

In 2003, a Dutch musical 3 Musketiers with a book by André Breedland and music & lyrics by Rob & Ferdi Bolland premiered, which went on to open in Germany (both the Dutch and German production starring Pia Douwes as Milady De Winter) and Hungary.

Playwright Peter Raby, composer George Stiles and lyricist Paul Leigh have written another adaptation titled The 3 Musketeers, One Musical For All, originally produced by the now defunct American Musical Theatre of San Jose.

In 2006, an adaptation by Ken Ludwig premiered at the Bristol Old Vic.[14] In this version, d'Artagnan's sister Sabine, "the quintessential tomboy," poses as a young man and participates in her brother's adventures.

In 2018, The Dukes performed an outdoor promenade production in Williamson Park, Lancaster, adapted by Hattie Naylor: in this version d'Artagnan was a young woman aspiring to be a musketeer.[15][16]

Video games and board games

In 1995, publisher U.S. Gold released Touché: The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer by video game developers Clipper Software, a classic point-and-click adventure game.[17] In 2005, Swedish developer Legendo Entertainment published the side-scrolling platform game The Three Musketeers for Windows XP and Windows Vista. In July 2009, a version of the game was released for WiiWare in North America and Europe under the title The Three Musketeers: One for All!.[18] In 2009, Canadian developer Dingo Games self-published The Three Musketeers: The Game for Windows and Mac OS X. It is the first game to be truly based on the novel (in that it closely follows the novel's story).[19] 2009 also saw the publication of the asymmetric team board game The Three Musketeers "The Queen's Pendants" (Настольная игра "Три мушкетера") from French designer Pascal Bernard[20] by the Russian publisher Zvezda.[21] In 2010, a co-operative game called "Mousquetaires du Roy" was released by Ystari and Rio Grande.[22] The alternative spelling of "Roy" was taken from the old French and is rumoured to be preferred over the regular spelling because the publishers desire to have a letter "Y" in the name of the games they publish.[23] Designed by François Combe and Gilles Lehmann for 1-5 players, the medium heavy game depicts the quest to retrieve the Queen's diamonds, while at the same time fending off disasters back in Paris. A sixth player expansion, called "Treville" was also made available in 2010.[24]

In 2010, Anuman Interactive launched The Three Musketeers, a hidden object game on PC and MAC. Players follow d'Artagnan in his quest to become a king's musketeer.[25]

Web series

In 2016, KindaTV launched a web series based on the story of The Three Musketeers, called "All For One".[26] It follows a group of college students, mainly Dorothy Castlemore and is centred around a sorority- Mu Sigma Theta (MST). The majority of characters have been gender-swapped from the original story and most character names are based on the original characters.

It covers several themes including the LGBT community, mental health, long-distance relationships and college life.

Audio drama

In September 2019, Amazon released The Three Musketeers: an Audible Original Audio Drama,[27] which follows the story of the book told from Milady's perspective.

In April 2021, Durham University Audio Society began releasing the first season of DUADS' The Three Musketeers.[28] The show originally aired on Durham University's student radio station, Purple Radio, and went on to be nominated for and receive several local awards. The show remains faithful to the events of the novel, but adds in several adventures and touches on additional themes, including LGBT themes. The first season covers the first arc of the book, the quest for the Queen's diamond studs. A second and third season are in the works.

In May 2022, Radio Mirchi Kolkata station aired The Three Musketeers in Bangla version, translated by Rajarshee Gupta for Mirchi's Sunday Suspense Programme. It was narrated by Deepanjan Ghosh. D'Artagnan was voiced by actor Rwitobroto Mukherjee. Athos was voiced by Gaurav Chakrabarty, Porthos by Agni, Aramis by Somak, King Louis XIII by Sayak Aman and Cardinal Richelieu by Mir Afsar Ali.[29]

Other

 
Three Musketeers, Issue No. 1, Classic Comics, published 1941

Publisher Albert Lewis Kanter (1897–1973), created Classic Comics for Elliot Publishing Company in 1941 with its debut issues being The Three Musketeers. The Three Mouseketeers was the title of two series produced by DC Comics; the first series was a loose parody of The Three Musketeers. It was also made into motion comics in the Video Comic Book series

In 1939, American author Tiffany Thayer published a book titled Three Musketeers (Thayer, 1939). This is a re-telling of the story in Thayer's words, true to the original plot but told in a different order and with different points of view and emphasis from the original.

Fantasy novelist Steven Brust's Khaavren Romances series have all used Dumas novels (particularly the D'Artagnan Romances) as their chief inspiration, recasting the plots of those novels to fit within Brust's established world of Dragaera.[30] His 2020 novel The Baron of Magister Valley follows suit, using The Count of Monte Cristo as a starting point.[31][32]

Sarah Hoyt wrote a series of historical murder mysteries with the musketeers as the protagonists. (Hoyt wrote the novels under the name Sarah d'Almeida.)

Tansy Rayner Roberts wrote Musketeer Space, a space opera retelling of the original book in which almost all characters have a different gender, as a weekly serialized novel from 2014 to 2016.

In popular culture

Literature

In the book The Assault, The Three Musketeers is quoted in the Prologue as the protagonist had the story read to him by Mr. Beumer, a lawyer who later becomes senile and in morbidity.

The American translator, Lawrence Ellsworth is currently translating The d'Artagnan Romances entirely and he has also written a 2-volume novel called The Rose Knight's Crucifixion that is a parallel novel to The Three Musketeers and most of the characters from The Three Musketeers and Sir Percy Blakeney from The Laughing Cavalier and The First Sir Percy by Baroness Orczy appear. The protagonist's physical appearance, however, is based on Quasimodo from Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.

Film and television

In the movie The Man in the Iron Mask, the aging musketeers come out of retirement and reunite to save France from the spoiled, cruel young King Louis XIV (played by Leonardo DiCaprio). The movie features Jeremy Irons as Aramis, John Malkovich as Athos, Gerard Depardieu as Porthos and Gabriel Byrne as D’Artagnan.

In Slumdog Millionaire, Jamal Malik's final question was to correctly identify the name of the third musketeer- which was Aramis. Jamal did so and won twenty million rupees.

In the film Django Unchained, one of the slaves, owned by Calvin Candie, is named D'Artagnan.

Video games

In Pokémon Black and White, the Pokémon Cobalion, Terrakion and Virizion, known as the Swords of Justice, are based on the Three Musketeers. Cobalion represents Athos, Terrakion represents Porthos and Virizion represents Aramis.[33] The fourth Sword of Justice, Keldeo, represents d'Artagnan.[34]

Music

The Smiths song You've Got Everything Now features the line: "I've seen you smile, but I've never really heard you laugh" and is borrowed from a narrative description of Athos:

He was very taciturn, this worthy signor. Be it understood we are speaking of Athos. During the five or six years that he had lived in the strictest intimacy with his companions, Porthos and Aramis, they could remember having often seen him smile, but had never heard him laugh.

— Chapter 7, The Interior of the Musketeers[35]

Ppcocaine's song "Three Musketeers" shares little with the novel but its title.

References

  1. ^ Les Trois Mousquetaires by Alexandre Dumas – Free Ebook : Author's Preface. 2004. Retrieved 26 February 2014 – via Project Gutenberg.
  2. ^ Losada, Juan Carlos (3 November 2019). "Los mosqueteros y la alargada sombra de Alejandro Dumas". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  3. ^ Dumas, Alexandre. The Three Musketeers, Author's Preface.
  4. ^ {https://www.biblio.com/the-three-musketeers-by-dumas-alexandre/work/3218 Collecting The Three Musketeers by Dumas, ALexandre - First Edition Identification Guide], biblio.com. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  5. ^ Thorpe, Adam (25 November 2006). "Review: The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, translated by Richard Pevear". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  6. ^ Dumas, Alexandre, The Three Musketeers, Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition, "A Note on the Translation", p. xxi
  7. ^ Ellsworth, Lawrence (21 November 2022). "Musketeers Cycle by Alexandre Dumas".
  8. ^ "The Three Musketeers. 1921. Directed by Fred Niblo | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  9. ^ "The Three Musketeers". IMDb. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  10. ^ "The Three Musketeers". IMDb. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  11. ^ Young, Neil (23 September 2011). "The Three Musketeers: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  12. ^ The Three Musketeers (2023) - IMDb, retrieved 6 May 2023
  13. ^ Strecker, Erin (1 August 2012). "One for all: BBC announces new show 'The Musketeers'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  14. ^ Ken Ludwig – Playwright. "The Three Musketeers". kenludwig.com. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  15. ^ Bartlett, Chris (24 July 2018). "The Three Musketeers review at Williamson Park, Lancaster – 'slick and inclusive open-air theatre'". The Stage. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
  16. ^ Brennan, Clare (22 July 2018). "The Three Musketeers review – a joyful twist on the classic swashbuckler". The Observer. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
  17. ^ Touché: The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer, Moby Games
  18. ^ "The Three Musketeers: One for All! (WiiWare)". Nintendo Life. 21 October 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2010.
  19. ^ The Three Musketeers: The Game, Moby Games
  20. ^ "Pascal Bernard – Board Game Designer". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 18 January 2010.
  21. ^ Звезда. Настольные игры. Сборные модели и миниатюры. (in Russian). Zvezda. Retrieved 18 January 2010.
  22. ^ "Mousquetaires du Roy". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  23. ^ "1st Ystari Game where the S comes before the Y?". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  24. ^ "Mousquetaires du Roy: Tréville miniature". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  25. ^ "HdO Adventure series | GamesIndustry International". Gamesindustry.biz. 18 March 2010. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  26. ^ All for One, Gwenlyn Cumyn, Angie Lopez, Claire Gagnon-King, retrieved 11 April 2018{{citation}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  27. ^ "The Three Musketeers: An Audible Original Drama (Audio Download): Alexandre Dumas, Marty Ross, David Ahmad, Rachel Atkins, Catherine Bailey, ed Barry, Timothy Bentinck, Nicholas Boulton, Eliza Butterworth, Gunnar Cauthery, Stephen Critchlow, Adetomiwa Edun, Audible Originals: Amazon.co.uk: Audible Books & Originals". Amazon UK.
  28. ^ "DUADS' the Three Musketeers • A podcast on Anchor".
  29. ^ #SundaySuspense | The Three Musketeers Part 1 | Alexandre Dumas | MIrchi Bangla, retrieved 23 May 2022
  30. ^ Tilendis, Robert M. (23 December 2014). "Steven Brust's The Khaavren Romances". Green Man Review. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  31. ^ Eddy, Cheryl (1 July 2020). "There Are So Many New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books Coming Out in July". Gizmodo. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  32. ^ Steven Brust (28 July 2020). The Baron of Magister Valley. Tom Doherty Associates. ISBN 978-1-250-31146-7.
  33. ^ "Ken Sugimori Reveals More Gen 5 Lost Pokemon Designs". Lava Cut Content. 31 May 2019. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  34. ^ Gilbert, Henry (10 October 2013). "Pokemon facts - 30 little known pieces of trivia from the classic franchise". gamesradar. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  35. ^ The Three Musketeers Project Gutenberg.

External links

  • The Three Musketeers at Standard Ebooks
  • The Three Musketeers at Project Gutenberg. Plain text format.
  •   The Three Musketeers public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • History of Dumas' Musketeers, shows links between the characters and actual history.
  • Comprehensive collection of Dumas links
  • The Three Musketeers. Scanned public domain editions in PDF format from Archive.org, some w/ illustrations, introductions and other helpful material.
  • "The Paris of The Three Musketeers", by E. H. Blashfield and E. W. Blashfield. Scribner's Magazine, August 1890. Cornell University Library.
  • Cooper, Barbara T., "Alexandre Dumas, père", in Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 119: Nineteenth-Century French Fiction Writers: Romanticism and Realism, 1800–1860, edited by Catharine Savage Brosman, Gale Research, 1992, pp. 98–119.
  • Hemmings, F. W. J., "Alexandre Dumas Père", in European Writers: The Romantic Century, Vol. 6, edited by Jacques Barzun and George Stade, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1985, pp. 719–43.
  • Foote-Greenwell, Victoria, "The Life and Resurrection of Alexandre Dumas", in Smithsonian, July 1996, p. 110.
  • Thayer, Tiffany, Three Musketeers, New York: Citadel Press, 1939. (On the hard cover, the title is printed as Tiffany Thayer's Three Musketeers.)
  • Discussion of the work, bibliography and links
  • Bibliography and references for The Three Musketeers

three, musketeers, other, uses, disambiguation, novel, film, adaptations, film, french, trois, mousquetaires, tʁwɑ, muskətɛːʁ, french, historical, adventure, novel, written, 1844, french, author, alexandre, dumas, swashbuckler, genre, which, heroic, chivalrous. For other uses see The Three Musketeers disambiguation For the novel s film adaptations see The Three Musketeers in film The Three Musketeers French Les Trois Mousquetaires le tʁwɑ musketɛːʁ is a French historical adventure novel written in 1844 by French author Alexandre Dumas It is in the swashbuckler genre which has heroic chivalrous swordsmen who fight for justice The Three MusketeersD Artagnan Athos Aramis and PorthosImage by Maurice LeloirAuthorAlexandre DumasOriginal titleLes Trois MousquetairesCountryFranceLanguageFrenchGenreHistorical novel adventure novel swashbucklerPublication dateMarch July 1844 serialised Pagesc 700 depending on edition Followed byTwenty Years After The Vicomte of Bragelonne source source Les Trois Mousquetaires by Alexandre Dumas in French LibriVox recording by Jc Guan Chapter 1 Les trois presents de M d Artagnan pere Set between 1625 and 1628 it recounts the adventures of a young man named d Artagnan a character based on Charles de Batz Castelmore d Artagnan after he leaves home to travel to Paris hoping to join the Musketeers of the Guard Although d Artagnan is not able to join this elite corps immediately he is befriended by three of the most formidable musketeers of the age Athos Porthos and Aramis the three musketeers or the three inseparables and becomes involved in affairs of state and at court The Three Musketeers is primarily a historical and adventure novel However Dumas frequently portrays various injustices abuses and absurdities of the Ancien Regime giving the novel an additional political significance at the time of its publication a time when the debate in France between republicans and monarchists was still fierce The story was first serialised from March to July 1844 during the July Monarchy four years before the French Revolution of 1848 established the Second Republic The story of d Artagnan is continued in Twenty Years After and The Vicomte of Bragelonne Ten Years Later Contents 1 Origin 2 Plot 3 Characters 4 Editions 5 Adaptations 5 1 Film 5 2 Television 5 2 1 Live action 5 2 2 Animation 5 3 Stage 5 4 Video games and board games 5 5 Web series 5 6 Audio drama 5 7 Other 6 In popular culture 6 1 Literature 6 2 Film and television 6 3 Video games 6 4 Music 7 References 8 External linksOrigin Edit A Musketeer of the Guard c 1660 Dumas presents his novel as one of a series of recovered manuscripts turning the origins of his romance into a little drama of its own In the preface he tells of being inspired by a scene in Memoires de Monsieur d Artagnan 1700 a historical novel by Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras printed by Pierre Rouge in Amsterdam which Dumas discovered during his research for his history of Louis XIV 1 2 According to Dumas the incident where d Artagnan tells of his first visit to M de Treville captain of the Musketeers and how in the antechamber he encountered three young Bearnese with the names Athos Porthos and Aramis made such an impression on him that he continued to investigate That much is true the rest is fiction He finally found the names of the three musketeers in a manuscript titled Memoire de M le comte de la Fere etc Dumas requested permission to reprint the manuscript permission was granted Now this is the first part of this precious manuscript which we offer to our readers restoring it to the title which belongs to it and entering into an engagement that if of which we have no doubt this first part should obtain the success it merits we will publish the second immediately In the meanwhile since godfathers are second fathers as it were we beg the reader to lay to our account and not to that of the Comte de la Fere the pleasure or the ennui he may experience This being understood let us proceed with our story 3 The Three Musketeers was written in collaboration with Auguste Maquet who also worked with Dumas on its sequels Twenty Years After and The Vicomte of Bragelonne Ten Years Later as well as The Count of Monte Cristo Maquet would suggest plot outlines after doing historical research Dumas then expanded the plot removing some characters including new ones and imbuing the story with his unmistakable style The Three Musketeers was first published in serial form in the newspaper Le Siecle between March and July 1844 Plot Edit Depiction of the Cardinal s musketeers the great rivals of the King s musketeers In 1625 France D Artagnan leaves his family in Gascony and travels to Paris to join the Musketeers of the Guard At a house in Meung sur Loire an older man derides D Artagnan s horse Insulted D Artagnan demands a duel But the older man s companions instead beat D Artagnan unconscious with a cooking pot and a metal tong that breaks his sword His letter of introduction to Monsieur de Treville the commander of the musketeers is also stolen D Artagnan resolves to avenge himself upon the older man who is later revealed to be the Comte de Rochefort an agent of Cardinal Richelieu who is passing orders from the cardinal to his spy Lady de Winter usually called Milady de Winter or simply Milady In Paris D Artagnan visits Monsieur de Treville at the headquarters of the musketeers but without the letter Treville politely refuses his application He does however write a letter of introduction to an academy for young gentlemen which may prepare his visitor for recruitment at a later time From Treville s window D Artagnan sees Rochefort passing in the street below and rushes out of the building to confront him but in doing so he offends three musketeers Athos Porthos and Aramis who each demand satisfaction D Artagnan must fight a duel with all of them that afternoon As D Artagnan prepares himself for the first duel he realizes that Athos s seconds are Porthos and Aramis who are astonished that the young Gascon intends to duel them all As D Artagnan and Athos begin Cardinal Richelieu s guards appear and attempt to arrest D Artagnan and the three musketeers for illegal dueling Although they are outnumbered four to five the four men win the battle D Artagnan seriously wounds Jussac one of the cardinal s officers and a renowned fighter After learning of this King Louis XIII appoints D Artagnan to Des Essart s company of the King s Guards and gives him forty pistoles D Artagnan hires a servant named Planchet finds lodgings and reports to Monsieur des Essart whose company is a less prestigious regiment in which he will have to serve for two years before being considered for the musketeers Shortly after his landlord speaks to him about the kidnapping of his wife Constance Bonacieux When she is presently released D Artagnan falls in love at first sight with her She works for Queen Anne of France who is secretly having an affair with the English duke of Buckingham The king Louis XIII gave the queen a gift of diamond studs but she gives them to her lover as a keepsake Cardinal Richelieu who wants war between France and England plans to expose the tryst and persuades the king to demand that the queen wear the diamonds to a soiree that the cardinal is sponsoring Constance tries to send her husband to London to fetch the diamonds from Buckingham but the man is instead manipulated by Richelieu and thus does not go so D Artagnan and his friends intercede En route to England the Cardinal s henchmen repeatedly attack them and only D Artagnan and Planchet reach London Before arriving D Artagnan is compelled to assault and nearly to kill the Comte de Wardes a friend of the Cardinal cousin of Rochefort and Milady s lover Although Milady stole two of the diamond studs Buckingham provides replacements while delaying the thief s return to Paris D Artagnan is thus able to return a complete set of jewels to Queen Anne just in time to save her honour In gratitude she gives him a beautiful ring Shortly afterward D Artagnan begins an affair with Madame Bonacieux Arriving for an assignation he sees signs of a struggle and discovers that Rochefort and M Bonacieux acting under the orders of the Cardinal have assaulted and imprisoned Constance D Artagnan and his friends now recovered from their injuries return to Paris D Artagnan meets Milady de Winter officially and recognizes her as one of the Cardinal s agents but becomes infatuated with her until her maid reveals that Milady is indifferent toward him Entering her quarters in the dark he pretends to be the Comte de Wardes and trysts with her He finds a fleur de lis branded on Milady s shoulder marking her as a felon Discovering his identity Milady attempts to kill him but D Artagnan eludes her He is later ordered to the Siege of La Rochelle He is informed that the queen has rescued Constance from prison At an inn the musketeers overhear the Cardinal asking Milady to murder Buckingham a supporter of the Protestant rebels at La Rochelle who has sent troops to assist them Richelieu gives her a letter that excuses her actions as under orders from the Cardinal himself but Athos takes it The next morning Athos bets that he D Artagnan Porthos and Aramis and their servants can hold the recaptured St Gervais bastion against the rebels for an hour for the purpose of discussing their next course of action They resist for an hour and a half before retreating killing 22 Rochellese in total D Artagnan is made a musketeer as a result of this feat They warn Lord de Winter and the duke of Buckingham Milady is imprisoned on arrival in England but she seduces her guard Felton a fictionalization of the real John Felton and persuades him to allow her to escape and to kill Buckingham himself Upon her return to France Milady hides in a convent where Constance is also staying The naive Constance clings to Milady who sees a chance for revenge on D Artagnan and fatally poisons Constance before D Artagnan can rescue her The musketeers arrest Milady before she reaches Cardinal Richelieu They bring an official executioner put her on trial sentence her to death and execute her After her execution the four friends return to the Siege of La Rochelle The Cardinal s Guards arrest D Artagnan and take him to the cardinal When questioned about Milady s execution D Artagnan presents her letter of pardon as his own Impressed with D Artagnan s wilfulness and secretly glad to be rid of Milady the Cardinal destroys the letter and writes a new order giving the bearer a promotion to lieutenant in the Treville company of musketeers leaving the name blank D Artagnan offers the letter to Athos Porthos and Aramis in turn but each refuses it Athos because it is beneath him Porthos because he is retiring to marry his wealthy mistress and Aramis because he is joining the priesthood D Artagnan though heartbroken and full of regrets finally receives the promotion he had coveted Characters Edit Sculpture of d Artagnan Athos Porthos and Aramis in Condom France MusketeersAthos Comte de la Fere he has never recovered from his marriage to Milady and seeks solace in wine He becomes a father figure to d Artagnan Porthos M du Vallon a dandy fond of fashionable clothes and keen to make a fortune for himself The least cerebral of the quartet he compensates with his homeric strength of body and character Aramis Rene d Herblay a handsome young man who hesitates between his religious calling and his fondness for women and scheming D Artagnan Charles de Batz de Castelmore D Artagnan a young foolhardy brave and clever man seeking to become a musketeer in France Musketeers servantsPlanchet a young man from Picardy he is seen by Porthos on the Pont de la Tournelle spitting into the river below Porthos takes this as a sign of good character and hires him on the spot to serve d Artagnan He turns out to be a brave intelligent and loyal servant Grimaud a Breton Athos is a strict master and only permits his servant to speak in emergencies he mostly communicates through sign language Mousqueton originally a Norman named Boniface Porthos however changes his name to one that sounds better He is a would be dandy just as vain as his master In lieu of pay he is clothed and lodged in a manner superior to that usual for servants dressing grandly in his master s old clothes Bazin from the province of Berry Bazin is a pious man who waits for the day his master Aramis will join the church as he has always dreamed of serving a priest OthersMilady de Winter a beautiful and evil spy of the Cardinal she is also Athos s ex wife D Artagnan impersonates a rival to spend a night with her attracting her deadly hatred Rochefort is a more conventional agent of the Cardinal Following their duel on the road to Paris d Artagnan swears to have his revenge He loses several opportunities but their paths finally cross again towards the end of the novel Constance Bonacieux the queen s seamstress and confidante After d Artagnan rescues her from the cardinal s guard he immediately falls in love with her She appreciates his protection but the relationship is never consummated Monsieur Bonacieux Constance s husband He initially enlists d Artagnan s help to rescue his wife from the Cardinal s Guards but when he himself is arrested he and the Cardinal discover they have an understanding Richelieu turns Monsieur Bonacieux against his wife and he goes on to play a role in her abduction Kitty a servant of Milady de Winter She dislikes her mistress and adores d Artagnan Lord de Winter brother of Milady s second husband who died of a mysterious disease apparently poisoned by Milady He imprisoned Milady upon her arrival in England and decided to send her overseas in exile Later he took part in Milady s trial Historical charactersKing Louis XIII of France presented by Dumas as a fairly weak monarch often manipulated by his chief minister Queen Anne of Austria the unhappy queen of France Cardinal Richelieu Armand Jean du Plessis the king s chief minister who plots against the queen in resentment at having his advances rebuffed Dumas describes him as being 36 or 37 though in 1625 Richelieu was 40 M de Treville captain of the musketeers and something of a mentor to d Artagnan though he has only a minor role George Villiers 1st Duke of Buckingham a handsome and charismatic man used to getting his way he thinks nothing of starting a war between England and France for his personal convenience His courtship of Anne of Austria gets her in trouble John Felton a Puritan officer assigned to guard Milady and warned about her ways he is nonetheless seduced and fooled by her in a matter of days and assassinates Buckingham at her request Editions EditLes Trois Mousquetaires was translated into three English versions by 1846 One of these by William Barrow 1817 1877 4 is still in print and fairly faithful to the original available in the Oxford World s Classics 1999 edition To conform to 19th century English standards all of the explicit and many of the implicit references to sexuality were removed adversely affecting the readability of several scenes such as the scenes between d Artagnan and Milady There are 3 modern translations as well One recent English translation is by Will Hobson in 2002 Another is by Richard Pevear 2006 5 who though applauding Barrow s work states that most of the modern translations available today are textbook examples of bad translation practices which give their readers an extremely distorted notion of Dumas writing 6 The most recent translation is by the American translator Lawrence Ellsworth Lawrence Schick published by Pegasus Books in February 2018 from the 1956 French edition Ellsworth decided to translate the full trilogy of The d Artagnan Romances as well as the two novels of The Count of Moret for 21st century readers in 9 volumes making it the first complete translation in over a century and a half 6 out of 9 volumes have been published and the 7th volume is in progress in a serialized translation on Substack 7 Adaptations EditFilm Edit Main article The Three Musketeers in film The Three Musketeers 1921 a silent film adaptation starring Douglas Fairbanks 8 The Three Musketeers 1939 a musical comedy adaptation starring Don Ameche and The Ritz Brothers The Three Musketeers 1948 a 1948 adaptation starring Van Heflin Lana Turner June Allyson Angela Lansbury Vincent Price and Gene Kelly 9 The Three Musketeers 1973 an adaptation by Richard Lester starring Oliver Reed Frank Finlay Richard Chamberlain and Michael York This was only the first half of the Dumas novel with the rest appearing in the following year s The Four Musketeers D Artagnan and Three Musketeers 1978 a popular Soviet musical featuring Mikhail Boyarsky The Three Musketeers 1993 a 1993 Disney adaptation starring Charlie Sheen Kiefer Sutherland Oliver Platt and Chris O Donnell 10 The Musketeer a 2001 film The Three Musketeers 2011 directed by Paul W S Anderson and starring Luke Evans Ray Stevenson and Milla Jovovich 11 The Three Musketeers D Artagnan and The Three Musketeers Milady a 2023 two part French adventure film saga starring Francois Civil Vincent Cassel Pio Marmai Romain Duris and Eva Green The Three Musketeers 2023 directed by Bill Thomas and starring Malachi Pullar Latchman as D Artagnan 12 Television Edit The novel has been adapted also for television in live action and animation Live action Edit The BBC has adapted the novel on three occasions The Three Musketeers a 1954 BBC adaptation in six 30 minute episodes starring Laurence Payne Roger Delgado Paul Whitsun Jones and Paul Hansard The Three Musketeers a 1966 BBC adaptation in ten 25 minute episodes directed by Peter Hammond and starring Jeremy Brett Jeremy Young and Brian Blessed The Musketeers a 2014 series by Adrian Hodges is the newest BBC adaptation 13 starring Tom Burke Santiago Cabrera Howard Charles and Luke Pasqualino as the titular musketeers Young Blades is an American Canadian television series that aired on PAX in 2005 The series serves as a sequel to the novels centered on the son of d Artagnan played by Tobias Mehler A series adapted for Korean history aired in 2014 Animation Edit Walt Disney Productions produced a Silly Symphony cartoon called Three Blind Mouseketeers which is loosely based on the novel in 1936 in which the characters are depicted as anthropomorphic animals A two part adaptation aired on The Famous Adventures of Mr Magoo with Magoo portraying D Artagnan The Three Musketeers was a series of animated shorts produced by Hanna Barbera as part of The Banana Splits Comedy Adventure Hour and The Banana Splits amp Friends show The Three Musketeers was a Hanna Barbera animated special from 1973 It was part of the 1970s 80s CBS anthology series Famous Classic Tales that was produced by Hanna Barbera s Australian division and often aired around the holidays between Thanksgiving and New Year s Day Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds is a 1981 Spanish Japanese anime adaptation where the characters are anthropomorphic dogs A sequel The Return of Dogtanian was released in 1989 by BRB Internacional Thames Television and Wang Film Productions Set 10 years after the original it is loosely based on the novel The Vicomte de Bragelonne A key difference between the two Dogtanian adaptions and Dumas novel is that the character traits of Athos and Porthos were interchanged making Athos the extrovert and Porthos the secretive noble of the group In 1989 Gakken produced a new anime adaptation called The Three Musketeers Anime this time with human characters which features several departures from the original Albert the Fifth Musketeer is a 1994 French animated series featuring a new musketeer the titular Albert Mickey Donald Goofy The Three Musketeers a direct to video animated movie produced by Walt Disney Pictures and the Australian office of DisneyToon Studios directed by Donovan Cook and released on 17 August 2004 The Backyardigans had a 2009 episode in its third season by the name of The Two Musketeers a third musketeer joins by the end of the episode A Barbie adaption of the tale by the name of Barbie and the Three Musketeers was released in 2009 Stage Edit The first stage production was in Dumas own lifetime as the opera Les Trois Mousquetaires with a libretto by Dumas himself and music by Albert Visetti The Three Musketeers is a musical with a book by William Anthony McGuire lyrics by Clifford Grey and P G Wodehouse and music by Rudolf Friml The original 1928 production ran on Broadway for 318 performances A 1984 revival ran for 15 previews and 9 performances In 2003 a Dutch musical 3 Musketiers with a book by Andre Breedland and music amp lyrics by Rob amp Ferdi Bolland premiered which went on to open in Germany both the Dutch and German production starring Pia Douwes as Milady De Winter and Hungary Playwright Peter Raby composer George Stiles and lyricist Paul Leigh have written another adaptation titled The 3 Musketeers One Musical For All originally produced by the now defunct American Musical Theatre of San Jose In 2006 an adaptation by Ken Ludwig premiered at the Bristol Old Vic 14 In this version d Artagnan s sister Sabine the quintessential tomboy poses as a young man and participates in her brother s adventures In 2018 The Dukes performed an outdoor promenade production in Williamson Park Lancaster adapted by Hattie Naylor in this version d Artagnan was a young woman aspiring to be a musketeer 15 16 Video games and board games Edit In 1995 publisher U S Gold released Touche The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer by video game developers Clipper Software a classic point and click adventure game 17 In 2005 Swedish developer Legendo Entertainment published the side scrolling platform game The Three Musketeers for Windows XP and Windows Vista In July 2009 a version of the game was released for WiiWare in North America and Europe under the title The Three Musketeers One for All 18 In 2009 Canadian developer Dingo Games self published The Three Musketeers The Game for Windows and Mac OS X It is the first game to be truly based on the novel in that it closely follows the novel s story 19 2009 also saw the publication of the asymmetric team board game The Three Musketeers The Queen s Pendants Nastolnaya igra Tri mushketera from French designer Pascal Bernard 20 by the Russian publisher Zvezda 21 In 2010 a co operative game called Mousquetaires du Roy was released by Ystari and Rio Grande 22 The alternative spelling of Roy was taken from the old French and is rumoured to be preferred over the regular spelling because the publishers desire to have a letter Y in the name of the games they publish 23 Designed by Francois Combe and Gilles Lehmann for 1 5 players the medium heavy game depicts the quest to retrieve the Queen s diamonds while at the same time fending off disasters back in Paris A sixth player expansion called Treville was also made available in 2010 24 In 2010 Anuman Interactive launched The Three Musketeers a hidden object game on PC and MAC Players follow d Artagnan in his quest to become a king s musketeer 25 Web series Edit In 2016 KindaTV launched a web series based on the story of The Three Musketeers called All For One 26 It follows a group of college students mainly Dorothy Castlemore and is centred around a sorority Mu Sigma Theta MST The majority of characters have been gender swapped from the original story and most character names are based on the original characters It covers several themes including the LGBT community mental health long distance relationships and college life Audio drama Edit In September 2019 Amazon released The Three Musketeers an Audible Original Audio Drama 27 which follows the story of the book told from Milady s perspective In April 2021 Durham University Audio Society began releasing the first season of DUADS The Three Musketeers 28 The show originally aired on Durham University s student radio station Purple Radio and went on to be nominated for and receive several local awards The show remains faithful to the events of the novel but adds in several adventures and touches on additional themes including LGBT themes The first season covers the first arc of the book the quest for the Queen s diamond studs A second and third season are in the works In May 2022 Radio Mirchi Kolkata station aired The Three Musketeers in Bangla version translated by Rajarshee Gupta for Mirchi s Sunday Suspense Programme It was narrated by Deepanjan Ghosh D Artagnan was voiced by actor Rwitobroto Mukherjee Athos was voiced by Gaurav Chakrabarty Porthos by Agni Aramis by Somak King Louis XIII by Sayak Aman and Cardinal Richelieu by Mir Afsar Ali 29 Other Edit Three Musketeers Issue No 1 Classic Comics published 1941 Publisher Albert Lewis Kanter 1897 1973 created Classic Comics for Elliot Publishing Company in 1941 with its debut issues being The Three Musketeers The Three Mouseketeers was the title of two series produced by DC Comics the first series was a loose parody of The Three Musketeers It was also made into motion comics in the Video Comic Book seriesIn 1939 American author Tiffany Thayer published a book titled Three Musketeers Thayer 1939 This is a re telling of the story in Thayer s words true to the original plot but told in a different order and with different points of view and emphasis from the original Fantasy novelist Steven Brust s Khaavren Romances series have all used Dumas novels particularly the D Artagnan Romances as their chief inspiration recasting the plots of those novels to fit within Brust s established world of Dragaera 30 His 2020 novel The Baron of Magister Valley follows suit using The Count of Monte Cristo as a starting point 31 32 Sarah Hoyt wrote a series of historical murder mysteries with the musketeers as the protagonists Hoyt wrote the novels under the name Sarah d Almeida Tansy Rayner Roberts wrote Musketeer Space a space opera retelling of the original book in which almost all characters have a different gender as a weekly serialized novel from 2014 to 2016 In popular culture EditLiterature Edit In the book The Assault The Three Musketeers is quoted in the Prologue as the protagonist had the story read to him by Mr Beumer a lawyer who later becomes senile and in morbidity The American translator Lawrence Ellsworth is currently translating The d Artagnan Romances entirely and he has also written a 2 volume novel called The Rose Knight s Crucifixion that is a parallel novel to The Three Musketeers and most of the characters from The Three Musketeers and Sir Percy Blakeney from The Laughing Cavalier and The First Sir Percy by Baroness Orczy appear The protagonist s physical appearance however is based on Quasimodo from Victor Hugo s The Hunchback of Notre Dame Film and television Edit In the movie The Man in the Iron Mask the aging musketeers come out of retirement and reunite to save France from the spoiled cruel young King Louis XIV played by Leonardo DiCaprio The movie features Jeremy Irons as Aramis John Malkovich as Athos Gerard Depardieu as Porthos and Gabriel Byrne as D Artagnan In Slumdog Millionaire Jamal Malik s final question was to correctly identify the name of the third musketeer which was Aramis Jamal did so and won twenty million rupees In the film Django Unchained one of the slaves owned by Calvin Candie is named D Artagnan Video games Edit In Pokemon Black and White the Pokemon Cobalion Terrakion and Virizion known as the Swords of Justice are based on the Three Musketeers Cobalion represents Athos Terrakion represents Porthos and Virizion represents Aramis 33 The fourth Sword of Justice Keldeo represents d Artagnan 34 Music Edit The Smiths song You ve Got Everything Now features the line I ve seen you smile but I ve never really heard you laugh and is borrowed from a narrative description of Athos He was very taciturn this worthy signor Be it understood we are speaking of Athos During the five or six years that he had lived in the strictest intimacy with his companions Porthos and Aramis they could remember having often seen him smile but had never heard him laugh Chapter 7 The Interior of the Musketeers 35 Ppcocaine s song Three Musketeers shares little with the novel but its title References Edit Les Trois Mousquetaires by Alexandre Dumas Free Ebook Author s Preface 2004 Retrieved 26 February 2014 via Project Gutenberg Losada Juan Carlos 3 November 2019 Los mosqueteros y la alargada sombra de Alejandro Dumas La Vanguardia in Spanish Retrieved 17 May 2020 Dumas Alexandre The Three Musketeers Author s Preface https www biblio com the three musketeers by dumas alexandre work 3218 Collecting The Three Musketeers by Dumas ALexandre First Edition Identification Guide biblio com Retrieved 17 March 2023 Thorpe Adam 25 November 2006 Review The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas translated by Richard Pevear The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 17 May 2020 Dumas Alexandre The Three Musketeers Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition A Note on the Translation p xxi Ellsworth Lawrence 21 November 2022 Musketeers Cycle by Alexandre Dumas The Three Musketeers 1921 Directed by Fred Niblo MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 17 May 2020 The Three Musketeers IMDb Retrieved 4 March 2020 The Three Musketeers IMDb Retrieved 4 March 2020 Young Neil 23 September 2011 The Three Musketeers Film Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 17 May 2020 The Three Musketeers 2023 IMDb retrieved 6 May 2023 Strecker Erin 1 August 2012 One for all BBC announces new show The Musketeers Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 1 August 2012 Ken Ludwig Playwright The Three Musketeers kenludwig com Retrieved 28 December 2018 Bartlett Chris 24 July 2018 The Three Musketeers review at Williamson Park Lancaster slick and inclusive open air theatre The Stage Retrieved 25 July 2018 Brennan Clare 22 July 2018 The Three Musketeers review a joyful twist on the classic swashbuckler The Observer Retrieved 25 July 2018 Touche The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer Moby Games The Three Musketeers One for All WiiWare Nintendo Life 21 October 2009 Retrieved 18 January 2010 The Three Musketeers The Game Moby Games Pascal Bernard Board Game Designer BoardGameGeek Retrieved 18 January 2010 Zvezda Nastolnye igry Sbornye modeli i miniatyury in Russian Zvezda Retrieved 18 January 2010 Mousquetaires du Roy BoardGameGeek Retrieved 15 March 2018 1st Ystari Game where the S comes before the Y BoardGameGeek Retrieved 15 March 2018 Mousquetaires du Roy Treville miniature BoardGameGeek Retrieved 15 March 2018 HdO Adventure series GamesIndustry International Gamesindustry biz 18 March 2010 Retrieved 29 June 2014 All for One Gwenlyn Cumyn Angie Lopez Claire Gagnon King retrieved 11 April 2018 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint others link The Three Musketeers An Audible Original Drama Audio Download Alexandre Dumas Marty Ross David Ahmad Rachel Atkins Catherine Bailey ed Barry Timothy Bentinck Nicholas Boulton Eliza Butterworth Gunnar Cauthery Stephen Critchlow Adetomiwa Edun Audible Originals Amazon co uk Audible Books amp Originals Amazon UK DUADS the Three Musketeers A podcast on Anchor SundaySuspense The Three Musketeers Part 1 Alexandre Dumas MIrchi Bangla retrieved 23 May 2022 Tilendis Robert M 23 December 2014 Steven Brust s The Khaavren Romances Green Man Review Retrieved 3 August 2020 Eddy Cheryl 1 July 2020 There Are So Many New Sci Fi and Fantasy Books Coming Out in July Gizmodo Retrieved 3 August 2020 Steven Brust 28 July 2020 The Baron of Magister Valley Tom Doherty Associates ISBN 978 1 250 31146 7 Ken Sugimori Reveals More Gen 5 Lost Pokemon Designs Lava Cut Content 31 May 2019 Retrieved 23 September 2019 Gilbert Henry 10 October 2013 Pokemon facts 30 little known pieces of trivia from the classic franchise gamesradar Retrieved 28 August 2020 The Three Musketeers Project Gutenberg External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Les Trois Mousquetaires Wikisource has original text related to this article The Three Musketeers The Three Musketeers at Standard Ebooks The Three Musketeers at Project Gutenberg Plain text format The Three Musketeers public domain audiobook at LibriVox History of Dumas Musketeers shows links between the characters and actual history Comprehensive collection of Dumas links The Three Musketeers Scanned public domain editions in PDF format from Archive org some w illustrations introductions and other helpful material The Paris of The Three Musketeers by E H Blashfield and E W Blashfield Scribner s Magazine August 1890 Cornell University Library Cooper Barbara T Alexandre Dumas pere in Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol 119 Nineteenth Century French Fiction Writers Romanticism and Realism 1800 1860 edited by Catharine Savage Brosman Gale Research 1992 pp 98 119 Hemmings F W J Alexandre Dumas Pere in European Writers The Romantic Century Vol 6 edited by Jacques Barzun and George Stade Charles Scribner s Sons 1985 pp 719 43 Foote Greenwell Victoria The Life and Resurrection of Alexandre Dumas in Smithsonian July 1996 p 110 Thayer Tiffany Three Musketeers New York Citadel Press 1939 On the hard cover the title is printed as Tiffany Thayer s Three Musketeers Discussion of the work bibliography and links Bibliography and references for The Three Musketeers Novels portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Three Musketeers amp oldid 1154753761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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