William Marshal in fiction
*Four generations of the Marshal family, from Isabel de Clare's parents through William fitzWilliam's fictitious bastard son, are the subjects of a series of four historical romances by
Mary Pershall. Dawn of the White Rose (©1985) is the one about William Marshal and Isabel de Clare.
*William Marshal also appears as a supporting character in Thomas B. Costain's out of print novel
Below the Salt, and Sharon Kay Penman's novel
Time and Chance, as well as a minor appearance in Penmnan's
When Christ and His Saints Slept, illustrating the story about young William's time as King Stephan's hostage and John Marshal's defiance.
*William Marshal is the main character of the novel
A Pride of Kings by Juliet Dymoke, published by the New English Library in 1978.
*A new novel about William Marshal,
The Greatest Knight by Elizabeth Chadwick, based on primary sources and the main secondary source biographies of professors Painter, Duby and Crouch was published by Time Warner Books on
November 3 2005. A sequel,
The Scarlet Lion followed in 2006. As one of the prominent historical figures of the period, Marshal also appears as a minor character in several of her other novels set around the same time.
*In film, Marshal makes a minor appearance in 1968's
The Lion in Winter, portrayed by
Nigel Stock. Clive Wood portrays Marshal in the
2003 remake.
*Many events in William Marshal's life were incorporated into the 2001 film
A Knight's Tale.
*Another novel about William and his wife is
Champion (in German "Der Ritter der Könige) from Christian Balling of the year 1988.
*William Marshal is a major character in the novels
The Devil is Loose and its sequel,
Wolf at the Door by Graham Shelby. The books are about Richard Lionheart and King John, and are historical fictions about the events after the death of Henry II and the fall of the Angevin Empire.
William Marshal also has 2 appearances in the historical romance novels "The Falcon and the Flower" and "The Dragon and the Jewel" by author Virginia Henley.