Claire Chambers teaches global literature at the University of York and is the author of Britain Through Muslim Eyes: Literary Representations, 1780-1988.
In contrast, the English masses became increasingly hostile towards these Moroccan visitors. Following frequent food shortages in the 1590s and a failed coup by Robert Devereux, Second Earl of Essex in 1601, the jittery London public turned against the strangers, probably the first Muslims that most of them had ever seen. Rumours abounded that they were spies rather than ambassadors, and a moral panic developed over stories that they had poisoned members of their party on the Strand.
In response, Elizabeth made a declaration of protection for her “own natural subjects” whom she described as being “distressed” in these times of scarcity. She disingenuously expressed alarm at “the great number of Negroes and blackamoors which (as she is informed) are carried into this realm since the troubles between her highness and the King of Spain”. Echoing the “great annoyance” of her subjects about the lavish honouring of her visitors, Elizabeth went further to criticise them as “infidels having no understanding of Christ or his Gospel”. Recommending their immediate isolation and swift deportation, she resorted to the device still popular today of making political capital from attacking immigrants. Wisely deciding that the time had come to leave England, al-Annuri and his followers hotfooted it to Morocco in February 1601.
In 1605 Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice was first performed. It features a richly dressed man, the Prince of Morocco, who tries to woo the beautiful and witty heroine Portia. He is the first of the playwright’s ‘Moors’, as The Merchant of Venice is thought to have been written in the late 1590s. In the play, Morocco is eloquent and handsome; he is described as “a tawny Moor all in white” who cuts a striking figure. Just as his outward appearance is designed to impress, so too Morocco is seduced by glitzy surfaces. He fails the test set out in Portia’s late father’s will, whereby her potential husbands have to choose correctly from three caskets of gold, silver, and lead. Of course, Morocco selects the gold casket, concluding that “so rich a gem” as Portia could not possibly be “set in worse than gold”. In doing so, he loses Portia’s hand in marriage. Fortunately, her preferred suitor Bassanio is willing to “give and hazard all he hath” for Portia, as dictated on the inscription to the humble lead casket that he chooses.
Matthew Dimmock provocatively (but in my view accurately) asserts, “Without Islam there would be no Shakespeare”. He corroborates this by arguing that the many references to the Islamic world in the Bard’s plays function in part as a kind of product placement. Out of Elizabeth’s cordial exchange with Morocco, Persia, and the Ottoman Turks came a thriving trade. This led to wealthy English citizens acquiring a profusion of Oriental goods, from textiles and carpets to spices, pottery, and jewellery. These “material products of Islamic cultures”, Dimmock believes, were ostentatiously shown off by their English owners, who were proud of the Anglo-Islamic commercial relationship and their exotic new possessions. Additionally, in plays such as Othello, discussed in my column before last, and The Merchant of Venice touched on here, Shakespeare worked with, while transcending the limitations of, the popular but stereotypical ‘Turk play’ of his era.
One scholar, the late Martin Lings (himself a practising Sufi), argued in 2004 that the Bard expresses Sufi ideas. Lings averred that in many of the plays we find an encounter between, on one side nascent modernity and creeping atheism, and on the other passionate faith and esoteric customs. He situates Shakespeare squarely within the carapace of his own and fellow Sufis’ mystic tradition.
Building on Lings’s and others’ Sufi scholarship, some have developed the conspiracy theory that Shakespeare was in fact an Iraqi called Sheikh Zubair. While that is far-fetched, it is indisputable that without contact with the Muslim world, Shakespeare’s plays would not be so opulent, spicy, or political.