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17[[foldercontrol]]
18
19!!Chosen Men
20
21[[folder:Sharpe]]
22!!Richard Sharpe
23[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/richard_sharpe.jpg]]
24 [[caption-width-right:350:''"There's no future in being a gentleman in a fight."'']]
25->'''Played By''': Creator/SeanBean
26-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Tiger'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Triumph'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fortress'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Trafalgar'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Prey'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'', ''Sharpe's Escape'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fury'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Battle'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'', ''Sharpe's Skirmish'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Revenge'', ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', ''Sharpe's Assassin'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Ransom'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Challenge'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Peril'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Devil'' (Novel only)
27
28A rifleman in the British Army during the Napoleonic Wars. The series dramatises Sharpe's struggle for acceptance and respect from his fellow officers and from the men he commands. Sharpe was born a guttersnipe in the rookeries of London. Commissioned an officer on the battlefield, he overcomes class in an army where an officer's rank is often bought. Unlike many of the officers with whom he serves, Sharpe is an experienced soldier. Described as "brilliant but wayward" and a "loose cannon".
29----
30
31* ActionDad: During ''Sharpe's Company'' and ''Sharpe's Enemy'', where Teresa has his daughter. After [[spoiler:Teresa dies in ''Sharpe's Enemy'']], Sharpe never sees his daughter again.
32* AdaptationDyeJob: Sharpe is described as having dark hair and blue eyes. In contrast, Sean Bean has light hair and blue eyes.
33%%* AntiHero: Of the GoodIsNotNice variety.
34* BatmanGambit: Runs one in the closing minutes of ''Sharpe's Enemy.'' He tells Colonel Dubreton and his wife that he has horse (cavalry), foot and artillery. He knows the arrogant Ducos will be dismissive of this, which comes as a surprise to the French soldiers sent to take Adrados and they are beaten back by volleys of rifle fire, fake cavalry and rocket artillery.
35* BattleTrophy:
36** If Sharpe kills a French Colonel with suitably big feet, he'll take their boots for himself. It's for pragmatic reasons: the shoes the British issue are terrible by comparison.
37** Similarly, in the books he also wears pants looted from the same French Chasseur Colonel in ''Sharpe's Rifles'', to replace his own which were falling apart. This is mentioned as a backstory bit in the first book published, ''Sharpe's Eagle'', so that he has a NonUniformUniform. He eventually gets a spare full uniform down the line, but he habitually wears his usual uniform if possible.
38** He briefly takes Leroux's Klingenthal sword as one in ''Sharpe's Sword'', but opts against it.
39* BigDamnHeroes: His career defining moment in both books and tv series is to save Arthur Wellesley's (the future Duke of Wellington) life. In the books, it's at the Battle of Assaye, from approximately five Mahratta soldiers. In the tv series, it's from three French cavalrymen in ''Sharpe's Rifles''.
40* {{BFS}}: Alongside his rifle, Sharpe wields a 1796 Heavy Cavalry Sword.
41* BookDumb: Played with. In the beginning of the series, Sharpe has exactly the level of education expected of a man of his background and class (none). He learns to read after sharing a cell and a Bible page in India with William Lawford for three months. Even then, he sees no real reason to get an education, in the TV series, until he gets married and commissioned. At that point he seems to realise that the OfficerAndAGentleman thing is probably going to stick, and he can't embarrass his wife by being a brute. After this, he becomes an avid reader, and is occasionally shown swapping books with TheSmartGuy Harris.
42* BotheringByTheBook: Usually when he wants to annoy someone - as a former career NCO, and with extensive (unwanted) experience as a Quartermaster, he knows all the rules and can (when he wants to) apply them with malicious precision.
43%%* TheBully: But only if you're [[TheSociopath Obadiah Hakeswill]], who is even worse than him.
44* CallToAgriculture: Occasionally expresses a desire in the books to get a small farm and settle down after he leaves the army.
45* TheCaptain: For most of the Peninsular War books, he either has the rank or functions in the role. He later upgrades to MajorlyAwesome and, finally, ColonelBadass.
46* CaptainSmoothAndSergeantRough: As a soldier raised from the ranks and not a gentleman by birth, Sharpe fits the Sergeant Rough mold to most of his commanding officers, who are typically of the gentry class and bought their commissions, despite his rank being higher than a sergeant. This works best with Lawford, as both fit the respective roles like a glove, and recognise how well they work together.
47* CartwrightCurse: Until Lucille, Sharpe has little to no luck with women and is his own worst enemy in that field.
48* ChickMagnet: Being TallDarkAndHandsome, later with a distinguished skunk stripe, and interestingly scarred, he tends to be magnetically attractive to women. More than one character despairs at this.
49* CombatPragmatist: He's just as likely to use his fists and feet in a SwordFight as his sword. Case in point his duel with La Marquesa's husband.
50-->'''Sharpe''': We've played by your rules. Now, we'll play by mine. ''[Cue GroinAttack]''
51* CoolSword: His 1796 Heavy Cavalry Sword, given to him by Captain Murray. [[spoiler:After it gets broken in ''Sharpe's Sword'', Harper makes him a new one.]]
52* CunningLinguist: In the books, he remains relatively uneducated, but still winds up as a fluent speaker of French and Spanish.
53* DarkAndTroubledPast: An orphan raised in a brothel who suffered poverty, physical abuse and malnourishment. As a teenager, he went into hiding in Yorkshire after killing a gang leader.
54* TheDreaded: Sharpe is regarded as one of the most dangerous men in the British Army after taking a French Eagle at Talavera, and gets significant VillainRespect from the French (as is sometimes noted, he's occasionally respected more by the French than his own side). By the end of the series, he is responsible for 182 onscreen deaths. And that's just the tv series - the book version has a much higher kill-tally.
55%%* DrillSergeantNasty: Occasionally when he has to teach regiments to fight. And he's not even a sergeant - though he used to be.
56* TheDulcineaEffect: Depressingly prone to this, as Hogan lampshades - for all Sharpe's grouchy mannerisms, he's very prone to jumping on the metaphorical white charger and thunder off looking for ladies to rescue.
57* {{Foil}}: To Lawford. Lawford is a charming social butterfly, adept politician, and well-educated aristocrat who sees his military career as a springboard for political success. Sharpe is a taciturn and brilliantly talented BookDumb career soldier, illiterate until he met Lawford, and whose main ambition after the military is a peaceful life on a farm. They work fantastically together on the grounds thanks to the couple of things they have in common (both are brave and have HiddenDepths), and that they both respect and recognise each other's strengths - Sharpe's a survivor and a brilliant natural soldier, so Lawford (while more than competent in his own right) largely lets him do what he likes. In turn, Lawford is a highly competent administrator, taught Sharpe how to read and write, and is excellent at getting Sharpe the resources he needs.
58* GoodScarsEvilScars: Sharpe has prominent scars on his back from a sentence to 2000 lashes (of which only 200 were done). He often takes his shirt off with his back to the viewers. In the books, he also has a scar that gives him a mocking expression, save for when he smiles.
59* HappilyMarried:
60** He and Teresa were this before [[spoiler:her death]], even if her career as ''guerrilero'' and his as a soldier made it difficult.
61** After her death, he seems to be this with Jane, but after the honeymoon period wears off, it goes horribly wrong.
62** And again with Lucille at the end of the series, even if it is something of a common law marriage (divorce being complicated and expensive.
63%%* HeartbrokenBadass: [[spoiler:After Teresa's death.]]
64%%* TheHero
65* HonorBeforeReason: Despite sneering at most aristocratic pretensions, he takes this very seriously, and ends up in many duels as a result, to the exasperation of his more pragmatic friends and the Duke of Wellington.
66* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Both the book and TV versions, though it's more prominent in the latter case.
67-->'''Marie-Angelique''': You are a good man, Richard, whatever you would have the world think.
68* TheLancer:
69** To the Duke of Wellington, acting as Wellington's attack dog. In the TV show, Wellington's main solution to any particularly difficult problem is to have Sharpe and his men deal with it, be it destroying a bridge or putting down a small army of renegades, training a group of Irish soldiers who are angry and resentful, etc. It helps that Sharpe is simultaneously highly competent, detached from normal service thanks to his Chosen Men being marooned on the retreat from Corunna, and expendable.
70** He is the same to William Lawford, when Lawford commands the South Essex. Lawford is an excellent administrator and social butterfly, but while a highly comptent soldier in his own right, he ultimately sees his time in the Army as a springboard for a future career in politics. Sharpe, meanwhile, is a career soldier and excels at putting all the resources Lawford manages to schmooze together to good use.
71* MadeOfIron: He takes a great amount of damage over the series, mostly sword slashes and shots to the leg, but he gets shot in the gut in ''Sharpe's Sword'' and gets blasted with a blunderbuss in ''Sharpe's Revenge''. And that's not going into the scars on his back from 200 lashes.
72* MajorlyAwesome: Spends most of the TV series at the rank of major and he is one of the best in the British Army.
73* ManipulativeBastard: Poorly educated and blunt though he may be, he has a knack for manipulating people when he wants to.
74* MrFanservice: Just look at how often Creator/SeanBean shows up on that page. {{Shirtless Scene}}s in spades. Hogan lampshades it during ''Sharpe's Eagle'':
75-->'''Hogan:''' Sharpe?\
76'''Sharpe:''' Yes, sir?\
77'''Hogan:''' Stop showing off, Sharpe.
78* MurderIsTheBestSolution: He has a slightly disturbing habit of quietly murdering/arranging the deaths of officers, [[UnfriendlyFire even on his own side]], who he feels put his men in danger. This escalates in ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' all the way up to ''the Prince of Orange'', after the latter's stupidity got two battalions wiped out -- though since the Prince survived in RealLife, Sharpe only managed to get him in the shoulder. Despite the latter being an OpenSecret in ''Sharpe's Assassin'', he gets away with it. It helps that no one can prove it, and while Wellington puts two and two together (Sharpe was suspiciously close by when it happened, and he ''knows'' Sharpe), he finds it ActuallyPrettyFunny and very convient, [[DoWrongRight backhandedly telling Sharpe that he approves]] -- Orange was a SpannerInTheWorks who'd got several battalions killed but too powerful to dismiss -- a painful but non-lethal injury that forced him from the field was the perfect solution.
79* NonUniformUniform: In the books he wears pants looted from the French Chasseur Colonel antagonist in ''Sharpe's Rifles'', to replace his own which were falling apart. This is mentioned as a backstory bit in the first book published, ''Sharpe's Eagle''. He eventually gets a spare full uniform down the line, but he habitually wears his usual uniform if possible. The pants even become [[ChekhovsGun something of a plot point]] in ''Sharpe's Waterloo'': Sharpe's early eyewitness intel about the French army's advance is ignored by higher-ups because the officer he approached later said the intel came from a British Rifle officer wearing French cavalry trousers, thus it's assumed to be from an enemy agent, and so history plays out as in real life with Wellington being caught by surprise and "humbugged".
80* OopNorth: Sean Bean's Sheffield accent is on prominent display, despite the fact that Sharpe is canonically a Londoner. Bean's performance was so impressive, however, that Cornwell (who was still writing the books, including ones about Sharpe's backstory) established that Sharpe spent time in Sheffield during his teens before joining the army.
81* PlotArmor: Before completing the series, Creator/BernardCornwell [[WordOfGod said in interviews]] that Sharpe would die of old age, in his bed, surrounded by loving family members; ''"I owe him that much; he paid off my mortgage."''
82* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: To an extent, though perhaps less than one would expect from a 19th century soldier. For example: [[DeliberateValuesDissonance "You boneheaded Paddy."]]
83* PragmaticHero: Sharpe is, in every instance where women aren't involved, ruthlessly practical.
84* RankUp: Happens numerous times through the series, starting with a promotion from sergeant to lieutenant in ''Sharpe's Rifles'', from lieutenant to captain in ''Sharpe's Eagle'', from captain to major in ''Sharpe's Enemy'', and from major to lieutenant colonel in ''Sharpe's Waterloo.''
85* RefugeInAudacity: During the books version of ''Sharpe's Gold'', he needs to get the titular gold out of Almeida, as it is pretty much required to keep the British Army in the Peninsula. However, his enemy, Colonel Jovellanos (a Spanish partisan looking to use it to set up his own fiefdom), has successfully faked orders saying otherwise, which the British garrison commander believes. Almeida is one of the largest, strongest, and most secure fortresses in Portugal, bristling with defences. So what does Sharpe do? He blows up Almeida. [[note]] Almeida really did explode, ending the Siege of Almeida, and it went down as one of the largest explosions in the pre-nuclear age. [[/note]]
86* RightManInTheWrongPlace: Several characters (not to mention Creator/BernardCornwell himself) have often lampshaded the fact that the British Army in general, and Wellington in particular, distrust soldiers and officers who stand out for acts of daring and bravery, and would prefer to have a battalion of solid, dependable men instead of one badass rogue. But even Wellington needs the occasional dirty job done, and when that happens, he knows exactly who to call.
87** Cornwell has also lampshaded the irony that Sharpe is exactly the kind of soldier Napoleon loved and took care to reward, and that if Sharpe had been born French, he could have started in the ranks and made it all the way to general, as several of Napoleon's Marshals did.
88* SelfMadeMan: A military version, which brings him trouble from more aristocratic officers who have bought their commissions rather than earning them.
89* SonOfAWhore: In his own words, "I was born in a whorehouse and hope to die in the army." Total badass.
90* StillWearingTheOldColors: Sharpe refuses to wear any other uniform than that of the 95th, in spite of serving in a variety of other regiments. He also expresses a desire to be buried in it.
91* ATasteOfTheLash: Has a ''very'' low opinion of this type of punishment, given his own experience and the fact that it leads to [[DangerousDeserter desertion]] rather than [[MiseryBuildsCharacter discipline]].
92* TradingBarsForStripes: During his tenure in Yorkshire, he killed the landlord of the tavern where he worked at in a fight over a local girl. To avoid arrest, he took the "King's shilling" and joined the 33rd Foot.
93* UndyingLoyalty: Sharpe feels this way toward Lawford as the officer is both competent and fundamentally good, an exceeding rarity in the British Army. Add to this is the fact that Lawford taught Sharpe how to read and write, which Sharpe considers to be one of the greatest gifts he's ever received.
94* UnskilledButStrong: He's not a particularly skilled swordsman, but makes up for it by fighting dirty and beating down his opponents with overpowering attacks.
95* WardrobeFlawOfCharacterization: His uniform is cobbled together and worn out, with holes and missing braiding and buttons, as a way of showing that he's a poor soldier who earned his commission rather than a gentleman wealthy enough to purchase his position and a properly tailored uniform. Downplayed in the show.
96* WeaponSpecialization: In addition to his Baker Rifle, he also uses a 1796 heavy cavalry sword for fighting in close quarters. He prefers, and is much more skilled with, the rifle. Not only is the pairing very effective in combat as the cavalry sword is able to power through lighter officer swords and the rifle has more range and accuracy than either a musket or a pistol, but they serve as a reminder of the character's humble beginnings and where he is now. The rifle isn't that humble, to be honest, as all officers of the 95th historically carried them instead of more common pistols.
97* WhatTheHellHero: He calls out Leroy, with whom he normally gets on quite well, for his past as a slave trader.
98* WorkingClassHero: He's a great officer because he fought his way up from the ranks, defeating prejudice from the aristocrat-dominated officer corps who know far less about what warfare is like for the common soldier. Because of this Sharpe focuses on what he knows is important from his battlefield experience instead of getting hung up on theory like the book-taught officers. However, this trope is subverted in one way—Sharpe has a great respect for the upper-class William Lawford, who taught him how to read while they were imprisoned together in India. It helps that Lawford is a more than competent officer in his own right and a perfect {{Foil}} for Sharpe, the metaphorical Captain Smooth to Sharpe's comparative Sergeant Rough - Sharpe gets a commander who unhesitatingly trusts and supports him (most of the time), and Lawford gets the most dangerous man in the British army for his right-hand man, whose battlefield successes bolster Lawford's political career.
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:Harper]]
102!!Sergeant Patrick Harper
103[[quoteright:252:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/patrick_harper.jpg]]
104 [[caption-width-right:252:''"God save Ireland."'']]
105->'''Played By''': Daragh O'Malley
106-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Prey'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'', ''Sharpe's Escape'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fury'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Battle'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'', ''Sharpe's Skirmish'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Revenge'', ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', ''Sharpe's Assassin'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Ransom'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Challenge'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Peril'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Devil'' (Novel only)
107
108Harper is a large, fierce-seeming man from Donegal, Ireland, recruited in the early years of the 19th century into the British Army and eventually the 95th Rifle Regiment. He becomes one of Sharpe's closest friends and his most reliable companion, sharing many of his exploits and rising in rank beside him to sergeant and regimental sergeant-major.
109----
110
111%%* ActionDad: From ''Sharpe's Honour'' onward.
112* AdaptationalNameChange: In the books, Harper's middle name is Augustine. In the TV series, it's Michael.
113* AdaptationDyeJob: Harper is a large, blond man in the books. In the episodes, he's a large, dark-haired man.
114* AgeLift: He's in his mid-twenties in the books. In the series, he's middle-aged.
115* BerserkButton:
116** Don't insult his Irish ancestry. He gives Sharpe a DeathGlare when he calls him a "boneheaded Paddy" in ''Sharpe's Rifles''. When Obadiah Hakeswill calls him a "filthy Irishman" in ''Sharpe's Company'', Harper has to be restrained by Sharpe.
117** Don't be an Irishman who can't keep his gun in half-decent order. Ain't that right, O'Rourke?
118--->'''Harper''': I'm ashamed and disgusted, so I am, that an Irishman can't keep his gun in half decent order. Jesus, you wouldn't kill an Englishman with that, never mind a bloody Frenchman!
119* {{BFG}}: Harper's primary weapon from ''Sharpe's Company'' onward is a Nock gun, a heavy weapon with seven barrels, essentially a colossal shotgun. It was a gift from Sharpe.
120%%* TheBlacksmith: In ''Sharpe's Sword'' when [[spoiler:Sharpe's sword is broken in battle]].
121* BlownAcrossTheRoom: Anyone on the receiving end of Harper's Nock gun will end up like this. Oftentimes, Harper can kill three men at a time when firing.
122* CombatPragmatist: For one thing, grabbing Sharpe's balls in a fight in ''Sharpe's Rifles.''
123%%* DeathGlare: When Sharpe calls him a "boneheaded Paddy."
124* DefeatMeansFriendship: In ''Sharpe's Rifles'', Sharpe has to beat the stuffing out of Harper to gain his respect enough to follow him on their first mission together after the captain of the company dies.
125* FightingIrish: He's Irish and highly effective in combat, particularly with the [[{{BFG}} Nock gun]].
126%%* HappilyMarried: To Isabella/Ramona (Isabella in the books, Ramona in the TV series), in contrast to Sharpe (in the TV series. He's HappilyMarried in the books).
127* ImprovisedWeapon: Kills a French cavalryman during ''Sharpe's Rifles'' by shooting a ramrod into his throat.
128* ItsPersonal: [[spoiler:Toward the four traitorous Irish Company soldiers in ''Sharpe's Battle''. During the FinalBattle, Harper seeks them out and kills them all.]]
129* TheLancer: Sharpe's close friend and second-in-command.
130* OverlyLongName: Not him but his son, Patrick Jose Hagman Cooper Harris Perkins Harper.
131* PermaStubble: Harper typically has a day’s worth of stubble. [[ImportantHaircut He has to shave it for a disguise]] in ''Sharpe's Regiment''.
132* RankUp: He is, initially unwillingly, made a Sergeant in ''Sharpe's Rifles'', before later becoming a Sergeant-Major.
133* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Goes on one in the closing minutes of ''Sharpe's Battle'' after [[spoiler:O'Rourke, the traitorous Royal Irish Company soldier who murdered Perkins.]]
134%%* SergeantRock: After he and Sharpe become friends.
135* TheStarscream: During ''Sharpe's Rifles'', he tries to lead a mutiny against Sharpe a little less than halfway through.
136* TokenMinority: Of the Chosen Men, he's the only one who's not from England.
137* WeaponSpecialization: He uses a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nock_gun Nock gun]], a seven-barrelled musket developed in limited numbers by the Royal Navy; the gun has understandably immense firepower, ''especially'' at close range and with it, ridiculous recoil (in real life the British found the gun was CoolButInefficient as it was very heavy, very slow to reload and it would even often injure the operator by breaking or dislocating their shoulder; Harper never experiences this issue, though it is acknowledged that he's one of the very few men big and strong enough to handle it).
138[[/folder]]
139
140[[folder:Hagman]]
141!!Rifleman Daniel Hagman
142[[quoteright:247:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/daniel_hagman.jpg]]
143 [[caption-width-right:247:''"Got him."'']]
144->'''Played By''': John Tams
145-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'', ''Sharpe's Escape'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fury'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Battle'', ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'', ''Sharpe's Skirmish'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo''
146
147The oldest Chosen Man and the best shot, Hagman was a successful poacher until a run-in with the law forced a change of career.
148----
149
150%%* TheBigGuy: Of the quiet, skilled type.
151* BookDumb: He can neither read nor write, but he is the best marksman and survivalist among the Rifles.
152%%* BoomHeadshot: [[spoiler:His fate in the TV version of ''Sharpe's Waterloo.'' In the book it was a shot to the chest.]]
153* CharacterCatchphrase: He often follows each shot with a softly spoken "got him."
154* ChasteHero: Hagman is the only Chosen Man who doesn't have any particular romantic interests.
155* DeliveryGuy: He and Harris share this role for Harper's wife Ramona during the tv version of ''Sharpe's Honour'', which includes a scene where he and Harris argue over what position Ramona should be in to deliver the baby. Hagman says Ramona should be on all fours, Harris thinks she should be in a crab position. [[spoiler:Hagman wins.]]
156* DescendedCreator: John Tams, who played Hagman, composed much of the music for the series.
157* DiedInYourArmsTonight: [[spoiler:He dies in Sharpe's arms in the book of ''Sharpe's Waterloo'']].
158* FriendToAllChildren: Hagman sings children's songs to the children in camp, and takes care of a scared French drummer boy whose unit has been killed during the Battle of Waterloo.
159* FriendlySniper: Hagman is the best shot and a pleasant man to be around, who acts as a mentor to the younger riflemen, particularly Perkins.
160* HatDamage: Sharpe tests Hagman's skills when they first meet by throwing his shako up in the air and Hagman quickly shoots it.
161%%* TheHeart
162* OldSoldier: Hagman is the oldest of the Chosen Men.
163* OopNorth: Hagman hails from Cheshire.
164* RankUp: Promoted to Sergeant for ''Sharpe's Waterloo''.
165* SniperDuel: In ''Sharpe's Siege,'' as he and a French sniper shoot the [[spoiler:Compte de Marquerre]] as he returns from a parley.
166
167[[/folder]]
168
169[[folder:Harris]]
170!!Rifleman Harris
171[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/harris_5.png]]
172 [[caption-width-right:350:''"I'll trade you a Voltaire and a filthy book by the Marquis de Sade for yours by Sir Augustus, sir."'']]
173->'''Played By''': Jason Salkey
174-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Prey'' (Novel only)'', ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'', ''Sharpe's Escape'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fury'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Battle'', ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'', ''Sharpe's Skirmish'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Siege'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' (TV only)
175
176Formerly a teacher, now serving as a Chosen Man as a result of some bad debts.
177----
178* BackForTheFinale: After being absent for ''Sharpe's Revenge'' and ''Sharpe's Justice'', he returns in ''Sharpe's Waterloo''. [[spoiler:Winds up being BackForTheDead.]]
179* BadassBookworm: He enjoys reading books, especially philosophy and is the intellectual member of the company.
180* BrilliantButLazy: Harris has the most educational skills of the Chosen Men, but was a "courtier to my Lord Bacchus and an unremitting debtor."
181* CanonForeigner: Harris is original to the TV series, as the producers wanted a literate intellectual to act as a counterpoint to Sharpe, Harper, and the rest of the Chosen Men.
182* CulturedBadass: Harris is fluent in French, Spanish, and Portuguese, as well as poetry. In ''Sharpe's Sword'', he is given the job of decoding a message and in ''Sharpe's Mission'', he gets the better of a man trying to seduce Jane Gibbons by pointing out the flaws in his knowledge.
183* DeathByAdaptation: In the series, he's killed at Waterloo. Both his book counterpart and their real-life inspiration survived the war.
184* DeliveryGuy: He and Hagman share this role for Harper's wife Ramona during ''Sharpe's Honour'', which includes a scene where he and Hagman argue over what position Ramona should be in.
185* FieryRedhead: Averted; Harris doesn't lose his temper that much.
186* FrameUp: Framed for the murders of three Gypsies in ''Sharpe's Mission'', though he is cleared.
187* IAmVeryBritish: Speaks with an RP accent.
188* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:His fate in ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', while charging to rescue Hagman.]]
189* NoFullNameGiven: Only ever known as Harris. Hagman lampshades it when he asks about his name. WordOfGod gives his first name as Benjamin, in tribute to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Recollections_of_Rifleman_Harris the real Rifleman Harris whose memoir helped inspire the series]]. There are significant differences between the two, though. Most significantly the real Benjamin Harris was illiterate (his memoir was dictated) and from Somerset, not a well-read sophisticate.
190* RankUp: Is made a sergeant in ''Sharpe's Waterloo''.
191* RefugeInAudacity: During ''Sharpe's Sword'', Harris is in the library looking for a book that could serve as a key for a message he's trying to decode. When Sir Henry Simmerson asks him what he's doing, Harris replies that he's looking for a book to wipe his butt. Hilariously enough, Simmerson hands him exactly the book he needs.
192* TheSmartGuy: Harris can read and write in French and Spanish, which comes in handy a few times. There's a subplot in ''Sharpe's Sword'' where he's trying to decode a message.
193* SmartPeopleWearGlasses: Harris is sometimes seen with a pair of spectacles and is TheSmartGuy.
194* WarriorPoet: He's the closest thing the series has to this trope. In ''Sharpe's Sword'', he's involved in a lengthy sub-plot where he must find a copy of Voltaire's ''Literature/{{Candide}}'' in order to find a French spy. Besides that, he's one of the few literate members of TheSquad, and Sharpe often gets a lot of esoteric information from him, whether he wants it or not.
195[[/folder]]
196
197[[folder:Cooper]]
198!!Rifleman Francis Cooper
199[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/francis_cooper.png]]
200 [[caption-width-right:350:''"It's very hard to trust a man who wants to borrow your pick-lock."'']]
201->'''Played By''': Michael Mears
202-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Prey'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Eagle'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Company'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Honour'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Gold'' (TV only)
203
204A former thief who chose to join the Army instead of gaol [[note]]an old way of spelling jail[[/note]], hanging or transportation.
205----
206* CareerEndingInjury: Is implied to be repatriated due to injuries he suffered during ''Sharpe's Gold'', hence why he doesn't make any further appearances (except as narrator of ''Sharpe: The Legend'').
207* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: While he has a reputation for being unintelligent and impulsive at times, he is one of the best shots, rarely missing an opportunity, whether it's to leave the column to shoot a rabbit for supper, or to eye up any pretty lady.
208* DeadpanSnarker: Gets the CMOF in ''Sharpe's Rifles'', and possibly the entire series with his line, ''"It's very hard to trust a man who wants to borrow your picklock, sir."''
209* PutOnABus: Disappears after being wounded in ''Sharpe's Gold'', but shows up again as the narrator of ''Sharpe: The Legend.''
210** It was originally intended for him to return, but Michael Mears was busy with other projects.
211* TheSneakyGuy: A former thief, Cooper can do such things as pick locks.
212* SparedByTheAdaptation: In the novels, Cooper is the first named rifleman to be killed on the retreat to Corunna in ''Sharpe's Rifles''. His television counterpart would survive and go on to have many more adventures with the 95th Rifles.
213%%* StickyFingers: Which makes him useful for scrounging.
214* TallDarkAndSnarky: Tall, thin, dark-haired, and always ready with a quick line that leaves Sharpe, himself a DeadpanSnarker, wordless for reply.
215* TradingBarsForStripes: Sharpe asks him if he volunteered for the army. He replies that he was "invited" to join by a magistrate.
216* UnfriendlyFire: [[spoiler:Shoots a British spy dressed up as a French soldier in ''Sharpe's Company.'']]
217* UnusualEuphemism: Refers to himself in the past as a "trader... in property and the like."
218-->'''Sharpe''': Would that be other people's property, Cooper?
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Tongue]]
222!!Rifleman Isaiah Tongue
223[[quoteright:331:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/isaiah_tongue.jpg]]
224 [[caption-width-right:331:''"Yea. I say yea... yea."'']]
225->'''Played By''': Paul Trussell
226-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'' (Novel only)
227
228A Chosen Man with a MysteriousPast.
229----
230* AdaptationalPersonalityChange: In the books, Tongue is the educated Rifleman with an alcohol problem, similar to Harris. In the TV series, Tongue doesn't know much other than the Bible and being the group sentry.
231* AsTheGoodBookSays: Tongue has a tendency to quote the Bible and Harper refers to him as a Bible-thumper in ''Sharpe's Eagle.'' For example, he says "Oh woe unto them who rise up early and follow strong drink all day" when Sharpe has to call the Chosen Men away from a whole day of "whoring."
232* ClickHello: His first action in the series is to pull a gun on Sharpe.
233* MysteriousPast: Tongue doesn't know anything of his past apart from being in the Army and a foundling home.
234* NeverBareheaded: Always seen wearing a cloth atop his head.
235* PerpetualFrowner: Never shown smiling.
236* TheQuietOne: Tongue doesn't speak much and has to be told to speak up at one point.
237* SensorCharacter: Tongue has the best eyes and ears in the group, serving as the group sentry.
238* SparedByTheAdaptation: He's killed off in the novel ''Sharpe's Gold''. In the series, he merely disappears.
239* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Tongue is absent from the series after ''Sharpe's Eagle.'' At least Cooper has an excuse due to injury.
240[[/folder]]
241
242[[folder:Perkins]]
243!!Ben Perkins
244[[quoteright:210:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ben_perkins.jpg]]
245 [[caption-width-right:210:''"I'm sorry, Sarge..."'']]
246->'''Played By''': Lyndon Davies
247-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Escape'', ''Sharpe's Fury'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Battle'', ''Sharpe's Company'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Honour'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Sword'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Skirmish'' (Novel only)
248
249The youngest of the Chosen Men.
250----
251* TheBabyOfTheBunch: Perkins is the youngest of the Chosen Men and the least experienced of the Chosen Men.
252* BigDamnHeroes: Perkins earned his place in the Chosen Men when [[spoiler:he saved Sharpe from Colonel De L'Eclin in ''Sharpe's Rifles.'']]
253* ButtMonkey: As the [[TheBabyOfTheBunch youngest of the Chosen Men]], he usually gets the most humiliations, like getting taken hostage by Teresa, DisguisedInDrag, getting a TapOnTheHead from Hakeswill [[spoiler:which leads to Teresa getting killed)]] and [[spoiler:[[BreadEggsMilkSquick having his]] LoveInterest fall victim to the CartwrightCurse before his own death]].
254* CartwrightCurse: [[spoiler:The only woman he's interested in dies terribly, and he dies not long after.]]
255* ConvenientlyAnOrphan: Harper mentions he's an orphan in ''Sharpe's Eagle.''
256* DeathByAdaptation: He is slowly DemotedToExtra in the novels until fading out entirely, meanwhile in the television series [[spoiler:he is murdered by turncoats in ''Sharpe's Battle.'']]
257* DeathByIrony: [[spoiler:Perkins is the only Chosen Man left standing in a melee where the rest are gunned down. Then it turns out the Chosen Men were FakingTheDead. In the ensuing shootout, Perkins is murdered by O'Rourke, making him the first Chosen Man to die onscreen.]]
258* DisguisedInDrag: The other Chosen Men use him dressed up in Ramona's best dress as a TrojanPrisoner gambit in ''Sharpe's Enemy'' to infiltrate a fort held by an army of renegades.
259* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:Speared by O'Rourke, a traitorous member of the Spanish Royal Irish Company, in ''Sharpe's Battle.'']]
260* LeeroyJenkins: In the television version of ''Sharpe's Battle'', he bravely charges the French to protect the Irish Company and miraculously survives. [[spoiler:Only for the Irish turncoat, O'Rourke, to run him through with a bayonet.]]
261* PlayingSick: When the Chosen Men infiltrate another fort to [[spoiler:rescue Sharpe from Ducos]], Perkins pretends to be a cholera infectee, complete with groaning.
262* SacrificialLion: [[spoiler:The first Chosen Man to be confirmed as dead, dying about halfway through the series.]]
263* SoleSurvivor: He's the only other member of the 95th Rifles, aside from the Chosen Men, to survive an ambush that wipes out the other 95th Rifles in ''Sharpe's Rifles.''
264* StarCrossedLovers: With Miranda, a girl he rescued from pillaging French troops.
265* TogetherInDeath: [[spoiler:With Miranda. They're buried in the same grave.]]
266-->'''Harper''': Does anyone want to say anything?\
267'''Sharpe''': Yes; he was a brave soldier... and she was his lass.
268[[/folder]]
269
270!!Allies-British Officers
271
272[[folder:The Duke of Wellington]]
273!!Sir Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
274[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sharpes_wellington.jpg]]
275 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
276->'''Played By''': Creator/DavidTroughton (Sharpe's Rifles, Sharpe's Eagle), Creator/HughFraser (Sharpe's Company, Sharpe's Enemy, Sharpe's Honour, Sharpe's Gold, Sharpe's Battle, Sharpe's Siege, Sharpe's Mission, Sharpe's Waterloo, Sharpe's Challenge, Sharpe's Peril)
277-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Tiger'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Triumph'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fortress'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Prey'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Rifles'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'', ''Sharpe's Battle'', ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', ''Sharpe's Assassin'', ''Sharpe's Challenge'' (TV only)
278
279Commander of the British and Portuguese forces in Spain and a reluctant patron of Sharpe.
280----
281
282* ActuallyPrettyFunny: His reaction to some of Sharpe's antics, though he usually takes care not to show it to Sharpe himself. Most notably in ''Sharpe's Assassin'' after he successfully deduces that Sharpe shot the Prince of Orange - Orange having just got another battalion killed, Sharpe being suspiciously close by at the time (and a touch notorious for murdering other officers), and he backhandedly lets Sharpe know he that he knows (it's a fairly OpenSecret, but nothing can be proved) and approves. However, this is also because it turned out non-lethal, just painful, getting a SpannerInTheWorks off the battlefield without permanent harm, whereas Sharpe was out to kill. In the same book, he finds Sharpe's threats to flog Morris if he flogs any of Sharpe's men somewhat amusing, though in public he warns Sharpe that if a Major (Morris) can be flogged, so can a Colonel (Sharpe).
283* BerserkButton: Do not try to shift blame with him. When Simmerson tries to blame a screwup of his on the recently-deceased [[spoiler:Major Lennox]], it results in Wellesley utterly reaming him.
284* BigGood: Most of Sharpe's orders come from him, partly because of his seniority, partly because he's just about the only person who can actually ''control'' Sharpe.
285* ChivalrousPervert: His icy demeanour only tends to melt in the presence of attractive women - which is not especially surprising, since the real Duke of Wellington was a notorious flirt.
286* DeadpanSnarker: As in real life, he has a notoriously dry wit.
287-->'''Lord Uxbridge''': What plans do you have?\
288'''Wellington''': Plans?\
289'''Lord Uxbridge''': I am second-in-command, I ought to know!\
290'''Wellington''': As soon as Napoleon Bonaparte tells me what ''he'' plans to do, then I shall know what ''I'm'' going to do, and I shall tell you. But as Bonaparte has not yet confided in me, I am unable to confide in you.
291%%* DeathGlare: He has a pretty impressive one, when he chooses to use it - and, again, he's the only person who genuinely scares Sharpe.
292* DoWrongRight: In ''Sharpe's Assassin'' he backhandedly lets Sharpe know that while he's letting the fiction lie, he knows perfectly well that Sharpe shot the Prince of Orange, and given that it was merely a painful injury that forced a SpannerInTheWorks off the battlefield, it was "a very good shot" (from a French skirmisher naturally) and he's very pleased.
293* TheDreaded:
294** In ''Sharpe's Escape'', Major Leroy points out that Wellington is perhaps the one man in the British Army (if not the world) capable of intimidating Sharpe.
295** The French generals who have faced Wellington in the Peninsula, including Marshals Soult and Ney, all warn Napoleon not to underestimate him at Waterloo. [[IgnoredExpert He fails to listen.]]
296* FourStarBadass: He doesn't often fight, but he can, and actually rather well. He's also willing to stray dangerously close to the French lines when needed, and remains icy calm. The latter, at least, is also something that Wellington was known for in real life.
297* FrontlineGeneral: He spends the entirety of Waterloo on horseback, riding up and down the line, well within range of the French artillery (his second-in-command, Lord Uxbridge, has his leg taken off by a cannonball while right next to him).
298* GoodIsNotNice: He's often abrupt, abrasive, and cold with those around him, including Sharpe - who he finds both immensely useful and a repeated pain in the neck owing to his tendency to, as Wellington puts it, "wage private wars behind my back!" He is also noted by Hogan as being the one man who genuinely scares Sharpe. However, he does have his kinder moments. In the book version of ''Sharpe's Battle'' he is perfectly willing to sacrifice Sharpe's career in order to get promoted to ''Generalissimo'' of Spanish forces. He does this not for his own glory, but because it's likely the only way to win the war, and is extremely sorrowful that he will have to "sacrifice the career of one bad officer (Runciman) and one good one."
299* HistoricalDomainCharacter: See UsefulNotes/TheDukeOfWellington.
300* ImpliedDeathThreat: After Simmerson tries to extort Wellington using his connections--despite Wellington having already reprimanded Simmerson only moments before for his cowardice--Wellington responds that Simmerson can choose between "[hiding] in England or [being] a hero in Spain".
301* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: He's abrasive, but will stick his neck out to help Sharpe, if he can afford to, and is genuinely infuriated on Sharpe's behalf when he finds out that Sharpe's Captaincy hasn't stuck (''again''). However, this is partly because he regards Sharpe as useful, and he's also entirely willing to cut Sharpe loose if doing so is necessary. Sharpe, a PragmaticHero himself, tends not to take it personally.
302* ManipulativeBastard: Not above using emotional blackmail and other methods to get what he wants, such as bringing in the wife of a missing agent to guilt someone into taking on a job they have turned down.
303* NervesOfSteel: A trait appreciated by his troops as it instills them with confidence, and witnessed with some disbelief by his enemies.
304* NotSoDifferentRemark: In the TV version of ''Sharpe's Enemy'', he lays into Sir Augustus Farthingdale, who has dismissed the "threat" posed by Pot-au-Feu's "army" of deserters:
305-->''Mark me close, Colonel. What do you think the supreme virtue, sir? To the Frenchman and his [[UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution recent revolution]], it is liberty. To the Whig, puffing in Parliament, it is license to do anything, provided it does not disturb his pleasure. But to the common soldier, it is anarchy: to do whatever he wants and be damned to his fellows! But to me and [[UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte Bonaparte]], the supreme virtue is '''order'''. We are not Whigs. We know that a man may love his neighbor over Monday and massacre him over Tuesday, unless society keeps him in '''order'''! These deserters, if not secured and shot, will destroy my army more surely than Bonaparte...! And I'll thank you not to forget it.''
306* PetTheDog:
307** In the books, at the end of ''Sharpe's Enemy'', after [[spoiler:Teresa's death]], he takes a moment after Sharpe has reported to him to say, somewhat awkwardly, "All things pass."
308** He also repeatedly does his best to give Sharpe a leg-up when he deserves it, or a shot at getting out of whatever trouble he's in this time, and in ''Sharpe's Assassin'' he uses his newfound influence to get Sharpe confirmed as a Lieutenant-Colonel (meaning that if he retires, he retires as a Lieutenant-Colonel, not as brevetted Lieutenant) and hints at opportunity in the peacetime army.
309* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives an ''epic'' one to Simmerson when the latter attempts to shift blame for losing the King's Colours, one of a regiment's standards, touched by King George's hand.
310-->'''Simmerson''': [[NeverMyFault The fault was not mine sir.]] [[spoiler:Major Lennox]] must answer.
311-->'''Wellington''': [[spoiler:Major Lennox]] ANSWERED WITH HIS LIFE, as ''you'' should have done if you had any sense of honour! You lost the colours of the King of England. You disgraced us, sir, you've ''shamed'' us, sir! You will answer.
312* RightManInTheWrongPlace: Sharpe often reflects that the British Army has a positive genius for giving officers' commissions to inept bullies and cowards, but miraculously, almost by accident, has allowed the one man who knows how to beat the French to hold a general's rank, and even more miraculously, has entrusted that man with overall command of the Peninsular Army.
313* SeenItAll: He makes a point of being unfazed by everything to calm his troops, but by ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' he's seen the high water mark of Sharpe's antics and mostly just finds them funny or exasperating (irritably noting that Rossendale's presence means that Sharpe is going to kill him).
314* SelfMadeMan: Much like Sharpe, he started from the bottom and reached high rank, earning him no end of contempt from his peers. Of course 'bottom' was a relative term - while he wasn't born into the very highest ranks of the aristocracy, he was still an aristocrat. His high-flying career was only possible because of his aristocratic origins and connections. Nobody not born into the gentry could ever hope to attain commands such as those Wellesley was given, and the only thing that truly distinguished Wellesley from other noblemen given command as a favour rather than on merit was that he proved to have actual talent when it came to command.
315* TechnicianVsPerformer: Described, pretty accurately, as a cold and ruthlessly efficient Technician, in comparison to the usual Performer flair of Napoleon and his marshals, with one French observer comparing the two as being like ice and fire. In ''Sharpe's Enemy'', he ruefully says to Sharpe that the British public must think he enjoys war, or at least the glory that comes with being England's most successful general, but to him it is nothing more than a necessary job, ''"like being a street-sweeper."''
316[[/folder]]
317
318[[folder:Hogan]]
319!!Major Michael Hogan
320[[quoteright:262:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/michael_hogan_0.jpg]]
321 [[caption-width-right:262:''"Stop showing off, Sharpe."'']]
322->'''Played By''': Creator/BrianCox
323-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Battle'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Sword'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Honour'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Regiment'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Siege'' (Novel only)
324
325Wellesley's aide and liaison with Sharpe. A middle-aged, snuff-addicted Irishman in the Royal Engineers who introduces Sharpe into the murky world of politics and espionage.
326----
327* TheChessmaster: As Wellington's spy master, this is his usual job. Most notable, he arranges for Sir Henry Simmerson to botch a mission at Val de la Casa in ''Sharpe's Eagle''.
328* DemotedToExtra: In the TV series, he disappears after ''Sharpe's Eagle'', to be replaced by Nairn, Munroe and Ross.
329* TheDiseaseThatShallNotBeNamed: Falls ill with some sort of dangerous fever in ''Sharpe's Siege'' and manages to fight through the delirium to convey important information to Sharpe on his sickbed. [[spoiler:Sharpe sheds ManlyTears when he later learns the fever proved fatal.]]
330* DoubleMeaning: What he said Wellington told him about Sir Henry Simmerson. "'Hogan', says he, 'the South Essex is a sight to make you shiver.'" (Well shiver because they're woefully incompetent until Sharpe gets there).
331%%* TheEngineer: One of his functions.
332* FunctionalAddict: Is seen taking snuff quite frequently, but is unimpeded by its use.
333%%* NumberTwo: Considered this for Wellesley.
334* ObfuscatingStupidity: He feigns ignorance and appears dim-witted to lull his enemies into a false sense of security.
335* {{Oireland}}: Considers himself, Wellesley and Harper to be the three Irish men standing between Bonaparte and Britain.
336* SparedByTheAdaptation: Another case of the actor leaving the show before their character appeared in the story in which they would've passed away.
337[[/folder]]
338
339[[folder:Dunnett]]
340!!Major Warren Dunnett
341[[quoteright:177:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/major_warren_dunnett.png]]
342 [[caption-width-right:177:]]
343->'''Played By''': Creator/JulianFellowes
344-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' (Novel only)
345
346Sharpe's first commanding officer.
347----
348* CharacterDeath: [[spoiler:Cut down by Colonel D'Eclin in an ambush in the TV adaptation]].
349* DeathByAdaptation: [[spoiler:The books version is captured in an ambush and later reappears for ''Sharpe's Waterloo''. Here, he is cut down by D'Eclin and dies on the spot]].
350* FatIdiot: In the TV series, Dunnett is rather heavyset and sets up his camp in an open field, which becomes a great spot for an ambush. The book version is thinner and rather more competent.
351* UpperClassTwit: Dunnett is the first of many snobbish commanding officers Sharpe has to contend with.
352[[/folder]]
353
354[[folder:Murray]]
355!!Captain John Murray
356[[quoteright:152:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/captain_john_murray.png]]
357 [[caption-width-right:152:]]
358->'''Played By''': Tim Bentinck
359-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles''
360
361Executive Officer to Major Dunnett and second in command of the Rifle company. While Dunnett treats Sharpe with contempt due to the junior officer's being made up from the ranks, Captain Murray immediately recognizes Sharpe's bravery and battlefield skill and respects him as one of their own. The reverence with which Harper and the others talk about him indicates a mutual respect between Murray and the enlisted men.
362----
363* AFatherToHisMen: [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure Murray is highly respected by the men under his command.]] He seems to care about them, even though he is a gentleman and they are working-class commoners. When Murray dies, the rest [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere try to desert]].
364* AlmostDeadGuy: How we see Murray for most of his on-screen time. He spends his dying moments passing on advice to Sharpe, who is severely out of his element as an officer brought up from the ranks, on how to lead his men like an officer should. He then passes on his sword, says his last words, and dies with a final gasp.
365* TheCaptain: Even though he is junior to Dunnett, Murray clearly is the more competent and well-behaved officer.
366* CharacterDeath: Slashed across the chest during the French attack that virtually wipes out the rest of Sharpe's company. He dies soon afterwards.
367* CoolSword: Carries a 1796 Heavy Cavalry Sword, which he later [[TakeUpMySword passes on to Sharpe.]]
368-->'''Murray''': I want you to have my sword. Maybe if the men see you carrying it…
369-->'''Sharpe''': They'll think I'm a proper officer?
370-->'''Murray''': No. They'll think I liked you.

371* LastWords: "Bloody silly place to die."
372* NumberTwo: As executive officer, he is considered this to Dunnett.
373* OfficerAndAGentleman: In the most British sense of the word. Murray is of the upper-class and knows that Sharpe is not, but [[TheMenFirst tries to encourage Sharpe to not let social status get in the way of good leadership.]]
374-->'''Murray''': Don't be too hard on the men, Sharpe. How can I say this without offense? You see, the lads don't like an officer who comes from the ranks. They want an officer to be privileged, to be set apart from them. Touched by grace. They think of you as one of them, as one of the damned.
375* SorryThatImDying: Murray says almost this exact thing to Sharpe.
376-->'''Murray''': Sorry to be so much trouble.
377* TakeUpMySword: Gives his sword to Sharpe while dying of his wounds.
378[[/folder]]
379
380[[folder:Nairn]]
381!!Major Nairn
382[[quoteright:245:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nairn.jpg]]
383 [[caption-width-right:245:''"You're a soldier, aren't you? Of course you're expendable!"'']]
384->'''Played By''': Michael Byrne
385-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Regiment'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Revenge'' (Novel only)
386
387Dour, Scottish and secretive, another one of Wellington's spymasters.
388----
389* CompositeCharacter: Takes Major Hogan's role in ''Sharpe's Company'' and ''Sharpe's Honour.''
390* DeathFakedForYou: Fakes Sharpe's death in ''Sharpe's Honour'' so he can investigate La Marquesa's claims.
391* MajorInjuryUnderreaction: In ''Sharpe's Revenge'', Nairn is injured by a canister shot. He claims he has only been hit in the leg and instructs Sharpe to lead the brigade forward. Only later does Sharpe learn [[spoiler:the canister had fatally pierced Nairn's lung.]]
392* OhCrap: In ''Sharpe's Enemy'' when he learns Ducos is operating in the area of Adrados because he knows that Ducos is trouble.
393* SparedByTheAdaptation: Once again, the character survives the television series by simply not turning up in the story they otherwise would've died in.
394[[/folder]]
395
396[[folder:Frederickson]]
397!!Captain William Frederickson
398[[quoteright:152:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/captain_frederickson.png]]
399 [[caption-width-right:152:''"I'm not smiling, sir. A musket ball broke my jaw. I have false teeth. The sawbones stuck on the smile for free, sir."'']]
400->'''Played By''': Philip Whitchurch
401-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Revenge''
402
403Older and grittier than Sharpe, Frederickson commands the Royal American Rifles, a unit raised in America and left over from the Revolutionary War, with only one actual American, Thomas Taylor, left among their ranks.
404----
405* CulturedWarrior: Frederickson has some pretty solid badass credentials, none of which are diminished in the slightest by his tendency to seek out Spanish churches to admire the architecture, sketch the landscapes they are marching through in pencil and read every poem in his immediate vicinity.
406** In the TV adaptation of ''Sharpe's Revenge'', he stands up as Sharpe's lawyer before a French tribunal, explaining in an undertone that a soldier gave him a law book to wipe his ass with, but he decided to read it instead.
407* EyepatchOfPower: Wears an eyepatch over his left eye, which appears to be dead.
408* FacialHorror: "I'm not smiling, sir. A musket ball broke my jaw. I have false teeth. The sawbones stuck on the smile for free, sir."
409* GameFace: When fighting, he removes his false teeth, wig and eyepatch.
410* GeniusBruiser: Frederickson is a capable combatant and military leader, and deliberately cultivates his fearsome appearance. He is also fluent in German and conversant in French and Spanish, an aspiring lawyer and a great lover of art, poetry and architecture, and spends his time off making landscape sketches in pencil and discussing politics with American expats and French prisoners.
411* IronicNickname: "Sweet William".
412** GeniusBonus: To add a layer to the irony "Sweet William" is a stock character from English folk ballads, who is generally about equal parts a male version of TheIngenue and the ''innamorato'' from CommediaDellArte... none of which is applicable to Captain Frederickson.
413* NightmareFuelStationAttendant: Facial injuries aside, he collects perfect teeth from French dead, and plans to have a full set made.
414%%* PerpetualSmiler: Due to the FacialHorror he's received.
415* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: Described as a misogynist, even by the standards of the time, though it's downplayed, as we rarely actually see him interact with women (he usually appears on the front-line). He does actually fall for a woman, Lucille, eventually - though women are rarely charmed by [[YouAreACreditToYourRace A Credit To Your Race]] attitudes and she likes Sharpe better.
416[[/folder]]
417
418[[folder:Munro]]
419!!Major Mungo Munro
420[[quoteright:245:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mungo_munro.png]]
421 [[caption-width-right:245:"You're not to enquire what I've been doing since we've last met because it's secret."]]
422->'''Played By''': Hugh Ross
423-->'''Appears In''': Sharpe's Gold (TV only), Sharpe's Battle (TV only), Sharpe's Sword (TV only)
424
425A heavily-accented Scottish spymaster for Wellington
426----
427* AnythingButThat: His offer to play the bagpipes for Sharpe results in Sharpe requesting a dangerous mission instead.
428* CanonForeigner: Unlike the spymasters from the first two seasons, he is entirely original to the TV series.
429* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: Like most of the series' spymasters, he disappears after a single season.
430* DeadpanSnarker: Pretty much his standard form of communication, especially with Sharpe.
431-->"I could use words like dire and dreadful but I wouldna want to cheer you up."
432* DreadfulMusician: He proudly declares he's never had a bagpipe lesson in his life. Anyone that hears him play can well believe it.
433* EarWorm: His pipe major uses earplugs to avoid having to listen to his music.
434* EvilLaugh: He has a tendency to give these whenever amused, notably when realising he's sending regicide Sharpe to train a royal guard.
435* ManipulativeBastard: His plans often end up putting Sharpe in harm's way to achieve a goal, notably when he posts him to train the Real Irlandesa Compania within easy reach of Sharpe's latest enemy Brigadier-General Loup.
436* TeethClenchedTeamwork: He probably has the most abrasive relationship with Sharpe of any of Wellington's spymasters, which is quite an achievement given how many clashes Sharpe has with them.
437* {{Troll}}: Colonel Runciman insists that being Wagonmaster-General means he should be addressed as "General". Munro calls him "Wagonmaster" instead.
438[[/folder]]
439
440[[folder:Kiely]]
441!!Colonel Lord Benedict, Earl of Kiely
442[[quoteright:159:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lord_kiely.png]]
443 [[caption-width-right:159:]]
444->'''Played By''': Creator/JasonDurr
445-->'''Appears In''': Sharpe's Battle
446
447A young aristocrat in command of the Royal Irish Company of Spain.
448----
449* AdaptationalHeroism: He's much more heroic (and likeable) in the TV version than his book counterpart (who, notably, is ''not'' married; and, rather than the TV version's RedemptionEqualsDeath, is instead DrivenToSuicide).
450* ColonelBadass: Kiely has the rank of colonel and he is a deadly combatant.
451* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: He gets taken from behind by Loup and fatally stabbed in contrast to committing suicide in the book.
452* DuelToTheDeath: His first combat scene involves challenging one of Loup's men to single combat, which Kiely wins.
453* GoodOldWays: Kiely is a strong believer in the glory of past wars and even dresses like a walking portrait of a decorated war hero.
454* HonorBeforeReason: Duels one of Loup's men in single combat, and refuses to strike the killing blow when he has the advantage.
455* KickTheDog: He's quite a {{Jerkass}} to his loyal wife, upbraiding her for her response to an insult made by Juanita, and blaming her for the death of their child.
456** He immediately changes his tune when he learns that she is pregnant.
457* LastOfHisKind: He is the last to bear the name of Kiely:
458--> "''I am the last of my blood, Sharpe. When I die, the name dies with me.''"
459** The news of his wife's pregnancy subverts this.
460* MasterSwordsman: Unlike your average [[TheNeidermeyer Neidermeyer]], Kiely is a highly effective swordsman.
461* NobilityMarriesMoney: His wife had money, he had the title.
462* SkilledButNaive: Is a very capable fighter, but is untested in the field and cites the romanticised battles of legend, which sets him at odds with Sharpe. However, he grows quickly to see Sharpe as the expert and defers to him accordingly.
463* StayInTheKitchen: He is shocked by his wife loading and handing out rifles to the Royal Irish Company soldiers.
464-->'''Kiely''': Good God! What the hell does she think she's doing?
465-->'''Sharpe''': Being a good wife. I don't see the Dona Juanita getting her hands dirty, do you?
466[[/folder]]
467
468[[folder:Runciman]]
469!!Colonel Claude Runciman
470[[quoteright:204:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/colonel_claude_runciman.png]]
471 [[caption-width-right:204:]]
472->'''Played By''': Ian [=McNeice=]
473-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle''
474
475An ex-general and officer appointed by Wellington to accompany the Royal Irish Company and liaise between Sharpe and Kiely.
476----
477* AuthorityInNameOnly: It's clear that unlike Sharpe and Lord Kiely, Runciman doesn't command any real authority over the men and is just along for the ride - a situation with which he's perfectly comfortable.
478* BigEater: To the point where other soldiers actually take bets on how much he can eat.
479* CowardlyLion: While he doesn't actually reach the frontlines, Sharpe manages to rouse his courage to make a very risky move with the Royal Irish Company (or, to be more accurate, let Sharpe do it), on the grounds that they're in deep trouble but glory pays for all.
480* FatBastard: Averted. Runciman is more or less harmless, pleasant enough to be around, and fairly well-meaning, which leads to Sharpe taking an odd liking to him. Granted, it helps that his fairly mild nature makes him easy for Sharpe to manipulate to his own ends, but even still.
481* FrontlineGeneral: Tries to be this, insisting that, as a general, he has to lead the men in battle. He only heads to bed when Sharpe promises to wake him.
482* {{Gasshole}}: "'Let the effusions out', Sharpe. That's what my doctor says."
483* GloryDays: Used to be Wagonmaster General, and is ready to remind you of that.
484* HeavySleeper: Manages to sleep through a battle.
485* HiddenDepths: He reveals with disarming honesty that unlike most less than competent officers, he's ''not'' a MilesGloriosus - he'd like glory, but he has no illusions about the fact that he's not a brave warrior like Sharpe, and he is very relieved (and downright delighted) to be retiring with a Barony.
486* InsistentTerminology: Prefers to be addressed as ''General'' Runciman, rather than Colonel. Sharpe uses this to manipulate him.
487* NiceGuy: Somewhat. He's generally fairly harmless, PoliticallyIncorrectHero moments aside, and seems to genuinely respect Sharpe's abilities. Sharpe comes to like him well enough that he does what he can to try and protect him from being used as a scapegoat in ''Sharpe's Battle'' - though it helps that the method through which he does so serves Sharpe's ends as well.
488* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: Holds a very low opinion of the Irish - which [[DeliberateValuesDissonance was pretty common at the time.]]
489--> "''[The Irish] don't understand their own good luck. I mean, we go and we sort out their country, and all they do is froth at the maw and throw brickbats at us. I mean, there's no gratitude, Sharpe. None, but still, we have to be diplomatic. We have to treat these chaps as if they were English. Well, '''almost''' English.''"
490* RankUp: After the events of ''Sharpe's Battle'', he is given the title of Baron.
491[[/folder]]
492
493[[folder:Spears]]
494!!Lord Captain Jack Spears
495[[quoteright:207:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lord_jack_spears.png]]
496 [[caption-width-right:207:''"I've impressed the great Sharpe, how wonderful!"'']]
497->'''Played By''': Creator/JamesPurefoy
498-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Sword''
499
500Handsome, devil-may-care reckless fool, Jack Spears is one of the few officers who genuinely befriends Sharpe as an equal. Spears has a title, but no money, so he does not see himself as any better than Sharpe, and Sharpe respects Jack's bravery as an Exploring Officer, riding behind enemy lines in full uniform so as not to be mistaken as a spy.
501----
502* AnArmAndALeg: In the television adaptation, Spears is missing his left arm, rather than having merely injured it.
503* BeingTorturedMakesYouEvil: In the television series, [[spoiler:[=LeRoux=] tortured him into betraying England.]]
504* BludgeonedToDeath: [[spoiler:At the end of his suicidal charge, the French beat him to death.]]
505* DeathSeeker: It becomes apparent his reckless acts of bravery are actually [[spoiler:suicide attempts over his guilt at betraying England to [=LeRoux=]]]
506* HandicappedBadass: Spears can still handle himself in a fight despite missing an arm.
507* LeeroyJenkins: His establishing scene has him riding out to fight a French company, flashing his sabre.
508* RedemptionEqualsDeath: In the TV series, [[spoiler:after learning of his treachery, Sharpe gives him a chance to regain his honor via a suicidal charge that will raise morale. Spears accepts the challenge]].
509** Invoked in the novel, with Spears [[spoiler:behaving recklessly and riding into the suicidal charge in attempts to redeem himself for betraying England.]] Ironically, Spears actually ''survives'' the suicidal charge in the novel and is [[spoiler:confronted with his treachery by Sharpe afterwards. Spears asks Sharpe to kill him and tell everyone he died a hero, which Sharpe acquiesces to.]]
510[[/folder]]
511
512[[folder:Prince George]]
513!!George Augustus Frederick, Prince Regent of the House of Hanover
514[[quoteright:160:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sharpes_prince_george.png]]
515 [[caption-width-right:160:]]
516->'''Played By''': Creator/JulianFellowes
517-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Regiment''
518
519The heir to the British Empire and an admirer of Sharpe's exploits. Sharpe is summoned to attend him during his investigations for the missing reinforcements.
520----
521* AdiposeRex: His corpulent figure is in keeping with his historical size circa 1813.
522* TheGhost: He is first mentioned in a letter read in ''Sharpe's Enemy''.
523* HeroWorshipper: To Sharpe, expressing his delight in meeting the Hero of Talavera.
524* HistoricalDomainCharacter: See UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfHanover.
525* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: While he is not above mild ribbing at Sharpe's expense, he has nothing but admiration for him, and is delighted to act as his patron from time to time.
526* ManChild: He never had to mature and still has childish fantasies about being a great frontline general, which is made worse by the fact that brown nosers play along with him. Also, he petulantly keeps track of how many regiments bear his name and gloats whenever he sees a soldier wearing his white feathers.
527* MilesGloriosus: He's implied to be mildly delusional. Despite never having set foot on a battlefield, he claims responsibility to great exploits and victories even in front of the very men who actually achieved them. Many encourage this, because they're licking his boots. Those who aren't actively toadying still play along because it doesn't hurt to have the Prince Regent's favor.
528-->'''Prince Regent:''' We were enveloped in flames! Were we not, Dick? Oh, that bloody day!\
529'''Rossendale:''' He, uh, thinks he was there. Let him.\
530'''Sharpe:''' We were, sir. Enveloped in flames.\
531'''Prince Regent:''' [Gesturing towards his head] Every detail etched!
532[[/folder]]
533
534[[folder:Pyecroft]]
535!! Major Septimus Pyecroft
536[[quoteright:180:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/septimus_pyecroft.png]]
537 [[caption-width-right:180:]]
538->'''Played By''': Nigel Betts
539-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only)
540
541A skilled demolitions expert, Septimus Pyecroft who takes an Exploring Officer position following a serious disfiguring injury. It is on one such exploration that he happens upon Zara, the only survivor of an attacked gypsy family.
542----
543* AnArmAndALeg: His left forearm ends in a hook hand.
544* CanonForeigner: ''Sharpe's Mission'' was an original teleplay, not based on any original novel.
545* DemolitionsExpert: This was his role before the accident. Wellington recruits him to fulfil it again.
546%%* DramaticUnmask: To Zara.
547* DueToTheDead: Buries Zara's parents and commends them to the Lord.
548%%* GoodScarsEvilScars: His facial burns and his hook hand.
549* InTheHood: He wears a leather cowl to cover his burns.
550* JackBauerInterrogationTechnique: He manages to coerce [[spoiler:Pope into spilling Colonel Brand's plan to capture Ross]] by depositing a pouch of blast powder on him with a lit fuse eight minutes long.
551* SadisticChoice: How Wellington recruits him; either help demolish the French powder magazine or be sent back to England, where children can point and stare at him. Pyecroft chooses the former.
552* WeUsedToBeFriends: Was close friends with Major General Ross before the accident that burned him, for which he blames Ross. [[spoiler:They reconcile in the end.]]
553[[/folder]]
554
555!!South Essex Regiment
556
557An infantry regiment that Sharpe and the Chosen Men are assigned to in ''Sharpe's Eagle''.
558
559[[folder:Lawford]]
560!!Lieutenant Colonel William Lawford
561[[quoteright:190:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lawford.png]]
562 [[caption-width-right:190:]]
563->'''Played By''': Martin Jacobs, Benedict Taylor
564-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Tiger'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Regiment''
565
566An elegant dandy, monied, fashionable, aristocratic and able to buy his promotions, William Lawford represents everything Sharpe hates about the British Army and the officer class. Except Sharpe likes his superior officer very much, and the feeling is quite mutual. Complete opposites, they forged a friendship that surpassed rank and class while stuck together in adversity in India on a mission to rescue Lawford's uncle, Hector [=McCandless=]. Sharpe kept Lawford alive and Lawford taught Sharpe how to read and write, using only one page of the bible while in the dungeons of the Tippoo.
567----
568* AnArmAndALeg: Sharpe cuts off Lawford's arm to save his life in ''Sharpe's Company.''
569* BashBrothers: With Sharpe, to an extent as Colonel of the South Essex - while Harper tends to be by Sharpe's side in the actual fighting (though Lawford can and does fight), the two work together smoothly, on the grounds that they trust each other implicitly.
570* TheBusCameBack: In ''Sharpe's Regiment.'' He's an accidental impediment, but he is still trying to help and protect Sharpe. Essentially, he takes the evidence that Sharpe has of the {{Big Bad}}'s fraud at the expense of the South Essex, takes it to said BigBad and offers to make it disappear... in exchange for Sharpe getting a Colonelcy in the American Rifles.
571* CaptainSmoothAndSergeantRough: The Captain Smooth to Sharpe's Sergeant Rough. This dynamic continues even though each rises past captain and sergeant, and suits them both perfectly - Lawford handles the politics (his ultimate ambition is to be a successful politician), and gives Sharpe free rein on the military side of things. In turn, Sharpe teaches Lawford how to be a soldier, and Lawford teaches the illiterate Sharpe how to read and write (required to be a commissioned officer in the British army) and something about politicking.
572* HiddenDepths: As early as his first appearance, he proves to be an adept marksman.
573* OddFriendship: With Sharpe, given their completely different social classes. They are very, very close, however, and Sharpe is highly grateful to Lawford for teaching him how to read.
574* PlotTriggeringDeath: More like Plot-Triggering CareerEndingInjury; the loss of his arm at the beginning of ''Sharpe's Company'' means that another commanding officer and subordinates need to be found... which leads to [[SociopathicSoldier Obadiah Hakeswill]] reentering Sharpe's life.
575* PutOnABus: In ''Sharpe's Company'', thanks to losing his arm.
576* YouAreACreditToYourRace: Lawford and Sharpe have a lot of respect for each other despite Lawford having a lot of things that Sharpe despises about the upper class, and Sharpe being a rough-hewn gutter-rat.
577[[/folder]]
578
579[[folder:Lennox]]
580!! Major Lennox
581[[quoteright:169:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/captain_lennox.png]]
582 [[caption-width-right:169:]]
583->'''Played By''': David Ashton
584-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle''
585
586An old friend of Sharpe's who is one of the officers of the South Essex Regiment when Sharpe and the Chosen Men are assigned to it.
587----
588* BraveScot: An honorable, effective Scottish officer.
589* BrutalHonesty: He spares no words to Sharpe over what kind of commander Sir Henry Simmerson is.
590-->'''Lennox''': But thank you for reminding me I was a damn good soldier. Now, wipe your boots. I'll take you to meet a damn bad one.
591* DiedInYourArmsTonight: [[spoiler:Dies in Ensign Denny's arms while talking to Sharpe]].
592* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler:Cut down by French cavalry at the bridge at Valdelacasa.]]
593* LastRequest: [[spoiler:Asks Sharpe to seize an Imperial Eagle from the French Army to make up for losing the King's Colours.]]
594* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: Sharpe describes how he managed to rally a regiment to victory in India.
595* OldSoldier: He's the only member of Simmerson's staff who is a veteran.
596* OnlySaneMan: Until [[spoiler:his death a little more than halfway through ''Sharpe's Eagle''.]]
597* {{Retirony}}: He ''was'' retired. Then his wife died, he had nothing else but the army and the South Essex was all he could get. Halfway through the episode, [[spoiler:he is killed by French soldiers at Valdelacasa]].
598* TheScapegoat: Attempted. [[spoiler:Simmerson tries to pin the blame on Lennox for losing the King's Colours; since Lennox is dead, he can't defend himself. Since he was trying this on Wellington, who is nobody's fool and in a thoroughly foul mood to begin with, this goes poorly.]]
599[[/folder]]
600
601[[folder:Leroy]]
602!!Captain Thomas Leroy
603[[quoteright:223:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thomas_leroy.png]]
604 [[caption-width-right:223:]]
605->'''Played By''': Gavan O'Herlihy
606-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Company'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Honour'' (Novel only)
607
608The son of an American Loyalist, Leroy has made his fortune in the slave trade, purchased a captain's commission in the South Essex.
609----
610* BoomHeadshot: [[spoiler:Takes a bullet to the head charging the French barricade in ''Sharpe's Honour''.]]
611* CigarChomper: Fittingly, often seen smoking cigars as opposed to the traditional British pipe.
612* DeadpanSnarker: When the Chosen Men jog ahead of the South Essex.
613-->'''Sir Henry''': What the blazes?!
614-->'''Leroy''': Quick time, sir. The Rifle Regiment only has two marches, quick time and dawdle.
615* DeliberateValuesDissonance: His family traded slaves, something he saw no problem continuing. [[WhatTheHellHero Sharpe calls him on it.]]
616** This is a bit of TruthInTelevision as the average Englishman (such as Sharpe) at this time were deeply hostile to the slave trade (which by this point had been outlawed in Britain).
617* DemotedToExtra: In the books, Leroy appears in ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Company'', and ''Sharpe's Honour'' [[spoiler:where he is killed]]. In the TV series, he doesn't reappear after ''Sharpe's Eagle''.
618* EveryoneHasStandards: Disapproves of Simmerson's flogging of [[DeliberateValuesDissonance white men]], only for Simmerson to shout him down.
619* GoodOlBoy: Leroy hits all the marks, being a conservative military man from the DeepSouth. However, being shifted back a few centuries, his attitudes are quite different from most examples of the trope.
620* InsistentTerminology: He is not American; he is Virginian.
621* NostalgiaFilter: Given that he would've been (at the oldest) a child when the Loyalists were expelled from the United States, his insistence on still being a "Virginian" (rather than an Englishman, which most Loyalists viewed themselves as) comes off a bit like this.
622%%* OnlySaneMan: [[spoiler:Takes this role after Lennox's death.]]
623* SparedByTheAdaptation: Survives the television series (by virtue of not reappearing after his introductory story).
624* TokenEnemyMinority: An American Loyalist officer in the British regular army at a time when England was still occasionally in direct conflict with the United States like UsefulNotes/TheWarOf1812. Though, since he specifically describes himself as being 'from Virginia' rather than America, he's not that much of an enemy.
625* WhatTheHellHero: Calls Sharpe out for leading [[EnsignNewbie Ensign Denny]] deep into French lines, all just to capture an Eagle. Sharpe returns the favour by calling Leroy out on his slave trading.
626* YouAreInCommandNow: After Simmerson flees the battle and Sharpe gallivants on his own to capture the Imperial Eagle, Leroy takes charge of the rank-and-file himself.
627[[/folder]]
628
629[[folder:Denny]]
630!! Ensign Denny
631[[quoteright:164:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ensign_denny.png]]
632 [[caption-width-right:164:]]
633->'''Played By''': Nolan Hemmings
634-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Company'' (Novel only)
635
636The young Ensign and lowest ranking officer in the South Essex.
637----
638* DiedInYourArmsTonight: [[spoiler:Dies in Leroy's arms at the end of ''Sharpe's Eagle''.]]
639* EnsignNewbie: Very much so. And the first of several for the series.
640* HeroWorshipper: Admires Sharpe and follows him and the Chosen Men and they appreciate him in return. He follows them when they go to seize the Imperial Eagle. [[spoiler:This doesn't end well for him]].
641* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:Bayoneted by a French soldier toward the end of the Battle of Talavera.]]
642* TheseHandsHaveKilled: Appears quite shocked after killing his first man at the bridge at Valdelacasa.
643[[/folder]]
644
645[[folder:Dobbs]]
646!!Dobbs
647[[quoteright:164:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dobbs_1.png]]
648 [[caption-width-right:164::]]
649->'''Played By''': Paul Bigley
650-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle''
651
652A soldier in the South Essex.
653----
654* {{Fainting}}: The first time his name is mentioned onscreen, he's shown fainting from over-exertion from drilling in the blazing sun.
655* {{Mook}}: Essentially a heroic version of one and manages to survive the Battle of Talavera.
656* PostVictoryCollapse: After managing to fire off four shots in a minute, he collapses from fatigue and the effects of the 75 lashes he received that morning.
657* ATasteOfTheLash: For losing consciousness, he is whipped 75 times.
658* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Is never seen again after ''Sharpe's Eagle''.
659[[/folder]]
660
661[[folder:Price]]
662!! Lieutenant Harry Price
663[[quoteright:165:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/harry_price.jpg]]
664 [[caption-width-right:165:]]
665->'''Played By''': Scott Cleverdon (Sharpe's Company), Nicholas Irons (Sharpe's Waterloo)
666-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Honour'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Regiment'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo''
667
668Harry is young, charming, and bored drunkard. Not entirely cut out for army life, Harry survives in a blur of wine, women and song and pure luck. Harry manages to be amusing and sort of makes himself the regimental mascot. Even Sharpe grew terribly fond of the lad and indulged him.
669----
670
671* TheAlcoholic: His first scene involves getting drunk during the storming of Ciudad Rodrigo.
672* CompositeCharacter: In the TV series, he takes the role of Robert Knowles, Sharpe's comrade who is sent to rescue Teresa and Antonia and is shot dead by Hakeswill.
673* DemotedToExtra: A semi-regular character in the books, only appears in ''Sharpe's Company'' and possibly ''Sharpe's Waterloo''.
674%%* HiddenDepths: He's a very good singer.
675* OneSteveLimit: A rather bizarre aversion. The Price in ''Sharpe's Company'' is shot dead by Hakeswill, but a similarly named character appears in ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', played by a different actor.
676[[/folder]]
677
678[[folder:Matthews]]
679!!Ensign William Matthews
680[[quoteright:206:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/william_matthews.jpg]]
681 [[caption-width-right:206:]]
682->'''Played By''': William Mannering
683-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Company''
684
68516 years old with weeks of experience, young Matthews follows Sharpe and Price around like a puppy.
686----
687* ChildSoldier: The actor who played him was 17.
688%%* DiesWideOpen: [[spoiler:After getting shot by Hakeswill.]]
689%%* EnsignNewbie: The second in the series.
690* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: Blond and nothing but sweet-tempered.
691[[/folder]]
692
693[[folder:Windham]]
694!!Colonel Brian Windham
695[[quoteright:193:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brian_windham.png]]
696 [[caption-width-right:193:]]
697->'''Played By''': Clive Francis
698-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'' (Novel only)
699
700Lawford's successor as the Colonel of the South Essex.
701----
702* DecompositeCharacter: Colonel Berkeley takes his place in ''Sharpe's Sword''.
703* DemotedToExtra: Unlike his book counterpart who appears for another novel, he doesn't appear in the show after this point.
704* {{Foil}}: He and his younger friends Rymer and Jack Collet are ones for Simmerson, Gibbons and Berry. Unlike Simmerson, Gibbons and Berry, who used ATasteOfTheLash with little practical use, Windham, Rymer, and Collet are nice enough fellows who don't really understand that they're leaving control of their ranks in the hands of a rape-happy psychopath like Obadiah Hakeswill. While Simmerson and Gibbons [[DirtyCoward turn tail from battle]] ([[spoiler:Berry is already dead]]), Windham, Rymer, and Collet try their best to lead from the front, with [[spoiler:the latter two getting killed in the assault on Badajoz.]]
705* HappilyMarried: To his wife Jessica. He carries a silver-framed portrait of her wherever he goes.
706* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: The man thinks [[SociopathicSoldier Obadiah Hakeswill]] is a proper soldier. To be fair, as Sharpe notes, Hakeswill is very, very good at hiding what he is and acting the model Sergeant in the presence of officers, only revealing his true malice towards the ranks (and Sharpe).
707* TheNeidermeyer: Subverted. He's set up to be this, another UnwittingPawn of Hakeswill at best, but he's revealed to be stern but fair (and good at reading the metaphorical room), willing to admit his mistakes, and lets Sharpe handle the tactics after realising his value.
708* SmarterThanYouLook: After demoting the framed Harper and ordering him flogged, he notices both that Harper is chatting with drummer boys through the flogging and that his decision has been met with a stony silence by the entire regiment. His response? To tell Harper he's a brave man and flick over a guinea as a reward for his courage, establishing him as stern, but fair. Sharpe is grudgingly impressed.
709* SparedByTheAdaptation: Yet another character who survives the television series simply because he didn't show up in the adaptation of the story in which they died.
710* UnwittingPawn: He winds up a pawn in Hakeswill's plot to discredit Sharpe and his Chosen Men.
711[[/folder]]
712
713[[folder:Collett]]
714!!Major Jack Collett
715[[quoteright:193:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/major_collett.png]]
716 [[caption-width-right:193:]]
717->'''Played By''': Robert Morgan
718-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Company''
719
720An officer who joins the South Essex with Windham.
721----
722* NumberTwo: To Windham, especially in the televised version where he is the battalion's only major.
723* OfficerAndAGentleman: Unlike the first complement of South Essex officers, Collett is unfailing polite and civil to Sharpe despite being bemused at a fellow officer raised from the ranks.
724* PlatonicLifePartners: He has a long-term association with Windham, who brings him to the battalion with him and expresses great sorrow at his death.
725* SacrificialLion: He's among the casualties of the attack on Badajoz.
726* UnknownRival: In the novel, his arrival with the battalion sees Leroy lose the vacant majority. He doesn't seem to be aware of this.
727[[/folder]]
728
729[[folder:Clayton]]
730!!Clayton
731[[quoteright:171:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/clayton.png]]
732 [[caption-width-right:171:]]
733->'''Played By''': Peter Gunn
734-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Escape'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' (Novel only),
735
736A soldier in the South Essex. Has a wife named Sally and two children.
737----
738* ActionDad: A soldier with two children.
739* BoomHeadshot: [[spoiler:Shot in the head while storming the breach at Badajoz]].
740* DeathByAdaptation: [[spoiler:The books' version of Clayton manages to survive all the way to ''Sharpe's Waterloo''. Here, he is killed at Badajoz]].
741* GoodWithNumbers: Also employed as a bookkeeper and helps Sharpe with math.
742* HiddenDepths: He's one of the few rank-and-file soldiers who can read.
743* NoFullNameGiven: Only ever known as Clayton.
744* UglyGuyHotWife: Clayton isn't particularly attractive, but his wife Sally is regarded as the prettiest wife in the regiment. This latter part is to both their detriment since his wife's looks [[SoBeautifulItsACurse puts them both in Obadiah Hakeswill's sights]].
745[[/folder]]
746
747[[folder:D'Alembord]]
748!!Captain Peter D'Alembord
749[[quoteright:172:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/peter_dalembord.png]]
750 [[caption-width-right:172:''"Honour, my dear Sharpe, is just a word behind which we hide our sins."'']]
751->'''Played By''': Edward Atterton
752-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Regiment'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Revenge'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' (Novel only)
753
754Dally is a handsome yet foppish young man who doesn't really seem suited to the army, yet there he is, sitting out a scandal in England that occurred as the result of a duel.
755----
756* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: He looks like a harmless, foppish aristocrat, but he's actually a very good fighter.
757* DemotedToExtra: Only appears in ''Sharpe's Honour'' in the TV series, while he appears in three other novels.
758* EveryoneHasStandards: He does not approve of Sharpe's [[CombatPragmatist fighting methods.]]
759-->'''D'Alembord''': This isn't a duel, it's a brawl!
760* HeritageDisconnect: When he appears at the Duchess of Richmond's ball in ''Waterloo'', a Belgian noblewoman (who, like many Belgian residents, considers herself French and loyal to Bonaparte) hears his French name and accuses him of disloyalty. He retorts that his family were Huguenots, and "La Belle France" made clear, in the nastiest possible way, that they were not welcome there.
761
762[[/folder]]
763
764!!Foreign Allies
765
766[[folder:Blas Vivar]]
767!! Major Blas Vivar, Count of Matamores
768[[quoteright:213:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/blas_vivar.png]]
769 [[caption-width-right:213:]]
770->'''Played By''': Simon Andreu
771-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'', ''Sharpe's Devil'' (Novel only)
772
773Enigmatic, deeply religious and deeply loyal to Spain, Vivar continues to fight the French after the defeat of Spain as a partisan.
774----
775%%* BadassInDistress: In ''Sharpe's Devil''.
776* TheBusCameBack: First appears in ''Sharpe's Rifles'' (chronologically the sixth book) and doesn't reappear until ''Sharpe's Devil'' (chronologically the twenty-fifth and final book).
777%%* CainAndAbel: With [[spoiler:The Man in Black/Tomas Vivar.]]
778* TheCaptain: Takes this role, successfully enthralling the Chosen Men - who don't yet like the newly promoted Sharpe very much. Seeing this, he mentors Sharpe in becoming this in his own right, explaining the three rules he sets his men, which Sharpe successfully modifies for his own use.
779* IfYouEverDoAnythingToHurtHer: Warns Sharpe not to break Teresa's heart.
780* LaResistance: Leader (alongside Teresa) of a group of partisans close to Casa Antigua and Torrecastro.
781* TheMentor: To Sharpe. He's important enough to him that Sharpe is stirred out of retirement in Normandy to go all the way to Chile to rescue him in ''Sharpe's Devil'' (though the reward Vivar's wife, another old friend, promises him is helpful - his farm does not pay for itself and, in Sharpe's own words, "French taxes are bloody evil").
782%%* PlatonicLifePartners: With Teresa.
783* RebelLeader: The leader of a partisan group in Spain.
784* RomanticismVersusEnlightenment: He's on the Romanticism side, with a strong belief in God and prophecy. This is portrayed positively during his first appearance, at least by contrast with the French, then more ambiguously in ''Sharpe's Devil'' (while he is still a positive character, Sharpe finds himself sympathising with the rebels against Spanish rule in South America).
785[[/folder]]
786
787[[folder:Dubreton]]
788!! Chef du Battalion (Colonel) Michel Dubreton
789[[quoteright:169:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/michel_dubreton.png]]
790 [[caption-width-right:169:]]
791->'''Played By''': Francois Guetary
792-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Enemy''
793
794A French Colonel whose wife is captured by the group of deserters led by Pot-Au-Feu and Obadiah Hakeswill.
795----
796* ClickHello: Greets Hakeswill with a cocked pistol as Hakeswill tries to rape Lady Farthingdale.
797* ColonelBadass: Holds the rank of Colonel and can hold his own against Sharpe.
798* DoWithHimAsYouWill: Hands Hakeswill over to Sharpe after Hakeswill murders [[spoiler:Teresa]].
799* ExactWords: When he corners Hakeswill and threatens to send him to Sharpe if the latter kills his hostage, Hakeswille almost immediately surrenders, pleading with Dubreton to do with him as he will but not send him to Sharpe. However, when Hakeswille asks him for reassurance that Dubreton will keep his word, Dubreton venomously reminds him that he could do with him as he wills, and he will do exactly that. Dubreton is next seen delivering the captured Hakeswille to Sharpe.
800* EnemyMine: Teams up with Sharpe against Pot-Au-Feu and Hakeswill.
801* FriendlyEnemy: Dubreton and Sharpe get along famously, and when they do fight, it's NothingPersonal. Hell, he even gets on with Teresa, who ''hates'' Frenchmen, and is feared and hated by many of them in turn.
802* HappilyMarried: To his wife Sarah. He brings the ransom for her himself, and would gladly storm the place where she's being held, save that his superiors won't allow him to risk so much for his British wife.
803[[/folder]]
804
805[[folder: Barbier]]
806!! Lieutenant Jean-Luc Barbier
807[[quoteright:213:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lieutenant_barbier.png]]
808 [[caption-width-right:213:]]
809->'''Played By''': Julian Sims
810-->'''Appears In''' Sharpe's Gold (TV only)
811
812A French Lieutenant who joins forces with Sharpe against brutal partisan El Casco
813----
814* CriticalStaffingShortage: Sharpe tells him to lead two companies of French infantry against El Casco. The "two companies" consist of Sharpe's five riflemen.
815* EnemyMine: After losing all his men to El Casco, his only remaining option is to surrender to Sharpe and team up with him.
816* ManlyTears: He sobs in horror listening to his men being sacrificed by the partisans.
817* PunchclockVillain: He initially fights Sharpe but only because they're on opposite sides rather than because of any animosity or evil intent.
818* SoleSurvivor: He is the only one of his unit not to be killed by El Casco and his men.
819* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: It's no clear what happens to him after El Casco's defeat. There's only a couple of shots of him silently accompanying Sharpe's party to show he even survived the battle!
820[[/folder]]
821
822[[folder:Curtis]]
823!! Father Curtis, aka El Mirador
824[[quoteright:194:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/father_curtis.jpg]]
825 [[caption-width-right:194:]]
826->'''Played By''': John Kavanagh
827-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Sword''
828
829This crafty little priest is Wellington's number one spy in Spain. Curtis fought with Spain against the British, but now fights with Britain and Spain against France.
830----
831* AdaptationalBadass: He's no slouch in the books as Wellington's spy, but in the TV series he's also an excellent swordsman.
832* BadassPreacher: A Catholic priest, a spymaster, and in the TV series, an excellent duelist.
833* BloodKnight: After all these years, he still enjoys a good duel and is disappointed by Sir Henry Simmerson.
834-->'''Curtis''': God forgive me, but I wish it had lasted longer.
835* BullyHunter: {{Invoked}}. In the TV series, he defends Sharpe's love interest from the lecherous advances of Sir Henry Simmerson. Simmerson asks why the priest would care, since as an Irishman he should hate the English and support the French.
836-->John Bull's a bad neighbor, but Bonaparte's a bully, and so are you.
837* CoolOldGuy: He may be past his fighting days, but that doesn't mean he can't duel.
838* FightingIrish: "I'm Irish. John Bull's a bad neighbor, but Bonaparte's a bully, and so are you."
839* LivingMacGuffin: He is El Mirador, the number-one person on Napoleon Bonaparte's hit list.
840* TheSpymaster: Wellington's best spy in Spain.
841[[/folder]]
842
843!!Sharpe's Women
844
845[[folder:Teresa Moreno]]
846!!Commandante Teresa Moreno
847[[quoteright:240:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/teresa_moreno.jpg]]
848 [[caption-width-right:240:]]
849->'''Played By''': Assumpta Serna
850-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Eagle'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Gold'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Sword'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy''
851
852A Spanish partisan (guerilla) and assassin who is Sharpe's first wife.
853----
854
855* ActionGirl: A RebelLeader of partisans who can keep up with the Chosen Men.
856%%* ActionMom: From ''Sharpe's Company'' onward.
857* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: Due to the books being adapted out of order, she makes her debut in ''Sharpe's Rifles'', as opposed to ''Sharpe's Gold''.
858* AttemptedRape: Twice by Hakeswill in ''Sharpe's Company.'' She nearly guts him the first time. The second time, he has her daughter at bayonet point, and is only thwarted by Harper playing with his warped mind.
859* BayonetYa: Carries [[GunsAkimbo two pistols]] with spring-loaded bayonets.
860* CommandingCoolness: Her title is Commandante.
861* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler:Hakeswill shoots her and it takes her a while to die in ''Sharpe's Enemy.'']]
862* DeathSeeker: Described by Major Vivar that she rides, hating the French, and "hopes to die." Sharpe manages to take this part away.
863* HeroicSacrifice: In the TV series. [[spoiler:Dies trying to stop Hakeswill from raping and murdering Isabella and distracts him long enough for Colonel Dubreton to catch up and stop Hakeswill.]]
864* IHaveYourWife: Her first scene with the Chosen Men involves taking Perkins hostage.
865* LaResistance: The head of one group of partisans in Spain.
866%%* PlatonicLifePartners: With Major Vivar.
867* RapeAsBackstory: She was ForcedToWatch the French rape and murder her mother, then they raped her too along with her sister.
868* RedBaron: Known as "The Needle". [[RunningGag Don't ask why.]]
869* RunningGag: No one knows why she's called "The Needle." Considering her affinity for knives, no one really wants to know, either.
870%%* TheSixthRanger: Fills this role in the Chosen Men until [[spoiler:her death]].
871* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: She's the Tomboy to Josefina's Girly Girl in ''Sharpe's Eagle.''
872* YourMom: When she winds up in a fight with Hakeswill in ''Sharpe's Company'', intentionally jumping up and down on his BerserkButton.
873-->"Your mother was a whore who sold herself to a toad."
874[[/folder]]
875
876[[folder:Countess Josefina]]
877!!Josefina, Countess La Costa
878[[quoteright:159:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/josefina_lacosta_0.png]]
879 [[caption-width-right:159:]]
880->'''Played By''': Katie Caballero
881-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Gold'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'' (Novel only)
882
883A countess traveling with the South Essex Regiment. She is attached to Lieutenant Christian Gibbons, but is drawn to Sharpe.
884----
885* ActuallyPrettyFunny: She's amused by the sight of Sharpe and the Chosen Men jogging past the South Essex.
886* DecompositeCharacter: Her character from the books is split into two: Josefina and Lady Isabella Farthingdale, who appears in ''Sharpe's Enemy.''
887* EatingTheEyeCandy: Visibly admires a shirtless Sharpe drilling his riflemen from afar.
888* ImpoverishedPatrician: It's mentioned that she's short on money and owes her maids two months's worth of wages.
889* SingleWomanSeeksGoodMan: She is attached to Gibbons, but is drawn to Sharpe for his sense of honor and dependability. At the end of the episode, she ends up with Captain Leroy, who is just as honorable and dependable.
890* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: The Girly Girl to Teresa's Tomboy in ''Sharpe's Eagle.''
891[[/folder]]
892
893[[folder:Lady Farthingdale]]
894!!Lady Isabella Farthingdale
895[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/isabella_farthingdale.jpg]]
896 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
897->'''Played By''': Elizabeth Hurley
898-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Enemy'' (TV only)
899
900The wife of Sir Augustus Farthingdale, Lady Fartingdale is captured by an army of deserters led by Sharpe's ArchEnemy Obadiah Hakeswill.
901----
902%%* AttemptedRape: Twice at the hands of Hakeswill.
903%%* DamselInDistress: For ''Sharpe's Enemy.''
904* DecompositeCharacter: The books had her as Josefina, the Countess from ''Sharpe's Eagle.'' In the TV series, they're different characters.
905* DefiantCaptive: Never stops trying to resist Hakeswill.
906* GoldDigger: A sympathetic example. She doesn't really care about her husband and thinks quite little of him for his cowardice. [[spoiler: But it beats her previous job.]]
907* HighClassCallGirl: [[spoiler:Lord Farthingdale married Isabella believing her to be the cousin of a duke, not learning until after they were married that she was actually a prostitute hired by said Duke.]]
908* ManBitesMan: Bites Hakeswill when he murders [[spoiler:Teresa.]]
909* MayDecemberRomance: Much younger than her husband.[[spoiler: And it's not really a romance anyways.]]
910%%* PimpedOutCape: In her first appearance. Shame she loses it almost right away.
911* ShamefulStrip: Hakeswill forces her to pose topless for Sharpe when he comes to deliver the ransom. [[ChivalrousPervert Sharpe being Sharpe]], he calmly laces her shirt up.
912[[/folder]]
913
914[[folder:La Marquesa]]
915!! La Marquesa
916[[quoteright:203:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/helene_leroux.png]]
917 [[caption-width-right:203:]]
918->'''Played By''': Creator/AliceKrige
919-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Sword'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Honour''
920
921A half-English, half-French wife of an aristocrat who is made by Ducos to write a letter to her husband that Sharpe tried to force himself on her.
922----
923* ArrangedMarriage: Married her husband on Napoleon's orders.
924* DamselInDistress: After Sharpe is hanged [[spoiler:(he's really FakingTheDead)]], she is captured by El Matarife and imprisoned at the convent by Father Hacha. Then after Sharpe wins the Battle of Vitoria, El Matarife captures her again and it's over her that the DuelToTheDeath decides.
925* DatingCatwoman: With Sharpe, both of them using each other. Ultimately, neither takes it all that personally - the worst that happens is that she gets annoyed about his HonourBeforeReason tendencies.
926* NothingPersonal: Her attitude to what she did to Sharpe in ''Sharpe's Honour'' - she didn't have much choice, and Sharpe doesn't take it personally.
927* PetTheDog: Is genuinely sympathetic to Sharpe in ''Sharpe's Honour'', consoling him over [[spoiler: Teresa's]] death.
928* ReallyGetsAround: And not in the slightest bit ashamed of it, as she makes very clear to the Abbess when she escapes with Sharpe and Harper.
929-->"I'm off to commit adultery, lots of it!"
930%%* SheKnowsTooMuch: Why El Matarife and Father Hacha kidnapped her and imprisoned her in a convent.
931* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She is the only female of Ducos' group.
932* TakingTheVeil: More like "forced to take the veil" by El Matarife and Father Hacha.
933%%* ToplessnessFromTheBack: While changing her clothes after Sharpe and Harper rescue her from a convent.
934* UnrelatedInTheAdaptation: She's Colonel Leroux's sister in the books, but there's no relation between them in the TV show.
935[[/folder]]
936
937[[folder:Ellie Nugent]]
938!! Ellie Nugent
939[[quoteright:194:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ellie_nugent.png]]
940 [[caption-width-right:194:]]
941->'''Played By''': Jayne Ashbourne
942-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Gold'' (TV only)
943
944The daughter of Wellington's cousin Beth, who are visiting Wellington while looking for Ellie's father.
945----
946* DamselInDistress: Rescuing her is the object of the climax of the film.
947%%* ShipTease: With Sharpe.
948%%* TheseHandsHaveKilled: Her reaction after shooting a French cavalryman dead during a skirmish.
949[[/folder]]
950
951[[folder:Lady Kiely]]
952!!Lucy, Lady Kiely
953[[quoteright:192:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lady_kiely.jpg]]
954 [[caption-width-right:192:]]
955->'''Played By''': Allie Byrne
956-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle'' (TV only)
957
958The wife of Lord Benedict, Earl of Kiely.
959----
960* CanonForeigner: Created for the TV version of ''Sharpe's Battle.''
961* DefiantCaptive: She repeatedly refuses Loup's advances, [[GrievousBottleyHarm smashing a bottle over his head]] and threatens to slash her own throat if he tries to rape her.
962-->'''Lady Kiely''': You will not defile me, sir. On my child's life, you will not. I will do it, as God sees me.
963* ImperiledInPregnancy: After Kiely learns she is pregnant, she is sent away from the fort, [[IHaveYourWife but is captured by]] [[spoiler:traitorous members of the Irish Company so Loup can force Kiely to abandon Sharpe's men to die.]]
964* OutlivingOnesOffspring: She miscarried her first pregnancy some time ago and her husband can barely look her in the face after that.
965* SilkHidingSteel: Lady Kiely may seem to be your average aristocrat's wife, but she's handy with a pistol and proves to be a DefiantCaptive, as Loup found out the hard way.
966* StraightMan: Emotionally, she's stronger than her husband.
967[[/folder]]
968
969[[folder:Lass]]
970!! "Lass"
971[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lass_03.png]]
972 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
973->'''Played By''': Creator/EmilyMortimer
974-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Sword (TV only)
975
976Quiet and doll like, the novice is shocked into silence after witnessing the torture and murder of her priest and fellow nuns. She is found hiding in the woods by Sharpe and taken back to camp to be cared for by Ramona. Lass will not leave Sharpe's side and insists on sleeping with him, and finds herself unable to resist the temptation to touch his naked shoulder while he's trying to sleep.
977----
978* AttemptedRape: Sir Henry Simmerson tries to have his way with her at the end of ''Sharpe's Sword'', only to be stopped by [[BadassPreacher Father Curtis]].
979* BewareTheQuietOnes: She puts a coin down Simmerson's throat.
980* CanonForeigner: She was created for the TV series.
981* ClothingDamage: Simmerson cuts up her clothes a little when he tries to rape her.
982* HeroicBSOD: Spends most of the episode in one after watching the death of the priest and nuns.
983* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Only ever known as the "Lass."
984* SilkHidingSteel: Surprisingly considering that she spends most of the film silent due to trauma. When Simmerson attempts to cow her into doing as he pleases she initially goes along with it just long enough to pull his own gun on him and march him out of the library room.
985%%* SuddenlyVoiced: When Sharpe's fever finally breaks.
986[[/folder]]
987
988[[folder:Jane Gibbons]]
989!! Jane Gibbons
990[[quoteright:193:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jane_gibbons.png]]
991 [[caption-width-right:193:]]
992->'''Played By''': Abigail Cruttenden
993-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle'' (Mentioned in Novel only), ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Revenge'', ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo''
994
995Sir Henry Simmerson's niece and Christian Gibbons' sister. Sharpe later marries her. It ends badly.
996----
997* BigBadEnsemble: With Napoleon in ''Sharpe's Waterloo.'' Napoleon is the main French threat, she's the personal threat to Sharpe.
998* DiabolusExMachina: The events of ''Sharpe's Revenge'' seem to happen as much to break Jane and Richard up as anything else. Very little in the previous stories foreshadows it (except for a con-man flirting with her in the TV only story ''Sharpe's Mission'', and she still sides with her husband in the end), and she only takes a few weeks to go from being happily in love with Sharpe and looking forward to settling down with him, to being utterly terrified of him after he is framed as a murderous thief while finding time to spend his money and cheat on him with another man.
999* DomesticAbuse: Simmerson is shown just about to whip her during ''Sharpe's Regiment''.
1000* FaceHeelTurn: Turns from an ally of Sharpe's to an enemy. She was a NiceGirl, but a mixture of fear for Sharpe, chemistry with Lord Rossendale (who's genuinely trying to help her), and awareness that Sharpe's ultimate plans for his CallToAgriculture will leave her back in the same kind of back-country life she married him to escape lead to her leaving him. She actively becomes an enemy out of desperation, when she finds out that she's [[spoiler: pregnant]].
1001* LadyMacbeth: In ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' you see a noticeable change in her outlook in regards to Sharpe. By the time of ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', she's actively urging her lover to arrange Sharpe's death under the cover of battle. This is partly to do with the fact that she's [[spoiler: pregnant]], and since divorce isn't an option, she'll be ruined if he isn't out of the way for her to remarry.
1002* LaserGuidedKarma: Sharpe publicly defames her as a whore, it's made pretty clear to her that her adultery with Rossendale has made her persona non gratis in high society (as soon as Wellington is informed of who she is, he immediately blanks her, despite his usual soft spot for women), and Rossendale's death at Waterloo leaves her an unmarried woman pregnant with an illegitimate child, not a good position for a woman to be in that time.
1003* SuddenSequelHeelSyndrome: For the most part, she and Sharpe are a happy couple before ''Sharpe's Revenge'', and even then the worse she does at first is try to pull prank on him by leaving for England early to get back at him for not keeping a promise; once there though, she quickly gets manipulated into spending his money, then falls for rumours that he is a thieving murderer and ''then'' falls into paranoia that he'll try to ''kill'' her for sleeping with another man while she thought he was a condemned criminal, and before you know it she's plotting to kill ''him'' even after he's proven his innocence.
1004* TheUnfavorite: Simmerson treats her pretty badly compared to Christian.
1005[[/folder]]
1006
1007[[folder:Lucille]]
1008!!Madame Lucille Castineau, Vicomtesse de Seleglise, Lady Lassan
1009[[quoteright:145:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lucille_dubert.png]]
1010 [[caption-width-right:145:]]
1011->'''Played By''': Cécile Paoli
1012-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Revenge'', ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', ''Sharpe's Devil'' (Novel only)
1013
1014A French widow who Sharpe meets in ''Sharpe's Revenge''. Her first husband was a Captain in Napoleon's Imperial Guard Cavalry, who died in Russia. Deceived into believing Sharpe killed her brother, she tries to kill him. Later, they become lovers and she gives birth to his children Henri-Patrick and Dominique.
1015----
1016* AdaptationNameChange: In the television movie adaptation of ''Sharpe's Revenge'', she give her name as Madame [=DuBert=] and that her husband was killed at Talavera.
1017* DeathByAdaptation: In a departure from the novels, Lucille dies offscreen before ''Sharpe's Challenge''. In Cornwell's spinoff series ''Literature/TheStarbuckChronicles'', taking place during the UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar, Henri-Patrick says she is still alive, having outlived Sharpe.
1018* DontCallMeSir: Lucille never uses her title, considering it an artifact of the pre-Revolutionary period, and has always thought of her family and herself as rural farmers. Sharpe, by contrast, often makes a point of introducing her to visitors by her title, especially if these visitors are themselves aristocrats.
1019* FlorenceNightingaleEffect: On Sharpe. He's not especially receptive at first, since she shot him to begin with, and even after they warm up to each other, both resist as they know he's married. When Harper returns with news that Jane is cheating on him, they give in.
1020* HappilyEverAfter: ''Sharpe's Devil'' is the final book, which ends with Sharpe returning to his farm in France with his wife, Lucille, and reportedly living happily with her for the rest of his days.
1021* IAmNotPretty: Lucille has never understood why her first husband, Xavier, wanted to marry such a plain-looking girl, and she feels dowdy and out-of-place at the Duchess of Richmond's ball, especially when she catches sight of Jane. Sharpe later tells her that if Jane hadn't been so beautiful, he might have noticed sooner that she's rotten to the core and saved himself a lot of trouble.
1022* NiceGirl: Generally kind, wise, and relatively mild - [[BewareTheNiceOnes though she nearly kills Sharpe when they first meet, believing he killed her brother.]]
1023[[/folder]]
1024
1025!!Antagonists - Imperial France
1026
1027[[folder: Napoleon Bonaparte]]
1028!!Napoleon I, Emperor of the French
1029->'''Played By''': Ron Cook
1030-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Honour'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', ''Sharpe's Devil'' (Novel only)
1031
1032Emperor of the French and the overarching antagonist in the series.
1033----
1034* AffablyEvil: He's very charming, and gets on very well with Sharpe and Harper in ''Sharpe's Devil'', chatting about their military days and being apparently genuinely delighted to have the stream of boring visitors present to gawk at the Emperor interrupted by two genuine badasses who he can respect. [[spoiler: Of course, he also uses Sharpe as an unwitting mule for his message planning to arrange his escape]].
1035* DemotedToExtra: As ''Sharpe's Devil'', where Sharpe meets him at St Helena, was never adapted, we only see a pair of short scenes, one consulting with Ducos, and of his return from exile. Finally, there’s a brief glimpse of him at Waterloo.
1036%%* TheEmperor: Of the French.
1037%%* TheExile: First to Elba, and then to St Helena.
1038* GreaterScopeVillain: To the entire series, and particularly ''Sharpe's Devil'', where his plots to [[spoiler: escape to South America and carve out an empire there set the entire plot in motion]].
1039* HistoricalDomainCharacter: See UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte.
1040%%* InSeriesNickname: "Boney".
1041* TheUnfought: At least not face-to-face; Sharpe only catches a brief glimpse of him at Waterloo. When they do meet in the books, in ''Sharpe's Devil'', Bonaparte is a genial host to Sharpe (and not in good enough health to give the latter a fair fight anyway).
1042[[/folder]]
1043
1044[[folder: Colonel De L'Eclin]]
1045!!Colonel Pierre De L'Eclin
1046[[quoteright:169:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pierre_de_leclin.png]]
1047 [[caption-width-right:169:]]
1048->'''Played By''': Malcolm Jamieson
1049-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles''
1050
1051A French cavalry commander who is determined to keep the Spanish people rising up against the French.
1052----
1053* BackstabBackfire: Tries to shoot Sharpe in the back, but [[spoiler:is shot by Perkins.]]
1054* BigBad: The main antagonist of ''Sharpe's Rifles''.
1055* ClickHello: Greets Sgt. Williams with a cocked gun before the Man in Black strangles Williams.
1056* ColonelBadass: De L'Eclin is a colonel and a deadly combatant with a sword.
1057%%* DuelToTheDeath: Between him and Sharpe after Sharpe and the Chosen Men have decimated his garrison.
1058* GreenAndMean: An antagonist who wears green.
1059* HeroKiller: De L'Eclin is personally responsible for the deaths of the two senior officers in the 95th, Major Dunnett and Captain Murray.
1060* OffstageVillainy: Sharpe and the Chosen Men find the aftermath of a village massacred by De L'Eclin and his men.
1061[[/folder]]
1062
1063[[folder: The Man in Black]]
1064!!Tomas Vivar
1065[[quoteright:160:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tomas_vivar.png]]
1066 [[caption-width-right:160:]]
1067->'''Played By''': Anthony Hyde
1068-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Rifles''
1069
1070A mysterious man in dark civilian clothing who is De L'Eclin's right-hand man.
1071----
1072* AristocratsAreEvil: Has a claim on the countship of Matamoros. As for the evil part, he participates in two massacres.
1073* BaldOfEvil: The hair's thinning on the top of his head and he's a bad guy.
1074%%* BeardOfEvil: A short goatee.
1075* BondOneLiner: "Vale"[[note]] Spanish for "okay"[[/note]] (after strangling Sgt. Williams).
1076* BrutalHonesty: When he tells the two men with him to kill Harper, he's upfront with them that at least one of them will die.
1077* CainAndAbel: With [[spoiler:Major Blas Vivar.]] It's hard to tell which one's Cain and which one's Abel.
1078* DarkIsEvil: Wears all black. Harper even remarks he looks like an undertaker. He also has a black horse.
1079%%* TheDragon: To Colonel De L'Eclin.
1080* EvenEvilHasStandards: He's disgusted when Harper shoots one of his men in the throat, using a ramrod as a bullet.
1081* HatDamage: Harper shoots off his hat (and is later seen wearing it) after killing his two men when they come to take the chest.
1082* LastRequest: [[spoiler:After getting stabbed by Vivar, he asks him to not have any priests at his funeral.]]
1083* OnlyKnownByHisNickname: He's credited as the Man in Black and referred to in-story as [[spoiler:the Count of Matamores, a title he shares with his brother.]]
1084* RomanticismVersusEnlightenment: He is on the Enlightenment side, with his vision of Spain a princely court with Napoleon Bonaparte as the "light of reason".
1085* VillainousLegacy: In ''Sharpe's Devil'', the plot begins because [[spoiler: Napoleon and Lord Cochrane remembered him as an ally of Napoleon's, and mixed him up with his brother]].
1086[[/folder]]
1087
1088[[folder:Ducos]]
1089!!Major Pierre Ducos
1090[[quoteright:244:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pierre_ducos.png]]
1091 [[caption-width-right:244:]]
1092->'''Played By''': Creator/FeodorAtkine
1093-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Skirmish'' (Mentioned in Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy'', ''Sharpe's Honour'', ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Revenge''
1094
1095Aptly toad like, cold blooded, misogynistic and ruthless, Ducos is a political animal, having survived several changes of government by being a lying weasel and court toady.
1096----
1097* AdaptedOut: Loup and [[spoiler:Juanita]] work for Ducos in the book version of ''Sharpe's Battle''. In the episode, the plan is all Loup's.
1098* ArchEnemy: Does a good job of picking up the slack from Hakeswill after [[spoiler:Hakeswill's execution]] in ''Sharpe's Enemy'', and is a much more powerful enemy with far greater schemes. He is the force behind several other villains (especially in the novels) and he and Sharpe clash several times throughout the Peninsular War.
1099%%* AssholeVictim: Shot in the back by Sharpe at the end of ''Sharpe's Revenge.''
1100%%* BaldOfEvil: Just like Hakeswill.
1101%%* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Honour'' and ''Sharpe's Revenge.''
1102* BigBadEnsemble: In ''Sharpe's Enemy'', he's the most pressing French antagonist, but Hakeswill and Pot-au-Feu are the main enemies to contend with during most of the episode.
1103* BondVillainStupidity: Tells his whole plan to Sharpe while interrogating him in ''Sharpe's Honour.''
1104* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: In the novel ''Sharpe's Revenge'', he's executed via firing squad offscreen. In the film, Sharpe shoots him as he tries to escape.
1105* DirtyCoward: Never confronts Sharpe if a) he doesn't have a goon squad to back him up or b) Sharpe isn't emotionally compromised. On the other hand, given that he's a NonActionGuy and Sharpe is a OneManArmy, this is perhaps not so much cowardice as not being actively suicidal.
1106* DisproportionateRetribution: His plan in ''Sharpe's Honour'' involves framing Sharpe for murder and getting him hanged, just because Sharpe broke his glasses. Which he did because Ducos insulted [[spoiler:Teresa, Sharpe's wife, who had since been murdered.]]
1107* EvilCounterpart: To Wellington's various spymasters, Major Nairn in particular. Nairn is particularly distressed to hear that Ducos is operating in an episode.
1108* {{Fingore}}: On the receiving end in ''Sharpe's Revenge'': having given Ducos a round beating, Sharpe tells Ducos to pick up his dropped glasses. [[SchmuckBait Once Ducos has them in his hand]], Sharpe stamps on it, and Ducos is left screaming in pain as his palm is cut to ribbons by the broken lenses.
1109* FourEyesZeroSoul: Ducos wears glasses and is a nasty person.
1110* FrameUp: His main strategy against Sharpe, particularly in ''Sharpe's Honour'' and ''Sharpe's Revenge.''
1111* FrenchJerk: The prime example in the series, who looks down on everyone except whoever he's trying to impress. This is notable since most French officers Sharpe meets are at least AffablyEvil and sometimes enter into an EnemyMine situation if they have a common foe like Hakeswill or El Casco. Ducos is just a {{Jerkass}}.
1112* TheFriendNobodyLikes: To the French commanders in ''Sharpe's Enemy,'' and again in ''Sharpe's Siege''.
1113* GreenAndMean: An antagonist and usually seen wearing dark green clothes.
1114* InTheBack: Shot in the back by French soldiers for his failure in ''Sharpe's Honour'' (though he survives). [[spoiler:Sharpe snipes him in the back in ''Sharpe's Revenge'' and this time it finally sticks.]]
1115* LackOfEmpathy: When Sharpe asks him what Dubreton, whose wife is held captive, should do, Ducos replies "Find another" and [[AndYourLittleDogToo threatens to force Sharpe to do the same if Teresa is caught.]]
1116%%* TheManBehindTheMan: In ''Sharpe's Siege.''
1117* NeverMyFault:
1118** Ducos is angry at Sharpe for breaking his glasses, but doesn't recognize the fact that he caused the incident because he insulted [[spoiler:Teresa.]]
1119** His YouHaveFailedMe moment with Father Hacha also counts. Sharpe has just escaped him and Ducos is looking for someone to blame for not telling him that Sharpe was alive.
1120* NeverSpeakIllOfTheDead: [[spoiler:Very, ''very'' averted when he says that he ''would'' give Sharpe his regrets for the death of his wife, but "not if his wife was the Spanish whore who waged war on France."]]
1121* NiceJobFixingItVillain: In ''Sharpe's Siege'', [[spoiler: Ducos ordering General Calvet to march his troops to assault the fortress for the sake of his grudge with Sharpe leaves a massive gap in Napoleon's flank that Wellington immediately exploits. Calvet is both horrified and enraged to the point of nearly throttling Ducos when a courier from his superiors informs him what happened]].
1122* TheSociopath: Unempathic, ConsummateLiar, ManipulativeBastard, Narcissistic, and [[NeverMyFault doesn't take responsibility for his actions.]]
1123%%* TheSpymaster: To Napoleon.
1124* StrawMisogynist: Seems to regard all women as whores, judging by the way he speaks of and acts toward them, such as Colonel Dubreton's wife, Teresa, and La Marquesa.
1125* WhatADrag: [[spoiler:Gets dragged by his horse after Sharpe shoots him in ''Sharpe's Revenge'']].
1126* [[WhyDontYouJustShootHim Why Don't You Just Stab Him?]]: In ''Sharpe's Revenge'', Ducos has Sharpe at his mercy, but instead of just finishing Sharpe off with a single thrust, he pulls his sword back for a grand killing stroke, allowing Sharpe to knock Ducos off his feet and follow up with a GroinAttack to put Ducos out of action.
1127[[/folder]]
1128
1129[[folder:Father Hacha]]
1130!!Father Tomas Hacha
1131[[quoteright:201:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hacha.png]]
1132 [[caption-width-right:201:]]
1133->'''Played By''': Nikolas Grace
1134-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Honour''
1135
1136A Spanish SinisterMinister working for Major Pierre Ducos.
1137----
1138%%* BeardOfEvil: A natty little soul patch.
1139%%* CoDragons: With his brother El Matarife to Ducos.
1140* NeverBareheaded: Never seen without his hat.
1141* RedAndBlackAndEvilAllOver: He wears black preacher's robes with a large red cross and he's a SinisterMinister.
1142%%* SiblingsInCrime: With his brother.
1143* SinisterMinister: He seeks to unite the clergy and aristocracy against Great Britain. He also wants to re-establish the Spanish Inquisiton.
1144* YouHaveFailedMe: [[spoiler:Ducos kills him after Sharpe escapes from Ducos.]]
1145[[/folder]]
1146
1147[[folder:El Matarife]]
1148!!El Matarife
1149[[quoteright:206:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/el_matarife.png]]
1150 [[caption-width-right:206:]]
1151->'''Played By''': Matthew Scurfield
1152-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Honour''
1153
1154A Spanish partisan leader working for Ducos.
1155----
1156* BackstabBackfire: Tries to kill Sharpe after losing the final duel, [[spoiler:but a Spanish officer kills him.]]
1157%%* BadassCape: A hallmark of his group of partisans.
1158* BaldOfEvil: El Matarife is clearly balding and an active participant in Ducos' plans.
1159* BeardOfEvil: Like his brother, though El Matarife's beard covers more of his chin.
1160* ChainPain: Matarife's method of dueling involves both combatants on either end of a chain, slashing at each other with long knives, with the chain keeping them together.
1161%%* CoDragons: With his brother Father Hacha to Ducos.
1162* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: His death is altered, being shot by Major Mendoza as he prepares to stab Sharpe in the back rather than having his throat slit by Sharpe.
1163%%* DuelToTheDeath: With Sharpe at the end of ''Sharpe's Honour.''
1164* DragonTheirFeet: He's the last remaining threat after [[spoiler:Ducos shoots Father Hacha]] and Ducos is [[spoiler:shot by French soldiers for his failure to stop Sharpe at the battle of Vitoria.]]
1165%%* FinalBoss: Of ''Sharpe's Honour.''
1166* TheHeavy: Of ''Sharpe's Honour'', as his brother is behind the scenes with the Spanish upper classes and Ducos awaits results.
1167* KarmicDeath: [[spoiler:After being forced to confess his murder of La Marquesa's husband, he tries to stab Sharpe, only to be shot by the officer he had tricked by framing Sharpe.]]
1168* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Only ever known by the term "El Matarife."
1169* RebelLeader: TheLeader of a partisan group working for Ducos.
1170%%* SiblingsInCrime: With Father Hacha.
1171%%* SlashedThroat: What he does to La Marquesa's husband.
1172[[/folder]]
1173
1174[[folder:Loup]]
1175!!Brigadier General Guy Loup
1176[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/general_loup.png]]
1177 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
1178->'''Played By''': Oliver Cotton
1179-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle''
1180
1181A French general who vows revenge on Sharpe.
1182----
1183* AscendedExtra: While he's not exactly an ''extra'' in the novel version of ''Sharpe's Battle'', he does serve a much more minor role. Since Pierre Ducos isn't behind events in the television adaptation, Loup is promoted to the BigBad and masterminds the entire operation.
1184* AnimalMotifs: Wolves. His men wear grey uniforms, have wolf-tail sashes and capes and leave wolf heads at massacres. Plus the name Loup, which is French for wolf.
1185* BestServedCold: Wants revenge on Sharpe after Sharpe ordered the execution of two of his men and Loup had sworn to his men that he would protect them.
1186%%* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Battle.''
1187* EyeScream: His left eye appears to be dead.
1188* AFatherToHisMen: He promised to protect his men and is ''very'' angry when Sharpe orders the execution of two of them.
1189* HeroKiller: He is the first antagonist whose schemes lead to the death of one of the Chosen Men: [[spoiler:Perkins. He also gunned down Harper (this turns out to be FakingTheDead) and stabs Kiely to death.]]
1190* HeWhoFightsMonsters: Invoked.
1191-->"The chief weapon of the guerilla, Major, is horror. Horror! So, I make sure that I am more horrible than my enemy."
1192* MoralMyopia: Cares greatly about the well-being of his men and vows to avenge their deaths, yet at the same time orders them to commit massacres and acts of terror. Doubly so since the only reason his men were executed in the first place was as punishment for atrocities he himself had ordered. Granted, Sharpe's out of hand execution ''was'' technically a war crime, but no one was shedding too many tears bar Loup himself.
1193* PragmaticVillainy: An extremely dark example. To Loup, the deliberate brutality and horror he commits and allows his men to commit are not done for his enjoyment, but because they are the best way of deterring guerilla activity.
1194* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: Invoked. Part of what makes Loup so terrible is that he ''doesn't'' believe this; his men are ''encouraged'' to rape Spanish civilians, as a terror tactic and a "morale building" exercise:
1195-->''Release soldiers to rape and they will forget that they are hungry and their pay is three months in arrears. Rape is a weapon like any other, Major.
1196* SavageWolves: Purposely uses the image of his namesake as part of his mens uniforms as he has them commit brutal acts of terror to both demoralize Spanish resistance, and sate them with bloodlust and rape.
1197[[/folder]]
1198
1199[[folder:Juanita]]
1200!!Dona Juanita de Elia
1201[[quoteright:171:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/juanita.png]]
1202 [[caption-width-right:171:]]
1203->'''Played By''': Siri Neal
1204-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle''
1205
1206A Spanish partisan and French agent who is the mistress of Lord Kiely.
1207----
1208* AppleOfDiscord: [[spoiler:She's distributing fake newspapers among the Irish Company to encourage deserters and weaken the Anglo-Spanish alliance.]]
1209* CompressedHair: Her hair is typically up in curls, similar to [[ComicStrip/LittleOrphanAnnie Annie]], but is shown to be more than waist-length during the night.
1210%%* DarkMistress: To Lord Kiely.
1211* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: [[spoiler:In the book, Juanita is shot by Harper. In the TV adaptation, she is cut open by Kiely.]]
1212%%* TheDragon: To Loup.
1213* EvilCounterpart: To Teresa, as a female RebelLeader who is in a relationship with a British officer, [[spoiler:but is helping the French.]]
1214%%* FauxAffablyEvil: [[spoiler:When she informs Kiely of his wife's capture and forces him to comply with her and Loup.]]
1215* GunsAkimbo: Juanita carries two pistols, as shown when [[spoiler:Sharpe and Kiely duel near the end of the adaptation. She wounds Sharpe with one and is just about to draw the second when Kiely kills her.]]
1216* GuttedLikeAFish: [[spoiler: Dies this way when Kiely, [[TheDogBitesBack pushed too far by her blackmail and bullying]], slices her stomach open with his sabre]].
1217* RebelLeader: The leader of another group of partisans at the Franco-Spanish border.
1218* SheKnowsTooMuch: [[spoiler:Murders Miranda when she spies on Juanita's meeting with Loup.]]
1219[[/folder]]
1220
1221[[folder:O'Rourke]]
1222!!Guardsman O'Rourke
1223[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/orourke.png]]
1224 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
1225->'''Played By''': Liam Carney
1226-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Battle''
1227
1228A member of the Spanish Royal Irish Company, the ''Real Compania Irlandesa'', His Most Catholic Majesty, Ferdinand, the King of Spain's royal guard.
1229----
1230* AdaptationalVillainy: Although there is a similarly named member of the ''Compania Irlandesa'' in the novel, Rourke was not a traitor, nor a even a prominent character. There were, in fact, no traitors within the ranks of the ''Compania'', and they fought as reinforcements for the Highlanders and Connaught Rangers at the battle of Fuentes de Onoro. The traitor in the novel was not one of the soldiers at all, [[spoiler:nor was Perkins killed.]]
1231* BondOneLiner: "Murdering English bastard." [[spoiler:After shooting Sharpe's subordinate Jenkins.]]
1232* CavalryBetrayal: [[spoiler:Subverted. He and his men are just pretending to be TheCavalry. The ''real'' cavalry shows up less than five minutes later.]]
1233* ChekhovsSkill: The fact that he doesn't keep a gun in half-decent order winds up biting him in the ass when he comes face to face with Harper during the climax.
1234-->'''Harper''': [[PreMortemOneLiner A good soldier always looks after his weapon, boy.]]
1235* GangstaStyle: Holds his pistol sideways when he murders [[spoiler:Jenkins.]]
1236* HeroKiller: [[spoiler:He's the one who murders Jenkins and Perkins.]]
1237* HoistByHisOwnPetard: [[spoiler:Stabbed by Harper with the bayonet he used to murder Perkins.]]
1238* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:Stabbed repeatedly with a bayonet by Harper.]]
1239* MadeOfIron: Shrugs off getting shot in the leg with a heavy bullet without even a limp.
1240* NothingPersonal: "Sgt. Harper. I've no quarrel with a fellow Irishman." [[spoiler:Unfortunately, Harper ''does.'']]
1241%%* OhCrap: When his gun jams.
1242* TheQuisling: [[spoiler:The leader of a group of Royal Irish Company soldiers who are working for Loup.]]
1243* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: [[spoiler:Threatens to rape Lady Kiely to the extent that she'll wish she was dead.]]
1244* UngratefulBastard: [[spoiler:Murders Jenkins, who saved his life during a battle.]]
1245* VerbThis: Before shooting [[spoiler:Jenkins]], he says "Have that."
1246* WalkingSpoiler: His loyalties spoil the last 30 minutes of ''Sharpe's Battle''.
1247[[/folder]]
1248
1249[[folder:Leroux]]
1250!!Colonel Philippe Leroux
1251[[quoteright:205:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/philippe_leroux.png]]
1252 [[caption-width-right:205:]]
1253->'''Played By''': Patrick Fierry
1254-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Sword''
1255
1256A colonel in the Imperial Guard, sent to kill Wellington's spymaster, El Mirador.
1257----
1258* BadBoss: Shoots his captain to impersonate him.
1259%%* BigBad: In ''Sharpe's Sword''.
1260* ColdBloodedTorture: Inflicts this on the priest and the nuns in the opening five minutes, which traumatises the Lass into silence for most of the episode. [[spoiler:He also tortured Spears into betraying Britain.]]
1261* CoolSword: Harper suggests that Sharpe's wish to kill Leroux stems from desire for the latter's sword. It was able to break Sharpe's own CoolSword.
1262* DeadPersonImpersonation: Pretends to be his captain, allowing himself to be captured.
1263* DuelToTheDeath: Between him and Sharpe after Sharpe, the Chosen Men and the South Essex have stormed the fort at Villafranca.
1264* FauxAffablyEvil: Is polite to the English officers during his time as a captive. Sharpe sees right through it.
1265* HeroKiller: Gets the closest to killing Sharpe out of any villain, as well as demoralizing him by breaking his sword.
1266* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: Speared through the chest during his and Sharpe's final duel.
1267* ManipulativeBastard: Is able to play Colonel Berkeley like a fiddle.
1268* PraetorianGuard: Serves in Napoleon's Imperial Guard.
1269* WouldHurtAChild: Kills Ensign [=McDonald=].
1270[[/folder]]
1271
1272[[folder:Calvet]]
1273!!General Jean-Baptiste Calvet
1274[[quoteright:216:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/general_calvert.png]]
1275 [[caption-width-right:216:''"In Russia I ate my own corporal."'']]
1276->'''Played By''': Olivier Pierre (Sharpe's Siege, Sharpe's Mission), John Benfield (Sharpe's Revenge)
1277-->'''Appeared In''': ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Revenge''
1278
1279A French general and a veteran from Napoleon's Russia campaign. His force is the last opposition Wellington has in Spain.
1280----
1281* AdaptationalNameChange: The TV Series gives him the name Maurice.
1282* AffablyEvil: In a rough sort of way when he and Sharpe team up in ''Sharpe's Revenge'', recognising and respecting Sharpe's ability. While he does hold a bit of a grudge about the quicklime incident, he refers to it when basically demanding Sharpe come up with another evil idea because he knows he's capable of it, and Sharpe can't help liking it. Prior to the final battle of that book, he refers to Sharpe as he would a French soldier, and Sharpe returns it with a 'Mon General', getting a face splitting grin.
1283* BashBrothers: He and his orderly, Gaston, are rarely seen apart. He only calls off the attack in ''Sharpe's Siege'' when he sees his friend wounded.
1284%%* BigBad: In ''Sharpe's Mission''.
1285* BigEater: It is easier to count the number of scenes where he is ''not'' eating something. Justified, considering the starvation faced in the Moscow Retreat.
1286* EnemyMine: Works alongside Sharpe to recover the French Imperial Treasure in ''Sharpe's Revenge''. Given how similar they are, they end up getting along famously.
1287* FourStarBadass: The two medals displayed on his uniform are the Légion d'Honneur (Legion of Honor) (Red Ribbon) one of the highest commendations anyone civilian or military could achieve, and the Ordre de la Couronne de Fer (Order of the Iron Crown) (Yellow & Green Ribbon), created by Napoleon after his Italian campaign.
1288* {{Gasshole}}: Burps loudly after executing Colonel Cresson.
1289* TheHeavy: In ''Sharpe's Siege''; it is his force that is sent to take Maquerre's castle and kill Sharpe.
1290* ImAHumanitarian: Killed and ate his corporal during the Moscow Retreat.
1291* MirrorCharacter: To Sharpe; both of them are high-ranking officers that were promoted on merit, both of them saw action before Spain (Sharpe in India and Calvet in Italy and Russia) and both of them hold a dim view of their respective aristocracy. Calvet even has his own counterpart to Harper - Gaston.
1292* TheOtherDarrin: Calvet's original actor, Olivier Pierre, who did speak English, was replaced by English actor John Benfield for his final appearance because Pierre's accent was considered too thick for the amount of English dialogue required in his interactions with Sharpe.
1293* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Soup, or at least enough so that he will eat it with every meal. Including breakfast. When Ducos condescendingly questions this, Calvet shoots him a cold look and tells him, "I eat soup with every meal, because I remember when I had no soup."
1294%%* VitriolicBestBuds: With Sharpe in ''Sharpe's Revenge''.
1295* YouHaveFailedMe: To Ducos in ''Sharpe's Siege'', whom he grabs by the lapels and yells in his face, and to Colonel Cresson in ''Sharpe's Mission'', who he shoots.
1296[[/folder]]
1297
1298[[folder:Gaston]]
1299!!Corporal Gaston
1300[[quoteright:190:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/corporal_gaston.png]]
1301 [[caption-width-right:190:]]
1302->'''Played By''': Ercument Balakoglu
1303-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Siege'', ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Revenge''
1304
1305A French Corporal and orderly to General Calvet, serving him both in Russia and Spain.
1306----
1307* TheGadfly: Pretends to consume a poisoned mushroom in one scene.
1308* OlderSidekick: Appears to be older than Calvet.
1309* OldSoldier: His hair and moustache are grey and he still assaults the castle in ''Sharpe's Siege''.
1310%%* TeamChef: One of his duties for Calvet.
1311[[/folder]]
1312
1313[[folder:Maquerre]]
1314!!Comte Aristide de Maquerre
1315[[quoteright:218:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/comte_de_maquerre.png]]
1316 [[caption-width-right:218:]]
1317->'''Played By''': Christian Brendel
1318-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Siege''
1319
1320A French aristocrat and double agent who has worked undercover as a monarchist.
1321----
1322* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: He visits his sick mother and is broken when his sister, Catherine, refuses to accompany him away from their castle.
1323* FalseFriend: He lures the British into Bordeaux, telling them that the region are ready to rise in support of the Bourbons.
1324* InSeriesNickname: Major Hogan refers to him as ''Maquereau'', a French word for mackerel, but also slang for a pimp.
1325* InTheBack: In the series, he gets shot in the back by Robinson and Hagman.
1326* ManipulativeBastard: He convinces Colonel Bampfylde to leave the castle and the wounded men of the Prince of Wales Volunteers behind, along with ruining the gunpowder.
1327* NamedByTheAdaptation: The series gives him his first name.
1328[[/folder]]
1329
1330[[folder:Cresson]]
1331!!Colonel Cresson
1332[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cresson.png]]
1333 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
1334->'''Played By''': Peter Le Campion
1335-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only)
1336
1337A French Colonel with orders directly from Emperor Bonaparte to capture Major General Ross and a plan to do just that.
1338----
1339%%* BigBadDuumvirate: With Calvet in ''Sharpe's Mission''.
1340* CanonForeigner: Cresson is a TV-only character.
1341* TheChessmaster: Concocts a plan to capture Ross by luring him to a French powder magazine.
1342%%* TheManBehindTheMan: To [[spoiler:Colonel Brand.]]
1343* TheUriahGambit: [[spoiler:Following the failed plan, Calvet offers him some mushrooms, some of which are poisoned. The one he eats is not. He is still shot.]]
1344* WeHaveReserves: His plan hinges on using French deserters to lure Ross into the trap. He divides these between the Sheep - soldiers who turn tail and flee, and Goats - soldiers more willing to fight.
1345[[/folder]]
1346
1347!!Antagonists - British
1348
1349[[folder:Simmerson]]
1350!!Sir Henry Simmerson
1351[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sir_henry_simmerson.png]]
1352 [[caption-width-right:250:]]
1353->'''Played By''': Michael Cochrane
1354-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle'', ''Sharpe's Company'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Sword'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Challenge'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Peril'' (TV only)
1355
1356With more money than sense or taste and completely lacking in humanity, honour and decency, Sir Henry is the epitome of all that is bad about the British upper classes. He has neither morals nor backbone, his chief weapons are blackmail and backstabbing.
1357----
1358* ArchEnemy: Of Sharpe's many enemies, he appears the most, looking to cause Sharpe trouble at every turn.
1359* AssholeVictim: Downplayed, since he doesn't die, but whatever misfortunes befall him (such as a painful CurbStompBattle in ''Sharpe's Sword'') are well deserved.
1360* ATasteOfTheLash: His solution for discipline? Whip them.
1361%%* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Eagle'', since there is no visible French antagonist.
1362* BigBadWannabe: He's nowhere near as competent or clever as he likes to think he is, nor as he would need to be to get any of the glory or success he desires. Even when he is the main antagonist, he delegates the EvilPlan to his not-much-better nephew who in turn delegates it to the actually competent Berry (who is only truly effective in the show, not the novel).
1363* BreakoutVillain: Simmerson only appears in two novels (''Sharpe's Eagle'' and ''Sharpe's Regiment''), but his popularity with the audience has him show up three more times in the series, including one novel where he did not originally appear (''Sharpe's Sword'') and the two later miniseries (''Sharpe's Challenge'' and ''Sharpe's Peril'').
1364* CurbStompBattle: Ends up on the receiving end of a very painful one from [[BadassPreacher Father Curtis]] in ''Sharpe's Sword.''
1365* DirtyCoward: He'll run at the first sign of enemy troops.
1366* DirtyOldMan: Tries to force himself on "The Lass" in the TV version of ''Sharpe's Sword.''
1367* EvilCannotComprehendGood: He's baffled when Father Curtis draws his sword against him when Simmerson tries to rape "The Lass".
1368-->'''Simmerson''': What's it to you, priest? You hate the British.
1369-->'''Father Curtis''': I'm Irish. John Bull's a bad neighbor, but Bonaparte's a bully, and so are you. [Cue Father Curtis curb-stomping Simmerson]
1370* EvilUncle: For his niece Jane, whom he beats.
1371* ExposedToTheElements: In ''Sharpe's Peril'', Simmerson is found tied up naked in a fort, with his massacred subordinates scattered around him.
1372* GlorySeeker: He thought a little military success would help him in the political field.
1373%%* HeelFaceTurn: [[spoiler:During ''Sharpe's Peril.'']]
1374* IneffectualSympatheticVillain: He's a serial loser who owes his command entirely to belonging to the upper-class, and is otherwise completely incompetent and far more of a threat to himself and his own side than to the enemy. He doesn't become particularly sympathetic until "Sharpe's Peril" though, and that's only because he finds himself on the wrong end of EvilerThanThou to the cruel and dangerous villains of that story. In the books, he never achieves that at all.
1375* {{Jerkass}}: Most of his scenes involve him being nothing but an asshole.
1376* KarmaHoudini: Played straight in the novels, while his plans may be foiled, he is never punished, always squirming out of justice's reach beneath a whitewash. Averted in the television series, when...
1377* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: In "Sharpe's Peril", his garrison is slaughtered and he is tortured and left for dead by being stripped naked, stretched out and left to die in the sun. Even Sharpe takes pity on him after that.
1378%%* TheManBehindTheMan: In ''Sharpe's Regiment.''
1379* TheNeidermeyer: The chief example in the series. Sir Henry is more concerned with superficial things like proper marching and making sure his men stand ramrod straight, typically with collars that scar the men's necks. He's absolutely useless in combat and spends every appearance as the ButtMonkey of every character he goes against.
1380* NeverMyFault: Will typically shift blame from himself to the more professional officers, like Sharpe and Lennox.
1381* OnceDoneNeverForgotten: He's often reminded of his losing the King's Colours.
1382* ScreamsLikeALittleGirl: After he gets stabbed in the arm in the TV version of ''Sharpe's Sword.''
1383* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: He'll usually cower behind a relative at Horse Guards if things don't go his way.
1384* SmugSnake: Has a perpetual air of snobbery which his actions do nothing to justify.
1385* UpperClassTwit: A lower-end aristocrat with only money to help him and no common sense.
1386* VerbalTic: Has the habit of grumbling/burping when displeased and speechless.
1387* VillainousValor: In the TV series only, in ''Sharpe's Sword''. Despite being a DirtyCoward on a regular basis, he actually does try to hold his own against Father Curtis, dueling him until he can’t.
1388* WhiteHairBlackHeart: His hair is white and he is a loathsome human being.
1389* WouldHitAGirl: Oh boy would he. Jane Gibbons reveals that Simmerson regularly punishes her for acts of defiance. He also lets Girdwood, the man he wants her to marry, watch stating "a man should know how to treat his wife".
1390[[/folder]]
1391
1392[[folder:Berry]]
1393!!Lieutenant John Berry
1394[[quoteright:202:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/john_berry.png]]
1395 [[caption-width-right:202:]]
1396->'''Played By''': Creator/DanielCraig
1397-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle''
1398
1399The best friend of Simmerson's nephew Lieutenant Christian Gibbons.
1400----
1401* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the book, Berry was a FatBastard and FatIdiot. Here, he's thinner and more handsome, [[AdaptationalIntelligence as well as smarter]].
1402* AdaptationalBadass: He's much more dangerous here than in the novel, even eclipsing Gibbons as the secondary antagonist.
1403* AssholeVictim: [[spoiler:Killed by Harper while torturing Sharpe in the tv show. In the book, Sharpe straight up murders him.]]
1404* BadassBoast: "Nobody can be me with a pistol at 50 paces."
1405* ColdBloodedTorture: Inflicts this on Sharpe by kicking his leg wound until he begs for death.
1406* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: His death is an amalgamation of the deaths of Gibbons and Berry from the book: The novel has Sharpe luring Berry off to a secluded spot under the cover of a French attack and stabbing him through the throat with his sword.
1407* TheDragon: To Simmerson, bordering on DragonInChief in the second half of the episode after the colours are lost, since Berry makes the plans to discredit and kill Sharpe.
1408* DragonWithAnAgenda: In the TV series, he clearly hates Sharpe as much as Simmerson does if not even more, as Sharpe had embarrassed him in their earlier fight. He might have tried to do something about Sharpe even if no order was given, and he volunteers himself over Gibbons who doesn't seem to care.
1409%%* EvilSoundsDeep: Courtesy of Creator/DanielCraig.
1410* FoodSlap: Sharpe tosses wine into his face after Berry and Gibbons rape Josefina.
1411* GoodOldFisticuffs: With Sharpe when Berry tries to rape Josefina, with Berry laying more punches on Sharpe than the opposite.
1412* TheHeavy: In the TV series, he's technically working for Simmerson and Gibbons but is clearly the smartest of the three and seems to easily manipulate the other two (particularly Gibbons), and he's the one who seems to hate Sharpe the most and who comes up with and executes the EvilPlan to discredit or kill him.
1413* HypercompetentSidekick: To Gibbons. Gibbons is on higher social standing, being the nephew of an aristocrat, while Berry is his friend (and Berry remarks that he's not "top drawer"), but Berry is smarter and tougher.
1414%%* IcyBlueEyes: When you have Creator/DanielCraig playing someone, what do you expect?
1415%%* ImprobableAimingSkills: Apparently has these, if you go by his BadassBoast.
1416* InTheBack: [[spoiler:Stabbed in the back by Harper.]]
1417* KickTheDog: Forces a soldier to drill, a soldier that received 75 lashes that morning.
1418* NoFullNameGiven: Only known as Berry.
1419* NoSell: Sharpe tries to kick Berry in the groin during their fistfight. Berry only chuckles.
1420* RedOniBlueOni: Berry is the blue to Gibbons' red, patient, soft-spoken and clear-headed.
1421* SoftSpokenSadist: Berry rarely raises his voice above a whisper.
1422* SpikingTheCamera: Berry spends most of his first scene looking right at the camera when he speaks.
1423* ATasteOfTheLash: Berry is eager to use a riding crop on Josefina.
1424-->'''Berry''': The Countess has been very naughty, making eyes at Sharpe, making a fool of Sir Henry and calling herself a countess. Very naughty indeed. Naughty girls get spanked and put to bed.
1425* VictoriasSecretCompartment: Bribes one of Josefina's maids by dropping a coin down her dress.
1426* XanatosGambit: His plan to discredit Sharpe is to rape Josefina; Sharpe would call him and Gibbons out; if Berry wins, Simmerson is down an enemy and if Sharpe wins, his reputation will be destroyed.
1427[[/folder]]
1428
1429[[folder:Gibbons]]
1430!! Lieutenant Christian Gibbons
1431[[quoteright:136:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/christian_gibbons.png]]
1432 [[caption-width-right:136:]]
1433->'''Played By''': Neil Dudgeon
1434-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Eagle''
1435
1436The nephew of Sir Henry Simmerson and brother of Jane Gibbons.
1437----
1438%%* AbhorrentAdmirer: Towards Josefina.
1439* AdaptationalWimp: Much of the traits that Gibbons had in the novel were given to Berry.
1440* ButtMonkey: Can never win a card game with Berry.
1441%%* DirtyCoward: Just as much as his uncle.
1442* TheDitz: He's a bit of a clod.
1443* FoodSlap: Sharpe tosses wine in his face to challenge him to a duel after he and Berry rape Josefina.
1444* IneffectualSympatheticVillain: In the TV series only. He's mostly all bark and no bite, and would much prefer enjoying himself and having the company of ladies to much else. He wants to win glory in battle but clearly has no idea what war is actually ''like''. The worst thing he does is attempt to rape Josefina with Berry, but even that was only because Berry pushed and manipulated him into doing it and not something he ever contemplated on his own, and Berry is shown manipulating and exploiting him throughout the episode.
1445* KarmaHoudini: Unlike the novel's version he escapes any punishment from his actions towards Sharpe and Josefina.
1446* MuggingTheMonster: Twice.
1447** Tries to whip Sharpe when they pass each other in the street. Sharpe grabs the arm holding the whip and pulls him out of the saddle.
1448** Messing with a partisan disguised as an apple farmer gets him threatened with a knife and a MexicanStandoff.
1449* {{Nepotism}}: As Sir Henry's nephew, he receives a commission. Gibbons does nothing to earn it, only trying to woo Josefina and standing around.
1450* OhCrap: When he hears who he tried to hit and the man's reputation: it was Sharpe.
1451* RedOniBlueOni: The red to Berry's blue as Gibbons is impulsive, hot-headed and romantic.
1452* SparedByTheAdaptation: Gibbons is killed by Harper in the novel. Here, he flees back to England with his uncle.
1453* VillainousCrush: He has one for the Countess Josefina. She falls for Sharpe instead, then Leroy.
1454* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Disappears after ''Sharpe's Eagle''. His sister Jane never mentions him in subsequent episodes (it is possible they are actually cousins, but it is notable regardless).
1455[[/folder]]
1456
1457[[folder:Hakeswill]]
1458!!Obadiah Hakeswill
1459[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/obadiah_hakeswill.jpg]]
1460 [[caption-width-right:250:''"You can't kill me."'']]
1461->'''Played By''': Creator/PetePostlethwaite
1462-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Tiger'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Triumph'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Fortress'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Company'', ''Sharpe's Enemy''
1463
1464Hakeswill is Sharpe's nightmarish nemesis, haunting our lad from India until he turns up again in Spain. It was Hakeswill who got Sharpe flogged in India. Hakeswill's main goal in life seems to be to cause Sharpe as much misery and grief as possible.
1465----
1466* AdaptationalVillainy: Not that he's anything close to sympathetic in the novels, but the TV series makes him, if possible, even worse. For one, instead of laying off Lady Farthingdale because she came to the village to pray for her mother, Hakeswill tries to rape her and is only stopped by Pot-at-Feu telling him that rape will damage the ransom value.
1467* AnythingButThat: When caught by Colonel Dubreton in ''Sharpe's Enemy'', Hakeswill begs to not be handed over to Sharpe. Dubreton, who caught Hakeswill after he murdered [[spoiler:Teresa]] and tried to rape Lady Farthingdale, not to mention the fact that Dubreton's wife had been captured by the renegades, hands him over to Sharpe.
1468* ArchEnemy: To Sharpe. For one thing, Hakeswill is the reason why Sharpe has the scars on his back.
1469* AssholeVictim: At the end of ''Sharpe's Enemy'', where he is shot by a firing squad.
1470* BadBoss: On a normal day, Hakeswill's an abusive bully to the men in his charge. Other days, he'll actively murder them [[DirtyCoward to use as cover]] during battle.
1471* BaldOfEvil: Bald and a murderous, rape-happy psychopath.
1472* {{BFG}}: Gets a turn with Harper's Nock Gun. It goes badly.
1473* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Company''. In ''Sharpe's Enemy'', he's in a BigBadDuumvirate with Pot-au-Feu and they're in a BigBadEnsemble with Major Ducos, who seeks to invade Portugal using Adratos, the fortress the renegades are holed up in, as a funneling point.
1474* CharacterTics: Has an uncontrollable amount of facial tics due to his failed hanging years ago.
1475* ChekhovsGun: Hakeswill talks to his shako as if it's his mother. [[spoiler:It's also a good place to hide a small portrait.]]
1476%%* ClassicVillain: Of the {{Greed}} and {{Lust}} types.
1477* CompanionCube: Speaks to his hat as if it's his mother when he gets hold of a picture of Windham's wife - who, in his warped mind, bears a resemblance to his mother.
1478* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: In the novel, he faces the firing squad and Sharpe personally administers the ''coup de grace''. The film leaves the latter part out.
1479* DirtyCoward: He's shown hiding under bodies in ''Sharpe's Company''.
1480%%* DisappearedDad: To [[spoiler:Barabbas, as revealed in ''Sharpe's Peril'']].
1481* DrillSergeantNasty: Outwardly he behaves this way towards the common men in order to stay in the officers' good books; privately, he likes to be much ''much'' worse.
1482%%* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: More of an insane fixation, really.
1483* EvilBrit: Downplayed since most of the cast is British, but Hakeswill is the most evil one in the series, highlighted by combining a Cockney accent with a raspy voice to show his thuggish nature.
1484%%* FatBastard: In the books. The series makes him LeanAndMean.
1485* FromNobodyToNightmare: In his previous appearances, Hakeswill has been an internal irritant to Sharpe. In ''Enemy'', his regiment of deserters attracts the attention of Wellington, who considers them such a big threat that they must be destroyed as soon as possible.
1486* ForTheEvulz: Hakeswill's most regular hobby is to bully and abuse every enlisted man in his regiment that he can; his second most regular hobby is to brutally rape any woman he crosses paths with. He does both for no other reason than that it brings him immense pleasure.
1487* FrameUp: Frames Harper for stealing an aristocrat's wife's portrait and got him flogged in ''Sharpe's Company.'' Sharpe also mentions that Hakeswill framed him for the crime that got him flogged.
1488* TheFriendNobodyLikes: Even after he has joined the army of deserters, in the TV series, his French co-leader Pot-au-Feu never really warms up to him and merely sees him as a useful brute. In the books, the relationship seems to be a bit warmer, though the dynamic is much the same.
1489* GoodScarsEvilScars: Hakeswill has a prominent scar around his neck as a result of a failed hanging when he was 12 (in the books, [[TeensAreMonsters he raped a vicar's daughter]]).
1490* HeroKiller: [[spoiler:He murders Teresa when she tries to stop him from raping Lady Farthingdale.]]
1491* HoistByHisOwnPetard: [[spoiler:His appetites are his undoing in both episodes of the tv series he appears in: if he hadn't gone after Teresa the second time in ''Sharpe's Company'', he'd never have been caught out and forced to desert the army; in ''Sharpe's Enemy'', if he hadn't kidnapped Lady Farthingdale ''again'' in order to rape her, Teresa and Dubreton likely wouldn't have caught up with him.]]
1492* ItIsDehumanizing: His crimes are so loathsome that Sharpe doesn't consider him human. When Hakeswill is caught by Dubreton at the end of ''Sharpe's Enemy'':
1493-->'''Sharpe''': A liar. A thief. A rapist. A murderer. That's not a man. Take it away.
1494* IWantMyMommy: Shown screaming for his mother in ''Sharpe's Company.''
1495-->"Mother! Mother, Mother! Spread your wings and lift me high!"
1496* JokerImmunity: Due to the ''Sharpe'' novels being written out of chronological order, Hakeswill ends up surviving increasingly deadly circumstances in books set earlier in the timeline since he can't die until ''Sharpe's Enemy''. There are at least four unsuccessful attempt by Sharpe and Harper to kill Hakeswill, each one lending further weight to his conviction that he cannot die:
1497** In ''Sharpe's Tiger'', Hakeswill survives being confined in a courtyard with six hungry tigers.
1498** In ''Sharpe's Triumph'', Hakeswill survives an elephant attempting to trample him to death.
1499** In ''Sharpe's Fortress'', Hakeswill lives through being thrown into a pit of venomous snakes.
1500** In ''Sharpe's Company'', Harper shoots Hakeswill through a window in Badajoz with his seven-barrelled Nock gun. And yet Obadiah got back up again, to Harper's utter disbelief.
1501* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: Finally KilledOffForReal at the end of ''Sharpe's Enemy'', after surviving ''many'' previous events that would've killed anyone else.
1502%%* KickTheDog: Most of his time onscreen is spent doing this.
1503* LackOfEmpathy: In ''Sharpe's Enemy'', he orders one of the renegades to murder one of Lady Farthingdale's bodyguards simply for being an inconvenience. And that's not going into his treatment of women.
1504* MadeOfIron: In ''Sharpe's Company'', he takes a full-on blast from Harper's Nock gun, a weapon that can kill three men at a time, and keeps walking (and the shot kills the man standing next to him).
1505* TheManTheyCouldntHang: Believes that he cannot be killed. Case in point the hanging where he got his scar, and in ''Sharpe's Company'', when he falls from a great height and gets shot by Harper.
1506* MeaningfulName: Hake is a species of fish; swill can refer to leftover animal guts from the kitchen used to feed the pigs: "fish guts" would be a very appropriate description of the sergeant's personality.
1507* MurderByMistake: [[spoiler:Accidentally shoots [[EnsignNewbie Ensign Matthews]] while trying to shoot Sharpe.]]
1508* TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou: When Sharpe and the French colonel are fighting in ''Sharpe's Enemy'', Hakeswill whispers that he hopes Sharpe isn't killed. When Pot-au-Feu asks why, Hakeswill responds that he wants to do it himself.
1509* ProfessionalButtKisser: He will never ever openly disobey an officer or retaliate when an officer abuses him, and that makes it ''very'' hard to catch him in any wrongdoing.
1510* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: It's one of the reasons Sharpe hates him so much. [[EstablishingCharacterMoment The first time he shows up onscreen]], he tries to rape Teresa, showing what sort of a man he is. He also rapes and murders [[spoiler:Sally Clayton]].
1511* RasputinianDeath: When finally executed by firing squad, the initial volley fails to put him down and it takes a soldier shooting him point-blank through the heart to finish him off for good.
1512* TheResenter: Sharpe makes it his duty and his pleasure to lay a beatdown on Hakeswill every chance he gets as payback for the flogging he received as a private due to Hakeswill's sadistic cruelty, and because he knows the evil bastard is a thief and an enthusiastic rapist. Hakeswill is enraged that the lowly private he once bullied and abused is now an officer he has to bow and scrape to, so he secretly tries to inflict as much misery and ruin on Sharpe and his rifle company as possible.
1513* {{Sadist}}: There's no question he enjoys the pain he causes.
1514* SerialRapist: Tries to rape any pretty woman in the episode.
1515%%* SlasherSmile: Before he [[spoiler:shoots Teresa.]]
1516* TheSociopath: LackOfEmpathy? Check, just ask [[spoiler:Sally Clayton's]] children (in the TV series), after he raped and murdered their mother. In the books, more or less anything else. ConsummateLiar and ManipulativeBastard? Double check. Need for stimulation? If there's a pretty woman in the episode, he'll try to rape her and if she has a husband, he'll threaten him too. In the books, Sharpe even notes that he'll frequently threaten battalion wives with having their husbands flogged or executed if they don't sleep with him. {{Narcissist}}? He believes himself [[TheManTheyCouldntHang invincible]].
1517* SociopathicSoldier: Hakeswill is of the psychopathic type; if he wasn't in the army, he'd be doing the same things: bully anyone he can step on and rape any pretty woman he can find.
1518* SpitefulSpit: While tied to the post for execution, he spits at the man who attempts to put the blindfold over his eyes.
1519* TwitchyEye: Happens quite frequently when he's talking to himself or his "mother", or during his other overt moments of mental instability.
1520* WouldHitAGirl: [[spoiler:Murders Sally Clayton, in the TV series, and Teresa, in both books and series.]]
1521[[/folder]]
1522
1523[[folder:Fenner]]
1524!!Lord Simon Fenner
1525[[quoteright:219:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lord_simon_fenner.png]]
1526 [[caption-width-right:219:]]
1527->'''Played By''': Nicholas Farrell
1528-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Regiment''
1529
1530The Secretary At War, revealed to have been skimming the books, transferring and auctioning men and stores in and out of battalions secretly and taking hefty kickbacks for his trouble.
1531----
1532* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the novel, Fenner is a grey haired man in his fifties. His television counterpart is considerably younger.
1533* AffablyEvil: Impeccably charming, corrupt and cruel.
1534* AristocratsAreEvil: Is a Lord, and is utterly self-serving.
1535%%* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Regiment''.
1536%%* KickTheDog: To Lady Camoynes.
1537* TheManBehindTheMan: In ''Sharpe's Regiment'', alongside Sir Henry Simmerson.
1538* TheStoic: Is very calm and languid.
1539* VillainousBreakdown: Has a very brief one [[spoiler: when Lady Camoynes produces the evidence implicating his involvement in the soldier auctions.]]
1540* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Is second only to the Minister of War, who himself finds it difficult to press charges against him without proof.
1541[[/folder]]
1542
1543[[folder:Girdwood]]
1544!!Lt. Colonel Bartholomew Girdwood
1545[[quoteright:318:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bartholomew_girdwood.jpg]]
1546 [[caption-width-right:318:]]
1547->'''Played By''': Mark Lambert
1548-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Regiment''
1549
1550A disgraced officer on half-pay recruited by Simmerson to command the Second Battalion of the South Essex Regiment and the training camp, as part of Simmerson's crimping scheme.
1551----
1552%%* AbhorrentAdmirer: To Jane Gibbons, as a suitor.
1553* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Wants so desperately to be a great military leader and see action for the first time, that Sharpe makes him nominal commander just in time for a military engagement in the Pyrenees. The battle is such a shock that he becomes insane.
1554%%* BreakTheHaughty: Invoked by Sharpe when he gets put into combat.
1555%%* DastardlyWhiplash: Sports a very prominent one.
1556* FreudianExcuse: In regards to his dislike of dogs and the Irish: apparently he was mauled by a mastiff dog as a boy and narrowly survived an ambush by Irish rebels as a young officer.
1557%%* TheHeavy: In ''Sharpe's Regiment''.
1558* HeroWorshipper: To UsefulNotes/FrederickTheGreat, modelling himself on the Prussian king's image.
1559* MilesGloriosus: Projects an image of himself as a great military leader, and is anything but.
1560* VillainousBSOD: Is driven mad in his first battle at the end of ''Sharpe's Regiment'' and is subsequently sent home.
1561* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: Is afraid of dogs, and the Irish. Funnily enough, the actor is Irish.
1562[[/folder]]
1563
1564[[folder:Lynch]]
1565!!Sergeant John Lynch
1566[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/john_lynch.jpg]]
1567 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
1568->'''Played By''': Robert Patterson
1569-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Regiment''
1570
1571An Irish sergeant and Girdwood's second-in-command. In spite of being born there, or maybe because of it, Lynch despises everything Irish, including his own name, Sean, which he changed to John.
1572----
1573* BoomerangBigot: An Irish soldier who hates Irishmen.
1574* {{Catchphrase}}: "FILTH!"
1575* CoolAndUnusualPunishment: Harper forces him to shout "God save Ireland!" whenever the former is present.
1576* DirtyCoward: An obnoxious bully who tries to cut and run when actually faced with French troops in battle [[spoiler: only to be [[LaserGuidedKarma killed by several of the men he bullied]].]]
1577* TheDragon: To Girdwood. In the general scheme of things with Fenner and Simmerson, Lynch is TheBrute.
1578* DrillSergeantNasty: Regularly bullies the men under his charge.
1579* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: In the TV series, he's [[spoiler: bayoneted by [[UnfriendlyFire several of his own men]].]] In the book, he's just deployed in a squad with several Irish soldiers - most of his former victims - under Harper's command, who're all speaking in Gaelic which he's mostly forgotten... and then they start ''grinning'' at him.
1580* IronicEcho: [[spoiler: On the receiving end; at least one of the recruits who [[IncrediblyLamePun lynches]] him spits his catchphrase "Filth!" back at the dying sergeant]].
1581* LudicrousGibs: In the book, it's not exactly shown what happened to him, but there is reportedly very little of him left afterwards.
1582* OhCrap: When he realises the Irish recruit he was bullying a few days earlier was in fact Harper, a senior officer.
1583-->'''Lynch''': O'Keefe?
1584-->'''Harper''': Who? I am Sergeant Major Harper. And you are...[[IronicEcho filth]]?
1585* UnfriendlyFire: In the series and the book, he's murdered by several of his own men - and, in the latter case, by Harper.
1586[[/folder]]
1587
1588[[folder:Rossendale]]
1589!!Lord John Rossendale
1590[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lord_john_rossendale.jpg]]
1591 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
1592->'''Played By''': Alexander Armstrong (Sharpe's Regiment), Creator/AlexisDenisof (Sharpe's Revenge, Sharpe's Justice, Sharpe's Waterloo)
1593-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Regiment'', ''Sharpe's Revenge'', ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV only), ''Sharpe's Waterloo''
1594
1595A courtier to the Prince Regent, Rossendale initially helps Sharpe find missing recruits, but later seduces Jane Gibbons, Sharpe's wife.
1596----
1597* BringMyBrownPants: Rossendale pisses his pants when he bumps into Sharpe at the Duchess of Richmond's Ball, after Sharpe had chased him outside with murder in his eyes.
1598* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: [[spoiler: In the novel of ''Sharpe's Waterloo'', Rossendale is seriously wounded fighting a French cavalry charge and later murdered by a peasant woman looting the battlefield. In the TV adaptation, he's dragged off his horse and bayoneted by French soldiers]].
1599* TheDragon: To Jane, and a fairly reluctant one at that, with ''Sharpe's Waterloo'' making it quite clear that even if Sharpe didn't quite reasonably terrify him, he doesn't want to kill someone he once considered a friend and knows to be a genuinely good man who he has wronged.
1600* EvenEvilHasStandards: When Sharpe is blamed for a massacre in ''Sharpe's Justice'' Rossendale throws the paper down in disbelief. Sure, Sharpe wants to kill the man for taking his fortune and stealing his wife, but Rossendale knows Sharpe is an honorable man and wouldn't massacre civilians.
1601* IDidWhatIHadToDo: "I regret that I have played a part in (Sharpe's) misfortune. When I look at you, my love, I think, 'What else could I have done?' And what's more, to keep you I know I would do it all again."
1602* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:Bayoneted by French soldiers at the Battle of Waterloo]].
1603* ImpoverishedPatrician: Or at least very heavily indebted patrician, which is part of what leads him to stumbling towards the dark side.
1604* WreckedWeapon: Sharpe breaks both his pistol and his sword in a standoff.
1605[[/folder]]
1606
1607[[folder:Brand]]
1608!!Colonel Brand
1609[[quoteright:226:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/colonel_brand.png]]
1610 [[caption-width-right:226:]]
1611->'''Played By''': Creator/MarkStrong
1612-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only)
1613
1614A Major who fights alongside Sharpe in 1810 and conducts a rescue operation that made him Colonel. He leads his own company - Brand's Boys.
1615----
1616%%* BaldOfEvil: Is mostly bald along the top of his head.
1617* BrokenPedestal: Sharpe has nothing but praise for him at the beginning of ''Sharpe's Mission''. [[spoiler:He discovers Brand's butchery of helpless gypsies and French soldiers, as well as his part in Colonel Cresson's plan to capture Ross. By the end, he has nothing but scorn for him.]]
1618* TheButcher: Thinks nothing of slaughtering helpless soldiers.
1619* CanonForeigner: A TV-only character, along with the rest of Brand's Boys.
1620* DisneyVillainDeath: [[spoiler:Sharpe pushes him into a well.]]
1621%%* TheDragon: [[spoiler:To Colonel Cresson and General Calvet.]]
1622* FakeUltimateHero: Is celebrated as a British hero back home [[spoiler:and is anything but.]]
1623* GoodScarsEvilScars: Has a small, thin scar in the corner of his left eye.
1624* {{Leitmotif}}: He and his troops seem to have their own theme following them, a stirring piece of music [[spoiler: that becomes ominous and sinister as it goes on.]]
1625* RememberTheNewGuy: The episode he appears in features an opening flashback set just after ''Sharpe's Eagle'', but no mention of him is given before ''Sharpe's Mission''.
1626* SmugSnake: Never drops his smarmy demeanor even after being exposed and court-martialed as a French double agent. He even gloats that he will make Sharpe beg for his help in fighting off the French siege before Sharpe delivers him his impromptu execution.
1627* TheSocialDarwinist: Champions the notion that the strong survive and that the weakest die. He has no second thoughts on leaving the injured behind.
1628* VillainWithGoodPublicity: [[spoiler:Is still regarded well at home and tries to use that to leverage better terms following his capture.]]
1629* WalkingSpoiler: His loyalties spoil at least half of ''Sharpe's Mission''.
1630[[/folder]]
1631
1632[[folder:Crake]]
1633!!Captain Crake
1634[[quoteright:128:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/captain_crake.jpg]]
1635 [[caption-width-right:128:]]
1636->'''Played By''': Christian Rodska
1637-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only)
1638
1639The second highest officer in Brand's Boys.
1640----
1641* AntiVillain: Is far less antagonistic than [[spoiler:Pope and Brand]], and vehemently denies spying for the French, while confessing to the murdering and looting.
1642%%* TheAtoner: Becomes this in the final scenes of the episode.
1643* TheDragon: To [[spoiler:Brand]] as his second highest ranking officer.
1644* HoldTheLine: He leads the remnants of Brand's Boys in the defence of the powder magazine, to allow time for Sharpe, Ross, Pyecroft, the Chosen Men and the Prince of Wales volunteers to escape and destroy the magazine.
1645* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler:Sharpe offers him and the rest of Brand's Boys this. They accept.]]
1646[[/folder]]
1647
1648[[folder:Pope]]
1649!!Sergeant Pope
1650[[quoteright:178:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sergeant_pope.png]]
1651 [[caption-width-right:178:]]
1652->'''Played By''': Andrew Schofield
1653-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Mission'' (TV only)
1654
1655A prominent member of Brand's Boys.
1656----
1657* AintTooProudToBeg: When he is captured [[spoiler:by Sharpe and Pyecroft.]] He confesses everything.
1658%%* AttemptedRape: Of Ramona.
1659* TheBrute: The most vicious member of Brand's Boys.
1660* KickTheDog: Drives his boot into the chest of a French deserter that tries to surrender.
1661* KillItWithWater: Harper [[spoiler:drowns him.]]
1662* WouldHitAGirl: Is sent to kill [[spoiler:Zara.]]
1663[[/folder]]
1664
1665[[folder:Parfitt]]
1666!!Sir Willoughby Parfitt
1667[[quoteright:193:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/willoughby_parfitt.png]]
1668 [[caption-width-right:193:]]
1669->'''Played By''': Tony Haygarth
1670-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV)
1671
1672A crooked industrialist that Sharpe finds himself at odds with.
1673----
1674%%* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Justice''.
1675* EveryoneHasStandards: A combination of this and PragmaticVillainy perhaps, but he strongly objects to Captain Wickham massacring his workers who were listening to Truman's rabble rousing.
1676* FauxAffablyEvil: He is congenial towards Sharpe at first and adopts an avuncular attitude towards his staff but underneath it all he is completely ruthless and amoral.
1677* {{Hypocrite}}: He is insistent that Sharpe and Wickham have to capture Truman, considering him the biggest threat to industry in the area. [[spoiler: In fact, Parfitt is the one responsible for acts of sabotage against his rivals with Truman being a convenient scapegoat.]]
1678* KnowWhenToFoldThem: After his schemes are exposed, he meekly accepts Sharpe's demand that he write a letter exonerating him over the massacre Wickham carried out.
1679* NotSoDifferentRemark: He considers himself and Sharpe kindred spirits as self-made men. Sharpe is willing to accept it at first until he realises how corrupt Parfitt is.
1680[[/folder]]
1681
1682[[folder:Wickham]]
1683!!Captain George Wickham
1684->'''Played By''': Douglas Henshall
1685-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Justice'' (TV)
1686
1687The commanding officer of Sir Willoughby Parfitt's Yeomen.
1688----
1689* TheDragon: As Captain of Parfitt's Yeomen.
1690* CoDragons: He shares his position with Sharpe until the latter fights alongside Matt Truman.
1691* MoreDespicableMinion: His efforts to capture Truman by murdering the innocent workers that had come to listen to him enrages his employer, and his drunken, lecherous behaviour towards Jane forces Parfitt to rein him in.
1692* OverzealousUnderling: Related to the above, his orders were to simply capture Truman. He decides to massacre the innocent workers that had come to listen to the rabble-rouser.
1693* WellTrainedButInexperienced: His fencing skills prove to be Sharpe's superior in a controlled match, but the latter's experience on the field supersedes him.
1694[[/folder]]
1695
1696!!Antagonists - Other
1697
1698[[folder:Pot-au-Feu]]
1699!!Marshal Pot-au-Feu, Sergeant Deron
1700[[quoteright:161:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pot_au_feu.png]]
1701->'''Played By''': Tony Haygarth
1702-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Havoc'' (Novel only), ''Sharpe's Enemy''
1703
1704Pot-au-Feu was the name taken by French Sergeant Deron when he deserted and became the self-styled Marshal of France. A man who loves good food more than anything else. Leading the deserters with Hakeswill, Pot-au-Feu would rather discuss chicken recipes than fight.
1705----
1706* AffablyEvil: He cooks food for his enemies and is more friendly with them than they are with him.
1707* BigBadDuumvirate: With Hakeswill in ''Sharpe's Enemy''. They're in a BigBadEnsemble with Major Pierre Ducos.
1708* GreenAndMean: An antagonist who wears green. Downplayed as he's pleasant to be around unless you mess with his food.
1709* HandyCuffs: A rope variant when he uses the rope tied around his wrists to strangle a French soldier.
1710* HistoricalVillainDowngrade: In Cornwell's historical notes, he says he probably made Pot-au-Feu a more likeable character than he actually was.
1711* KarmaHoudini: Since he doesn't do anything particularly cruel or brutal like Hakeswill, he gets off relatively lightly within the episode itself; Sharpe eventually captures him as he's too fat to run away, and punishes him by putting him to work cooking for the batallion. When the French arrive, in the book, he employs him again to cook for both sides during truce negotiations.
1712* KnowWhenToFoldThem: Surrenders when his men are trapped and he has a sword to his throat.
1713* NiceJobFixingItVillain: [[spoiler:Puts Kelly on guard duty when the latter protests against the maids being offered to the unruly renegades. Kelly, when found by Sharpe and the Chosen Men, does a HeelFaceTurn and locks the renegades in the villa, making them waste time trying to get the doors open and the place is turned into a shooting gallery as Sharpe and the Chosen Men kill them left and right.]]
1714* NoMrBondIExpectYouToDine: Has Sharpe, Harper and Dubreton surrounded when they come to pay the ransom for the Colonels' wives. He could easily have them shot and take the cash, but stands his men down instead and offers to cook for the three "guests". Pot-au-feu clearly follows the rule of SacredHospitality.
1715* PhenotypeStereotype: He's a cowardly French FatBastard deserter whose only passion in life is cooking food and eating it. Even the name he chose for himself after deserting means "Pot on the fire".
1716* PragmaticVillainy: Tells Hakeswill to not rape the women because it will damage the ransom value.
1717* SmallNameBigEgo: Before deserting, he was a Sergeant and cook in the French army; a common soldier, otherwise a complete nobody and all-round FatBastard: As a deserter, he bestows upon himself the highest French military honor reserved for the greatest men that the French army has ever produced. His claim to such greatness is based purely on his culinary skills and interest.
1718* SupremeChef: Despite the above, even people who hate him are forced to admit he is an extraordinarily good cook.
1719* TrojanPrisoner: At the beginning, he is tied up along with some French soldiers by a group of British soldiers, who are escorting a woman. It turns out they are all working together, apart from the woman, who is their captive.
1720%%* WickedCultured: At least when it comes to food.
1721[[/folder]]
1722
1723[[folder:Kelly]]
1724!!Kelly
1725[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kelly_6.png]]
1726 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
1727->'''Played By''': Morgan Jones
1728-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Enemy''
1729
1730A former Connaught Ranger and one of Hakeswill's {{Mooks}}.
1731----
1732* BaldOfEvil: Not a hair on this renegade's head.
1733%%* BloodFromTheMouth: [[spoiler:After he's bayoneted.]]
1734* EvenEvilHasStandards: He's practically sickened by the other renegades' lewd actions toward the women.
1735* GoodCostumeSwitch: [[spoiler:Ditches his black head ribbon when he makes his HeelFaceTurn.]]
1736* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:Bayoneted by one of the renegades.]]
1737* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: Killed a French cavalryman at Talavera.
1738* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler:Sharpe persuades him to make a HeelFaceTurn and Kelly is killed by one of his fellow renegades in the battle next day. Sharpe recognizes him as a Chosen Man as Kelly dies from his wounds.]]
1739* RedemptionPromotion: He was a Connaught Ranger before his desertion, a mere {{Mook}} with the deserters, and [[spoiler:regarded as a Chosen Man by Sharpe as he dies.]]
1740[[/folder]]
1741
1742[[folder: El Casco]]
1743!!El Casco
1744[[quoteright:188:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/el_casco.png]]
1745 [[caption-width-right:188:]]
1746->'''Played By''': Abel Folk
1747-->'''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Gold'' (TV only)
1748
1749A Spanish partisan and death cult leader.
1750----
1751%%* BeardOfEvil: The guy looks like Creator/TimCurry's [[Film/TheThreeMusketeers1993 Cardinal Richelieu]] in Conquistador armor.
1752* BeatStillMyHeart: Carves out his victims' hearts.
1753%%* BigBad: Of ''Sharpe's Gold''.
1754%%* BlownAcrossTheRoom: [[spoiler:Courtesy of Harper.]]
1755* CanonForeigner: Since the adaptation of ''Sharpe's Gold'' is InNameOnly, El Casco and his death cult are completely new inventions of the television series and unrelated to the novel.
1756* {{Cult}}: His partisan group believe themselves to be descendants of shipwrecked Aztecs and practice the HumanSacrifice part to be sure. Ironically, they dress up like conquistadors and wear their armor.
1757* HellIsThatNoise: He meows exactly like a cat when he finds something appealing.
1758* HumanSacrifice: His partisan group uses the Aztec practice of removing human hearts while the victims are still alive.
1759* ImprobableWeaponUser: Uses an obsidian-bladed weapon against Sharpe.
1760* ThrowingYourSwordAlwaysWorks: Kills Lt. Ayres by throwing a knife into his chest.
1761* WouldHitAGirl: He's planning on carving Ellie's heart out.
1762[[/folder]]
1763
1764[[folder: Lady Molly Spindacre]]
1765!! Lady Molly Spindacre
1766[[quoteright:192:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/molly_spindacre.png]]
1767 [[caption-width-right:192:]]
1768-> '''Played by''': Connie Hyde
1769--> '''Appears In''': ''Sharpe's Revenge'' (TV only)
1770
1771A acquaintance of Jane Sharpe.
1772----
1773* BitchInSheepsClothing: Seems to be there specifically for this. She is the one who suggests Jane leave Sharpe and take all of his money, then happily encourages her to fall for the prodigal Lord Rossendale. And ultimately when Jane breaks down from the emotional strain of the situation Molly's suggestions have got her into callously calls Jane a whore and informs her that she is the laughingstock of the town, then leaves but not before informing her that her best bet is to leave Lord Rossendale and hitch up with the next man she can get.
1774
1775[[/folder]]
1776
1777[[folder:Prince Of Orange]]
1778!! William II, Prince of Orange
1779-> '''Played''': Creator/PaulBettany
1780--> '''Appears in''': ''Sharpe's Waterloo''
1781
1782Heir to the Dutch throne, looking for some battlefield glory. Hampered by one flaw: His complete incompetence.
1783----
1784* AssholeVictim: He gets several battalions killed due to his incompetence, whereupon Sharpe, who he called out of retirement to add some glamour to his staff, shoots him. ''Sharpe's Assassin'' reveals that this is an OpenSecret, since the shot was non-lethal, Wellington actually finds it ''funny'', telling Sharpe that the 'French skirmisher' who shot the Prince made "a very good shot."
1785* ButtMonkey: A total GeneralFailure, whose attempts to establish authority over Sharpe are a miserable failure, and ultimately gets ''shot'' by Sharpe, while Wellington just finds it funny.
1786* GeneralFailure: William is utterly clueless about the battlefield, ignoring the advice of seasoned soldiers like Sharpe and getting entire battalions killed in his bumbling attempts to win glory. He also thinks he's the second coming of Alexander the Great. In the end, Sharpe gets so sick of this that he actually ''shoots'' him, and Wellington, despite being perfectly aware that Sharpe is responsible, isn't bothered. In fact, he finds it funny.
1787* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: Probably the worst case of it in the entire series. The actual William II was, by all accounts, a standup kind of guy. Liked by both the British and his own men. The Sharpe version is a blithering, braying UpperClassTwit hated by everyone (his own soldiers included) and is so reviled Sharpe tries to kill him - though it is suggested that he does have a bunch of genuine friends, and he can be amiable enough if his pride isn't offended, and he isn't actually evil - just egotistical and horribly incompetent.
1788* KarmaHoudini: Aside from getting shot by Sharpe, William survives the battle he bungles. He would in fact live another 34 years.

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