Abessa: The Embodiment of Blind Faith

Jason

April 1, 2022

featured image that says abessa

Abessa is a character that shows up in Edmund Spenser‘s The Faerie Queene. She is blind, deaf, and mute.

The Story of Abessa

Abessa runs into Una during the first book of The Faerie Queene, and runs away screaming in terror at the sight of her and her lion.

Abessa as part of a dysfunctional family complete with Corceca, her mother, and Kirkrapine, a thief who is her mother’s boyfriend.

During the course of the story, Kirkrapine tries to assault Una, but you know eventually gets away unscathed.

The Argovale ad

🌍 Enter a Massive Shared Universe – Where ALL Mythologies Exist Together

Step into an expansive world where multiple mythologies intertwine to create an epic, multi-era adventure. This is a massive, shared universe imagining if Zeus, King Arthur, and Sherlock Holmes all lived in the same universe.

Here’s what you get when you join:

🌟 Β All Argovale books for FREE! That’s right, get access to Argovale books that’s worth $499 in value.
βœ… Weekly calls and guided sessions with the author.
βœ… Get feedback and inspiration from a creative, like-minded community
βœ… Access to the best fantasy readers group in the world.

Who Does Abessa Represent?

In the Faerie Queene, a highly allegorical story, Abessa represented the Catholic point of view, which at the time was considered blind and empty, hence Abessa’s conditions and obsessions with rituals.

Abessa’s name means “deficiency”, making the allegorical comparison clear. Una, who represents the true church, or the Protestant church, manages to escape this dysfunctional family, showing her strength and superiority (symbolically speaking) to the Catholic Church.

Abessa first appeared in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene.

See our complete list of Arthurian characters for more entries like this one.

Arthurian Bibliography

Photo of author

Author

Jason is a huge storytelling nerd devoted to cataloguing storytelling in all its forms. He loves mythology, history, and geek culture. When he's not writing books (see his work at MythHQ.com), his favorite hobbies include hiking, spending time with his wife and daughters, and traveling.