Third Murderer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Third Murderer | |
|---|---|
| Macbeth character | |
Illustration of the three murderers from the 1830 French book Galerie de Shakspeare | |
| Created by | William Shakespeare |
| In-universe information | |
| Affiliation | First Murderer, Second Murderer, Macbeth |
The Third Murderer is a character in William Shakespeare's tragedy Macbeth (1606). He appears in one scene (3.3), joining the First and Second Murderers to assassinate Banquo and Fleance, at the orders of Macbeth.
The Third Murderer is not present when Macbeth speaks to the First and Second Murderers, and is not expected by his partners. Although the Third Murderer is a small role, the identity of the character has been the subject of scholarly debate, and various productions have equated him with other characters.

The first two murderers are recruited by Macbeth in 3.1. In 3.3, the Three Murderers meet in a park outside of the palace, and the first two do not know the Third:[1]
- First Murderer. But who did bid thee join with us?
- Third Murderer. Macbeth.
- Second Murderer. He needs not our mistrust, since he delivers
- Our offices and what we have to do
- To the direction just.
The Third Murderer knows Banquo typically walks from the palace gate at this time. After the murder of Banquo, the Third Murderer asks "Who did strike out the light?" and concludes Fleance has escaped: "There's but one down; the son is fled". Altogether, the Third Murderer has six lines, almost all very brief,[2] with the only long one showing "a suspicious familiarity with Banquo's habits".[3]