Swordsman (comics)

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Swordsman
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Avengers #19 (Aug 1965)
Created by Stan Lee
Don Heck
In story information
Alter ego Jacques DuQuesne
Team affiliations Avengers
Lethal Legion
Emissaries of Evil
Legion of the Unliving
Abilities None: Superb athlete and an excellent unarmed combatant

The Swordsman is the name of several fictional characters in the Marvel Comics universe. Each of the men to use this name has essentially been a superhero, albeit a hero with no special powers, only skill with a sword. The first two Swordsmen have acted as supervillains at times. All of the Swordsmen save for the most recent one have been members of the Avengers.

Contents

[edit] Jacques Duquesne

The original Swordsman, Jacques Duquesne, trained the Avenger Hawkeye after accepting him, but rejecting his brother Barney to a circus, where the two were working alongside the archer called Trick Shot. When Hawkeye accidentally discovered that the Swordsman was stealing money, the two fought, the Swordsman leaving Hawkeye believing him dead. Later, the Swordsman attempted to join the Avengers in order to take advantage of the benefits that go with an Avenger ID. After failing in doing so at first, he was accepted as an Avenger as secretly an agent of the Mandarin, who created a pseudo-image of Iron Man to recommend the Swordsman to the Avengers. The Mandarin also fitted the Swordsman's Sword with extra powers, such as firing artificial lightning bolts. Soon after joining the Avengers, the Swordsman betrayed the team and left their ranks. He has tried to battle the Avengers on several occasions, in team with Egghead or joining the supervillain group the Lethal Legion.[1] However, he also assisted the Avengers on several later occasions, like in the Avengers' attack on Olympus and in the conflict that involved Kang's quest for the "Celestial Madonna", who was in fact Mantis, an ally of the Avengers.

The Swordsman rejoined the Avengers after he fell in love with Mantis, and she only realized that she felt the same for him when he died saving her life from Kang.[2] Mantis soon after married the elderst of Earth's alien Cotati which had resurrected and possessed the Swordsman's body, and would eventually bear the alien a son.

While the Swordsman was an outstanding fighter, his main weapon was a sword created by the super-villain Mandarin from Makluan technology in The Avengers #20. Besides serving as a melee weapon, it could fire energy blasts of various types, as well as flame and gas.

[edit] References

First details about his carnival performer career and the involvement of Clint (and Barney) Barton appears in classic The Avengers #19 (August 1965) and #65 (June 1969). The 19th issue is also the first appearance of this Swordsman, and in #20, he briefly joins the Avengers.

More origin details, with the involvement of Trick Shot, appear in the Solo Avengers series, many years later.

The long story-arc with Mantis started in The Avengers #114 (brief appearance in #112). The long Kang/Legion of Unliving saga (including Vision "origins") appears in The Avengers #129-135 and Giant-Size Avengers #2-4.

[edit] Philip Javert

The second Swordsman, Philip Javert, hailed from an alternate universe, and was recruited from there alongside Magdalene to join Proctor and his Gatherers. They travelled to Earth-616 (the primary Marvel Earth), where they attacked the Avengers, particularly Sersi (whose counterparts in the Gatherers' native worlds had gone mad and become evil) and the Black Knight (who was Proctor's counterpart on Earth-616). The Swordsman and Magdalene turned against Proctor and joined the Avengers briefly. Some years later, they would team with the Avengers and the Squadron Supreme and leave Earth-616 for parts unknown.

[edit] Heroes Reborn

The third Swordsman was a native of the "Heroes Reborn" world, which was created by Franklin Richards and later became the third Counter-Earth. He and his world were created after the Avengers "died" battling Onslaught. He joined the Avengers for the duration of their stay on that world, and was revealed to actually be that world's counterpart of Deadpool during his time with the cast-off heroes called the "Remnants".

[edit] Thunderbolts (Andreas von Strucker)

Main article: Andreas von Strucker

The fourth Swordsman appeared recently in the pages of New Thunderbolts.

At the request of Baron Zemo, Purple Man used his powers to take control of Andreas von Strucker and trained him to be a better fighter so he could be the new Swordsman and infiltrate the Thunderbolts. Andreas and his twin sister Andrea previously could only access their mutant energy powers when touching. After Baron Helmut Zemo murdered Andrea, Andreas flayed Andrea's flesh from her corpse, tanned it, and made it the hilt of his sword. He thus retains his mutant power but now he channels it through his sword.

[edit] Other versions

[edit] House of M

In this reality, Swordsman is a member of Shang-Chi's Dragons criminal organization, alongside Colleen Wing, Mantis, Zaran and Machete[3]. He and Mantis are an item as in the mainstream universe. He is killed by Bullseye when the Dragons are ambushed by the Kingpin's assassins[4].

[edit] In other media

[edit] Television

The original Swordsman appears in the Captain America/Avengers portion of Marvel Super Heroes.

The original Swordsman appears in one episode of The Avengers: United They Stand.

[edit] Video games

He appears in the PSP version of Marvel: Ultimate Alliance as the villain Hawkeye fights during his comic book mission in Murderworld. The version seen is the Andreas von Strucker version.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The joining with Lethal Legion appears on The Avengers #78-79.
  2. ^ Giant-Size Avengers #2
  3. ^ House of M: Avengers #2
  4. ^ House of M: Avengers #4