Asterisk denotes entries on real places.
*Seville.
Greek island. Exiled from Seville, where he has been caught making love to another man’s wife, the hero falls in love with the ruler’s daughter in a setting that resembles an erotic paradise. Because Haidee’s father is away, the lovers are free to indulge themselves–although Don Juan finds himself exiled again when the father returns. The Greek island becomes another example of the world as a place that conspires against lovers.
*Constantinople. Turkish capital to which Don Juan is taken by sailors who rescue him after he is abandoned at sea. There he becomes a subject of the Ottoman rulers and continues to attract the amorous attentions of noble women. Byron uses Constantinople to place his hero at the crossroads of the Christian and Turkish empires, demonstrating that for all the differences in customs between East and West, his hero’s desire to keep his dignity intact while enjoying himself never slackens. Places threaten to change the hero, but his spirit proves remarkably resistant to the coercions of environment.
*Russia. Even after Don Juan is captured by Russians besieging the Turkish city of Ismail and he becomes a lover of Russia’s ruler, Catherine the Great, he remains stubbornly his own person and not merely the plaything of Russia’s great autocrat.
*England. Sent to England as part of a diplomatic entourage, Don Juan becomes a fixture of English society, fending off women who look upon marriage as a career. Byron provides many satirical descriptions of his superficial native land, admirably summing up Don Juan’s journey from “lands and scenes romantic,” where lives are risked for passion, to a “country where ’tis half a fashion.”