Heroic Bastard

"In short, I'm a bastard. And before you make any smart remarks, I mean the fatherless kind."

- Alistair, Dragon Age

While the Badass hero or the Anti-Hero may get called a bastard, it's not usually meant literally. This trope is for the protagonist for whom "bastard" is just a factual description, not a comment on his personality. He could easily be a very pleasant, well-mannered fellow, but his parents never married.

Until fairly recently in fiction, a child born out of wedlock was often expected to have a treacherous or villainous nature just due to the fact of his illegitimate birth, which of course is how the term "bastard" came to mean someone who was...well, a bastard. In modern times, however, with the rise of more liberal and humane attitudes—as well as the rapid increase in unwed motherhood as a societal phenomenon—it has become less acceptable to assume that a person will have a tendency toward evil behavior just because Dad never gave Mom a ring. (Or because Mom or Dad had him when one of the two already gave a ring to another person).

Back in the day, this could be a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy. Since a child born out of wedlock would be the target of all kinds of discrimination and would not be allowed to participate in some central parts of society (like church services), they often had to become ruthless, cunning rogues just to have a chance of surviving. Especially since the fathers didn't have to care for them (and often wouldn't) and the mothers may have used the kid to let out their frustration about "those goddamn men". Then again, fatherless children have a documented tendency to violence, suicide, lack of self-control, and poverty—so, statistically speaking, there's something to the stereotype, though how much of this is due to the social stigma is left as an exercise to the reader. But most bastards manage to rise above these expectations.

In fact, modern authors have found that making their hero a bastard can have some valuable dramatic benefits. Perhaps his parents never married because one of them vanished mysteriously; this can lead to a juicy revelation later in the story when it is discovered that Mom or Dad is someone very important to the plot. If the writer is feeling generous, the vanished parent could be a local power figure or at least wealthy. If not, the vanished parent could end up being someone the hero has to fight. At a minimum, being born a bastard and getting socially snubbed for it can give your character a reason to feel mistreated yet prove his heroic character by rising above it and saving the world anyway.

Interestingly, if we look back far enough, we find that most of the greatest heroes of ancient Greek myth were illegitimate, making this Older Than Feudalism. However, this generally only applied if the hero's parents didn't marry because one of them was a god—most often baby-daddy Zeus, who had serious fidelity issues with his goddess wife and was forever running around impregnating mortal women with heroes. It should be also be noted that in ancient Greece, "heroic" did not necessarily mean nice, so many Greek heroes were bastards who were also bastards.

If the Heroic Bastard is also a heroic bastard, he's an Anti-Hero or Sociopathic Hero. And while the heroic bastard may be magnificent, he is not automatically a Magnificent Bastard.

Anime and Manga

 * Fullmetal Alchemist, Edward and Alphonse Elric have their mother's surname because she never officially married their father, Van Hohenheim, despite living with him for years and sharing a house with him. Hohenheim's failure to make an "honest woman" out of Trisha Elric is in the manga because.
 * Similarly, the anime version
 * Prince Arslan was roundly denounced by his detractors as not being of royal blood, but quickly proves to his devoted companions and several nobles that he is charismatic, kind, and intelligent enough to make a great ruler regardless. His knack for attracting high-class and devoted followers definitely doesn't hurt either.
 * Serpico from Berserk is the illegitimate son of a powerful merchant born from an affair with a maid. He's also one of the few genuinely good characters in the series, as he cares for his legitimate sister Farnese and protects the weak.
 * from Star Driver. He was the product of an affair between his mother, and.
 * Touma H. Norstein of Digimon Savers. Like in Ratatouille, it's never stated outright because this is a kid's show, but the implication is that he's the son of an Austrian aristocrat and a Japanese exchange student who never married. He's a nice guy, if a little cold at first, but he suffered due to his illegitimacy, as his grandmother told him to his face (right after his mother died!) that he was a member of the great Norstein family, yet he wasn't.
 * Future Trunks from Dragon Ball Z. He states clearly to Goku upon their first meeting that Bulma and Vegeta never got married, because the former did not want to.
 * Also Present-Day Trunks as well. Though his parents do eventually marry.
 * George from Paradise Kiss. His Hot Mom Yukino is a former model who got knocked up by an extremely wealthy man and quit her career to have him. This results in heavy resentment from her towards him, and strong and complicated love/hate feelings from him towards her, also affecting his relationship with Yukari.
 * Tybalt from Romeo X Juliet. This is one of the reasons why he fights the Montagues, in fact..
 * Kallen Stadtfeld of Code Geass is the daughter of a noble and his lawfully wed wife. Except that Kallen Kozuki's mother is actually, but no one talks about that.
 * Josuke, hero of Part 4 of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, is the illegitimate son of the now-elderly hero of Part 2.
 * Satellizer L. Bridgette from Freezing, daughter of a nobleman and his mistress.
 * from So Ra No Wo To. After years of neglect, save for her older half-sister, her family finally acknowdleges she's around when they need a royal princess to marry for a peace treaty. She's not exactly willing, but she does it anyway because that's what her sister would have done.
 * from Sensual Phrase. Doubles as
 * from Aishite Night.
 * from Gundam Wing. The leads we have say that
 * All the Gundam pilots with the definite exception of Quatre and maybe Trowa may be this, as most of them are orphans without birth names and their parentage isn't really explored.
 * Banagher Links from Gundam Unicorn might also be this. It's never ascertained whether his parents actually got married and he obviously uses his mother's name.
 * Confirmed, as the 8-minute preview of episode 5. One member of the Vist Family distinctly refers to him as the illegitimate son of Cardeas Vist.
 * One of the protagonists of Virgin Love was the son of his father's mistress, and was never officially recognized as his son. His dad stayed completely out of his and his mother's life until he hit university age, when he sent him to school and put him on the fast-track in his company.
 * Link in the first The Legend of Zelda manga is implied to be the, when she was married.
 * Tamaki Suoh of Ouran High School Host Club is an example, though you might disagree about how much he fits the heroic stereotype.
 * Hinted in regards to  from Oniisama e.... In the manga, it's mentioned that  ...
 * Also,
 * And then we find out that

Comic Books
"Renee Montoya: "You really are a bastard." The Question (Vic Sage): "Well, I was raised in an orphanage, so you're probably right.""
 * DC Comics is crawling (so to speak) with them:
 * Connor Hawke, son of Oliver Queen, the Green Arrow. Oliver also has several other illegitimate children, including Robert, the boy Shado has with him after raping him. Cissie King-Jones (Arrowette) is heavily implied to also be one.
 * Damien Al Ghul, son of Bruce Wayne and Talia al Ghul (Although "Heroic" might stretch things a bit. But he tries.)
 * Raven, daughter of the archdemon Trigon and a human woman.
 * Damage, thought to be a bastard, revealed later that his true parents were married (The original Atom and his wife)
 * Tom, illegitimate son of Wildcat of the JSA.
 * Huntress
 * Vic Sage makes the assumption that he is a bastard, since he was raised in an orphanage, but he never learned his actual parentage so it was never confirmed. He has made peace with this fact and does not let it wear him down.


 * Marvel Comics also has a few:
 * All three of Captain Mar-Vell's children: Genis and Phyla (by Elysius) and Teddy (by Anelle).
 * Magneto's daughter Lorna/Polaris appears to have been born out of wedlock. Though the exact details are confusing, to say the least.
 * Even Marvel Comics 2 has a few. Wolverine's son, Sabreclaw, who was a double bastard before his Heel Face Turn. His mother's still unknown. And then there's Darkdevil,.
 * Blade
 * Clea
 * Wesley in Wanted is known to have been a bastard. In the comic book he's a Sociopathic Bastard, whilst in the film, he runs the gamut from Poor Bastard to Anti-Hero Bastard to Magnificent Bastard.
 * from Watchmen, who realizes late in the book that.
 * It's rather obviously implicit that Rorschach's parents were unmarried, too. (And even if he's not a hero, he's a brave, very well-meaning main character, so... close enough.)
 * The title character of Nikolai Dante is the illegitimate son of Dmitri Romanov.

Fan Works

 * In Eye of the Fox Kira is a rather blatant example as while the methods of his conception is still unknown to the reader, his parents were obviously never together in a word, and he just barely stops short of being a Bastard Bastard.

Film

 * Kirk's son David, seen in the second and third Star Trek movies, was illegitimate. Kirk's cry of "You Klingon bastards! You killed my son!" in the third movie was parodied by Peter David as, "You Klingon sons! You killed my bastard!"
 * in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.
 * Played straight in the 1999 Sci Fi adaptation of Beowulf: he's the bastard child of his human mother and a demon father. Grendel is the son of the King and another demon.
 * Also the film has Grendel the son of the King after an affair with the demon. The third monster, however,

Folklore and Mythology

 * Hercules, Perseus, Ramma, Sigurd, Apollo, Artemis.
 * In fact, the whole of the Heroic Age in Classical Mythology was basically about a bunch of heroes (which is a Greek word, by the way) who were mostly badass extramarital children of Olympian gods (first of all, Zeus), making them the Ur Example of Heroic Bastard (both in academic sense and often personality-wise).
 * A startlingly large number of the protagonists in classic Arthurian myth are illegitimate, to wit:
 * King Arthur himself was born of a deception when Merlin disguised Uther Pendragon as Gorlois so Uther could sleep with Gorlois' wife, Igraine. Uther and Igraine did get married before Arthur was born, so he is not of illegitimate birth, just illegitimate conception, so still technically qualifies.
 * Merlin was said to be the child of a human woman and an incubus. It doesn't seem likely that they were married.
 * The "perfect gentle knight" Galahad, one of the Grail-finders, was the bastard son of Lancelot and Elaine.
 * Mordred is usually the son of Arthur and his half-sister Morgause (or Morgaine). While many of the older versions of Arthurian myth paint Mordred as a typical double-bastard (evil as well as illegitimate), more recent works (and even some of the older ones) have tried to reform this character.
 * In Mary Stewart's The Wicked Day, Mordred is actually a decent guy, if somewhat broody. His falling-out and fight with Arthur is the result of incredibly bad luck and a terrible misunderstanding, not deliberate treachery on Modred's part.
 * In Elizabeth Wein's The Winter Prince, Medraut (the original spelling of "Mordred") is highly intelligent and not evil, but is terribly conflicted about his heritage, particularly when he meets his half-brother Lleu, the legitimate son and heir of Artos (Arthur) that his evil mother Morgause wants him to kill, and finds that he simultaneously loves, hates, and envies the other boy.
 * The Book of Mordred is entirely about Mordred's time as a knight of the round table.
 * Perceval, in the versions where he's Pellinore's son. And that's just the major characters. To this add Sir Tor (one of the knights of the white hart), Guinglain (Gawaine's long-lost son), Yvain the lesser, and Sagramore in many of his Hungarian incarnations, plus at least two other bastard sons of Arthur (Logors and Arthur the less) and anyone that has slipped this troper's mind. As the majority of the fathers in these cases were major knights themselves, the original ballad writers were apparently more concerned with the geneaology than they were the marriage vows.
 * Karna in the Mahabharata.
 * Jephthah in the Biblical Book of Judges was the son of Gilead and a prostitute, and was exiled by his half-brothers for being a bastard. Later in life, they have to beg him to lead them to victory over the Ammonites.

Literature
"Is "Elene bastard" the best you could come up with? It's not even much of an insult, because in my case it happens to be true."
 * FitzChivalry Farseer, hero of Robin Hobb's Farseer and Fool trilogies, is the bastard son of Prince Chivalry Farseer. "Fitz" is Norman-French for "son," so Fitz's name is simply "son of Chivalry," but since Fitzroy ("son of the king") was the surname given to illegitimate sons of the English kings, it also means, colloquially, "bastard of Chivalry."
 * Speaking of Fitzroys, the vampire protagonist of Tanya Huff's Blood Books novels is one Henry Fitzroy, the bastard son of King Henry VIII. He's also heroic.
 * Henry Fitzroy also shows up in Mercedes Lackey's This Scepter'd Isle.
 * Desmond MaqqRee, known to the press of the Fair World as Doc Sidhe
 * George Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire has bastards of all sorts in a wide variety of temperaments. The most notable and heroic is Jon Snow, who is raised as the bastard son of Lord Eddard Stark. Jon's estrangement from the Stark family spurs him to leave the household and join the Night's Watch.
 * Daine in Tamora Pierce's The Immortals series is illegitimate, hence her patronymic matronymic is "Sarrasri" from her mother. Turns out that her father though she doesn't find this out until the last book.
 * Touchstone in Garth Nix's Old Kingdom series was the bastard son of the Queen and a nobleman, though he ends up taking the throne after a Rip Van Winkle situation leaves him as the only royal left alive anywhere. In the same series, Lirael of the Clayr, although not technically illegitimate since the Clayr don't typically marry, has to deal with very similar social disapproval because her mother ran off mysteriously (against tradition) and returned pregnant with Lirael, and completely refused to speak of the identity of Lirael's father. The odd circumstances of Lirael's birth, combined with her non-Clayr looks and lack of Clayr gifts, all cause her to be treated by some as an awkward "love child" rather than a "true daughter of the Clayr."
 * Stragen, a thief in David Eddings' Elenium and Tamuli series, is the bastard son of a noble. He is initially a bit sensitive about it, but gets over it.
 * He then uses it to insult a vast number of obstinate Styrics.

""I'm the son o' Stanley an' Willa Silva, who was actually married when I was born but passed on soon after, God rest 'em...""
 * In The Belgariad, Mandorallen is insulted as "the bastard of Vo Mandor"...due to "some temporary irregularity about my birth which still raises questions about my legitimacy." Since he is a fearsome fighter, however, the only people who mention this are relatives (local traditions disapprove of shedding the blood of kinsfolk), idiots, and people a safe distance away.
 * In the sequel, king Urgit of Chtol Murgos is revealed to be one, as Silk's late father found the Murgo nobility's custom of sequestering their women nothing but an inviting challenge. The result is actually a benefit to Urgit (and by extension, his kingdom) as he's spared from the hereditary insanity plaguing the royal bloodline (as well as giving him enough cunnning to win the deadly succession war). It also saves him from Mallorean Emperor Zakath having him horribly killed as part of his (Zakath's) methodical revenge extermination of the Urga bloodline. After some king-coaching from Garion, Urgit goes on to be a fairly decent king.
 * The titular hero in Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe series is the son of a prostitute and an unknown man.
 * Alain from Crown of Stars is (supposedly) the son of a servant and either a merchant, a count, an elven shade (don't ask), his grandfather or some completely unknown man. This is a major plot point in the series - until he stops caring about it.
 * Oh, and Liath? She's the daughter of a priest and a fire elemental.
 * Not to mention that in order to become king or queen, you have to sire or birth a bastard to prove your fertility. Sanglant is the bastard son of the current king and an elven woman from that "ceremony." He gets treated even worse than the average bastard thanks to his mother's blood.
 * Pearl Prynne, the illegitimate child of Hester Prynne, from The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, is a slightly revised version of the "illegitimacy means evil child" notion. Because the entire book is about the rebounding effects of denying and admitting sin, Pearl is seen as a living embodiment of the scarlet letter A worn on Hester's chest. Pearl is irreverent, impish, and obsessed with the scarlet letter, and a source of much anguish to her mother, until
 * Jack Jackson/Fitzjack, of Ken Follett's The Pillars of the Earth, being the bastard of a hanged travelling musician. He turns out fine and even builds one of England's first Gothic Cathedrals, among other things.
 * Lyra Belacqua (or Lyra Silvertongue, as she is later called) of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials was born of an affair between the adventurer/scientist Lord Asriel and Mrs. Coulter that.
 * All of the half-bloods from Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson and The Olympians series. The titular character is the son of Poseidon and a mortal woman.
 * Tanis Half-Elven, the leader of a band of heroes in the Dragonlance Saga novels, is the product of a Human Warrior raping his Elven Mother.
 * Steel Brightblade, the product of a one-night stand between Sturm Brightblade and Kitiara Uth Matar, may have been a servant of an evil deity, but he did help save the world on one occasion.
 * Mark of Tasavalta in Fred Saberhagen's Books of Swords and Books of Lost Swords is the natural son of Mala and the Emperor.
 * Tristran Thorn, hero of Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess' Stardust, is the bastard son of Dunstan Thorn and.
 * Philp Kent, the title character of John Jakes' novel, The Bastard.
 * In Dan Abnett's Gaunts Ghosts novel Ghostmaker, Dorden had, as a new fledged doctor, saved a woman in labor and her baby. This is revealed by Corbec, who was the baby; being illegimate, his mother did not have the same name, which is why he hadn't realized.
 * In Sandy Mitchell's Warhammer 40,000 novel Scourge the Heretic, Drake is the (presumably illegitimate) son of a man of high standing and a chambermaid. Though somewhat bitter about his inability to advance on his stratified world, he copes by joining the Imperial Guard to escape, and when he is recruited to help an Inquisitor, his uncertain status may be reflected in his ability to handle shifting social situations: intimidating a man of the very highest birth by treating him with no deference, and drawing information from servants by pleasantries.
 * In Christopher Moore's novel Fool, an Affectionate Parody of King Lear,
 * Alan Campbell's Deepgate Codex books have.
 * Stephen Maturin of O'Brian's Master and Commander fame was the son of an Irish officer and a Spanish woman. At several points throughout the series, Maturin empathizes with other (literal) bastards, including Aubrey's illegitimate bi-racial son Sam.
 * Les Misérables has Fantine, who has no family at all - she was named by a stranger who found her wandering barefoot in the streets as a child. She who bears a daughter out of wedlock, and names her Euphrasie Cosette, who is eventually adopted by Jean Valjean.
 * Apropos in the Sir Apropos of Nothing series was the son of a prostitute who was gang-raped by a bunch of knights.
 * In Lois McMaster Bujold's Chalion world, one of the five gods is the Bastard, god of the unseason, who give shelter to those who have none and provides friends to the friendless and justice to those who cannot find it.
 * Discworld's King Verence... sort of. He's not really The Hero as much as a secondary protagonist. Verence becomes king after his half-brother TomJon, the child of the last ruler, decides to be an actor. He was made king thanks to the fact that Verence and TomJon have a strong resemblance to each other and the previous king had a habit of [exercising his droit de seigneur. Granny Weatherwax decided this was close enough and made him king. Subverted however in.
 * Terry Pratchett seems quite fond of enthroning bastards. Aside from Verence's case, Pyramids ends with  on the throne of Djelibeybi, and Witches Abroad's Ella, eventual ruler of Genua, is the illegitimate daughter of Baron  . Princess Keli's late father (from Mort) was known as "King Olerve the Bastard"—even on his hourglass! -- and he doesn't seem nasty enough to merit such a title unless he, too, was illegitimate.
 * Richard in the Sword of Truth series is not only a bastard, but the product of
 * Axis in Sara Douglass's Axis trilogy is of illegitimate birth, and is reminded of this fact constantly, particularly in the first book.
 * Aeneas in The Aeneid. He's the illegitimate son of the goddess Aphrodite/Venus and the mortal Anchises. For that matter, any child of a god(dess) and a mortal, except for Achilles. His immortal mother actually married his mortal father, and then left him after Achilles was born.
 * Max in the Codex Alera, while not the main character, is the bastard son of High Lord Antillus. This nets him both incredible power and an Evil Stepmother who's been trying to get rid of him for years.
 * And while The Hero, Tavi, technically isn't a bastard, for the first three and a half books he thought he was and might as well have been, and he was plenty heroic in that time. His father was a soldier, and while it was technically illegal for Legionnaires to be married, it wasn't uncommon for them to do so in secret, or at least discreetly enough that nobody would bring it up.
 * Both Cat and Bones from the Night Huntress series. Cat is the product of rape, and she and her mother are both shunned by their small town for her out-of-wedlock birth. Bones is both a bastard and the Son of a Whore. They team up to kill evil vampires and rescue the human victims.
 * Technically, Kvothe of The Name of the Wind actually is a bastard; his parents were never formally married, though they lived as a couple.
 * Jiaan in the Farsala Trilogy is the bastard child of a Farsalan war leader and later takes his place, though with no one's consent.
 * Thomas Raith from The Dresden Files fits this trope.
 * Eric von Darkmoor in The Riftwar Cycle novels is the bastard (although his mother tried to claim that he was legitimate, and that his father's relatives annulled the marriage in order to get the Baron-to-be to marry another noble for an alliance) son of the Baron von Darkmoor. He is a much better person than the eldest legitimate child of his father.
 * In Contact, finds out in the very last chapter that . This subplot is completely absent from The Movie.
 * Warrior Cats has so many of these that they're in every series. Examples include: Mistyfoot and Stonefur, who are    also count, with them also being half-clan, and their mother  . They believe that another relation of theirs is their mother, and the truth does not come out until much later.
 * They're cats for crying out loud! All non-human animals are bastards!
 * Mariam from A Thousand Splendid Suns is a tragic example, since she had the bad luck to be one in a society that considers this utterly scandalous.
 * Andre-Louis in Scaramouche was born from an affair.
 * Tzigone, one of the central protagonists of Counselors and Kings is the bastard daughter of the renegade wizardess Keturah . She's very determined to keep this from coming out, however, since Halruaa's laws regarding marriage and procreation are draconian and a wizard's bastard is executed out of hand if both parents can't be named..
 * The title character of Candide is one of the nicest guys in the story. He also happens to be illegitimate (his mother refused to marry his father because "he could produce no more than seventy-one quarterings in his arms"). Despite how little legitimacy matters to the events of the book, Cunegonde's brother refuses to allow her to marry so far below her. He never lets up on this tiring belief, even after Candide bought him out of slavery.
 * Emily Roland from Temeraire is and it's more common than not for women in the Air Corp to have children out of wedlock. The point that keeps coming up in the story is that no, she's not Laurence's bastard.
 * Ellis Peters seems fond of bastards; many of them crop up in her Cadfael books and most of them are heroic. The one that stands out most is Olivier,.
 * Lanen in Tales of Kolmar finds out early that the man her mother married before running away wasn't her father after all. Her initial reaction is relief, since it explains the rather cool relationship that had existed between them, and largely it doesn't seem to matter, but in a low moment later she does bring up her bastard heritage.
 * All four of the main characters of David Drake's The Lord of the Isles series are this, although in the case of Garric and Sharina it's downplayed if not actively covered up, to avoid problems about Garric's claim to the throne. Garric's mother was having an affair with his father while married to Sharina's father ... and Garric's dad was and is married to Sharina's mom. (There was no love within either marriage.) Cashel and Ilna's father was a peasant—and their mother is a queen of The Fair Folk, who is unlikely to have wed the fellow.
 * Dennis Silva points out, on one occasion, that this doesn't apply to him:

Live-Action TV

 * A good chunk of heroines in Hispanic Telenovelas are daughters of mothers abandoned by their lovers, even when the plot does not involve their heritage or lineage at all.
 * Bobby Goren of Law and Order: Criminal Intent  Fortunately, he was raised by someone else and only recently found out.
 * Claire Bennett knew she was adopted, but it was only after she found out the man who raised her was working for a Pseudo-Government Conspiracy did she learn that she was the.
 * Lampshaded in an episode of the TV-series The Associates in which a man notes that there is a TV show called The Bastard about a man who is, well, the title character, and he says, "What will they do next, create a sequel to Lassie called Son-of-a-Bitch?"
 * Subverted in Veronica Mars, when the eponymous heroine
 * Henry from Once Upon a Time.
 * Locke, Aaron, and Walt from Lost, all of whom have been said to be special and important, were all born out of wedlock. Further, all were given up (or scheduled to be given up) for adoption.
 * Det. Olivia Benson from Law and Order Special Victims Unit is the child of a rape.
 * In Kamen Rider Kiva, It's whose the bastard child, although it's inverted, as his father was an all-around nice guy, while his mother fell in love with him more than her actual spouse.
 * The term "hero" is debatable, but Francis Wilkerson from Malcolm in the Middle was born during the wedding ceremony between Hal and Lois.
 * In a DVD extra to accompany the series, Hal, in Being Human (UK) tells Leo that he was raised in a brothel by six prostitutes, but that he never knew which of them was his mother. Ironically, he's often called Lord Hal by the other vampires, because he's one of the 'old ones'.

Theater

 * In keeping with The Zeroth Law of Trope Examples: "The Bastard", Philip Faulconbridge, in King John is a sort of avatar of his father, Richard the Lion Heart. Richard's old enemy Leopold of Austria is conflated by Shakespeare with the Viscount of Limoges, and appears wearing Richard's own personal lion-skin (!), which Faulconbrige takes back after slaying him.
 * in Wicked,
 * Wagner's Siegfried.
 * Jack Dunois, the Bastard of Orléans, in George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan.

Video Games
""So you're not just a bastard, but a royal bastard!""
 * Ayane of the game Dead or Alive is the product of Kasumi's mother being raped.
 * Thomas from Suikoden III is one of the nicest characters in the game and also is a bastard.
 * Likewise Hugo from the same game.
 * Ramza Beoulve, the main character of Final Fantasy Tactics, is heavily implied to be this. Although it only comes up in passing in the game, one imagines it was more of an issue when he was living among nobles, before everyone got caught up in the Lion War. Ironically one of the only unequivocally good characters in the game. For further irony, both his older (presumably legitimate) brothers are bastards in the more contemporary sense of the word. For instance, Dycedarg . Zalbag is much more sympathetic, even noble, but he was still the one giving the order for . The game implies that he may be, like Algus/Argath, a classist, and was willing to sacrifice because  was a "mere" commoner, and insults Ramza for having his mother's "commoner blood".
 * Umineko no Naku Koro ni's is one, but does not know this thanks to . However, his parents did get married, just several years later.
 * The Bastard of Kosigan, bastard son of . Though he might be a Villainous Bastard if you play him the other way. And given the number of women he can end up taking advantage of he may be leaving a few behind.
 * Fire Emblem has a few examples as well:
 * Princess Guinevere in Fuuin no Tsurugi, the illegitimate daughter of King Desmond and his mistress, turns out to be
 * Marriages between Beorc and Laguz are forbidden in Path of Radiance and Radiant Dawn, so all Branded are bastards  Some of the Branded, like Soren and Stefan, serve Ike and could therefore be considered heroic.
 * in Path of Radiance
 * Azel in Genealogy of the Holy Wars, son of the former Duke of Velthomer and his wife Cigyun's favorite lady-in-waiting/maid... or at least he tries to be before everything goes to hell and.
 * But wait, there's more!
 * And even more. The sort-of sequel to Geneaolgy, Thracia 776, reveals that
 * On of the important reveals of Dragon Age is that King Cailan had an illegitimate half brother, namely, one of the few heroic characters in the game.


 * Leliana was also born out of wedlock, something that apparently made life very difficult for her mother in Orlais. Not only one of the more heroic characters, but also one of the only idealists.
 * Mage NPC Feynriel from Dragon Age II, provided you help him realize his potential.
 * Also an Earthborn Shepard, if you play him/her as a paragon.
 * Martin Septim in The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. Not only he is the bastard son of the Emperor and the real hero of the story; he was a bastard on PURPOSE. (The Emperor of Tamriel was really Genre Savvy.)
 * Implied with Emilia in Blaze Union; even though Gulcasa was raised by his abusive father—the parent they share—he never even knew that Emilia existed until she found him.
 * The hero of Baldur's Gate if you play him/her to be good.
 * Prince Amiti of Ayuthay in Golden Sun: Dark Dawn was raised under a cover story where his mother was a powerful Mercury Adept who restored the lost Magitek beneath the palace and concieved him by a miracle. Once the player characters show up, the truth comes out—Amiti's mother, a non-Adept, concieved him the natural way, with a foreign Adept who had started the machine and whose face no one else saw.
 * Jin Kazama from the Tekken series, who is the son of Jun Kazama and Kazuya Mishima. His heroism however has since turned to villainy as of Tekken 6.
 * Also, who is the ending result of one of   trips to Scandinavia. So far, he fits this trope well.
 * Kazuhira/McDonnel Benedict Miller, one of the main protagonists in Metal Gear Solid Peace Walker, was heavily implied to have been conceived due to his mom having to work as a prostitute in post-war Japan to survive.
 * Also Meryl Silverburgh, as she was conceived from an affair between her mother and her uncle Roy Campbell.
 * Supplemental Halo material reveals that Lieutenant Commander Miranda Keyes is the product of an affair between the then Lieutenant Jacob Keyes and Dr. Catherine Halsey.
 * Also Meryl Silverburgh, as she was conceived from an affair between her mother and her uncle Roy Campbell.
 * Supplemental Halo material reveals that Lieutenant Commander Miranda Keyes is the product of an affair between the then Lieutenant Jacob Keyes and Dr. Catherine Halsey.

Web Comics

 * Janine from Murphy's Law claims to have been born five months premature.
 * Secret from Keychain of Creation.
 * Alex from The Dreamer.

Web Originals

 * Carmilla (Sara Waite), one of the students at Whateley Academy in the Whateley Universe, is the child of a powerful lust demon (Gothmog, a child of Shub-Niggurath) and a human woman (actually, a Deep One pre-transformation). You'll never guess, but it was a one-night stand. Of a sort. Despite this background, and having to suck the life out of things in order to live, she's one of the good guys.
 * Bishop Curisor, aka Arturo, aka . It's even on his business card.

Western Animation

 * While the movie Ratatouille itself never uses the word (it is a kid's movie, after all), it's fairly obvious that Linguine was born out of wedlock and that his father apparently didn't even know he existed. The entire thing is not treated as odd or wrong in any way, and at least a few people have commented that this may show a changing public opinion about children born to unmarried parents in the US. Of course, this may come off as Values Dissonance it's set in modern France, where the majority of children are born out of wedlock, so there it's a case of Truth in Television.
 * And of course, they're French.
 * In The Simpsons, Bart finds out that Homer has a brother (voiced by Danny DeVito) who was born out of wedlock, and says, "So any idea where this bastard lives?" Marge realizes that because it is the truth, they can't punish Bart for his use of this profanity. Homer, understandably, is still annoyed by it however.
 * Bart himself also technically qualifies, as he was conceived before Homer and Marge were married. They did perform marriage and was born in wedlock, though, although he nearly came close to becoming one due to Homer leaving the family as he thought he wouldn't provide well for them.
 * Caleb from WITCH when it's revealed that Nerissa is his mother.