Tuesday, 27 August 2024

The Historical Importance of Brittany by Jennifer Ivy Walker


 The Historical Importance of Brittany
By Jennifer Ivy Walker

La Bretagne (Brittany)-- the peninsula in northwestern France whose coastline borders the English Channel to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to the west-- is known for the many myths and legends of the Celtic people who once inhabited the region long before Julius Caesar and his Roman legions conquered Gaul in the first century BC.


Among the Celts of la Bretagne, men trained to become Druid priests or savage warriors (les guerriers), and women were often guérisseuses celtiques-- gifted healers whose natural remedies included herbs of the forest, healing crystals, and curative waters of Brittany’s sacred springs. There are many legends of mythical creatures in Brittany, including the famed fairies Morgane la Fée and the Lady of the Lake Viviane, in Arthurian tales from the enchanted Forest of Brocéliande. My trilogy, The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven, is a fantasy retelling of the Celtic medieval legend of Tristan et Yseult, interwoven with Arthurian myth. 



During the Second World War, Brittany was part of Hitler’s 2000 mile long Atlantic Wall, which extended from the southern coast of France all the way up the northern coast of Norway. Many Breton seaports were considered crucial in defending the German occupied territories against the anticipated Allied invasion. One of those key ports was the medieval walled city of Saint-Malo, on la Côte d’ Émeraude (the Emerald Coast), at the border between Brittany and Normandy. The Battle of Saint-Malo, which was fought between the fourth of August and the second of September 1944, is the culminating point of my novel, The Witch of the Breton Woods. 


After the D-Day invasion of Normandy in June 1944, the Allied Forces succeeded in retaking the Cotentin peninsula from the Germans, and moved west for the Battle of Brittany. The French Resistance was crucial in the Allies’ liberation of France. The Witch of the Breton Woods features a fictional band of Resistance members known as Les Loups (The Wolves), with a nod to the Celtic myths and Arthurian legends from the enchanted Forest of Brocéliande. 




The Witch of the Breton Woods
By Jennifer Ivy Walker


Publication Date: 10th July 2024
Publisher: The Wild Rose Press
Page Length: 163 Pages
Genre: Historical Romance

Traumatized by horrors witnessed during the Nazi invasion of France, a young woman retreats to the dense Breton woods where she becomes a member of the clandestine French Resistance. When she finds a critically injured American paratrooper whose plane was shot down, she shelters the wounded soldier in her secluded cottage, determined to heal him despite the enormous risk.

Ostracized by villagers who have labeled her a witch, she is betrayed by an informant who reports to the Butcher—the monstrous leader of the local paramilitary organization that collaborates with the Germans. As the enemy closes in, she must elude the Gestapo while helping the Resistance reunite the American with his regiment and join the Allied Forces in the Battle of Brittany.

Can true love triumph against all odds under the oppressive Third Reich?


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Jennifer Ivy Walker


Jennifer Ivy Walker has an MA in French literature and is a former high school teacher and professor of French at a state college in Florida.  Her novels encompass a love for French language, literature, history, and culture, incorporating her lifelong study, summers abroad, and many trips to France.

The Witch of the Breton Woods is heart-pounding suspense set during WWII in Nazi-occupied France, where a young woman in the French Resistance shelters and heals a wounded American soldier, hiding him from the Gestapo and the monstrous Butcher who are relentlessly hunting him.

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Monday, 26 August 2024

Five minute history - The Coal and Iron Police by Jennifer M. Lane


Five minute history - The Coal and Iron Police
By Jennifer M. Lane

My favorite thing about reading historical fiction is being inspired by little pieces of history that leap off the page. Quite often, I find myself launched into an unexpected, adjacent realm of research, like the time I was a teenage girl and found myself researching Napoleon's days in exile after reading about Waterloo.

As a historical fiction writer, I often find myself in an eddy of research that informs the work but doesn't end up on the page. Such was the case in Downriver - with the Coal and Iron Police.
Though the facts and town of Downriver are fictional, the circumstances and background that shape the story are rooted in fact. Safety and worker conditions and the history of worker uprisings are central to the plot of Downriver, and none of those things can be studied without mention of the Coal and Iron Police.

In 1868, Pennsylvania granted companies the right to create their own law enforcement to uphold their own rules. It seems strange by today's standard, that a state would allow a company to run its own law enforcement, but at the time, there were no state-level police efforts. Only counties and towns managed law enforcement. As coal patch towns popped up in the wilderness, it made sense to both the coal company and the state to allow for privatized law enforcement to protect company interests. But it was deadly for many workers. What emerged was the Coal and Iron Police (C&IP).


What looked good on paper was put to sinister use. Underpaid workers who faced horrible working conditions, whose livelihoods that were essentially indentured servitude, engaged in strikes. Coal bosses used the Coal and Iron Police for strike-breaking and to evict striking families from their homes. For example, in 1910, the C&IP were used as strikebreakers in Westmoreland, evicting workers from their houses and forcing them to live in tents for a winter. During the long strike, 16 people - miners and their wives - were shot and killed, some while sleeping in their tents while others were trampled by horses.

This endless fight for safety, workers rights, and fair pay would have framed much of Charlotte’s father’s life. 

Twenty-three years before Downriver takes place, the Molly Maguires were tried for a years-long string of violence and murder in their actions against the coal bosses. Frank Morris would have been in his twenties when Jack Kehoe was hanged after being found guilty of leading the Molly Maguires on a deadly retribution spree.

And only three years before our story takes place, in 1897, the Lattimer Massacre occurred. An estimated 15,000 mine workers from coal companies throughout Luzerne, Carbon, and Schuylkill Counties protested dangerous working conditions, unpaid overtime, and high prices at the company store by marching, which led to a strike.


The Luzerne County sheriff declared a state of civil disorder and deputized 87 men - mostly managers in coal companies - and armed them with rifles and bullets. He warned the unarmed, striking workers of the Pardee Company not to march toward Lattimer - just west of modern-day Hazelton - but they did anyway.

When the 400 striking men arrived, they encountered a band of about 150 Coal & Iron Police and volunteers. After a brief scuffle, shots were fired. History disagrees about who fired first, but the 400 unarmed striking workers scattered while the sheriff's men shot them in their backs. Nineteen men were murdered, 38 severely wounded, and the massacre made headlines around the country. 

It was this landscape into which I painted Frank Morris, a quiet man who stood on a soapbox and asked peacefully for workers’ rights in a time after violence failed. But we follow his firebrand of a daughter, part of the first generation after an era of violence, as she seeks to put right the wrongs in her path.


Downriver
By Jennifer M. Lane


Publication Date: May 28, 2024
Publisher: Pen & Key Publishing
Pages: 344 pages
Genre: Historical

A sulfur sky poisoned her family and her heart. Now revenge tastes sweeter than justice.

It’s 1900. In a Pennsylvania coal town tainted by corruption and pollution, Charlotte's world collapses when her parents meet a tragic end. Sent to a foster family in a Maryland fishing village, she’s fueled by grief and embarks on a relentless quest for justice against the ruthless coal boss, Nels Pritchard.

But Charlotte is no ordinary girl. She shares the fiery spirit of her father, whose powerful speeches inspired worker riots. With a burning desire for vengeance, she sets out to uncover the truth behind Pritchard's crimes, unearthing a shocking connection between the town's toxic air and the lifeless fish washing up on the shore of her Chesapeake Bay foster town.

To expose the truth, Charlotte builds a network of unexpected allies. There are gutsy suffragists, a literary society of teenage girls willing to print the truth… and Weylan. The captivating young man lost his own family to Pritchard’s poison. He offers support, but Charlotte questions his true motives when he lures her to break the law. Could she be falling into a dangerous trap, leading her to a fate worse than poison?

With her unwavering spirit and determination, Charlotte must forge alliances and navigate a web of treachery before Pritchard seeks his own ruthless revenge.

The newest book by award-winning author Jennifer M. Lane is perfect for fans of Jeannette Walls’ Hang the Moon and the fiery protagonist in The Hunger Games. Join Charlotte in this small town, coming-of-age dystopian historical saga as she finds resilience, courage, and triumph in her search for identity, independence, and her true home.

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Jennifer M. Lane


A Maryland native and Pennsylvanian at heart, Jennifer M. Lane holds a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Barton College and a master’s in liberal arts with a focus on museum studies from the University of Delaware, where she wrote her thesis on the material culture of roadside memorials.

Jennifer is a member of the Authors Guild and the Historical Novel Society. Her first book, Of Metal and Earth, won the 2019 Next Generation Indie Book Award for First Novel and was a Finalist in the 2018 IAN Book of the Year Awards in the category of Literary / General Fiction. She is also the author of Stick Figures from Rockport, and the six book series, The Collected Stories of Ramsbolt.

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Wednesday, 14 August 2024

Five minute history - Kingdom of Hungary (15th Century) by Katerina Dunne

 

Five minute history - Kingdom of Hungary (15th Century) bKaterina Dunne

Return to the Eyrie is a personal story with fictional main characters but is set against the complex historical background of the late 15th century Kingdom of Hungary. Medieval Hungary was a powerful multi-ethnic and multi-lingual kingdom, which covered a large part of Central Europe. 


15th-century Europe map copied from

https://www.gifex.com/detail-en/2009-09-17-811/Europe-during-the-15th-Century.html

During most of the 15th century, the main danger for Hungary came from the Ottoman Empire, which was rapidly expanding towards the west and north. Smaller kingdoms and principalities, such as Serbia, Bulgaria or Wallachia, had already become vassals of the Ottomans while Constantinople fell to them in 1453. All this meant that Hungary was now the last frontier holding back the Sultan’s advance towards Central Europe.

The years between 1458 and 1490 were dominated by the figure of Mátyás (Matthias) Hunyadi, who became king aged fifteen in January 1458. Although his family’s origins are a little obscure and subject to many theories, it seems that Mátyás was the first king of Hungary who was elected despite not being of royal blood. Therefore, this caused problems to his rule right from the start. Powerful barons and prelates within Hungary as well as the Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Poland disputed his legitimacy. So, Mátyás had to secure his throne first and foremost before dealing with the Ottoman threat. In fact, he spent more time at war with his Christian neighbours than fighting the Ottomans. He also spent much effort trying to influence politics in Bosnia, Wallachia and Moldavia, by supporting his favourite candidates as rulers there. The most famous example was Vlad Dracul III (also known as Vlad the Impaler) whom Mátyás initially supported, then arrested and imprisoned for many years until he finally released him in 1475 and sent him back to Wallachia to reclaim his throne. However, Vlad’s rule was short-lived as he was killed at the end of 1476. Similarly, Mátyás fought against the Moldavian Prince, Stefan III (later known as Stefan the Great), during the early years of his rule; however, he later supported Stefan in his efforts to repel the Ottoman attacks on Moldavia.

Some historians believe that Mátyás probably realised that the only way for him to be successful against the Sultan’s armies was to unite the neighbouring countries under his rule and thus increase his military strength. Others believe that he was more interested in becoming the Holy Roman Emperor himself.

But apart from his political and military achievements, Mátyás was also well-known for bringing the Italian Renaissance and Humanism to Hungary, becoming the patron of many scholars and artists and establishing the famous Corvina Library in his Buda palace.

All these elements of the historical background of the time are woven through the storyline of Return to the Eyrie. The main characters participate in the King’s military campaigns, while they also witness the devastation of the Ottoman attacks on the border areas of Hungary. The different battle tactics—from cannons, siege machines and gunboats to armoured cavalry and mounted archers—are depicted in the novel, showing the size and variety of the military forces Mátyás had at his disposal. As the characters travel across the kingdom, they meet people of different ethnic origins who speak a variety of languages, accentuating the multi-cultural nature of medieval Hungary. In addition, the splendour of the royal palace and the King’s legendary fair judgement (which became the subject of popular folk tales after his death) are also demonstrated when he deals with the heroine of the novel.

Bust of King Mátyás Hunyadi at the Royal Palace in Visegrád (author photograph)


Return to the Eyrie 
By Katerina Dunne


Publication Date: 30th April 2024
Publisher: Historium Press
Page Length: 404 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction (Medieval) / Historical Romance

Honour, revenge, and the quest for justice.
Belgrade, Kingdom of Hungary, 1470.

Raised in exile, adolescent noblewoman Margit Szilágyi dreams of returning to her homeland of Transylvania to avenge her father's murder and reclaim her stolen legacy. To achieve this, she must break the constraints of her gender and social status and secretly train in combat. When the king offers her a chance at justice, she seizes it—even if it means disguising herself as a man to infiltrate the vultures' nest that now occupies her ancestral ‘eyrie’.

Plagued by childhood trauma and torn between two passionate loves, Margit faces brutal battles, her murderous kin's traps and inner demons on her quest for vengeance. Only by confronting the past can she reclaim her honour—if she can survive long enough to see it through.

Return to the Eyrie is an epic coming-of-age tale of a young woman's unwavering pursuit of justice and destiny in 15th century Hungary.

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Katerina Dunne


Katerina Dunne is the pen-name of Katerina Vavoulidou. Originally from Athens, Greece, Katerina has been living in Ireland since 1999. She has a degree in English Language and Literature from the University of Athens, an MA in Film Studies from University College Dublin and an MPhil in Medieval History from Trinity College Dublin.

Katerina is passionate about history, especially medieval history, and her main area of interest is 13th to 15th century Hungary. Although the main characters of her stories are fictional, Katerina uses real events and personalities as part of her narrative in order to bring to life the fascinating history of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, a location and time period not so well-known to English-speaking readers.

Return to the Eyrie (published April 2024) is the second book in the Medieval Hungary series, a sequel to Lord of the Eyrie (published in February 2022).

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The magical gris-gris - a journey in understanding by Laura Rahme

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