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Showing posts with label Alison Stuart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alison Stuart. Show all posts

Monday, October 22, 2012

Let no Man put Asunder - Introduction to the Laws of Divorce

Following on from my earlier posts on the Laws of Succession and the Laws of Marriage, this month is an introduction to the English Laws of Divorce. 



Even today, marriage is one of the most important contracts two people can make it, but unlike many other contracts, it was, until very recently, extremely difficult to get out of.  It is only in my lifetime that divorce has become the “out clause” we all know.

Interestingly in the early days of Christian England, divorce by consent or for adultery or desertion was not unknown. It was only the Medieval canonists who, holding to  a strict interpretation of the scriptures, decreed that the bonds of matrimony were indissoluble during the lives of the parties.  The words of the old Book of Common Prayer marriage ceremony read “Let those whom God has put together let no man put asunder”.  Church courts would only grant divorce on the ground that the marriage had been void from the beginning. Eg. A want of consent to the marriage, precontract, consanguinity, affinity and impotence at the time of marriage.
Table of Consanguinity
from Liber Floridus 12th century
  •  Consent – Want of consent could be evidenced not only by duress but the age of the parties. The age of “consent” was fixed at 7 years old but until the age of puberty (12 for girls and 14 for boys – this minimum age was raised to 16 for both parties as recently as 1929) either party could avoid  the marriage. Parental consent was a requirement for the marriage of minors, although if the marriage had been solemnized and the parents raised no objection the marriage held.
  •  Consanguinity and Affinity– A Table of Kindred and Affinity formed part of the Book of Common Prayer and laid down those who could not marry. It was based on sound genetic propositions (eg a man may not marry his mother). Affinity is even more remote – it implied a relationship through marriage or carnal connection eg if a man fornicated with X’s sister he was forbidden from marrying X. Again some of the more remote affinities were only removed within the last 100 years (see the Deceased Wife’s Sister’s Marriage Act of 1907)
  •  Impotence (failure to consummate).  Incurable impotency had to be proved and might arise from malformation or invincible frigidity. A person found to be incurably impotent (inhabilis ab intitio) was not free to marry again but frigidity was no bar to a subsequent marriage!

Divorce a mensa et thoro (from board and bed). The feeling that divorce ought to be permitted in the case of matrimonial wrongs, such as adultery led to the development of a form of judicial separation whereby the parties, although remaining indissolubly united, were permitted to live apart (but not remarry. It could be granted for misconduct such as adultery, cruelty and sodomy and an innocent wife could be awarded alimony for her maintenance.

Surely the most famous divorce in history was that of Henry VIII and his wife Catherine of Aragon. Under the laws of affinity, Henry had required a papal dispensation to marry his brother’s wife.  When Henry sought to put the marriage aside on the grounds that the papal dispensation was ultra vires, the Queen claimed that her marriage to Prince Arthur had never been lawful as it had tot been consummated.  Only when Henry had the control of the church in his grasp did he “divorce” Catherine on the grounds that the marriage was void. His subsequent marriage to Ann Boleyn was also declared void although no reasons were officially given but he may have argued pre-contract or affinity (through his own relationship with Mary Boleyn). The effect was to bastardise Elizabeth. He divorced Ann of Cleves on the grounds of her precontract with Francis of Lorraine, incapacity and duress (sic!).
Catherine of Aragon

The legacy of Henry’s manipulation of the Canon Law and the English Reformation was a revision of the laws surrounding divorce.  Archbishop Cranmer proposed full dissolution of marriage for good cause (such as adultery, cruelty and desertion) but his proposals were never implemented.

Through his actions, Henry had bastardised both his daughters but both Mary and Elizabeth passed Acts of Parliament reinstating their status and thereby demonstrating that the civil Parliament could interfere with the canon law.  In 1548 the Marquis of Northhampton sought to divorce and remarry. The validity of his second marriage was upheld by Act of Parliament.

In 1670 divorce on the grounds of adultery was given effect by statute when Lord Roos’ marriage was dissolved and he was permitted to remarry but adultery remained the only ground for divorce and in order to obtain it the husband to first bring an action to prove the adultery at common law, then obtain a divorce a mensa et thoro from the Ecclesiastical court on the grounds of that adultery and finally petition the House of Lords. The parliamentary procedure was long winded and expensive but it was invoked about 300 times during the 18th and 19th centuries. It was exclusive to the wealthy classes and permitted only for male petitioners.

The only remedy still available for the more lowly classes was the dissolution on the basis of the marriage being void (a vinculo matrimonii) or legal separation (a mensa et thoro). The institution of civil marriage in 1836 removed the ecclesiastical objections to remarriage after divorce but did nothing to facilitate divorce itself.  Reform came in 1857 with the establishment of the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes which abolished the divorce jurisdiction of the church courts. All it did was improve the machinery for obtaining a divorce. The only ground for divorce remained adultery and in the case of a wife petitioner, cruelty and desertion had to be proved as well.  The abuse of the Victorian divorce court by society families became a scandal; formal evidence of adultery was frequently provided with little scrutiny! In the twenty years from 1867 to 1887 the number of divorces rose from 130 to 372.  Compare that with the USA where divorces, under a different legal system,  in the same period rose from 9,937 to 25,535.

It was not until 1935 that true reform in the shape of A.P Herbert’s Act came about.  Divorce on the grounds of cruelty and desertion (for three years)  were included. Wives had the same rights as their husbands. The Church of England responded by legislating that divorced persons should not be allowed to remarry in the Church. “No fault” divorce or divorce on the grounds of “irretrievable breakdown of marriage” only came into existence in the 1960s and 1970s.  


And to end on a personal note, in the late 1920s my own grandmother ran off with another man. She was in the terms of the day, a “bolter” (a term familiar to those who have read Love in A Cold Climate). Although she was the defaulting party my grandfather, being a gentleman, ‘took the blame’.  A hotel room in Brighton was hired and my grandfather seen to enter it in the company of a woman who was not his wife (thus proving adultery). The divorce obtained, my grandmother did remarry (twice in fact…everyone should have a scandalous grandparent). She was not permitted to remarry in the Church (even if she had wished to do so), nor I believe, permitted to take communion!

Source:  An Introduction to Legal History J.H. Baker/Osborn's Law Dictionary

Alison's latest book, GATHER THE BONES, is now available in print as well as digital.

Monday, September 17, 2012

A MICHELIN GUIDE TO A STORY IDEA

Writers are often asked where they get their idea for a story. Inspiration can strike in the most unexpected ways and sometimes there is no one trigger point for a story. 

GATHER THE BONES is a story that came from a number of different sources but it is perhaps a little brown book published in 1920 that I found at the back of my parents bookshelves that sowed the seeds of my hero, Paul’s war. Ypres and the Battle for Ypres 1914-1918, An illustrated history and guide”.


 It seems extraordinary that less than two years after the end of the war there was already a tourist industry around the battlefields, but the clue comes from a little insert on the town of Ypres which describes it as the “Centre for English, French and American Pilgrims”. In this little leaflet are advertisements for “Touring Cars” (wreaths by arrangement “placed on graves and photographed”), Hotels bearing the names “The Splendid” and “Hotel Britannique”. A good cup of tea in three minutes can be obtained from the Patisserie and Tea Rooms of Me Ve Vandaele on the Grand Place.


The Michelin Guides are ubiquitous today and I have a small collection of the narrow green guides for parts of France I have visited. It began in 1900 just as the first automobiles were appearing on the roads of  France. Two enterprising brothers, André and Edouard Michelin decided to produce a small guide, given free to motorists, listing petrol stations across France and information on where to get your vehicle repaired as well as crucial information on accommodation and meals.  In 1904 the Guide went international, with the publication of the Michelin Guide Belgium. 

The company must have seen the opportunity that existed and even while the war still raged it started to produce a produced a series of guides to the battlefields. According to a page in the guide, during the war itself, Michelin converted a warehouse into a hospital for the wounded, all funded by the company. It opened on September 22 1914 and the first wounded arrived that night. In all nearly 3000 soldiers were treated at the Michelin Hospital. (An illustrated booklet on how Michelin "did his bit" will be sent "free on application")



We are informed that during the Great War, Ypres was bombarded continuously for four years and 250,000 British fell defending the city. “Today Ypres is being quickly reconstructed,out of 5,000 Houses destroyed, 3,000 will have been rebuild by the end of 1923; thanks to the tenacity of the Population and financial help from the Belgium Government.”
“A number of quite up to date Hotels, providing every comfort: Central Heating, Electricity, Baths etc are already in full swing. ..The country around is agricultural, with villages and farms being rebuilt once more...Every convenience and comfort for Pilgrims and Tourists is to be had in Ypres...”


So we have hired our touring car (with a British Driver), fortified ourself with a 3 minute cup of tea and off we go. The most extraordinary thing about this little book are the illustrations: Before and After shots of little towns, chateau, woods and churches. Our touring car is pictured driving down a road lined by the broken stumps of trees and this is another taken at an intersection in what would have once been the thriving little town of Messines. 




My husband and I visited modern Ypres in 2005. Like the little towns of the Ypres salient it has been rebuilt, reconstructed to look as it did before 1914, but in the flat, green fields of the Ypres salient are the many, many cemeteries and memorials and in places it is still possible to see the craters and trenches that once criss crossed the area. 

Even ninety years after the last gun was silenced, the bodies of the missing were being discovered and a reinternment was occurring while we were there. I tried to imagine what it was like for the families of those young men who had no graveside to mourn and slowly the idea for Gather the Bones took shape.
I had Paul’s war there on my desk. In that non descript little book I had the images of the battlefields, the trenches, the concrete machine gun posts but more importantly I had the pilgrimage. Evelyn, Charlie’s mother, has to see where her son died, to really believe he is dead. It was the Evelyns who bought the 1920 Michelin Guide, booked the Hotel Splendid, bought their wreath and in their hired touring car, laid their ghosts to rest.

Monday, August 13, 2012

THE DISCOVERY OF THE ROYAL TOMBS OF UR


Firstly an apology...I know I promised a post on the Laws of Divorce but a recent visit to the Melbourne Museum's current exhibition on The Wonders of Ancient Mesopotamia (which is on until 7 October) combined with the release on September 3 of my new book, GATHER THE BONES, which coincidentally involves the 1922 discoveries of Ur, has led me in a different direction.

The Royal Standard of Ur
I have always been a closet archaeologist. In fact I was so keen on the dream of becoming an archaeologist that I had obtained all the information on enrolling in the London School of Archaeology when I finished University. Not to be. I finished my legal qualification, met a man, got married...and spent my life as a lawyer.  Not surprisingly I ADORE programs like Time Team. I don’t care if I am watching repeats or new episodes, every time a tiny chunk of dried,  black mud is identified as a piece of Anglo Saxon Pottery from the kiln on the west side of the hill in Chipping Leghorn, I feel a frisson of excitement. On my trips to England my husband and I can now spot a piece of Roman Samian ware pottery at 50 metres.

At University I had studied Ancient History under an eccentric old professor who still wore his gown and whose name, sadly, I can no longer recall. He had a passion for Sumerian History which he inculcated in me. So it is not surprising that when I was casting around for a suitable profession for the hero of GATHER THE BONES, Paul Morrow, he became a frustrated archaeologist. I often wonder if authors tend to vent their own frustrations on their characters, a sort of Munchausen by Proxy!

Despite Paul’s classical education, he had been forced into the army, rather than take up a scholarship at Oxford. Now, in 1923 (when my story is set), he works on the archaeological digs as the expedition manager rather than an archaeologist. To be honest I invented Paul’s position with the expedition, reasoning that someone had to organise the logisitics of an Expedition of this size and who better than an impoverished former army officer? 
C.L. Wooley and his site foreman Hahmoud

The early 1920s were an extraordinary time in archaeology. In Egypt, Carter had just opened the tomb of Tutankhamun and elsewhere in the Middle East activity that had been suspended during the Great War was recommencing.  In Iraq (or Mesopotamia as it was still known) Charles Leonard Woolley had begun work on the excavations, near Basrah, of a site that was to become known as the Royal Tombs at Ur. Some excavation had already been done on the site in the early part of the century but it was not until 1922 when the British Museum and the University of Pennsylvania launched a combined dig that serious excavation of the site began.

Woolley and team at the dig house

The digging season took place in the winter months to make the most of the cooler weather and Woolley commenced work in November 1922.   He commenced the dig with two large trenches near the ruins of a Ziggurat and within a week Trench A had already produced extraordinary evidence of high status burials with the discovery of gold items. Trench B produced more prosaic buildings and pottery. Feeling he lacked the experience to proceed with a full scale burials excavation, Woolley closed down Trench A and work continued on Trench B which revealed the important temple of E-Un-Mah and the beginnings of a massive wall. Time ran out and in Spring, the dig closed down and Woolley and his team returned to London (...and Paul to Holdston Hall).

Woolley supervising excavation
The excavations at Ur went on until 1934 and over that period the most extraordinary finds in the history of archaeology were unearthed. A total of about 1,850 burials were uncovered, including 16 that were described as “royal tombs” containing many valuable artefacts, including the Standard of Ur and the Lamb in the Thicket. Most of the royal tombs were dated to about 2600 BC. The finds included the unlooted tomb of a queen thought to be Queen Puabi (the name is known from a cylinder seal found in the tomb, although there were two other different and unnamed seals found in the tomb). Many other people had been buried with her, in a form of human sacrifice.

Cuneiform tablet
I did give Paul something useful to do in translating cuneiform tablets. Cuneiform had been deciphered by the end of the nineteenth century and the clay tablets are eloquent in their insight into Sumerian life. In my research for the book I came across the story of the boy who didn’t want to go to school that Paul tells Alice.

Woolley with Max Mallowan and Agatha Christie 1931
Finally a literary connection...one of the archaeologists who worked on the later excavations with Woolley was Max Mallowan, husband of Agatha Christie. Christie would accompany her husband for the dig season and, of course, her book (possibly my favourite of her books) MURDER IN MESOPOTAMIA is based on her experiences on the digs.

If you are interested in the excavations at Ur, visit http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/article_index/u/ur.aspx and, of course, good old Wikipedia is abounding in articles. For my research I went back to the bookshelves and dug out my old text book from University days...The Sumerians by Samuel Noah Kramer, one of the definitive works on the subject.

Monday, July 16, 2012

A Potted History of the Laws of Marriage


In my last Historical Hearts post I wrote about the Lawsof Succession. Continuing on the "property" theme,  this post is a short guide to the laws of marriage in England.

The laws of marriage went beyond being merely a civil contract,they significantly altered the status of an individual (the woman) in respect of her actions, obligations and property.  Because it was also considered a "holy estate", canon law as well as civil law had to be taken into account. Until the nineteenth century, questions of "Marriage" were the almost exclusive jurisdiction of the Church.

commixtio sexuum
Marriage required not only the solemnisation provided by the church but also the "physical union of man and woman in carnal copulation" (and because I love latin legal maxims, here's the maxim for the day "commixtio sexuum"). Because there could be copulation without marriage, it was decided that an intention to marry (a mental element) had to be present and according to Canon Law (and at least until 1753) a promise to marry someone could be held as an indissoluble union, a contract of marriage between two people by consent alone without any form of ecclesiastical ceremony, provided the consent was given in words of the present tense...”I am marrying you...” as opposed to “...I will marry you...”. These irregular marriages were generally legitimised by the parties being compelled to solemnise their marriage publicly at the door of the church. In the event of a dispute with a later marriage, this irregular marriage would be upheld. This archaic concept of marriage lingered through to the 1970s in the form of an action for “breach of promise of marriage”.

For a marriage to be “regular”, publicity of the intention to marry came into formal existence by 1200 when Archbishop Walter required banns to be published on three separate occasions. The calling of banns allowed the congregation to declare any impediment to the marriage such as consanguinity or pre contract.

In these early days, the marriage took place at the door of the church. The priest would call on the couple to declare any impediment. The parties would then speak the words of betrothal and present matrimony and the husband would then place a ring of the wife’s finger (the wearing of wedding ring by a man is a modern concept) and deliver to her the tokens representing dower (see my last blog). The ceremony would conclude with a nuptial mass inside the church.

In 1753 Lord Hardwicke’s Act abolished secret marriages. The publication of banns, the purchase of a licence, the presence of two witnesses and the recording of the marriage in a public register were made compulsory. Interestingly Jews and Quakers were exempt from this Act and there was no special provision for Roman Catholics and non conformists. This was not remedied until 1836 when the civil marriage ceremony was introduced and Non conformist places of worship could be registered under that statute. 

Husband and wife were seen in the eyes of both canon and common law as one person (here comes another legal maxim:  erunt animae duae in carne una).  This one person was, of course, the husband. Modern women may cringe at this quote from Blackelocke "...the very being or legal existence of a woman is suspended during marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband...". Of course the origin of this is scriptual, reflecting the Canon Law influence on marriage.

A wife could not own property or enter into contracts.  Only acting as an agent for her husband could she make valid contracts. Married women were only given the same contractual rights as men as late as 1935.

Neither could she sue or be sued and nor could she take any legal action against her husband because they were seen to be “one person”.  In the case of injury to the wife, a husband could sue for loss he suffered through the loss of the wife’s services or society (consortium). He could sue in trespass against a man who committed adultery with his wife. If the wife absconded with her lover, an action for “enticement” could be brought against the lover, alleging the defendant had maliciously schemed to deprive him of his wife’s consortium by enticing her away. This action was not abolished until 1970! No corresponding rights existed for the wife.
Hogarth:  The Marriage Settlement

On marriage any property which the woman owned as a single woman became the husbands and could be disposed of by him without recourse.  You may recall from my last post, if the husband predeceased the wife she could claim one third of his estate if he died intestate (without a will). If he died testate (with a will) she was only entitled to whatever legacies he saw fit to leave her. Interestingly although a wife’s real property brought by her into the marriage, vested in her husband during the marriage, if she predeceased him he was only entitled to a tenancy by the curtesy. A husband could dispose of her property but on his death the wife would be entitled to claim it back. However if she wanted to alienate the land during her husband’s life time, she would have to have his assent. Any grants of property to the wife during the marriage, vested the property in the husband.

By the eighteenth century an equitable doctrine of "separate use" had begun to be used. In equity, a husband and wife could be seen as separate people and property settled on the wife during marriage could be held on trust for the wife's separate use. Judges noted with concern that this could lead to the wife being coerced into disposing of her equitable estate to her husband and a far thinking judge solved the problem by inserting "the restraint on anticipation" condition into a settlement which prevented the wife from alienating or charging the property during her marriage. This protected the property for the wife until widowhood. It also prevented her from disposing of it legitimately in any other form!

While this equitable doctrine applied nicely to the landed classes, it did nothing for the poorer classes. By the middle nineteenth century, after intensive lobbying, the equitable doctrine of separate use was extended to wages and earnings of working women. This provided some modest protection for those women who worked to keep their families together only to have their husbands take their humble earnings. A further reform in 1882 extended this to property of a married woman, whether acquired before or after a marriage.

My next Historical Hearts Blog on August 13 will be a Potted History of Divorce.

Reference:  An Introduction to English Legal History: J.H. Baker

Friday, June 8, 2012

Historical Hearts Good News, New Releases & Cover Love!!



Danielle Lisle
has signed a contract with Total E Bound  for
PORTRAIT OF A SCANDAL
book one in my new SCANDALS OF NOBILITY series.
Available 29 October 2012.
Congratulations Danielle!!


Tamara Gill
has signed a second contract with Crimson Romance
for her Medieval time travel romance
DEFIANT SURRENDER
Available later this year
Congratulations Tam!!


Bronwyn Stuart
Scandal's Mistress
Available August 13 from Carina Press
It's a beautiful cover, Bron. Congratulations!!


blurb:

London, 1805

Justin Trentham, third son of the Earl of Billington, is determined to get himself disowned from his cold and unloving family. Despite his numerous affairs with questionable women of the ton, his parents continue to be dismissive of his ploys, but Justin spots the perfect scandal in the form of a beautiful, exotic Italian opera singer...

Carmalina Belluccini refuses to become his mistress, despite being tempted by his charms. But after losing her singing voice, she finds herself destitute. She agrees to be Justin's mistress for one month, until she has enough money to return to her beloved Italy.

She intends to keep their arrangement strictly business, but after witnessing Justin's vulnerable side, she finds herself falling more in love than in lust with him. Carmalina is having second thoughts about leaving England...but is their love strong enough to survive the scandal of the season?


Annie Seaton
Blind Lust
Available June 15 from Musa Publishing


blurb:

A wager between the gods can change your life. Even if you are a witch…
When Venus has a wager with Cupid, that prudish librarian, Lizzy Sweet cannot be enticed to love, she neglects to tell her son that Lizzy is a three hundred year old witch. The first man Lizzy sees after Cupid shoots his arrow is Josh Deegan, a famous country and western singer who has come to town to rediscover his muse, in an old farmhouse haunted by a culinary ghost.

Local warlock, Wesley Gordon, who has been hitting on Lizzy to no avail for over one hundred years, is not impressed. The quirky old folk of Silver Valley watch fondly as the battle between love and lust plays out. Leaden and golden arrows zing around, spells are magicked, potions stirred, and ghosts hunted. Who will fall in love and who will let the other go forever?

Anne Brear
The Gentle Wind's Caress
Available Now in print and ebook format



blurb:

Halifax, 1876. On the death of her mother and sister, Isabelle Gibson is left to fend for herself and her brother in a privately-run workhouse. After the matron's son attempts to rape her, Isabelle decides to escape him and a life of drudgery by agreeing to marry a moorland farmer she has never met. But this man, Farrell, is a drunkard and a bully in constant feud with his landlord, Ethan Harrington. When Farrell bungles a robbery and deserts her, Isabelle and Ethan are thrown together as she struggles to save the farm. Both are married and must hide their growing love. But despite the secrecy, Isabelle draws strength from Ethan as faces from the past return to haunt her and a tragedy is set to strike that will change all of their lives forever.



Tamara Gill
A Marriage Made in Mayfair
Available June 15 from Decadent Publishing


blurb:

Miss Suzanna March wished for one thing, the elusive, rakish charmer, Lord Danning. But after a frightful first season sees her flee to Paris, such dreams seem impossible. That is until she returns to London, a new woman, and one who will not let the ton's dislike of her stand in her way of gaining what she wants. Revenge on the Lord who gave her the cut direct and perhaps a little flirtation to show the mighty Viscount what he'll never have.

Lord Danning unbeknown to his peers is in financial strife and desperate to marry an heiress. Such luck would have it Miss Suzanna March fits all his credentials and seduction is his plan of action. Yes, the woman who returned from Paris is stronger, defiant, and a little argumentative, but it does not stop Lord Danning finding himself in awe and protective of her.

But will Suzanna fall for such pretty words from a charmer only after one thing. Or will Lord Danning prove to Suzanna and himself that she is more than his ticket out of debtor's prison...

Alison Stuart
Has two new fantastic covers for her novels
By the Sword
and
The King's Man
They look great, Alison. Congratulations!!




Both these titles are available as an ebook from Kindle, Apple, Sony, Kobo, Diesel, Barnes and Noble or in any format from Smashwords. Or in print from Book Depository, Amazon or Wordclay or directly from the author.




Saturday, May 19, 2012

Historical Hearts Good News

More great news for our Historical Hearts members.
This week we congratulate...


Alison Stuart
who has a fantastic new cover
for her September release with Lyrical Press
Gather the Bones
Alison also finaled in the
with her manuscript
Lord Somerton's Heir


And if Alison wasn't busy enough
she has also print published her
collection of short stories
Tower of Tales
through Lulu.
Congratulations Alison!



Anne Brear's novel
The House of Women
available from Knox Robinson Publishing
reached number 1 on the
Amazon free kindle historical romance bestseller list.
Congratulations Anne!



Erin Grace
has signed a 6 BOOK DEAL
More details of these fantastic stories to come.
Congratulations Erin!! Fantastic news!!



Tamara Gill
has sold her first single title manuscript
A Stolen Season
to Crimson Romance.



Tamara will also be celebrating the release of her
Regency romance novella
A Marriage Made in Mayfair
Available June 15
by holding a month long blog hop.
You can read more details of the hop at her blog here.


And last but certainly not least
Danielle Lisle
has two wonderful new covers to show off
for her manuscripts
The Rose's Bloom
and
The Virgin at Goodrich Hall
Available soon from Total E Bound

Congratulations Danielle! They're fantastic!



And that wraps up our good news this week.
Thanks for celebrating with us.
HH


Monday, February 6, 2012

Cromwell's Master of Spies


John Thurloe

One of the pleasures of writing fiction is that sometimes real life can be stranger than fiction and in the course of my research into the English Civil War period I have come across many interesting people whose lives read like fiction novels.
However, only one real life character appears in both of my books (The King’s Man and By the Sword)- Cromwell’s Secretary of State, John Thurloe.  Thurloe came from a fine tradition of spy masters to the English Court, such as Sir Francis Walsingham and Robert Cecil who dominated Elizabeth’s reign and saved his Queen from assassination on many occasions and as part of his duties as confidante to Oliver Cromwell,  Thurloe ran a ruthlessly efficient spy ring.
He began his career as a lawyer and by 1652 had been appointed to the position of Secretary of State.  The Commonwealth regime under Cromwell was poised in a precarious position with threats to its stability over continuing dissensions in religion matters and with the underground activities of the royalists both at home and in exile abroad. Over the following years he added the  portfolios of “Clerk to the Committee for Foreign Affairs”  and control of the post office, enabling easy interception of the mail to boost his intelligence gathering.
Thurloe  had no difficulty building his intricate network of agents. They were not hard to find. There were plenty of disenchanted and penniless royalists happy to exchange their former loyalties for regular pay. Names like Joseph Bampfield, Richard Willys, Henshaw and Wildman are all characters who cross my fictional agent, Kit Lovell, in THE KING’S MAN.  Richard Cromwell once famously remarked “Thurloe has the ability to find the key to unlock wicked mens’ hearts”.
Colonel Joseph Bampfield in particular epitomises the sort of man recruited by Thurloe. He began as a royalist and is most famous for his daring rescue of the young Prince James from imprisonment by parliament (for more about Bampfield and his lover, Ann Halkett see my blog "For the Love of a Spy” at Hoydens and Firebrands) .  He fled to the continent and by the early 1650s was working as a double agent for Thurloe who describes him in his State papers as employed in many ‘weighty affairs’.
Through this web of deceit, Thurloe managed to foil the Ship Inn plot (or Gerard’s plot) which is at the heart of The King’s Man and to infiltrate the famous SEALED KNOT , a secret royalist association whose plot to restore Charles II to the throne was foiled by Thurloe in 1655.
        Following the Restoration, inevitably, Thurloe was arrested for High Treason but he was never tried.  His extensive knowledge of foreign affairs made him too valuable to the new regime and he was released on the promise that he could be called upon to assist England in its troubles with foreign powers but he was plagued by ill health and died in February 1668 in his chambers at Lincoln’s Inn.
         During the reign of William III, workmen discovered the entire collection of Thurloe’s State Papers in a false ceiling during renovations to his former home. These are now readily available online
          Like his predecessors, Thurloe’s strength lay in his ability to work behind the scenes and he had the absolute trust and confidence of the Lord Protectors to whom he remained completely loyal, even advocating that Cromwell accept the crown.  Above all the temptations of high office, he seems to have remained absolutely honest and true to himself.  Even one of his political opponents writing in 1659 said:
“...(Secretary Thurloe)...having taken no man’s money, invaded no man’s privilege, nor abused his own authority, which is and merits to be great, the weight of all foreign and almost all domestic affairs lying on him...And though intelligences have been infinitely chargeable, yet without it, into whose hands had this nation fallen?...”

John Thurloe -  the consummate civil servant! 


PS My third book, GATHER THE BONES, will be published by Lyrical Press later this year. It is my first venture away from my beloved English Civil War into the shadow of another war...the Great War:  Ghosts, mystery and romance set against a backdrop of the English upper class in 1923. If you are enjoying Downton Abbey and would like to read more books set in that period then watch out for GATHER THE BONES!

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Historical Hearts Good News


Another great week on the Historical Hearts blog.
Join us in congratulating the following members on their excellent news.


Annie Seaton is now offering her services as an editor.
So if you have a ms you wish her to edit for
publication  and / or submission
please visit her website here for further details.


Alison Stuart has signed a contract for her novel
'Gather the Bones'
Available soon from Lyrical Press.
Alison calls it her 'Downton Abbey with Ghosts' story.
Sounds terrific and we can't wait to see the cover.
Congratulations, Alison!!


Anne Brear (Whitfield)
Is celebrating the release and beautiful cover love
for two of her historical novels.
'A Noble Place'
and
'The Gentle Wind's Caress'
These covers are just divine and I can't wait to read them both.
(further details below)

Australian Historical Available February 2012

Blurb:
Australia 1850.  Phillippa Noble, strong minded, spirited and adventurous, urges and encourages her parents and her twin to emigrate to the distant land of Australia to begin again. In a new country they can put their tainted past behind them, and Pippa can forget the unrequited love she felt for a distant cousin. Pippa blossoms in the new country and is determined that their horse stud will be the finest in the land. However, circumstances ensure that not all is golden. For every success, she has to bear up under the challenges of bushfire, death, the return of an old love and danger on the goldfields. Her strength is tested as she tries to find the right path to happiness, but it is the near loss of her dearest friend that makes her realise true contentment rests within her grasp and she must not let it go.

English Historical Saga Available June 2012
More details of this story coming soon...


Maggi Andersen has signed a contract to write
a three book series for Knox Robinson Publishing.

The series working title is: 'The Spies of Mayfair'
Book One: 'A Baron in her Bed' - Available Sept 2012
Book Two: 'Taming a Gentleman Spy' - Release date tba
Book Three: title & release date tba
Congratulations Maggi!! Amazing News!!


Congratulations again ladies
and keep the good news coming!



Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Historical Hearts Launch Party - Day 3



Welcome to the Historical Hearts and the seventeenth century world of me, award winning writer Alison Stuart.

Roundheads and cavaliers, heroes in bucket boots, lace collars and broad-brimmed hats? My passion for the English Civil War began in childhood and spills into my writing world. The ripples from this short, violent period of English History are still felt into today's democratic parliaments and I love nothing more than sharing this passion with my readers. I just wish I could convince more publishers of its worth as a rich source of romance and conflict.

Fortunately my two published English Civil War novels, THE KING'S MAN and the award winning BY THE SWORD are available in digital and print form at all reputable online sources. See my website www.alisonstuart.com for details of my writing. While the English Civil War is my passion, I love all periods of history and as I am currently working on a Regency and a World War One set novel, my blogs could be on any subject!

To celebrate the launch of Historical Hearts, I am offering a critique of the first 3 chapters of a historical novel (can be any period). Just enter the Comments section below and provide me with an alternative ending to the first sentence of my novel THE KING’S MAN. It begins “Thamsine Granville had not begun the day with the intention of killing Oliver Cromwell, but.........................”

The most outrageous answer will win but everyone who enters my contest will receive a prize of an ebook of THE KINGS MAN.



Looking forward to sharing history with you!

Good Luck!
Alison.



Welcome to the Historical Hearts launch party!

I’m Dana Scully. I write historical romances set around the tenth century in Wales. I’m currently unpublished, but that will change. As an unpubbed (and even once I am pubbed—LOL), I’ll be blogging inspirational pieces. Little somethings to keep you going on your own personal journey—whether it be in writing, reading, or life in general. Yes, my blogs will be writing related, but you’ll be able to take the main point and apply it to your own life and hopefully receive a bit of a boost from it too!

To get the ball rolling, I’d like to hear what inspires you. Is it the end of a good romance—that ahhhh happily ever after moment, is it hearing a feel good story on the nightly news, or perhaps a walk in the woods, or playing with your children...? What makes you feel good about you, about life, about the world in which we live?

I have a beautiful carved Welsh love spoon to give away to one of you wonderful bloggers. (I’ll be writing more about these tokens of love and affection in a few weeks...) So get blogging!



What inspires you? I hope to chat with you soon!

Good Luck!
Dana.



Hello and Welcome to our new Historical Blog site, where we hope you shall visit whenever the mood to enjoy fun and interesting things from our past takes your fancy. Or just come and cruise through the authors' works to see what's new with our books and writings.

My name is Mary deHaas and I am a devoted romance writer, who is currently unpublished. If it takes place in a drafty old castle, in the dry desert sands or upon the wild open seas, as long as a story spans the tyranny of time and conjures up the past, then it's the genre of history that I love to write about the most. I am also an artist--who paints pretty much all the above as well. I have a saying: "stay still long enough; I will paint you".

I have many favorite time-periods and thanks to my characters, I get to venture wherever I wish with each new story I write. My current WIP is a ST (single title) set off the Ivory Coast, during the 1850's. Allow me to share a little of my imagination with you through my love of art and my passion for writing.




I have a lovely hand-painted porcelain coaster and gum-leaf bookmark to give-away for a lucky person who knows where the *Ivory Coast* refers to in the history books.

Good luck!
Maryde.



Note: For your chance to win today's prizes, when answering the trivia questions or replying, please leave your name, email address and what draw you'd like to enter. Of course, you are more than welcome to enter all prize draws up for grabs. Good Luck!