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Category Archives: History

The Ruins at Scadbury

09 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by la Clarina in History

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A.D. Wraight, christopher marlowe, Marlovianism, Scadbury, Sir Francis Walsingham, Thomas Walsingham

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: I’m no Marlovian, thank you very much. I think Kit Marlowe was a genius without adding Shakespeare’s canon in the bargain and, if you wanted to pigeon-hole me, you could say I’m an orthodox Stratfordian who occasionally enjoys the story potential of alternative theories – provided it’s done well.

This is to explain that I don’t share the opinions contained in the Marlowe Studies Website. Still, they have lovely things there – one being a series of black and white images of Thomas Walsingham’s Scadbury Manor. Or at least, what remains of it. Continue reading →

Midnight in the Past

05 Tuesday Jan 2016

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories, Things

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future, Midnight in Paris, musings, Past

Past&FutureI had an interesting discussion with a friend, a few days ago – about… well, about past and future.

Yes – yes, he is the kind of friend with whom you chat late at night, and wax philosophical, and at one point he said that it bothers him that he will not see all of the future. “The best part of the show – and I’ll miss it.” Continue reading →

Through England on a Side Saddle

29 Tuesday Dec 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History

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Celia Fiennes, England, Restoration, travel writing

Celia-VisageCelia Fiennes, with this lovely, novel-worthy name, was a remarkable Restoration lady.

Though well-born and well-connected (her father was a Viscount’s younger son), she stayed single, which was quite uncommon for her time and station, and occupied her life otherwise.

In 1684, when she was 22, she began to travel around, because it struck her as a healthy occupation – and never stopped (or very little) for nearly three decades. Continue reading →

Why do you read historical fiction?

17 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Scribbling, Stories

≈ 3 Comments

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Historical fiction, historical novel

Continue reading →

Ugo and the Sausage King

10 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories

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Ajax, Milan, Scala theatre, tragedy, Ugo Foscolo

FoscoloBWAlmost exactly two-hundred and four years ago, Ugo Foscolo‘s tragedy Ajace premiered at the Scala Theatre in Milan.

In 1811 the flamboyant and patriotic Foscolo was quite the name when it came to poetry – but it may be that the stage was not his cup of tea…

The tragedy was very high-minded, very Greek in conception, very long-winded, and the audience was thoroughly bored – until a herald stepped in to announce the arrival of “Ajace, Re dei Salamini,” which translates to “Ajax, King of the inhabitants of Salamis”* but unfortunately in Italian sounds exactly like “Ajax, King of Little Sausages”… Continue reading →

Poor ghostly Agnes…

28 Saturday Nov 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Theatre

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Agnese Visconti, Felice Cavallotti, ghost stories, Gonzaga, Mantova

fantasma-donna“Why don’t you write us something about a local ghost story?” I was asked back in June.

And why not indeed… Only, when I set about researching, I found that my unimaginative hometown only has one official ghost.

Agnese Visconti was one of the many daughters of the Prince of Milan. Plain, sickly and waspish, she was married off very young to handsome Francesco Gonzaga, only son and heir to the de facto Lord of Mantova. It wasn’t what you’d call a happy marriage – but then nobody expected it to be – and it produced only one daughter.

Then Agnese’s father was murdered by an ambitious nephew, Gian Galeazzo Visconti, and things went truly downhill. Agnese decided she wanted revenge, and began working with her exiled brother to get back Milan… Continue reading →

Windows on the past

26 Thursday Nov 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories

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Biograph, History, Opera, opera libretto, The Wounded Cavalier, William Shakespeare Burton

WoundedCavalierBWFor some reason, The Hessian Renegades put me in mind of William Shakespeare Burton’s The Wounded Cavalier.

Burton, who bore the names he bore because of the Bard, was an English painter in the XIXth Century, and the Wounded Cavalier is perhaps his most famous work. My friend Marina shakes her head and sniggers whenever either author or painting are mentioned – by me, usually – because, she says, how can I like such an ugly painting?

Actually, it had its fans, back in the day – Ruskin being an especially vocal one. “Masterly”, he called it… Yes, well. I won’t be the one to deny that, whatever Ruskin had to say, TWC is a stagey affair, both stiff and sentimental… Continue reading →

Hollywood, Elizabeth, and name-dropping

19 Thursday Nov 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories

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Elizabeth, John Ballard, Thomas Elyot

elizabeth-(1998)-large-pictureBWLast week I watched Elizabeth for the first time – and was more than a little bewildered by the script.

At one point, there is this scene in which Father John Ballard, SJ, lands in England,  met by a bunch of Catholic conspirators – among whom he immediately spots out a very young Thomas Elyot. Recognising him as an agent of the Queen’s spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham, Father Ballard proceeds without further ado to kill the lad with his bare hands. Bad, bad Catholics! And in fact all Catholics are very, very evil in this film, made ruthless by fanaticism and/or a lust for power – whereas the occasional ruthless Protestant is just protecting Queen and country… Continue reading →

History Will Be Kind is out!

17 Tuesday Nov 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Scribbling, Stories

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A Little Princess, A Tale of Two Cities, Anthology, Charles Dickens, Historical fiction, History Will Be Kind, The Copperfield Review, Winston Churchill

History will be kind to me because I intend to write it,

Churchillsaid Winston Churchill… and write it he did. Authors of historical fiction usually go about “writing history” with more modest ambitions – or do they? Just look at Walter Scott or Charles Dickens… And I know Dickens was no historical novelist, properly speaking, but there is no denying that A Tale of Two Cities did much to shape the common perception of the French Revolution…

So perhaps this is it: we do not so much write history as tell it – and in telling it, we can shape the way it will be understood and perceived.

When Kipling said that if history were told in the form of stories it would never be forgotten, perhaps he did not mean that stories should take over the job of telling history. Perhaps he was stressing the responsibility that goes with the job of telling history in the form of stories… little_princess_fullpage

Just think of Sara Crewe telling dull Ermengarde about the French Revolution, and the severed head of the Princesse de Lamballe being carried over the crowd, stuck on a pike… “The princess was young and beautiful…” Sara tells a gaping Ermengarde – who won’t easily forget her history after that. A shame that Mme de Lamballe was 43 when she met her gruesome death – an age that no little girl would call “young”… So Ermengarde will always remember a picturesque fiction. It may not be very important, provided she remembers the French Revolution, but what of Dickens’s rather biased portrayal of the same period?

And yes – stories are not history, and vice versa. It would be most unfair to blame a novelist for “making things up” or “making things more dramatic”, but Ermengarde’s Princesse still raises interesting questions about the fiction and the perception of history.

Anhistory-kind-sml-2BWd History Will Be Kind, The Copperfield Review’s first anthology, provides an interesting exercise in “telling history”. A rich collection of historical short stories, poems and essays, it explores a range of historical periods, characters and events – from Empress Maud to Alexander the Great, from the Third Crusade to 1914 Mexico – and Kit Marlowe, of course. My own very young Kit Marlowe who, in Gentleman in Velvet, learns a hard lesson about consequences and prices to be paid.

On the whole, it is a little history of the world told through story, as well as an exploration of many ways in which “we” tell these stories…

You can find History Will Be Kind in e-book and paperback format here:

Amazon.com

Amazon.uk.co

Kobo

All else apart, and seeing the time of the year, wouldn’t it make a nice Christmas present for lovers of history and stories?

Ralegh and his Queen

05 Thursday Nov 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Books, History

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Elizabeth I, Mathew Lyons, The Favourite, Walter Ralegh

favourite-the-paperbackMathew Lyon‘s The Favouritetraces the rise of Walter Ralegh from Devon small gentry to royal favour and power – and does it by paying attention to the psychological intricacies of Ralegh’s relationship with the Queen.

Lyons reads between the lines of extant documents and explores the motives of words and actions. What emerges is the rather unusual portrait of”the man who threw his cloak at Elizabeth’s feet.”

The Favourite begins there too, with the famous anecdote that may or may not be a later fiction – but, the author says, even if it is, it fits Ralegh to perfection, in its mix of bold impulse and shameless display. If he didn’t do it, whoever made it up caught well the man’s projected image… Continue reading →

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