As is now being discovered, there were people of African descent living and working in Britain, especially in cities and ports like York. Archaeology discovered a Romano-British grave in York where a woman of black African and mixed race heritage had been buried in a rich tomb with grave goods. Archaeology also uncovered a tomb of a man of north African descent buried at a medieval friary in Suffolk, England, close to the port of Ipswich. According to bone specialists he had a bad back! The thirteenth century statue of Saint Maurice in Magdeburg cathedral in Germany clearly shows him as African.
Half-African, half-English, Yolande is the dark maiden of the title, a spiritual wanderer and warrior, helping those tormented by the restless dead and assisting the restless dead themselves to find final peace. She lives and works in England during the time of the Black Death.
Statue of St. Maurice at Magdeburg |
Medieval people also believed that in a crisis anyone, priest or lay person, could perform an exorcism because every Christian has the power to command demons and drive them away in the name of Christ. I took these ideas and developed them, allowing my Yolande to become an exorcist.
In 'Dark Maiden' I have Yolande and Geraint (a travelling player who becomes her friend, help-mate, lover and finally husband) face several encounters with both restless spirits and also demons. My ideas have always been shaped by the real beliefs of the time. So in 'Dark Maiden' there are evil spirits, restless ghosts called revenants, an incubus and vampires - all paranormal creatures with a medieval slant.
I'll talk about these in other blog articles.
Read Chapter One
Lindsay Townsend
Very interesting! Your book sounds wonderful, Lindsay!!
ReplyDeleteIt's a challenge to write strong, independent women during historical time periods when it was difficult to impossible (and dangerous) for so many women to be outwardly strong and independent. Yolande certainly seems like a woman who was able to break out of traditional roles and become her own woman. It's interesting to me that out of tragedy/hard times/hopeless often comes drastic change and opportunity. The wide-spread devasttion of the Black Death opened up opportunities for women that hadn't been available before. Best of luck with this story.
ReplyDeleteHistory, heroines, love, what's not to enjoy. Doris
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments, Doris, Kaye and Kristy. I agree, Kaye, about hard times often being the spur to change. After the Black Death in medieval England the survivors had more chances. Brutal, but true. It was the attempted suppression of rising wages that led to the Peasants' Revolt.
ReplyDelete