Georgian Recipes

    Selling Your Wife in 19th-Century England

    The Inspiration for Timothy Longworth's crime in The Rules of Seduction

    Could a Gentleman Hang for Murder after a Duel?

    Executions in England, late 18th and early 19th centuries

    Come Up and See My Etchings

    Mrs. Turton’s 1829 Divorce as debated in Parliament

    Nineteenth Century Advertisements
  • 1833 Classified Ads: Getting a Job
  • 1833 Classified Ads: Caring for the Mentally Ill
  • 1833 Classified Ads: Getting an Education
  • 1833 Newspaper Ads: Finding a Home
  • 1833 Classified Ads: Other Sales and Notices
  • Templars and Hospitallers
  • The Inspiration for Nesta's "Songs" in Stealing Heaven
  • Historical Background to The Protector
  • The Breton Civil War
  • Warrior Women
  • Historical Characters in The Protector
  • Historical Romances and Romantic Historicals
  • Historical Background to By Design

    Historical Background to By Possession
  • Historical Characters in By Possession
  • The Medieval Cost of Living
  • Medieval Crime and Punishment
  • Medieval Marriage: "Say the words with me."
  • Historical Background to By Arrangement
  • Historical Characters in By Arrangement
  • Fudging on Historical Accuracy
  • The Inspiration for Nesta's "Songs" in Stealing Heaven.

    In Stealing Heaven, the heroine, Nesta, is notorious throughout England and called the King's Whore. Her reputation regarding her relationship with King Edward III was inspired by an historical episode full of ambiguities.

    William Monatague was one of the knights who helped Edward III remove the usurper Mortimer from power (see my History Page for the background of By Design.) He was the oldest of the group. Afterward he became one of the King's closest friends and advisors, and was given the title of Earl of Salisbury. However, rather suddenly in 1341 he disappeared from the historical stage.

    We now know that he died that year, probably in a fall from his horse. His grave has even been found in Salisbury. Until recently, however, a different explanation was considered accurate even by historians. That story said that the earl had left the realm after arranging to have his title and lands given over to his son.

    Why would he take such a drastic step?

    It had to do with a woman.

    The Countess of Salisbury, William's wife, caught the eye of the King, William's good friend. According to the chronicles and poems, something happened between them that made the earl break with his liege and abandon the realm.

    There are several 14th-century versions of what transpired. One poem describes a game of chess with much longing on Edward's part and virtuous distance on hers. Another tradition described a seduction. Yet a third called it a rape.

    What really happened? Perhaps nothing, perhaps one of the above. Even in the late fourteenth century there were several accounts, just as in my novel there are several songs being song in the realm regarding what actually happened between Nesta and the King.

    Templars and Hospitallers

    In another entry I described the Teutonic Knights, one of the three most famous orders of fighting monks in the middle ages. The other two, the Templars and Hospitallers, are better known.

    The order of the Knights of the Temple was founded around 1119 in the Holy Land, with the goal of protecting pilgrims. The order quickly spread, and by the middle of the twelfth century it was involved not only in reinforcing the military campaigns in the Holy Land, but also in military actions in Europe. During the crusades, the Templars' organization and courage made them formidable foes.

    Over the next century and a half, the order grew wealthy and powerful. It had temples throughout Europe that served much as banks do today. Money could be left with them for safekeeping, and they also provided courier services for the transportation of money and valuables. They lent money to many of the kings of Europe.

    With the fall of Acre in 1291, all of the military orders became vulnerable, since their primary function, the Christian liberation of the Holy Land, had been rendered obsolete. The Templars attracted the attention of the French king, Philip IV, who most historians believe wanted their wealth. He arrested all of the Templars living in Paris, the administrative center of the order, in October of 1307. Under torture, the grand master Jacques de Molay and his circle confessed to heresy. With this evidence in hand, Philip continued his attack, ordering the closing of Templar monasteries. Pope Clement at first tried to protect the order, but in 1312 he issued a bull that ordered its dissolution. Jacques de Molay and the other leaders were to be imprisoned for life, but when they recanted their confessions they were burned to death in 1314.

    The Hospitallers were given the Templars property. However, some of the property found its way into private hands, including those of Philip IV. Templars were assigned to other monastic orders. None of the charges against them, which came to include heresy, witchcraft, and sodomy, among other crimes, was ever proven. In England, Edward I was so unimpressed by the evidence that he insisted that each Templar be given a trial, at which none were convicted. Edward also was slow to confiscate their property. The situation was even more peculiar in Scotland. Because of the war with England, the bull ordering the dissolution of the order was never officially promulgated.

    The primary benefactors of the Templars' fall was the Order of St. John, commonly known as the Hospitallers. It was founded before the first crusade, and protected a hospice for pilgrims within the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem. It soon became a powerful military order in the Holy Land, although it had members and hospices throughout Europe as well.

    After 1291, the order moved to the island of Rhodes, and then, in 1530, to the island of Malta. At that point they became known as the Knights of Malta. They were settled there by the Spanish emperor, and they owed fealty to the king of Sicily, to whom they paid a yearly tribute of one maltese falcon. From there their naval forces policed the Mediterranean. In 1798, however, they surrendered to Napoleon, and ceased to exist as a military force. The order today has an administrative center in Rome, and confines itself to charitable work.

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