"Ravaged by war
…AD 71. After the battle at Whorl,
Brennus of Garrigill is irrevocably changed.
Returning to Marske, Ineda finds her
grandmother dead, though Brennus is not. Snared by a Roman patrol,
they are marched to Witton where he is forced to labour for the Roman
IX Legion.
Embracing his new identity as Bran,
Brennus vows to avert Roman occupation of northernmost Brigantia.
Ineda becomes his doughty spying accomplice, though sometimes she’s
too impetuous. Trading with the Romans lends excellent opportunities
for information gathering. Over time, Bran’s feelings for Ineda mar
with his loyalty to Ineda’s father.
When she disappears, and cannot be
found, Bran enters direct service with Venutius, King of the
Brigantes. "
***
Today I'd like to welcome guest blogger Nancy Jardine, who is celebrating the launch of her new novel,
After Whorl-Bran Reborn, the second book in her
Celtic Fervour series.
The Beltane Choice, first in the trilogy, has received enthusiastic reviews, including such comments as "powerfully sensual," "authentic and original and rooted thoroughly in the past," and "a stunning and truly believable evocation of life as it is likely to have been lived in Northern Britain in 71 A.D." (this last by archaeologist Mark Patton).
How does one research such a long-ago, minimally-documented period? I was curious, so I invited Nancy to talk about her research here. I think you'll find her explanation as fascinating as I did. Here's Nancy:
|
Nancy Jardine |
A dearth of evidence can be overcome!
Researching
the era of AD 71-84 in northern Britannia.
Imagine
this scenario. You’ve managed to get a day pass to the best
possible library for a historical project that you’re researching.
“If you
require more help, please ask.”
Distracted
by the voice of the librarian you become aware that you’ve stopped
at an almost clear desk that’s been allocated for your study: three
books resting upon it. Only three books?
That
hollow feeling engulfed me some time ago when I realised just how few
written prime sources exist for researching the northern territory of
Roman Britain, during the period of AD 71- 84, the target time slot
for my Celtic Fervour series of historical romantic
adventures. Images from the period are very rare in sculpture and
metalwork. A few texts in Latin exist, written by Roman historians,
but since I don’t read Latin, I have to rely heavily on
translations. Interpretations of very ancient material can differ
greatly and can sometimes lead to confusion in the ‘hobby
historian’ like me. (My University degree is history based, though
I would never name myself an historian)
The lack
of sources made me feel a bit daunted, but it didn’t stop me
writing my fictional tales of northern Britannia because my Celtic
novels burned to be written!
Though,
what exactly got me interested in the period in the first place? I’m
an ex- primary teacher and loved to teach history at my school in
Aberdeenshire, Scotland. In particular, I loved teaching ‘Celts and
Romans’ of the northern climes of Britannia, my first foray
teaching this era during the late 1990s.
A lot of
the Celtic/Roman sources I used for my adult background knowledge had
been compiled by historians during the late Victorian period and into
the twentieth century. It was unfortunate that I couldn’t easily
lay hands on the newest interpretative evidence- the internet not as
available as it is now. I could get currently published non-fiction
texts for children, which were beautifully illustrated and which gave
me a very nice image to base work on for class work, yet I found it
very difficult to find concrete references for those interpretations
in historical tomes. Data from the aerial surveys taken across the UK
during the very dry summers of the 1970s seemed to be in University
publications, but not available to me. At times, it was frustrating
since I felt they could reveal more of what had happened in
north-eastern Scotland, but my teaching meant limited research time-
too many other subjects to currently deal with. Yet, I’d found
enough information to keep my interest levels high.
There’s
a lot more evidence for the Roman Empire in general, though, which
meant that it was easier to formulate class work based on the Roman
tradition which seemed to vary very little across the Imperial Roman
occupation of mainland Europe. Changing the situations slightly to
take account of the different topography and probable climate of
Aberdeenshire, two thousand years ago, took a little effort and was
tempered with some degree of imagination. Celtic sources likewise
were hypothesised from scant evidence unearthed at ‘digs’ across
Europe.
|
Julius Agricola |
In my
favour, Victorian scholars had identified a stretch of land behind
the school building in Kintore, Aberdeenshire, where there had been a
Roman Marching Camp. Kintore was the school I taught in, and the
village in which I still live. The marching camp was thought to be
Agricolan (approximately AD 73/74), possibly harbouring some 4000
Roman soldiers, approximately a legion’s worth. That was a great
start to our studies. I had great fun with my classes as we
investigated what it would have been like for them as Ancient Celts
living in Kintore when the Romans invaded the area. We built wattle
and daub walls for roundhouses on the grass outside my mobile
classroom (pretty messy, but very good for summer-term outside
activities) having collected the willow twigs, mosses and mud from
local woods. We made small scale Celtic villages and dyed cloth and
wool – all from plant materials. We marched Roman style across the
playing field, under which lay the Roman Marching Camp. We did many
other fun-filled activities like a re-enactment of the Battle of Mons
Graupius - between the Roman Empire and the warriors of the Celtic
chief named Calgacus (the Roman historian, Tacitus, having been
largely responsible for this information). Naturally our cardboard
swords meant zero blood loss- health and safety rules applying during
all outside activities even back then. I was hooked on Celtic/Roman
Britain history – and I truly believe those kids were too!
|
Kintore dig |
By 2002,
our Victorian built school was too small and a new school was
planned, to be built on that very field where we had made battle. No
new building could occur till a fairly large scale archaeological
excavation was undertaken, and between 2002 and 2004 the results of
the dig were astonishing. Technology had made sufficient advances and
the conclusions were that the site had likely been occupied on at
least three occasions by the Roman Army. The Agricolan camp might
have sheltered as many as 10,000 soldiers, according to the new
parameters found for the rampart ditch walls. The two hundred and
fifty plus Roman bread ovens that were uncovered (dendrochronology
only one technique used) were also substantial corroboration for the
increase in the number of soldiers harboured at the camp. Only a part
of the site was available for the dig and the estimate based on that:
an oven pit thought to have been created for a contubernium squad of
eight to ten men.
All
classes at the school were invited over to the dig during the
excavation period and were briefly updated. My class of 2004, 11-12
year olds, wrote such fabulous stories of the Roman invasion of the
area. If they could do such wonderful work, then so could I - was my
thought at the beginning of the long school summer holiday. I spent
virtually the whole six week break writing the basis of what is my
time-travel novel for early teens. Since then it has undergone many
changes, though. Initially set in the Agricolan period (AD 84) I
later changed it to be in the Severan era of AD 210: that made it
during the very last large scale Roman campaign in north-east
Scotland. (A Severan camp is also thought to have been at the same
site at Kintore)
|
Septimius Severus |
My reason
for changing the time period was that during yet another vacation I
wrote the first draft of what eventually became The Beltane
Choice, the first novel in my Celtic Fervour series. I had
no wish to use the same location and time period in my romantic
adventure that I had used for my early teen novel, so I set The
Beltane Choice in northern Brigantia in AD 71 (currently the
north of England). That location was particularly chosen since the
Roman Governor of the time, Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius
Rufus, was making huge advances northwards in Britannia.
Cerialis
is documented as …“having at once struck terror into their
hearts by invading the commonwealth of the Brigantes, which is said
to be the most numerous tribe of the whole province: many battles
were fought, sometimes bloody battles, and by permanent conquest or
by forays he annexed a large portion of the Brigantes.”
(translation from the Annals of Tacitus)
It took a
number of drafts (those summer holidays again) and occasional forays
of new research on the era in northern Britain to ensure the facts I
used about the period were as accurate as possible-still a challenge
given the dearth of resources. After I ceased full-time teaching in
2008, I submitted The Beltane Choice to publishers. On the
third try, it was eventually published in August 2012 by Crooked Cat
Publishing.
When I set
myself to write a sequel to it in late 2012, I wanted to focus a bit
more on Roman aspects since The Beltane Choice is heavy on the
Celtic bias. I went back to Library sources again to find out more
specific details about fort and signal tower building in northern
Brigantia. I revisited the sources written specifically on the
Governorships in Britannia of Cerialis, Frontinus and Agricola –
approximately the period between AD 69 and AD 85.
I used the
Inter-Library Loan Services and borrowed text material from The
British Library: accessing sources suggested to me by Dr. Mark
Patton, a fellow Crooked Cat author who is also an archaeologist. My
main text to refer back to again and again, tended to be Sheppard
Frere’s Britannia, A History of Roman Britain (though dated, as it
was written pre 1980s, it still held relevant information). I dipped
into Patrick Ottaway’s Roman York to learn about the earliest fort
at Eboracum (just sufficient about the original wooden fort to
satisfy me). I scoured translations of the Annals of Tacitus and of
the few other Roman and Greeks historians who made brief mentions of
Roman campaigns in northern Britannia.
Though
there was still not very much to go on, I allowed my imagination to
lead me into book two of the series which I named After Whorl:
Bran Reborn. Many small forts, and some even larger fortresses,
seem to have been built (or rebuilt since wooden structures had a
limited ‘shelf life’) during the governorship of Cerialis. I
focused on that aspect, and on the lines of communication set up by
both Romans and Celts in the territory of northern Brigantia.
My male
Celtic protagonist, Brennus of Garrigill from The Beltane Choice,
does a little bit of spying on Roman troop movements and fort
building – a core element of the novel. Aided by Ineda of Marske
they send on information to the Brigante King Venutius, till
something rather unfortunate happens.
The
writing was going well till I realised my time-lines didn’t really
match up as my Brigante spies moved further north into the lands of
the Selgovae (present day southern Scotland). I spent many hours
trawling the internet to access the most recent information on fort
excavations and was delighted to find that my own timeline (chosen to
match incidents in my fictitious tale) was matching most recent data
but not that of the 1970s scholars. Quite enervated, and definitely
relieved, I continued to write and write. After a while, I realised
that my follow-on story to The Beltane Choice had developed
into two stories. After Whorl-Bran Reborn will be published on
16th December 2013 by Crooked Cat Publishing, the second
book of the series. After Whorl-Donning Double Cloaks will be
published in the spring of 2014 as the third book- the stories
continuing.
By the end
of book three, After Whorl-Donning Double Cloaks, I’ve taken
my Garrigill Brigantes from Brigantia all the way up to the
Bennachie, only nine miles from my home area of Aberdeenshire. The
range of hills named Bennachie is one of the most likely sites in
northern Scotland for the great battle referred to in The Annals of
Tacitus where the Roman Empire’s army battled against the Celtic
leader named Calgacus. In my Battle of Mons Graupius (the name coined
by scholars during the nineteenth century), Rome makes battle with
Calgach, my name for the Celtic leader a more Gaelic sounding form.
So, given
the difficulties of researching in a dearth of prime source
information, I have great hopes that the readers of my Celtic Fervour
series enjoy my fictitious tales set in as sound a historical
background as I can possibly make it.
Than you
for inviting me today, Tinney, on my little blog tour to launch After
Whorl-Bran Reborn.
Some additional information:
Facebook
Launch Party **Giveaways**
Blog
launch Tour **Special Prize**
A special
Blog Tour ‘friend’ will WIN a mystery gift for the most
commented
visits to blogs during the launch tour for After Whorl: Bran
Reborn. (i.e. most comments between 9
th Dec and 18
th
Dec wins the prize) To be sure you don’t miss any blog posts check
Nancy’s Blog regularly between the 9th Dec and the 17
th
Dec.
http://nancyjardine.blogspot.com
Nancy
Jardine lives
in the fantastic ‘castle country’ of Aberdeenshire, Scotland,
with her husband. She spends her week making creative excuses for her
neglected large garden; doesn’t manage as much writing as she
always plans to do since she’s on Facebook too often, but she does
have a thoroughly great time playing with her toddler granddaughter
when she’s just supposed to be ‘just’ childminding her twice a
week.
A lover of
all things historical it sneaks into most of her writing along with
many of the fantastic world locations she has been fortunate to
visit. Her published work to date has been two non fiction history
related projects; two contemporary ancestral mysteries; one
light-hearted contemporary romance mystery and a historical novel.
She has been published by The Wild Rose Press and Crooked Cat
Publishing.
***
I'd like to thank Nancy for sharing this post with us, and I know we all wish her all the best with her book launch.
Nancy Jardine holds copyright to the images in this post, with the exception of the photos of the statues of Septimius Severus and Julius Agricola, which are in the public domain.