On this day, Vasco da Gama sailed to India...
Sunday, 7 July 2019
Friday, 5 July 2019
Website updated
The website updated with news of the new book. Men being thrown off battlements, heroic looking crusaders whacking unfortunate Muslims. To look at you'd think this is a Christian victory, rather than the crusaders' last stand in the Holy Land at the siege of Acre 1291. It's of course a completely unhistorical piece of nineteenth century French romanticism. The book will offer something more factual, but hopefully as gripping in its own way...
Wednesday, 3 July 2019
The guns of Constantinople
I spent a couple of hours in the company of my web designer the other day looking again at pictures of the remarkable painted monastery of Moldovita in Romania. They form the header for my website, which is having an overhaul, and this blog. They're remarkable for their warm, vibrant colours. Five hundred years old they still glow, though they've suffered from some wear - and the occasional graffiti.
This one appeared on the cover of my first book fourteen years ago and I have a deep fondness for it.
Here's the whole church:
I've never been but I'd love to see them.
Thursday, 30 May 2019
The blog is back - and a new book is on the way!
The blog has been having a pretty long holiday, some might say a mid-life crisis. Partly this is down to pressure of writing life, and partly to laziness. But it's back; there will be regular new posts. More importantly I have a new book out in October - Accursed Tower - the story of the crusaders' last stand in the Holy Land. A tale of giant catapults and the desperate defence of the city of Acre on the shores of Palestine - the Alamo of the crusades. If you've been watching Knightfall on Netflix, this is the true story!
Here are the the covers for the UK and US editions.
UK

US

More info at:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Accursed-Tower-Crusaders-Last-Battle/dp/0300230311/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_14_img_1?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=KJFAZKJN83R944JRC6GT
and
https://www.amazon.com/Accursed-Tower-Fall-Acre-Crusades/dp/1541697340
Here are the the covers for the UK and US editions.
UK

US

More info at:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Accursed-Tower-Crusaders-Last-Battle/dp/0300230311/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_14_img_1?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=KJFAZKJN83R944JRC6GT
and
https://www.amazon.com/Accursed-Tower-Fall-Acre-Crusades/dp/1541697340
"Know that the day was terrible to behold."
Friday, 23 December 2016
A week in China
I have been on a week long book tour to promote the Chinese editions of my books. A fascinating whirlwind visit: three cities (Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing) , five talks with the aid of my excellent book translator and interpreter Hans Lu, ten interviews (I think), about two thousand books signed. The enthusiasm of Chinese readers for Mediterranean history has taken me - and indeed, I think, my Chinese publishers - by surprise.
The size, the energy and the sheer gaudiness of the cities was surreal. Christmas musak in hotels, giant teddy bears dressed up as Father Christmas - China appears to have the appetite to absorb all traditions and festivals in its rush to consumerism after the decades of Maoist austerity
I was whisked from city to city on bullet trains at about 200 miles an hour, through flickering landscapes of fields, huddled traditional villages, lakes, rivers and the repeated sightings of new mega towns and their stooping cranes rising on the horizon like mirages in a desert.
The attention of the audiences, the depth of their questions, and their desire to take photographs at book signings were amazing and surprising. Not to mention the limitless dedication to social media on all occasions. 30, 000 people watched the last talk on live streamed video.
The talk in Nanjing was held in one of the most extraordinary bookshops I've ever been to. The Librairie Avant-Garde is in a converted underground car park. It's a vast temple to literate book loving, owned by a Christian, hence the cross. The welcome there included a hat, as worn by the bookshop staff, and a fabulous piece of travel luggage, courtesy of a Chinese travel company who helped sponsor the visit - the must-have marketing tool for all authors!
There were brief opportunities for sight seeing. The Forbidden City in Beijing on a clear, smog-free sunny day was extraordinarily impressive, followed by a ramble through the hutongs (the network of traditional narrow lanes with houses built round courtyards),
I also had an enjoyable morning's tour of central Shanghai - the Bund, the old European trading centre on the banks of the Yangtze, now facing an immense panorama of twenty first century skyscrapers across the water - Stockholm remade as Manhattan - and the streets around.
I got to sample a wide range of Chinese cuisine - and my chopsticks skills held up reasonably well!
Thanks so much to Mr Li, Hans, Joan and Fengyun - the man who made it all happen.
| A little practice at signing my name |
The size, the energy and the sheer gaudiness of the cities was surreal. Christmas musak in hotels, giant teddy bears dressed up as Father Christmas - China appears to have the appetite to absorb all traditions and festivals in its rush to consumerism after the decades of Maoist austerity
| The castle is entirely edible. The bricks are cinnamon flavoured biscuits; its snow capped turrets are icing. |
I was whisked from city to city on bullet trains at about 200 miles an hour, through flickering landscapes of fields, huddled traditional villages, lakes, rivers and the repeated sightings of new mega towns and their stooping cranes rising on the horizon like mirages in a desert.
The attention of the audiences, the depth of their questions, and their desire to take photographs at book signings were amazing and surprising. Not to mention the limitless dedication to social media on all occasions. 30, 000 people watched the last talk on live streamed video.
The talk in Nanjing was held in one of the most extraordinary bookshops I've ever been to. The Librairie Avant-Garde is in a converted underground car park. It's a vast temple to literate book loving, owned by a Christian, hence the cross. The welcome there included a hat, as worn by the bookshop staff, and a fabulous piece of travel luggage, courtesy of a Chinese travel company who helped sponsor the visit - the must-have marketing tool for all authors!
There were brief opportunities for sight seeing. The Forbidden City in Beijing on a clear, smog-free sunny day was extraordinarily impressive, followed by a ramble through the hutongs (the network of traditional narrow lanes with houses built round courtyards),
| Street food in the hutongs |
I got to sample a wide range of Chinese cuisine - and my chopsticks skills held up reasonably well!
Thanks so much to Mr Li, Hans, Joan and Fengyun - the man who made it all happen.
Wednesday, 16 November 2016
A day in Castelló d'Empúries
| The largest double font in the world? |
| Walls of sulphur yellow |
| The spectacular doorway of the Romanesque Santa Maria de Castelló. |
| Doors and signs - the last a homage to Ovidi Montllor, Catalan singer and actor And lunch... |
Thursday, 31 March 2016
Gloucestershire man discovers India…sort of...
During research for my book Conquerors about
the Portuguese voyages of discovery I unearthed a remarkable connection to England and the region in which I live. When the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama rounded Africa in 1498
he was not just the first man to discover a sea route to India and join up the
world – he was also the descendant of a Gloucestershire family.
It’s often said
that England and Portugal are Europe’s oldest allies. Both are seafaring countries
on the Atlantic sea board which traded with each other in medieval times. English
crusaders stopped off at Lisbon in 1147 and helped the king of Portugal expel
the Muslim rulers of the city. Many of the English stayed and settled down. Trading
links and agreements followed. In 1373 Edward III concluded a treaty with the envoys
of the Portuguese king to send archers to resist attacks from the larger
neighbouring kingdom of Castile.
It was eight
years before an expeditionary force could be assembled. The Duke of Cambridge gathered
some 3000 men at Plymouth. Amongst those who went was ‘Frederick Sudley of
Gloucestershire’. Frederick evidently
originated from Sudeley, near Winchcombe, but his exact origins seem uncertain.
He could not have been a son of John de Sudeley, 3rd Baron Sudeley, who died in
1367, as he had no direct heirs, but it’s possible to hazard a guess that he
was a member of the family, and a figure of some importance. If so, Frederick would have contributed his
own band of men-at-arms and archers to the expedition. Eight ships from Bristol
sailed round to Plymouth to join the Duke of Cambridge – it seems likely that
Sudley and his Gloucestershire contingent made the journey on these ships. They
finally landed at Lisbon in June 1381.
| Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire |
The English
expedition achieved nothing. The men were unpaid and the whole enterprise
quickly collapsed. After a few months they returned home. However Frederick
Sudley decided to stay in Portugal where he prospered. His name, rendered as Sodré
in Portuguese, became prominent. He had
a son João (John) and a grand-daughter Isabel who married Estêvão da Gama, from
a wealthy and titled family. Vasco, their son, was Frederick’s great-grandson.
![]() |
| Vasco da Gama |
It has to be
said that the Sodrés and the Gamas were a rough lot. Two of Isabel’s brothers,
Vicente and Brás Sodré, accompanied Vasco on his second expedition to India.
These Sodrés were Vasco’s uncles but were hardly older than him. The
anglo-portuguese crusading tendency remained strong. Vicente was a member of the powerful Christian
Order of Christ, the Portuguese successor to the Templars, and the governor of
its fortress town at Tomar. It’s likely
that the Sodré brothers and Vasco da Gama had grown up together at Sines on the
coast of Portugal and had shared experiences of piracy, raiding Muslim ports
and capturing ships. When Vasco returned
from his second voyage to India in 1503 Vicente Sodré remained in control of
Portuguese ships in the Indian Ocean, accompanied by his brother Brás . Unfortunately
the Sodré brothers became distracted by the lure of plundering Arab merchant
vessels and ended up being shipwrecked off the Arabian Peninsula. Vicente was
drowned. Brás died in mysterious circumstances – it’s been suggested that the Sodré
brothers had greedily kept the lion’s share of the plunder for themselves and
that Brás was so hated that he was murdered
by his own men. Recently there’s been
the probable discovery of the remains of one of their ships off the coast of Oman.

| Cannon balls and the ship's bell from the shipwreck |
The Sudeley connection
is still recorded in modern Lisbon – the family gave its name to a riverside
area beside the river Tagus, the Cais do Sodré (Sudeley’s Quay). Once a rough
sailor’s haunt it’s now a trendy area of bars and restaurants, and a transport
hub. There’s a Cais do Sodré railway and metro station and a ferry terminal
across the Tejo. The ships that carried
Vasco da Gama and a Gloucestershire name to India in the fifteenth century were
built on the river banks nearby. In the wake of Vasco’s arrival in India, the
Portuguese developed a wide-ranging empire and Frederick’s descendants sailed
with them. Today you can find Sodrés across the Portuguese speaking world,
particularly in Brazil. The Sudelies have travelled a long way from the slopes
of the Cotswold Hills.
| Cais do Sodré in the past |
| And now |
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