The Lord of Ireland (The Fifth Knight Series Book 3) (35 page)

BOOK: The Lord of Ireland (The Fifth Knight Series Book 3)
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‘Just because John knew about this Sinnach, this Fox, doesn’t mean he was involved in de Lacy’s death.’ The words sounded hollow even as he spoke them.

‘Eight years.’ Theodosia shook the letter again. ‘Why would The Fox wait eight years to get his revenge on Hugh de Lacy? It makes no sense. Unless you think of who really wanted de Lacy out of the way.’

‘John.’ Palmer dragged a hand through his hair. ‘And he couldn’t manage it himself. But he found a way.’ He swore long and hard. ‘If your brother stood in front of me right now, I’d put a sword through him. No question.’

‘It would join mine,’ came Theodosia’s steely response. ‘But hold, let me read the clerk’s final words.’

Again, she read in silence. Again, she gasped.

 

I write this in haste as an addendum as events have changed immeasurably.

Geoffrey, Henry’s third son and Duke of Brittany, has been fatally wounded at a tournament in France, may God rest his soul. Henry is recalling John from his progress back to Ireland. The King has only two sons remaining now, so will be reconsidering how he rules his lands.

I believe that you, Sir Benedict, and the lady Theodosia should be on your highest guard.

 

‘There is no more.’ Her shocked gaze met his. ‘But John is so much nearer the throne of England. His power increases by t
he day.’

Palmer put his hand over her shaking one, a trembling that was born
of
fury. ‘Your father still has that throne. And Richard
succeeds
him.’ He pulled her to him, held her tightly in his arms. ‘We need have no fear of John.’

‘Oh, I think we do.’

‘He will be far too consumed with his new status to even think of us.’

‘And if he is not?’

‘He will be,’ he repeated. ‘I’m always right, remember?’

As the last of the sun’s golden light lit the room, Palmer offered up a prayer that he was.

But he would be taking Gerald’s advice very seriously.

Palmer would be on his highest guard. As he always was.

List of Characters

The majority of characters’ names and Irish place names used in this novel are in their Anglicised form. I have done this to aid clarity for readers who may not be familiar with the Irish language. For those who can read
as Gaeilge
, I hope you will forgive me.

 

The Normans

Sir Benedict Palmer, Lord of the Manor of Cloughbrook,
Staffordshire

Lady Theodosia Palmer, wife of Sir Benedict and secret daughter of Henry II

Henry II, King of England

John, Lord of Ireland, youngest son of Henry II

Hugh de Lacy, Henry’s 1st Lord of Meath

Gerald of Wales, Royal Clerk to Henry II and adviser to the court

 

The Irish

Eimear, second wife of Hugh de Lacy and daughter of Ror
y O’Connor

Rory O’Connor, King of Connacht and High King of Ireland

Dermot
McCarthy, King of Desmond

Donal
O’Brien, King of Thomond

Matthew O’Heney, Archbishop of Cashel, Ireland

Historical Note

My story of John’s disastrous 1185 campaign in Ireland as
Dominus Hiberniae
is of course fictional, but much of the history and many of the places and events are real.

Theodosia’s experience of an earthquake (whilst still in
England
) might seem odd. But on 15 April 1185, a large earthquake did indeed take place.
According to the British Geological Survey report,
The Seismicity of the British Isles to 1600
, sources
record that it was felt throughout all of
England
, and was the worst ‘ever known in
England
’. ‘Stones were split, stone houses were thrown down’ and Lincoln Cathedral was badly
damaged
.

Twelfth-century Ireland was indeed viewed as a wild and inhospitable place by those on its neighbouring and larger island. It was
genuinely
perceived to be at the earth’s edge, for of course people had no idea what lay on the other side of the Atlantic. Those views of Ireland were largely reinforced by contemporary chroniclers, as most people in England had never set foot there. Gerald of Wales was one of the most prolific chroniclers, with his
Topography of
Ireland
and
The Conquest of Ireland
among his extensive works. He did visit there twice.

Gerald portrayed Ireland as a natural resource in the most
positive
light, but his accounts of its people are extremely p
roblematic. I have used many of his own views in the no
vel a
s, t
o put it simply, you just couldn’t make it up. But it’s important t
o rem
ember that Gerald was on the side of the invaders. And if you make those you seek to conquer less than civilised, less than human, then you have the sword of justification in your hand. It’s a very powerful weapon and has never been sheathed for very long in human history. The history of Ireland is no exception.

Hugh de Lacy was also a real historical figure. De Lacy was originally Lord of Weobley in Herefordshire. His father had joined the Knights Templar and had signed his lordship
over
to Rob
ert, hi
s eldest son. Robert died childless, so Hugh inherited the title, which he had not expected to do, and became an important tenant of the Crown. That wasn’t enough to satisfy him. He married Rose of Monmouth, the widow of the powerful Baderon, increasing his prosperity. And he liked to acquire land, whether in England, Wales or Normandy. He also had a rather unfortunate tendency to simply take it. In 1171, de Lacy went with Henry II to Ireland. The kingdom of Mide (Meath) was a particularly attractive prize, and de Lacy made sure he won it.

We know quite a lot about de Lacy as a person, as Gerald wrote extensively of him. He was probably not the most handsome of men. Gerald’s description certainly does not flatter: ‘What Hugh’s complexion and features were like, he was dark, with dark, sunken eyes and flattened nostrils. His face was grossly disfigured down the right side as far as his chin by a burn, the result of an accident. His neck was short, his body hairy and sinewy. He was a short man. H
is bui
ld –
misshapen
.’ Gerald even included a picture of him in his
Conquest of Ireland
. Such detail is a gift to a novelist.

The trouble was, de Lacy was a bit too good at what he did – certainly as far as Henry was concerned. The King tried to clip de Lacy’s wings, recalling him to England several times and granting the lordship of Ireland to Henry’s own son, John, who was only around eleven years old at the time. But de Lacy was one step ahead. His first wife, Rose, had died around 1180. He married again, but this time he took an Irish wife, a daughter of the High King Rory O’Connor (Ruaidri Ua Conchobair) of Connacht. Some records name this woman as Rose also, but this is likely to be a confusion. I gave her the name Eimear, a warlike heroine from Irish legend.

This marriage was not well received by Henry. He had suspicions that de Lacy was attempting a strategic marriage in the same way that another of his men, Richard FitzGilbert de Clare (
Strongbow
), had done a decade earlier. Gerald certainly had a dim view of de Lacy’s ambitions: ‘He was avaricious and greedy for gold and more ambitious for his own advancement and pre-eminence than was proper.’

Henry’s solution was to send his son John, now eighteen (or possibly nineteen: there is some debate on the exact date of John’s birth), to Ireland in 1185 to assert his authority as Lord of Ireland. John’s mission, which started with him pulling the beards of the Irish dignitaries who came to greet him at Waterford, was not a
success.

Frustratingly, there isn’t a great deal of detail about John’s
campaign
. Gerald is the main source of information. We know John built castles at Tibberaghny, Ardfinnan and Lismore. We know that he made serious errors of judgement, abandoning the prospect of the native Irish and the settlers being equal partners and
making
huge grants
of land
to his friends.
Gerald also writes of drunkenness, laziness and desertion by John’s men as well as their defeat on a number of occasions by the Irish.

John went back to England after nine months, complaining to Henry that de Lacy had been conspiring against him. This is highly unlikely. John was more than capable of failures of his own making.

Whether de Lacy had designs on taking Ireland from Henry, we will never know, for his life was brutally cut short. On
26 July 1186
, de Lacy was inspecting his new castle at Durrow when he was murdered by a single assassin. Contemporary accounts tell us that the murderer had concealed an axe beneath his cloak, and he took de Lacy’s head off with one savage blow, and his head and body fell into the
castle

s ditch
.

The murderer was sent by a chieftain of Meath, Sinnach

the Fox

Ua Catharnaig. Sinnach claimed that he ordered the murder to atone for the wanton destruction of land sacred to the great saint Colmcille, on which de Lacy had built his castle at Durrow. It’s more likely that it was simple revenge. One of Sinnach’s sons
had been
slain by Henry’s men some eight years previously, when Hugh de Lacy was the King’s representative in Ireland. Sinnach had always vowed to avenge that death.

I added the fiction of John’s involvement in de Lacy’s death. Whatever the real motive, it solved a problem for Henry. The
powerful
threat that was Hugh de Lacy was no more. Chronicler
William
of Newburgh recorded that ‘the news was gladly received b
y Henry’.

De Lacy was buried at Durrow, but his body was later removed to St Thomas’s Abbey to lie buried alongside his first wife. The Archbishop of Cashel, Matthew O’Heney, was instrumental in its removal.

The Rock of Cashel was an obvious choice for the climax of the novel, the events of which are entirely fictional. Henry II had
visited
there in 1171–72. Some of the buildings that still stand on Saint Patrick’s Rock appear in the novel as they would have stood there in 1185. The Round Tower, an architectural design that is unique to Ireland, is the site’s oldest building. Originally a bell tower, it dates from around 1100. Cormac’s Chapel, built by a king of
Desmond
(part of Munster) was consecrated in 1134. The ruins of the
cathedral
are not those of the cathedral that appears in my novel. That cathedral was built in the thirteenth century and added to over the
centuries
. Some sources claim that a cathedral was built
there
in 1169, and then replaced.

The
mid-ninth-century
High Cross is still there at Durrow, and the remains of the motte where de Lacy met his brutal end can be glimpsed through the trees.

Acknowledgements

As ever, there were many people who helped me in getting this novel to publication
to whom
I owe every thanks. Julia Jewels, the audience member who asked me (at the launch of my first novel,
The Fifth Knight
, at the Irish World Heritage Centre in Manchester) if I would ever write a book about medieval Ireland. I, of course, said no. But the seed was instantly planted, and now here is that book.

It has been in very safe hands. My agent, Josh Getzler, remains my cheerleader for all things medieval. Emile Marneur at Thom
as &
Mercer received the idea with great enthusiasm and encouragement. Also at Thomas & Mercer, Sana Chebaro has always been on hand to make sure the world gets to know about my novels. A
spe
cial word of thanks must go to my editor, Katie Green, for her brilliant insights and for her patience that would make Job look twitchy.

There are many historians whose excellent work I have consulted and who are mentioned in the bibliography. Any errors and fictitious accounts are of course mine. But I would like to give sincere thanks to Dr Colin Veach for his answers to my detailed questions about Hugh de Lacy and for his generosity in sharing his knowledge.

Joe Newman-Getzler needs a special mention for the timely Idiot Plot reminder. Kevin McMahon of Manchester Irish
Writers
provided inspiration for names within my ridiculously restricted brief but came up trumps. Dan FitzEdward and re-enactors from Historia Normannis were utterly generous with their time and
sharing
of their huge amount of knowledge. Beta-readers Paul
Fogarty
and Graham Mather reported for duty as always. Stephanie Powell and John Ketch made the Rock of Cashel research extra fun, as well as making arrangements for it not to rain.

And my Jon and my Angela are, as always, my life.

Bibliography

Without the sterling work of historians, historical novelists could not do what they do, and I am no exception. Though I try to ground my fiction firmly in fact, any errors are down to me.

For anyone looking for an overview of the history of medieval Ireland, I recommend:

 

Seán Duffy,
Ireland in the Middle Ages
(London: Palgrave
Macmillan
, 1997). Duffy also has an excellent chapter on John and Ireland in S.D. Church’s
King John: New Interpretations
(Suffolk: Boydell Press, 1999).

Art Cosgrove (ed.),
A New History of Ireland, Volume II,
Medieval I
relan
d
1169–1534
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008).

Dáibhí Ó Cróinín,
Early Medieval Ireland: 400–1200
(London: Longman, 1995).

Historian Marie Therese Flanagan is a wonderful read for those seeking to go deeper, with her publications
Irish Society,
Anglo
-
Norman
Settlers, Angevin Kingship: Interactions in Ireland in the late 12th Century
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998) and
The
Transformation
of the Irish Church in the Twelfth Century
(
Suffolk
: Boydell Press, 2010).

 

She is also the author of the entry on Hugh de Lacy in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
.

Colin Veach’s excellent
Lordship in Four Realms: The Lacy
Family
, 1166–1241
(Manchester: Manchester University Press,
2015
) is invaluable for the history of Hugh de Lacy. Two further exemplary articles by Colin Veach on Hugh de Lacy’s history are:

 

‘Relentlessly striving for more’: Hugh de Lacy in Ireland,
History
Ireland:
Features
, 15(2) (March/April 2007).

‘A Question of Timing: Walter de Lacy’s Seisin of Mea
th 1189–94
’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 109C, p
p. 165–194 (2009).

 

There are many, many books on King John. Three of my favourites are these:

 

W.L. Warren,
King John
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1981).

Frank McLynn,
Lionheart & Lackland: King Richard, Kin
g Jo
h
n an
d the Wars of Conquest
(
London
: Vintage B
ooks, 200
7).

Marc Morris,
King John: Treachery, Tyranny and the Road to Magna Carta
(London: Hutchinson, 2015).

 

And for those of you who want to hear more from the colourful Gerald of Wales:

 

Gerald of Wales,
The History and Topography of Ireland
(
London
:
Penguin Classics, 1982).

A.B. Scott and F.X. Martin (eds),
The Conquest of Ireland by Giraldus Cambrensis
(Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, 1978).

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