Duke of Aquitaine
The Road to Santiago de Compostela
Friday, March 25th, 2011 | Duke of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Aquitaine, The Writing Life, William X | 2 Comments
I am currently fascinated by the medieval pilgrimage from southern France to Santiago de Compostela in Northern Spain. I have read that Santiago de Compostela translates to “St James the Greater of the Field of Stars” which is poetic beyond belief and enough to make me love the road sight unseen.
I read of it years ago in one of Paulo Coelho’s wonderful books…I think he writes about the road to Santiago in more than one. But I did not really pay attention to the pilgrimage until working on TO BE QUEEN, because Eleanor’s father takes that road, with disastrous results.
The same themes and ideas come up again and again in my work, and it looks as if the Road to Santiago may be one of them. I am researching an idea for a story that takes place on the Road to Santiago, so I am reading a great deal about that pilgrim road, which was highly traveled in the medievel period, especially during the 10th -12 centuries.
The book I am drawn into at the moment is I’M OFF THEN by Hape Kerkeling, the German commedian, who took time out to walk this road and contemplate his life. The result, along with whatever personal insights and strengths he gained, is this wonderful, funny, heart-warming book. Deftly translated from the German by Shelley Frisch, I am finding myself transported by Herr Kerkeling’s journey and his charming story telling.
As hard as the road to Santiago sounds, his book makes want to try it for myself. Research trip? Maybe someday. But I get the very disctinct sense that to walk the Road to Santiago de Compostela, you are more than taking a stroll. You are facing yourself and your life in a way that will transform you. That sounds like a journey that I would like to take.
Quote from William X, Duke of Aquitaine
Wednesday, December 15th, 2010 | Duke of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Aquitaine, To Be Queen, William X | No Comments
In one of the early chapters of TO BE QUEEN, William says to Eleanor, “Caution is a necessity, even for the very brave.”
As both her husbands, King Louis of France and King Henry of England could attest, Eleanor was always brave, if not always cautious.
Duke William X of Aquitaine
Friday, December 10th, 2010 | Duke of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Aquitaine, To Be Queen | 2 Comments
William X, Duke of Aquitaine, Count of Poitou, was Eleanor’s father. He plays a key role in raising Eleanor to be a woman of power in my upcoming novel, TO BE QUEEN. I believe he was instrumental to whom Eleanor later became. Of course, I have no written proof of this. William never wrote a letter on vellum to posterity, telling the world what an amazing woman and ruling duchess he hoped his daughter would become. But I think Eleanor’s life speaks for itself. William never remarried after his wife and only son died, in spite of a great deal of pressure from both Church and secular authorities to do so. Eleanor, Duchess at fifteen and Queen of France less than six months later, more than proved herself to be a powerful woman in a world of men. I have no doubt that William, had he lived to see the path of his daughter’s life, would have been proud of her.
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