Ferdinando Paleologus and Historical Oddities in Barbados

After a brief hiatus, I am back to writing.  I’ve also been travelling with family and was fortunate to vacation in Barbados – an island I absolutely adore.  Aside from the fact that it’s always hot and this winter the weather in Canada has been brutal, the Bajans are very hospitable to strangers.

Barbados also has an interesting history which intrigues me. There are unusual historical oddities that pop up in the most unlikely places.  A good example of this is the final resting place of Ferdinando Paleologus who was the last descendant of the second brother of Constantine, the last Christian Emperor of Constantinople.

After the Turks seized Constantinople, Ferdinando’s father fled to Cornwall in England.  He married an English woman and they had five children.  Ferdinando was their third son.  Sometime between 1628 and 1650, Ferdinando came to Barbados to manage a plantation which belonged in his mother’s family.  What must it have been like to have sailed all that distance and settle in a foreign country? It is likely that Ferdinando never saw England again.   In my book, Distant Hills the heroine does just that and sails to Jamaica into the unknown.  Yet fortunately, she does return to England even though her return puts her in great jeopardy.

What is known about Ferdinando’s life in Barbados is that he was married and he was a successful plantation owner and a prominent member of St. John’s Parish Church.  His only son Theodosius was killed at sea. When Ferdinando died he asked to be buried according to Greek Orthodox rites which meant he was buried so that his head pointed west and his feet to the east.  Despite his involvement with the local Anglican Church, he remained true to Greek Orthodox traditions.

Here is the inscription written on Ferdinando’s marker.

“Here lyeth ye body of
Ferdinando Paleologus
Descended from ye imperial lyne
Of ye last Christian
Emperors of Greece
Churchwarden of this Parish
1655-1656
Vestryman, Twentye years
Died Oct. 3 1678”

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Reflections of 2018

Happy New Year to all!  2019 has begun and I pause after the holidays to reflect on the past year.  2018 was a real mixture of highs and lows.  In April our eldest son was married in Niagara Falls in a wonderful ceremony overlooking the falls.  Then in August, our beloved mother died just a month after celebrating her 90th birthday from complications due to her severe dementia.  Her rapid decline caught all of us by surprise but even though she had forgotten most things her sense of humour remained intact.  We miss her still.

In October, I finally published my first novel Distant Hills – a novel I had worked on (while writing other projects) for almost a decade!  I tend to be a perfectionist!  This is a new and exciting journey for me as I busily promote this novel and begin the research and writing of my second novel which I hope to publish in 2019.  So I leave 2018 with a mixture of feelings – some happy and some sad but I am always optimistic about the new year.  One can never predict how it will unfold but I look forward to the challenges and adventures of 2019.

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Sarah Churchill Duchess of Marlborough

Last week I wrote a bit about Sarah Jennings Duchess of Marlborough who was an unusual woman for her day.  For one thing, she was very intelligent and politically savvy though she had never received a formal education.  Her friendship with Queen Anne began when Anne was a Princess.  Sarah’s family were undistinguished and she secretly married the handsome John Churchill against the wishes of his parents who were hoping for a more lucrative alliance.  But by the time Anne became Queen of England in 1702 the Churchills were already rising to power and influence.  Anne created the duchy of Marlborough and as I mentioned in my last blog gave the Marlboroughs land and money to build Blenheim Palace.

After John Churchill died in 1721, Sarah became Duchess in her own right.  The early deaths of her two sons meant that she was now head of the family.  Under her care and prudent investments, some 30 estates were added to the family possessions.  She became obsessed with the completion of Blenheim Palace as a lasting memorial to her beloved husband.  As it was later written about her, “Her outspoken nature and scathing pen earned her more than a few enemies, but her power and influence were unequalled by any other 18th-century woman.”

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The Favourite

The Favourite is going to be in movie theatres soon.  I can hardly wait.  The film stars Olivia Colman as Queen Anne of England, Rachel Weisz as Sarah Jennings and Emma Stone as Abigail Masham and it is about the rivalry between the two women for the affections of the Queen. The movie takes place probably some thirty years before my novel begins but the manners and social mores of the periods were very similar.  Queen Anne’s reign ended in 1714 and she was succeeded by the first of the Georgian kings, hence the ‘Georgian period’.

Sarah Jennings, the Duchess of Marlborough is one of the rivals mentioned above.  (I will be writing more about her in my next blog because she was an unusual woman for her time)!  For one thing, many disapproving nobles thought she had too much influence over Queen Anne which benefited the Marlboroughs’ family and friends.  One of the benefits was the gift of Blenheim Palace to the Duke of Marlborough for his success in defeating the Spanish at Blenheim.

Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire is one of the most beautiful places in England.  During our last trip, my husband and I spent an enjoyable day touring the palace and its massive grounds.  These are just two photos of the many spectacular views at Blenheim Palace.

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Eating and Reading

HBO brought out a version of My Brilliant Friend which is supposed to be very good.  I recorded it but I haven’t watched it yet.  Too busy watching Outlander!

I read the book though about a few years back and while I enjoyed it, it was not an easy, breezy read.  This is a meal of a book.  It’s not an appetizer novel.  It is a sit-down full course meal.  Once you begin to read, you are committed!

Is it any surprise that on the American Thanksgiving day I am linking reading to eating?

Happy Thanksgiving all!

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