Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Some Research Notes by Carol Townend

The Palace Brides trilogy is set in Medieval Byzantium. The starting point was a map of the Imperial Palace in Constantinople found on Wikipedia.


(Apologies for the slightly blurry resolution.) The map gives tantalising hints at why the Byzantine era was one of the most fascinating periods in history. There are glittering palaces. There’s a polo field. There are great reception chambers, and baths made from marble. Princesses would have walked through the Palace grounds, great retinues trailing in their wake. The paths and courtyards would have been crowded with lords and ladies, with generals and soldiers, with servants and slaves.

The City of Constantinople was built on the tip of a peninsular, and from the map you can see that the Great Palace was close to the sea walls. There would have been fabulous views of the Sea of Marmara from some of the Palace windows! After finding this map, the idea for the Palace Brides trilogy was born.

My husband and I visited Istanbul (the site of medieval Constantinople) to refine some ideas.  Here are some of the photos.

In the first one I am standing by the ruins of the Hippodrome where the entertainments (circuses, chariot races etc) were held. It gives some idea of the scale, the Hippodrome was HUGE! A scene in the first Palace Bride (Bound to the Barbarian) takes place outside the Hippodrome.
 
At which point I had better add that for the citizens of Constantinople, anyone born outside the Empire was considered to be a barbarian.  My first hero is an Anglo-Saxon, so that definitely puts him in the barbarian category as far as the Byzantines were concerned!  The same goes for the hero of the second book (Chained to the Barbarian).  Sir William Bradfer is an Apulian knight, who has been enslaved.   The heroine first sees him when he is put up for sale in the slave market.
 
Another place we visited in Istanbul is the underground cistern, the Basilica Cistern.   This was a vast chamber in which freshwater was collected for use in the palace.  It's close to Hagia Sophia, on the map its towards the top, at the centre.

The Basilica Cistern  is an extraordinary feat of Byzantine engineering.     It was begun in 532 by the Emperor Justinian, and the engineers used a site where there had been an even earlier cistern.   It has survived the ravages of time and conquest.    Wandering about Istanbul near Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque, it's hard to imagine the hidden cistern beneath your feet.   It's vast! 

Down in the cistern, it's so quiet you have no idea that there's a thriving city overhead. The bases of some of the columns show heads that have come to us from Greek mythology. Among other things, you can find the Medusa...


After seeing the cistern, I couldn't resist setting part of Chained to the Barbarian there!  I love research, it's like following a trail, once you start you never quite know where you are going to end up...



7 comments:

Cheryl St.John said...

How amazing to see all of that history in person. Enjoyed the photos.

Barbara Monajem said...

Awesome. It's great how seeing a historical site sparks story ideas. :)

Carol Townend said...

Hi Cheryl and Barbara,
It's odd how some places spark ideas better than others. However, ideas can strike when you are least expecting them. Visits to historic places are one of my favourite prompts...I am wondering where I can wangle a trip to next. Any suggestions, anyone?

Kate said...

What a trip that must have been! Isn't history grand? I think that's what had me gravitating to reading and writing different historical periods. Lucky you to have walked where so many have before.

Carol Townend said...

Hi Kate,
Yes, it was a fabulous trip. I felt very priveleged to be walkiing in places I had read about so avidly at uni!

Melinda Hammond/Sarah Mallory said...

Wonderful insight, Carol. It seems everything Byzantine if BIG! No wonder your book are so enjoyable.

Carol Townend said...

Hi Melinda,
Thanks so much! My favourite place to visit in Istanbul is Hagia Sophia. That is truly steeped in history. And then there's the boat trip up the Bosphorus, and then...