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Medieval Stories
The Saxon Secret to Avoiding a Bad Ruler

The Saxon Secret to Avoiding a Bad Ruler

What if the worst rulers in English history didn't have to happen?

Bad kings - the weak, the cruel, the catastrophically incompetent - weren't inevitable. They were the consequence of a system that handed the most powerful job in the kingdom to whoever happened to emerge from the right womb in the right order!

Primogeniture, succession by (male) birth order, gave England Edward II, whose personal failings and political incompetence ended in his deposition and probable murder. It gave England Richard II, whose erratic tyranny triggered a constitutional crisis and cost him his throne. It gave England Henry VI, whose mental collapse plunged the country into thirty years of civil war. These weren't accidents of fate. They were what happens when a system prioritises birth order over every other human quality.

But before the Normans locked this system in place, the Anglo-Saxons did something far more interesting.

The Aetheling System: Choose the Best, Not the First

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Muriel of Lincoln
Norman Invasion, Saxon England, Medieval England, LIncoln Rachel Elwiss Joyce Norman Invasion, Saxon England, Medieval England, LIncoln Rachel Elwiss Joyce

Muriel of Lincoln

Nicola de la Haye held Lincoln Castle against a French siege and saved England, and everyone remembers her name.

Almost no one remembers her grandmother.

Muriel of Lincoln didn't lead armies or defy kings in any spectacular fashion, but without her calculated survival and strategic positioning, there would be no Nicola, no legend, no castle defense that changed the course of English history.

This is the story of the invisible foundation upon which greatness was built.

The Survivor's Daughter

After 1066, most Saxon lords lost everything—their lands, their titles, their entire futures disappeared as William the Conqueror handed England to his Norman knights like spoils of war.

But Muriel's father, Colswein of Lincoln, somehow managed to keep his holdings, and the Domesday Book provides the documentary proof of this remarkable survival.

This wasn't luck or accident—this was cold, hard value in the eyes of the new regime. The Normans needed more than swords and intimidation to actually rule England in any sustainable way; they needed local networks, local loyalty, and men who could make occupation feel less like conquest and more like legitimate governance. Colswein was one of those rare men who proved too useful to destroy, whose cooperation was worth more than his elimination.

And the fastest, most permanent way to lock in that kind of usefulness? Marriage between the old world and the new.

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Book Review: Ripples Through Time by Christina Courtenay
Book Review, Historical Fiction, Blog Tour Rachel Elwiss Joyce Book Review, Historical Fiction, Blog Tour Rachel Elwiss Joyce

Book Review: Ripples Through Time by Christina Courtenay

A fun timeslip modern-day and Viking era set romance novel, Christina Courtney’s tale ticks all the right boxes.

An attractive man and woman in modern day England, brought together by unhappy circumstances. An attractive Viking (Norse) man and a Saxon woman in England, brought together by unhappy circumstances.

There are family betrayals and jealousy, buried treasure, and two kind people, attracted to each other—in both timelines!

And did I mention the fantastic setting—Viking invaded Saxon England? Swords and axes, healing herbs, and ancient stone monuments to the dead...

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