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Medieval Stories
She Didn't Wait for Permission
Nicola de la Haye, Medieval Women, Medieval Misogyny Rachel Elwiss Joyce Nicola de la Haye, Medieval Women, Medieval Misogyny Rachel Elwiss Joyce

She Didn't Wait for Permission

‍International Women's Day asks us to celebrate the women who refused to accept the limits placed upon them. Who pushed back. Who led. Who endured. And every year, we tend to look to the recent past — to suffragettes, trailblazers, and glass-ceiling-breakers of the modern era.

‍But what about the women who did all of that eight hundred years before anyone thought to name it?

‍Meet Nicola de la Haye. Sheriff of Lincolnshire. Castellan of Lincoln Castle. The woman who, in 1217, successfully defended one of England's most strategically vital fortresses against a French-backed rebel army: at the age of approximately seventy. She didn't wait for permission, and she didn’t expect plaudits: because no one was going to give it.

‍ What the Twelfth Century Said Women Were

‍The medieval world had very clear ideas about women's place in society, and those ideas were enforced from pulpit, court, and custom alike. Women were considered intellectually weaker than men, legally subordinate to their fathers and husbands, and spiritually suspect - daughters of Eve, prone to temptation and manipulation(!!!). Church fathers and contemporary writers were emphatic on the subject. Women should be silent, obedient, and invisible in public life.

‍I've explored just how relentless and inventive that misogyny was in my medieval misogyny series, including a look at the men who competed, with some enthusiasm, for the title of Worst Villain to Women of the 12th Century. It's a crowded field.

‍What Nicola de la Haye Actually Did

Nicola inherited the hereditary castellanship of Lincoln Castle from her father, and she held it through two marriages, through political upheaval, through sieges and civil wars, and with a grip that no one could prise loose. She administered justice, she negotiated with kings, defied a rogue justiciar who threatened the kingdom whilst Richard the Lionheart was on crusade, and she commanded garrisons and organised castle defences - incredibly well.

When King John's reign collapsed into civil war and a French prince threatened to take the English throne, Nicola was the one defending Lincoln.

She was also, at various points, told she was too old, too female, and too inconvenient. She resigned her position as castellan (constable), but was promptly reappointed, because no one else could do it as well as she could.

And one of King John’s last acts was to make her the first female sheriff in England - Sheriff of Lincoln.

‍This is the woman at the heart of my novel Lady of Lincoln: not a fictional heroine invented to fit a modern template, but a real woman whose story has simply been waiting to be told.

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A Rat, a Skull, and a Murder That History Never Solved

A Rat, a Skull, and a Murder That History Never Solved

On This Day: The Death of William Longespée, Third Earl of Salisbury. 7th March 1226

William Longespée’s Tomb at Salisbury Cathedral

When they opened the tomb, they found a rat. And not just any rat, but a dead one, curled inside a man's skull, centuries after both had gone into the dark. And when investigators ran the chemical analysis, the results sent a chill down historians’ spines.

Arsenic.

This is the story of William Longespée, Earl of Salisbury: soldier, crusader, half-brother to a king, and the death that eight hundred years of history has never been able to explain.

The King's Bastard Who Rose to Power

Born around 1176 as the illegitimate son of King Henry II, Longespée had no business becoming one of the most powerful men in England. But he did.

Through marriage to Ela of Salisbury, he became Earl and acquired one of the great titles of the realm. But he didn't coast on it; he fought, he commanded, and he mostly won.

His military career contained at least two moments that changed the course of history.

The Destruction of the French Fleet

In May 1213, King Philip II of France was massing an invasion fleet near the port of Damme, in what is now Belgium. The ships stretched across the harbour; hundreds of vessels, loaded with supplies, troops, and the ambition to bring England to its knees.

Longespée led the English fleet across the Channel to meet them.

What followed was less a battle than a systematic destruction. The English found the French fleet largely undefended as many of the ships sat at anchor with skeleton crews while the main force was raiding inland. Longespée's men fell upon them, seized what they could carry, and burned much of the rest.

It was one of the most decisive naval actions of the entire medieval period, and Philip's planned invasion collapsed. England, which had looked dangerously exposed, was suddenly safe.

Longespée had just saved the kingdom, and was hailed a hero.

He did it again four years later.

In 1217, with the young Henry III barely clinging to his throne, a French prince was being supplied and reinforced by sea. Longespée commanded the English fleet at the Battle of Sandwich, intercepting the French supply convoy in the Channel and destroying it with ruthless efficiency.

The strategy was brutally effective. Without reinforcement, the French campaign collapsed, and Henry III kept his throne.

His success (and probably his arrogance) meant he made enemies; powerful ones, in high places.

The Enemy You Already Know

One of those enemies was Nicola de la Haye; the indomitable castellan of Lincoln Castle, the woman who held the city against all odds and shaped the fate of England. But Nicola and Longespée were not allies. They were rivals, moving through the same treacherous political landscape from opposite sides.

It went further than politics. Longespée held the wardship of Nicola's granddaughter, Idonea. He’d essentially bought her wardship and betrothal to his son from John when she was captured during the Baron’s Revolt.

In the medieval world, controlling a child's wardship meant controlling their future, their inheritance, their marriage prospects. It was power over everything that mattered.

Nicola was not happy. What happens between them next is covered in the third novel in my Nicola de la Haye series, Lady of England.

A Storm at Sea. Then Something Worse.

In early 1226, Longespée's ship was wrecked.

He survived, battered, exhausted, exposed to the sea, and made his way to Salisbury. It was the obvious explanation when he fell ill shortly afterwards and died: a man weakened by shipwreck, a body pushed past its limits; the kind of death that happened all the time in the thirteenth century.

On 7 March 1226, he died.

His body was carried into the new cathedral at Salisbury, which was still rising from the water-meadows, still smelling of fresh stone and lime, and buried with the honours due an earl.

A model of Salisbury Cathedral still under construction, as it was when Longespée was buried there

But the rumours started almost immediately.

The Poison Rumours

William Longespée may well have been murdered by Hubert de Burgh with arsenic

The official verdict was illness, but the unofficial verdict was murder.

Suspicion gathered around Hubert de Burgh, the formidable royal justiciar who had long tangled with Longespée in the brutal politics of Henry III's court. In a world where power changed hands fast and rivals had everything to gain, poisoning wasn't paranoia. It was a reasonable fear.

But there was no proof. The rumours circulated, faded, and were eventually filed away under unsolved.

Then, in 1791, during a major reordering of Salisbury Cathedral, the tomb was opened.

The Rat and the Skull

When Longespée’s tomb was opened, an eerie detail emerged: a rat skeleton trapped inside the earl’s skull. Later testing revealed arsenic in the rat’s bones, giving chilling new life to the medieval whispers that the great earl had been poisoned.

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How a Birthday Party at Chinon Kickstarted a Civil War (5 March 1173)

How a Birthday Party at Chinon Kickstarted a Civil War (5 March 1173)

Today is my birthday 😁. And as birthdays go, I could have shared mine with worse people, because 5 March 1133 was also the birthday of Henry II of England, born at Le Mans, one of the most formidable rulers medieval Europe ever produced.

Henry II’s Birthday was 5th March

Soldier, lawgiver, empire-builder, father of eight legitimate children (and countless illegitimate ones), and a man whose family would become both his greatest weapon, his biggest headache, and eventually most spectacular downfall.

Which makes today a good day to talk about what happened on his fortieth birthday, in 1173. Because that evening a feast was held at Château de Chinon. The great hall would have been ablaze with candlelight and Henry, thinking he’d managed to control his spoiled, entitled (but courteous and generous) namesake son, allowed the goblets to be repeatedly refilled by his son’s own hand.

The drunkenness that followed led to everything that followed: the Great Rebellion, where Henry’s family were torn apart, and his throne would never feel secure again.

This event, and the Great Rebellion itself, runs through the heart of my novel Lady of Lincoln.

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Big News: Lady of the Castle Shortlisted for the HNS First Chapter Competition

Big News: Lady of the Castle Shortlisted for the HNS First Chapter Competition

Lady of the Castle has been shortlisted for the Historical Novel Society's First Chapter Competition before it’s even been published, and and I'm still doing a happy dance about it! 🥳

This is my second Nicola de la Haye novel, still unpublished, still being polished, but somehow its opening chapter caught the attention of the HNS judges in the competitive 11th–16th Century Category. 😀

The competition honours exactly what makes historical fiction electric: that first page that drops you into another century and refuses to let go. Nicola de la Haye - castellan, survivor, one of medieval England's most remarkable women - has a story worth telling, and it’s wonderful that Lady of Lincoln has already won so many awards, but also that Lady of the Castle is being credited even before the book even exists in final form!

Lady of the Castle continues where Lady of Lincoln left off, following Nicola through the treacherous politics and passions of the late 12th century. I'm deep in final revisions. You can track my writing and publishing progress here.

Stay tuned!

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She Was Almost Written Out of History, But Today, She Takes Back Her Story

She Was Almost Written Out of History, But Today, She Takes Back Her Story

Lady of Lincoln is officially here, and the woman history almost forgot is ready to be remembered.

Today is publication day for Lady of Lincoln, and I won't pretend I'm not emotional. This book, and this woman, has lived in my heart for years.

Nicola de la Haye was real. She inherited Lincoln Castle, commanded a garrison, defied kings, and at nearly seventy years old, held her fortress against the forces of Prince Louis of France in a siege and then a battle that may have changed the course of English history. Without her, England might be speaking French today.

And yet, until now, you've almost certainly never heard her name.

I hope that ends today.

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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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Blue Ink Review Celebrates Lady of Lincoln
Nicola de la Haye

Nicola de la Haye

The inspiration of Brienne of Tarth, Nicola de la Haye saved England twice. Watch the video below and discover the legend. (Spoilers alerts!).

And when you’ve finished, it’s time to find out more about the medieval heroine, the world she lived in, the corrupt men she had to deal with, and how the medieval badass sorted them all out!

Buy the first book in the Nicola de la Haye series, Lady of Lincoln, here.

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LADY OF LINCOLN is available on NetGalley!

LADY OF LINCOLN is available on NetGalley!

For a limited time only, Lady of Lincoln is available for Netgalley reviewers and librarians to read and review.

If you love immersive historical fiction based on real characters and strong women protagonists, then this novel is for you!

Get your copy here: https://www.netgalley.com/catalog/book/787763 or click the image above.

More on Lady of LIncoln:

1173. Nicola de la Haye will inherit great estates and Lincoln Castle—one of England's most strategic fortresses, but the medieval world is a man's world and her father arranges a marriage to secure her estates. She chooses love instead, causing her world to collapse. King Henry II punishes her. Her husband betrays her and joins a rebellion. Powerful men circle her inheritance like wolves.

LADY OF LINCOLN is the award-winning first book in the true story of Nicola de la Haye—the woman who would become England's first female sheriff and, years later, save the realm from a French invasion. But that triumph is still distant. This is where it begins: with a young woman learning what defiance costs, and what it takes to survive.

"A towering, epic saga… one of the greats in this genre." — Readers' Favorite ★★★★★

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Lady of Lincoln Gallops into the Chaucer Awards

Lady of Lincoln Gallops into the Chaucer Awards

I’m delighted to share some wonderful news: Lady of Lincoln has been named a Finalist in the Chanticleer International Chaucer Award for Historical Fiction.

It feels especially fitting to imagine Lady of Lincoln galloping into this space. The novel tells the true story of Nicola de la Haye, a medieval noblewoman who refused to be sidelined in a world designed for men, and who quite literally rode into danger to defend her lands, her people, and her legacy.

The Chaucer Award celebrates historical fiction that brings the past vividly to life, honouring works grounded in strong research, compelling storytelling, and memorable characters. To see Nicola’s story recognised in this way is deeply meaningful.

Thank you to Chanticleer for championing historical fiction, and to every reader who has ridden alongside Nicola on her journey so far. More news to come: the ride is far from over.

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Herstory Refuses to Be Forgotten!
Nicola de la Haye, Historical Fiction, Awards Rachel Elwiss Joyce Nicola de la Haye, Historical Fiction, Awards Rachel Elwiss Joyce

Herstory Refuses to Be Forgotten!

ady of Lincoln opens in 1168, when a fourteen-year-old Nicola de la Haye stood in the barracks of Lincoln Castle, a young girl surrounded by sleeping soldiers, determined to help a boy who didn't belong. It was a small act of defiance in a world that would soon demand much larger ones.

I'm honoured to share that Lady of Lincoln has been named a semi-finalist in the 2025 Chanticleer Chaucer Awards for Early Historical Fiction.

The novel has already won awards, and this is a highly prestigious one. Chuffed as I am, it’s not really about awards and recognition that I can weave a good tale (although I’m thrilled about that!). It's about what Nicola's story represents—a woman who inherited a barony and a castle in her own right, who found herself caught between impossible loyalties when her husband joined the Great Rebellion of 1173-4, and who chose to defend what was hers.

That’s what inspired me to write about her in the first place.

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Another Accolade for LADY OF LINCOLN!
Book Award, Book Reviews, Lady of Lincoln, Nicola de la Haye Rachel Elwiss Joyce Book Award, Book Reviews, Lady of Lincoln, Nicola de la Haye Rachel Elwiss Joyce

Another Accolade for LADY OF LINCOLN!

Besides winning a gold medal and ‘Book of the Year’ from the Coffee Pot Book Club, a ‘Notable Book’ Award from BlueInk Review (their highest accolade), and Five Stars from Reader’s Favorite, LADY OF LINCOLN has now been shortlisted for the Chaucer Award by the Chanticleer International Book Awards!.

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Lady of Lincoln Awarded the Prestigious BlueInk ‘Notable Book’ Seal!

Lady of Lincoln Awarded the Prestigious BlueInk ‘Notable Book’ Seal!

I’m delighted to share some wonderful news:
Lady of Lincoln has been awarded the BlueInk Notable Book Seal — an honour reserved for a very small number of books judged to be of exceptional merit.

BlueInk Review is one of the publishing industry’s most respected editorial review services, created by professional critics and editors who have written for outlets such as Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, and major newspapers.

The Notable Book Seal is BlueInk’s highest distinction, highlighting titles that stand out for their literary quality, authenticity, and craftsmanship. Fewer than five percent of submissions receive this accolade.

Here’s some of what the reviewer wrote about Lady of Lincoln:

“Joyce’s rich characterization unfolds against a vivid, meticulously researched historical backdrop… a gripping account of courage amid the brutal realities of civil war.”

For a historical novel rooted in the real life of Nicola de la Haye, England’s indomitable Lady of Lincoln Castle, this accolade is deeply meaningful. It celebrates not only the countless hours of research and writing but also the historical women who refused to be forgotten.

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LADY OF LINCOLN Wins Book of the Year Award!

LADY OF LINCOLN Wins Book of the Year Award!

I can’t quite believe I’m posting this, but besides winning the Gold Medal for Historical Biographical Fiction, LADY OF LINCOLN won the Book of the Year Award in the Coffee Pot Book Club annual awards!

I’m so honoured that my novel has been recognised amongst such great fiction, and so pleased to have done the memory of NIcola de la Haye proud! 😀

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LADY OF LINCOLN wins the Gold Medal Award!
Book Award, Lady of Lincoln, Nicola de la Haye Rachel Elwiss Joyce Book Award, Lady of Lincoln, Nicola de la Haye Rachel Elwiss Joyce

LADY OF LINCOLN wins the Gold Medal Award!

I’m absolutely thrilled that LADY OF LINCOLN has won the Gold Medal in the Historical Biographical Fiction category in the Coffee Pot Book Club ‘Book of the Year’ awards!

I cannot thank the committee enough for recognising the novel, the hard work in putting it together, but also Nicola de la Haye’s story!

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Finalist in Book of the Year! 🥳

Finalist in Book of the Year! 🥳

I was overwhelmed last night to receive this surprise email:

“I am pleased to announce that your book, Lady of Lincoln, is a Finalist in The Coffee Pot Book Club Book Of The Year Awards 2025.”

Lady of Lincoln is a finalist for Book of the Year Award with the Coffee Pot Book Club

I’m overjoyed and delighted. 🎊🎊🎊🎊🥂🥂🥂🥳🥳🥳

In particular, I’m so pleased that Nicola (Nicholaa) de la Haye’s story is gaining recognition! 🏰

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