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    El Campeador

    Page 24
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      Don Iago turned to me and, grinning, clasped my arm, “And it is good to know that in an uncertain world some things never change. I am pleased that you are still the madman, the hero of Salamanca. You say that which others only think!”

      As we mounted Babieca and Hercules El Campeador said, “It is a pity that he does for I fear he will have a shorter life because of it!”

      We turned our horses and left León without a backward glance. It was many years until we returned. When we reached the parting of the ways Rodrigo said, “I will say farewell to my wife for I will not bring her and my children and I will meet you at Briviesca.”

      “Then we head for Catalonia and not the taifa?”

      “I know that Ramon Berenguer bears me no love but his is the only Christian country left to me. I will try him and if he will allow me to serve him then Jimena and my family can come.”

      “But you think that will not happen.”

      “No, we will try it and then offer our swords to the Moors!”

      Epilogue

      Maria was forewarned of my arrival and was tearful when I entered my hall. None knew of the King’s punishment and so, with all of my men and family gathered I told them. Maria fell to her knees and wept. Anna and Isabella had also been with me for years and their faces showed their shock.

      “The men I take know who they are.”

      Geoffrey said, “We will all follow you, lord!”

      “And if I knew where I was going that might be something I would consider, but all of you need to stay here and protect my foster mother and my land. This is exile and not banishment. As such it can be rescinded. When I am able, I will send word to you. This is not something I chose. Rather it was chosen for me when I was asked to train Rodrigo de Vivar. None of you wish me to abandon him, do you?” I looked at them all but held the gaze of Maria and she shook her head and rose.

      She came over to me and hugged me, “It is my fault and your foster father’s for we brought you up this way. You are noble and you are loyal. It is a shame the King is not more like you. We will keep a home for you and pray for you each night. This night we will feast as though it is Christmas for who knows when we shall meet again!”

      I learned, from the men I had left behind, that Álvar had been sent on a diplomatic mission to Anjou and that he had known nothing about our fate. I was pleased for I had worried that our old comrade had been part of the conspiracy. I saw now that it was not true. If he had been present then he would have intervened. King Alfonso was cunning!

      It was noon the next day when Rodrigo arrived. He had with him Rafa and Carl and they led spare horses and El Campeador’s war gear. He had a tearful farewell with Maria and then we headed up the road, first to Pamplona and then to the coast and Catalonia.

      When we reached the col and looked down on my home he said, “And now the real adventure begins. Know this, William Redbeard, there is no other man I would rather do this with. Let us step out on this precipice together.”

      “Aye, for you truly are El Campeador!”

      Our horses began the descent to Navarre and we lost sight of Castile. We were exiles and wanderers but we were also a band of warriors and I feared any man who came up against us!

      The End

      Glossary

      Armiger- champion

      Barracho – steep-sided gully

      Buskins- boots

      Campi doctor -battlefield trainer

      Chevauchée a raid by mounted men, normally knights

      Jubbah- quilted garment worn over or beneath mail

      Magerit –Madrid

      Mozarab-one who fights for the Taifa states but is not necessarily a Muslim

      Pariah- tribute

      Pel- a wooden stake embedded in the ground where men at arms would practice their strokes

      Taifa –a faction or geographical area which followed a petty king or warlord in Iberia

      Tijfaf- quilted armour for horses

      Quintain- a target used by mounted men

      Ventail- a piece of mail secured on a helmet and covering all but the eyes of a knight

      Maps and Illustrations

      Historical Notes

      Books used in the research:

      The Normans- David Nicolle

      Norman Knight AD 950-1204- Christopher Gravett

      The Knight in History- Francis Gies

      Knights- Constance Brittain Bouchard

      El Cid- The Making of a Legend, M.J. Trow

      El Cid and the Reconquista 1050-1492

      Armies of the Crusades- Wise and Embleton

      The Moors- Nicolle and McBride

      English Medieval Knight 1200-1400 Gravett and Turner

      Age of Empires computer game

      This story began to be written when I was about fourteen, more than fifty years ago and I watched Charlton Heston chew up the scenery in the great epic, El Cid. When I began to write the story, I did my research and found that the Charlton Heston El Cid was not the legend that I thought he was. I think that good as the film was the truth and reality showed an even greater Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar.

      This is a story and while I have been at pains to write a historically accurate story, I have used the holes in history to make it fiction. Most of what we know about El Cid comes from a poem, written a long time after the great Spanish knight died, Carmen Campidoctoris. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmen_Campidoctoris. There is doubt about almost everything which happened to Rodrigo until he was already famous. Even the inscription on his sword which I used is in doubt as the one in Valencia says that it was made in 1040, and that was three years before he was even born. Briviesca was an ancient fortress but it was moved in the fourteenth century to its present position. Of the old settlement, there are few traces left and I have had to use my imagination.

      I have made his father, Don Diego, ‘a bad ‘un’ as it suited my story but we know very little about him and his grandfather, the Lord Luis of my story, is better documented.

      The only documented battles we have for this period are Atapuerca and Graus although King Ferdinand and Prince Sancho did manage to subjugate two taifa and make them vassals. The written records are a little vague and as most of the material we have comes from many years after Rodrigo’s death then it is hard to differentiate where the legend ends and reality kicks in. My philosophy is, if in doubt then make it up!

      There are, however, more than a couple of incidents which baffle me as a historian. The murder of King Sancho is one. According to the limited history we have King Sancho and the deserter, Vellido entered the forest where King Sancho was stabbed with a spear. I have tried to make sense of this in my explanation. If it seems farfetched, then I agree with you. I cannot see why the King would go alone with a deserter into a wood.

      The second incident was the Battle of Cabra. According to one legend, and the film ‘El Cid’, then the reason that El Cid is banished is because he demanded an oath from King Alfonso. That legend grew in the 14th century and was not recorded at the time. More than that King Alfonso did send Rodrigo on a diplomatic mission to the Emir of Córdoba to secure the pariah. That would not have happened if Rodrigo was in disgrace. The Count Garcia did lead Christian knights to support the Emir of Granada in an attempt to take Córdoba. He was captured by El Cid and returned to Castile. It was a year after the Battle of Cabra when we last see Rodrigo at court and then he is exiled. My story is my version of events, but it may not be the true one. Until someone builds the TARDIS or a good version of Doc Brown’s time machine, we shall never know.

      The kings, princes and emirs all existed and behaved, pretty much as I describe. King Ramiro was not killed by a knight but a Moor who could pass as a Christian! I gave Iago that honour. The story of Prince Sancho and his fiancée was also true, and I had to read my research several times to work out that it was not, in fact, a brother and sister who married!

      The term Taifa means a faction but the reality is that the Emirs who ran those states were largely warlords and the idea of Christian fighting Muslim is mislea
    ding. Christian and Moor would ally when it suited their purposes and they would act like sharks around a wounded shark when it suited too.

      I have used William as the narrator for I wish the story to continue after El Cid’s death. (Sorry, spoiler alert!) I have, however, tried to use William to get into Rodrigo’s mind. At the moment there will be a final book to this series but that depends upon how William Redbeard develops. He is a real person to me and he has a mind of his own. Like Ted Hughes’ ‘Thought Fox’ my stories often write themselves. It is a scary world in which I live.

      I also discovered a good website http://orbis.stanford.edu/. This allows a reader to plot any two places in the Roman world and if you input the mode of transport you wish to use and the time of year it will calculate how long it would take you to travel the route. I have used it for all of my books up to the eighteenth century as the transportation system was roughly the same. The Romans would have been quicker!

      Griff Hosker

      February 2020

      Other books by Griff Hosker

      If you enjoyed reading this book, then why not read another one by the author?

      Ancient History

      The Sword of Cartimandua Series

      (Germania and Britannia 50 A.D. – 128 A.D.)

      Ulpius Felix- Roman Warrior (prequel)

      The Sword of Cartimandua

      The Horse Warriors

      Invasion Caledonia

      Roman Retreat

      Revolt of the Red Witch

      Druid’s Gold

      Trajan’s Hunters

      The Last Frontier

      Hero of Rome

      Roman Hawk

      Roman Treachery

      Roman Wall

      Roman Courage

      The Wolf Warrior series

      (Britain in the late 6th Century)

      Saxon Dawn

      Saxon Revenge

      Saxon England

      Saxon Blood

      Saxon Slayer

      Saxon Slaughter

      Saxon Bane

      Saxon Fall: Rise of the Warlord

      Saxon Throne

      Saxon Sword

      Medieval History

      The Dragon Heart Series

      Viking Slave

      Viking Warrior

      Viking Jarl

      Viking Kingdom

      Viking Wolf

      Viking War

      Viking Sword

      Viking Wrath

      Viking Raid

      Viking Legend

      Viking Vengeance

      Viking Dragon

      Viking Treasure

      Viking Enemy

      Viking Witch

      Viking Blood

      Viking Weregeld

      Viking Storm

      Viking Warband

      Viking Shadow

      Viking Legacy

      Viking Clan

      Viking Bravery

      The Norman Genesis Series

      Hrolf the Viking

      Horseman

      The Battle for a Home

      Revenge of the Franks

      The Land of the Northmen

      Ragnvald Hrolfsson

      Brothers in Blood

      Lord of Rouen

      Drekar in the Seine

      Duke of Normandy

      The Duke and the King

      New World Series

      Blood on the Blade

      Across the Seas

      The Savage Wilderness

      The Bear and the Wolf

      The Reconquista Chronicles

      Castilian Knight

      El Campeador

      The Aelfraed Series

      (Britain and Byzantium 1050 A.D. - 1085 A.D.)

      Housecarl

      Outlaw

      Varangian

      The Anarchy Series England

      1120-1180

      English Knight

      Knight of the Empress

      Northern Knight

      Baron of the North

      Earl

      King Henry’s Champion

      The King is Dead

      Warlord of the North

      Enemy at the Gate

      The Fallen Crown

      Warlord's War

      Kingmaker

      Henry II

      Crusader

      The Welsh Marches

      Irish War

      Poisonous Plots

      The Princes’ Revolt

      Earl Marshal

      Border Knight

      1182-1300

      Sword for Hire

      Return of the Knight

      Baron’s War

      Magna Carta

      Welsh Wars

      Henry III

      The Bloody Border

      Baron’s Crusade

      Sentinel of the North

      Lord Edward’s Archer

      Lord Edward’s Archer

      King in Waiting

      Struggle for a Crown

      1360- 1485

      Blood on the Crown

      To Murder A King

      The Throne

      King Henry IV

      The Road to Agincourt

      Tales of the Sword

      Modern History

      The Napoleonic Horseman Series

      Chasseur a Cheval

      Napoleon’s Guard

      British Light Dragoon

      Soldier Spy

      1808: The Road to Coruña

      Talavera

      The Lines of Torres Vedras

      The Lucky Jack American Civil War series

      Rebel Raiders

      Confederate Rangers

      The Road to Gettysburg

      The British Ace Series

      1914

      1915 Fokker Scourge

      1916 Angels over the Somme

      1917 Eagles Fall

      1918 We will remember them

      From Arctic Snow to Desert Sand

      Wings over Persia

      Combined Operations series

      1940-1945

      Commando

      Raider

      Behind Enemy Lines

      Dieppe

      Toehold in Europe

      Sword Beach

      Breakout

      The Battle for Antwerp

      King Tiger

      Beyond the Rhine

      Korea

      Korean Winter

      Other Books

      Great Granny’s Ghost (Aimed at 9-14-year-old young people)

      For more information on all of the books then please visit the author’s web site at www.griffhosker.com where there is a link to contact him or visit his Facebook page: GriffHosker at Sword Books

     

     

     



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