The empress and the sociopath

On January 27, 1186, Constance de Hauteville wed the eldest surviving son of the Holy Roman Emperor, Heinrich von Hohenstaufen. She was eleven years older than he, and for the first eight years of their marriage, she was believed to be barren. But to the amazement and skepticism of the medieval world, she became pregnant in the spring of 1194, and was delivered of a healthy son in late December of that year, who would later gain greater fame than either of his parents. She was forty by then and Heinrich’s enemies—who were legion and well-deserved—claimed the entire pregnancy was a hoax, a scheme concocted by Heinrich to get a male heir. Constance was outraged by this malicious slander and showed remarkable courage and fortitude by inviting the women of the town of Jesi to watch her give birth, determined that none would be able to deny the legitimacy of her son. I’ve mentioned often that Constance is a character in Ransom and is also the star of my first-ever short story, A Queen in Exile, which appeared this past December in George RR Martin’s anthology, Dangerous Women. I have great admiration for Constance, wed to a man who had neither honor nor mercy. She deserved so much better, and I am grateful to that medieval mosquito who infected Heinrich with malaria and brought about his unexpected and sudden death in 1197—assuming that he did die of malaria, for dysentery has also been suggested, as has poison. While there is no evidence of the latter, if it was true, the question would not have been, Who would have wanted to murder Heinrich? It would have been, Who would not have wanted to murder him?
9 likes ·   •  4 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 27, 2014 07:00
Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Anduine (new)

Anduine yes, she was quite a woman was she not? And what a family, to marry into. After all her father-in-law none other than Barbarossa, (she was supposedly quite loved by him, to the anoyance of Heinrich), mother to Friedrich II. Henry the Lion brewing his own little rebellion among them, and wasn't Richard the Lionheart held capitve by that lovely family? Sometimes history writes the best historical thrillers.


message 2: by Sharon (new)

Sharon It sure does, Anduine. Whenever I write about the Angevins, I marvel that their reality always transcended fiction. If I had nine lives like a cat and a command of German, I would have liked to write the story of Heinrich's youngest brother Philip, who I jokingly call the only good Hohenstaufen. (I don't include Barbarossa in that criticism, aiming it at Heinrich and his thuggish brothers, Conrad and Otto, both of whom were murdered.) But Philip seems to have been a genuinely good guy, and that makes his assassination all the more tragic.


message 3: by Anduine (new)

Anduine well, in case you should ever get a chance of a privat history trip over here - you know how to find me. It would be an honor and pleasure to be your personal translator/interpreter in your 10th life ;-)


message 4: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Thank you, Anduine. I will definitely keep your generous offer in mind!


back to top

Sharon Kay Penman's Blog

Sharon Kay Penman
Sharon Kay Penman isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Sharon Kay Penman's blog with rss.