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Advenutes of Alianore Audley--January Group Read
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Susan
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Jan 01, 2010 05:09PM

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This book is freakin' hilarious!
I've so needed a good laugh. I'm really enjoying it! I wonder where I could score a copy of Brother Baldwin's One Hundred and Twenty-Six Positions for Knights and their Ladies!

I thought this book was hilarious, but that it was important that you already had a foundation of Plantagenet history, or you were going to be totally confused.
Also, I interlibrary loaned this book, and the copy I got came from some library in Kansas, which I thought was really interesting. What causes libraries to buy books?

Jenny, if you find a copy, be sure to share! ;)

I'll put up another post tonight when I have the book in front of me with some of my favorite quotes and scenes, but off the top of my head I do remember laughing out loud when Roger complained that he was going to be suspended from jousting for six months and pulled out his copy of the Knightly Code!








I think that might be a reference to the ancestors of the present Spencer family (i.e., Princess Diana's family). The Spencers were given a phony male-line Despenser pedigree at some point. A genealogist named Horace Round wrote extensively about this:
http://books.google.com/books?id=-MZs...


It's been a while since I read the book, but I remember being proud of catching the reference at the time!

Do they still believe this?

Do they still believe this?"
I think so--I believe Diana's brother mentions it at least as a possibility in his book on the family, but I don't have the book to verify it. They might have a female-line descent--I think genealogists have traced one, but I could be wrong. Brian might know.


On the Despenser descent, I believe Princess Diana does descend from Constance of York's Despenser marriage but by a female line (as the male line became extinct around 1413.) Sadly I have forgotten the detail. Obviously the link antedates Alianore's chronicle and she was not to know of it.
As far as the male line is concerned, I believe it's bogus, or, at least, cannot be proved. There's discussion on the matter somewhere on the web if anyone's interested.


I had in mind the long-running BBC radio show, The Archers, but I didn't make much of it. I think there is one point where Alianore says the Archers may one day be more famous than the Beauchamps. Well, in the BBC sense they are!