Fans of Norah Lofts discussion
How Far to Bethlehem?
>
How Far to Bethlehem - the journey

Somehow, I always had the idea that at least one of the Wise Men was from the Orient. But not sure why I thought that.

I think Jexal is the only fictional place in the whole, tho Im not sure about Bethphage
Gaspar is an invader of Jexal, he is a Mongolian ? or Bactrian ? from much further North. Jexal is described as having previously been invaded by Alexander on his way to India. NL also says it is "immensely old and has been described as the most beautiful city in the world" From the ways she describes the people , cultured, rich , soft living, peaceful etc , I think she is basing Jexal on somewhere like Persepolis or Babylon.
Traditionally the Magi were supposed to have come from Persia weren't they?
Here is a link to Alexander's journeys using an acient map -
http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pr...
You could see how Melchior might have met up with Gaspar and then later Balthazar coming down from Edessa etc.
I think this is a great idea Peggy

Barbara, good info on the map; I will try to to print it out. I will have to look up Bactrian, that is a term I am not familiar with. Didn't Gaspar's army of 500 all have red hair and blue eyes, along with bowed legs from learning to ride horses at an early age?

" that race of which the 500 were at once the remnant and the flower had eyes as blue as the summer sky and believed boy babies were born with bowed legs, ready shaped to a horse's barrel'
and later she mentions the red hair too. They are sun worshippers it seems, unlike the Jexalians .
Now that makes me re-think my ideas of Mongolia or Bactria (now part of Afghanistan I think and probably still the scene of fighting !!)
Surely people from that region would be dark haired and dark eyed...so, hmmmm must look further ...maybe some Caucasion race of old?
Also, I see I repeated some stuff you had already found out and posted , so sorry , I jumped in too quickly !

Since this is NL's version of the Magi, I think now Jexal was not a real city, where the facts could be confirmed about who conquered it and so on, but it is still interesting (to me, lol) to know what geographic area we are talking about, and what "tribe" could be a link to Gaspar.
Also, Barbara, my copy says Pyongyang is 1600 miles from Bethlehem, which would seem to be a typo!
I appreciate all the insights while I run with this!

Since NL clearly gave us one Asian Wise Man and one African, surely Gaspar must be intended to be European, or of European descent. The alternate tradition about the Magi, the one that doesn't make them all three Persian, has them representing the three major races of mankind.
Then, although "Jexal" is described as a city Alexander passed through en route to India, we're also told that Gaspar is the leader of a very recent band of conquerors--remember that the boy who would otherwise have been king of that city has asked Gaspar to consider marrying his sister to unite the old and new royal lines. And the new conquerors are red-haired and blue-eyed? Might they be CELTS? Nice to think!

http://hubpages.com/hub/The-White-Tri....
Major finds seem to have been in the 1980's and I haven't been able to find any earlier - which leaves us with a little mystery since NL first published HFTB in the 1960's.
It must have been , if not a theory , at least a rumour well before the actual findings. Or NL is even more brilliant than we thought !


http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander...
The dates fit,and though they fit for Persepolis too, it was in ruins by the time of Christ.
Still don't know how NL knew about the ancient redhaired people tho.....

These links indicate that there were redheads or blondes with blue and green eyes throughout the middle east and asian countries so we are on the right track. Barbara, thanks for reminding us that Gaspar's people were sun worshippers.
Mary, good point about NL having the Magi represent the three major races of mankind.
Rita, you may be thinking of the "Beauty of Loulan."

Thank you Peggy for your wonderful idea.


I can't find anything earlier then 1978 -and most of them were in the mid-1980's - in terms of actual archaeological findings. My copy of HFTB gives the publication date as 1965 so it msut have been known about or ,as you imply, a legend must have been in existence before any actual proof came to light.


For example, at the end of chapter where Mary visits Elisabeth
"And she turned upon them the smile that was to embrace the world"
And for Balthazaar, when he accosts Gaspar and Melchior and his dream seems to be coming true at last
" They looked at him with blank uncomprending faces and of all the bad moments in his life, that was quite the worst "
And humour too, as when Gaspar refuses to wear the triple crown of Jexal, being advised to on the grounds that it would impress people
' ..he retorted he could impress people in his own hat , or know why not."
Now I am up to the entry into Jerusalem, as is fitting for December the 28th!
BTW, harking back to some earlier posts, I have just read ( sorry I forget which chapter) of Gaspar's Mongolian homeland .
Also my copy , a Corgi pb, has a cover which seems to be very faithful to NL's descriptions of Gaspar Melchior and Balthazar as they enter Jerusalem, right down to B's turban of red silk woven through with blue, Gaspar's baggy riding pants, and Melchior's frail frame and conical hat.
Not a very elegantly thought-through post, sorry !

I recommended this book to my pastor last week, as Bible Study was discussing books about the Nativity.



This book has such depth of characters that you can take something new from it each time you read it. Hadn't thought of it before but Gaspar did have a kind of crusty, brusque sense of humor.
The chapters devoted to Herod and his wife and sons were pretty fascinating too. The bit about how he kept his wife's rooms exactly as they were after she died and continued to think he was in communication with her--good stuff.
I ran across the part about Gaspar's homeland too and meant to jot down the page number and forgot. Let me know if you find it again.
Peggy

I do like Gaspar , so, well, so sexy in the ancient tribal kind of way, but I do want to say to him, put aside the rigidity of those tribal ways re women and understand that Ilya, when you come home to Jexal, will be the making of you all as a blended nation and for you as a wife ( a bit like Madselin and Rolf)
The part where NL refers to Gaspar's Mongolian homeland is in chapter 4, Jexal, nearish the end, p 121 in my Corgi pb. She says
" His tribe had brought with them from their remote Mongolian homeland all the rules governing the treatment of horses..."
and in other places she refers to the tents and the treading of wool into felt.

Gaspar had as much to learn and challenge him as anybody else did on that journey. He certainly wasn't lacking in self confidence but he needed to have his views broadened a bit, as you say, especially about women! Nothing like travel to give you new insights, even in those days!


That's very interesting Selene, the Khazars seem to be pretty well post-Christ , but as you are suggesting , there must have been ancestral peoples.
We have enjoyed ourselves wondering where Gaspar came form - and how NL came to know all this too, as all the published research on it seems to be well after the publishing date of HFTB.


I couldn't find any mention of an ancient coin known as a rose jekkel either, so guess that was also a figment of Norah Lofts imagination - does anyone know anything about that?


http://www.vcoins.com/ancient/vilmar/...




There'a picture of one here (right hand side)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rya...


Yes, the rose noble is beautiful! Curiously, the one pictured seems not to have been circulated very much, since it still has its circular shape.
Barbara, would you go so far as to wear a pair of miniature ones as earrings? :)








But I also like the intro of other characters that will come into play in later years - Barabbas? The story of the good Samaritan?
Another question that may be covered if we do a group discussion for December: is Gaspar supposed to be from Mongolia originally? I've read some books on Gengis Khan and there seems to be a similarity.