Blog Tour – The Middle Ages Unlocked – Why we wrote the book by Gillian Polack and Katrin Kania


I am delighted to host a stop on the blog tour to celebrate the US launch of…



You can buy the book from: Amberley Publishing


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


You can follow the authors on Social Media:

@GillianPolack
@katrinkania





Why we wrote the book by Gillian Polack and Katrin Kania


‘When I first saw the draft of what would become The Middle Ages Unlocked, I was in a conference bar, peeking over the shoulder of Gillian’s friend. Said friend had made Gillian promise to show her the draft, I was there because I had met Gillian a little bit before and we enjoyed each other’s company, and I am naturally curious. (I like to say that it’s a professional requirement, being curious.)


 (c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing



It was a huge draft, and it was full of everything. Medieval stories, literature, witty quotes, lists of all kinds of things, explanations, fascinating examples of things expected and unexpectable. It was also, very obviously, a draft, and it had a few holes left to be filled, among them the chapter about textiles and clothing. I foolishly offered to take a look at the clothes chapter. That, somehow, very quickly turned into I’d help with the rest of it, as well. So I became co-writer on a project so dauntingly large I’d never have dared take it on alone.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


Gillian and I both like a challenge, and The Middle Ages Unlocked (or The Beast, as it was lovingly and sometimes not-so-lovingly called behind the scenes) was a challenge and a half. The first idea behind the book was to provide writers with a one-stop guidebook to all things medieval, and that quickly turned out to be an impossible task. What we could do, and what Gillian’s plan was when I joined her, was write a book to give a basic understanding of the era. A book that would help the reader understand how the many aspects of medieval life interconnected, and how much variation and how much humanity there was.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


We aimed to show the connections, the cross-ties, the mutual influences. You can find general histories of about any era that will tell you about the political events (this king killed that one and took the throne, and then he married that princess). You can also find articles and sometimes even books about a specific topic, treating it in detail (such as charcoal analysis of industrial fuelwood from medieval and early modern iron-working sites in North Yorkshire). These are all useful reading, but they rarely place their topic into a wider context. A king might kill another king and justify this with a vision that God sent him, and to understand why this would have been a valid explanation for many contemporaries, you have to know about the role of religion in that time. Woodland management didn’t only provide wood for fuel and other uses, but also included wild harvesting, herding and hunting. Hunting, however, was a complex topic in itself, as hunting rights would differ depending on the animal being hunted, the ownership of the woodland and the type of legal system that applied.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


With The Middle Ages Unlocked, we focus on making these connections clear. We aim for the middle ground between very broad overviews that omit a lot and very detailed knowledge that requires previous knowledge to understand. So we explain how the government worked in general, how important individual persons and families were, how it worked with religious structures from the Church (and sometimes against them). We do not go into detail about individual political events, as there are enough political histories of England available. We explain the basics of craft organisation, and of the crafts themselves so you can go and read detailed analyses about guild history, or look at archaeological finds and understand how they were made, or read about resources and tools necessary for crafts and will know why they were needed. We explain about the polyglottal society and about the languages that were used, as well as the kinds of literature they were used for, so you will know why a certain text was in French and another one in Latin.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


We blended two different disciplines, that of the historian and that of the archaeologist. And we did our best to point out, again and again, that nothing was cut and dried. There was so much variety in the Middle Ages! We have a hard time grasping this today, with the limited sources that we have available. We’re also biased by our modern industries and modern lifestyles that provide us with the same brand items all over the world, with exactly the same books in exactly the same type. We are used to picking out pre-fabricated things from a catalogue when back in the Middle Ages, a craftsperson would have made things that, even in early mass-production, would be slightly different from each other. At times, it felt like every second sentence was “But this is just an example, and there were many other, different variations of this”.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


We wrote The Middle Ages Unlocked to be a gateway book, something pleasant to read that would give readers a deep understanding of medieval life and society, across all its breadth. We’re hoping it will satisfy the curiosity of its readers, and that it will make them even more curious about individual topics and eager to read more about them.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


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More books to look forward to in 2016


3 May 2016 – Elizabeth: The Forgotten Years by John Guy


(c) Viking

(c) Viking





15 March 2016 – In the Footsteps of the Six Wives of Henry VIII by Sarah Morris and Natalie Grueninger


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


‘This guidebook takes a fresh perspective on the tale of Henry VIII’s six wives, by taking you on a journey through a selection of manors, castles, and palaces that played host to Henry s unforgettable queens. Explore the Alhambra Palace in Spain, childhood home of Katherine of Aragon; stand in the very room at Acton Court, where Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII publicly dined; walk the cobbled grounds of Hampton Court Palace, which bore witness to both triumph and tragedy for Jane Seymour; visit Dusseldorf in Germany, birthplace of Anne of Cleves; travel to Gainsborough Old Hall in Lincolnshire, where Henry VIII and Catherine Howard rested on their way to York in 1541 and wander the picturesque gardens and panelled rooms of Sizergh Castle in Cumbria, where Katherine Parr spent time in mourning, after the death of her first husband. Each location is covered by an accessible and informative narrative, which unearths the untold tales and documents the artifacts, as well as providing practical visitor information based on our first-hand experiences of visiting each site. Accompanied by an extensive range of images, including family trees, maps, photographs and sketches, this book brings you closer than ever before to the women behind the legends, as it takes you on your own personal and illuminating journey in the footsteps of the six wives of Henry VIII.’

From Amazon.co.uk


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‘The Middle Ages Unlocked’ Blog Tour


I am very pleased to be participating in the blog tour for the US launch of ‘The Middle Ages Unlocked: A Guide to Life in Medieval England, 1050–1300’ by Gillian Polack and Katrin Kania.


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


Amberley Press Release:

‘To our modern minds, the Middle Ages seem to mix the well-known and familiar with wildly alien concepts and circumstances. The Middle Ages Unlocked provides an invaluable introduction to this complex and dynamic period in England.

Exploring a wide range of topics from law, religion and education to landscape, art and magic, between the eleventh and early fourteenth centuries, the structures, institutions and circumstances that formed the basis for daily life and society are revealed.

Drawing on their expertise in history and archaeology, Dr Gillian Polack and Dr Katrin Kania look at the tangible aspects of daily life – ranging from the raw materials used for crafts, clothing and jewellery to housing and food – in order to bring the Middle Ages to life.

The Middle Ages Unlocked dispels modern assumptions about this period to uncover the complex tapestry of medieval England and the people who lived there.

Dr Gillian Polack is a novelist, editor and medieval historian as well as a lecturer. She has been published in both the academic world and the world of historical fiction.

Dr Katrin Kania is a freelance textile archaeologist and teacher as well as a published academic. She has published books and articles in both German and English.’



Travelling History- Travelling into the Past: The Middle Ages Unlocked

Supremacy and Survival: The English Reformation Blog Tour Interview: The Middle Ages Unlocked

Medieval Archives: The Middle Ages Unlocked: Author Interview

Felicty Pulman: An Insight into the Middle Ages with Gillian Polack

Henry the Young King: And Death Will Have His Day’: Guest Post by Gillian Polack, Author of The Middle Ages Unlocked

My blog: Why we wrote the book by Gillian Polack and Katrin Kania

Nerdalicious: Tools and Crafts


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Books 2015 – on sale today – Charles Brandon by Steven Gunn


15 October – Charles Brandon: Henry VIII’s Closest Friend by Steven Gunn


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


‘We don’t really consider Henry VIII to have had friends, rather subjects, cronies and dutiful wives and ministers of state. But Henry was a very sociable person and craved genuine relationships. Charles Brandon, the son of Henry VII’s standard bearer at the Battle of Bosworth, was to be his closest friend and companion for his entire life. They were educated together and Charles would hold a succession of important offices in the royal household. Henry VIII trusted Charles with some of the dirtiest jobs at the Tudor court, including clearing out Katherine of Aragon’s household and later arresting and extracting a confession from Anne Boleyn. Henry also forgave him for marrying in secret his favourite sister, Mary Rose. Yet Brandon’s life was by no means free from misadventure. His marriage to Henry’s sister Mary was disastrous, and his relationship with Anne Boleyn fraught. He was accused of treason and was responsible for a military fiasco. Steven Gunn explains how Brandon not only survived these vicissitudes of fortune and managed to retain the king’s friendship, but steadily increased his own power, wealth and standing. When Charles died in 1545, Henry ordered a lavish funeral and he was laid to rest in St George’s Chapel in Windsor, where Henry had buried his favourite wife, Jane Seymour, and where he would be buried himself a mere eighteen months after his one true friend.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk

Amberley Publishing


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Books 2015 – on sale today – The Lost Tudor Princess by Alison Weir


1 October – The Lost Tudor Princess: A Life of Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox by Alison Weir


(c) Jonathan Cape

(c) Jonathan Cape


‘Royal Tudor blood ran in her veins. Her mother was a queen, her father an earl, and she herself was the granddaughter, niece, cousin and grandmother of monarchs. Some thought she should be queen of England. She ranked high at the court of her uncle, Henry VIII, and was lady of honour to five of his wives. Beautiful and tempestuous, she created scandal, not just once, but twice, by falling in love with unsuitable men, which led to the passing of the first Act of Parliament to regulate royal marriages. Fortunately, the marriage arranged for her turned into a love match.

Throughout her life her dynastic ties to two crowns proved hazardous. A born political intriguer, she was imprisoned in the Tower of London on three occasions, once under sentence of death. She helped to bring about one of the most notorious royal marriages of the sixteenth century, but it brought her only tragedy. Her son and her husband were brutally murdered, and there were rumours that she herself was poisoned. She warred with two queens, Mary of Scotland and Elizabeth of England. A brave survivor, she was instrumental in securing the Stuart succession to the throne of England for her grandson.

Lady Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox, was a prominent and important figure in Tudor England, and yet today, when her Tudor relations have achieved almost celebrity status, she is largely forgotten.

Her story deserves to be better known. This is the biography of an extraordinary life that spanned five Tudor reigns, a life packed with intrigue, drama and tragedy.’

From Amazon.co.uk


Further details – Alison Weir

Further details – Amazon.co.uk


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