Today I have a guest post by Kim Rendfeld to talk about her wonderful historical novel, "The Cross and the Dragon", published by Fireship Press. Over to you, Kim...
A Touch of Medieval Magic
By Kim Rendfeld
One fascinating element of the Middle Ages is how vestiges
of paganism coexisted with Christianity. The eighth-century Franks of my debut
novel, The Cross and the Dragon,
would have a simpler description: magic.
Magic was real to most medieval folk of all classes,
including royalty. Through magic and religion, they explained their world and
exercised some power over the events in their lives.
My heroine, Alda, wears an iron dragon amulet with a stone
from Drachenfels alongside her cross. She believes the long-ago hero Siegfried
actually did slay the dragon on a mountain across the river from her Rhineland
home. In legend, Siegfried bathed in the dragon’s blood and became
invulnerable, except for where a leaf fell on his shoulder.
For my novel, I invented the part about the monster’s blood
seeping into the rocks and imbuing them with magical protection, but it is not
that far from what medieval people believed.
Magic resided in stones, groves, enclosures, and springs. In
a difficult childbirth, a midwife might whisper a spell in the mother’s ear to
ease the process. A sick child would be taken to a rooftop while medicinal
herbs were cooked and incantations were said. Even priests would turn to
divination, spell casting, or interpreted dreams. Manuscripts copied by monks
contained magical squares to predict the course of an illness by combining the
letters of the patient’s name with the number of the day on which he fell ill.
The Church frowned on sorcery, often blamed for murder and
disasters such as a storm destroying a harvest. The penalty for witchcraft
could have come straight out of a folktale collected by the Brothers Grimm:
being sealed in a cask and thrown into the river. Yet as you can see, the use
of protective and healing magic was so widespread, the Church looked away most
of the time.
So, while The Cross
and the Dragon does not have overt spell-casting as you would find in the
Lord of the Rings or Harry Potter series, magic has a presence. The characters
believe in it and in otherworldly creatures and act accordingly. I simply
couldn’t exclude magic from my story.
Nonfiction Sources
Daily Life in the
World of Charlemagne, Pierre Riche, translated by Jo Ann McNamara
Daily Life in Medieval
Times, Frances and Joseph Gies
Kim Rendfeld is the author of The Cross and the Dragon, a tale of love amid the wars and blood
feuds of Charlemagne’s reign. For more about Kim and her fiction, visit
www.kimrendfeld.com.