The city of
Bath in Somerset , south west England is a world heritage site, famous
for its Roman baths and its Regency architecture. I drew on the Roman city of Aquae Sulis and its baths for my historical
romance Flavia’s Secret. There is also a hidden city at Bath , the medieval city, parts of which
remain even after much has been built over, adapted, added to or superseded by
the Regency makeover the city underwent in the eighteenth century.
We can see the medieval city in John
Speed’s 1610 map of Bath . It’s small and walled, with towers
and gates. The thermal baths are there, and there are orchards, churches and
hospitals. The Abbey is also shown, smaller than in the early Middle Ages when
it was extensively added to by Bishop John, who wished to make Bath the seat of
his bishopric. This Abbey church was wrecked by fire in 1137 and the whole
monastery complex declined, especially after the Black Death in 1439. Later,
the rebuilt church occupied only the nave-space of the former Norman cathedral.
Other medieval buildings of Bath , such as St Catherine’s hospital on
Bilbury
Lane , the church of St Mary of Stalls and Alsi’s bath have long
disappeared, their foundations hidden beneath the later expansion of the city.
However aspects of medieval Bath do survive. A section of city walls
still stands in Upper Borough and is now protected. Part of one of the ancient
gates, the East Gate, remains, close to Robert Adam’s Pulteney Bridge . Many of the Georgian-fronted
buildings turn out to have hidden medieval timber frames and structures behind
the palladian facades, such as was discovered behind the front of 21-22 High Street . There are medieval cellars, too,
such as one in Abbey Church House. The ancient healing place of the Hospital of St John the Baptist, ‘the hospital of the
baths’ still partly fulfils its original medieval function.
I have recreated the medieval city
and its baths in my recently published historical mystery, An Older Evil, the first of a series featuring
Alyson, a widow of Bath .
4 comments:
Congratulations. I remember you discussing this character you had created way back in your creative writing classes in Holmfirth. At last she sees the light of day! My writing continues to plod. I now have an historical novel 'on the go' but am chuffed to have had my first short story accepted.
Congratulations, Carol! Well done on your first short story acceptance!
Lindsay,
I also write medieval romance, so I'm really intrigued by your comments and reviews. Have to add one or more of them to my TBR list:-)
So glad I found you! Best of luck,
Diane O'Key
dianeokey.com
CHERISH THE KNIGHT
Thanks so much, Diane! It's always lovely to discover a fellow writer of medieval historical romance!
I'd love you to guest blog on my other two blogs Lindsay's Romantics and Historical Fiction Excerpts, if you have the time.
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