1356 is a novel written by Bernard Cornwell. Published in 2012, it is the fourth part of his Grail Quest series and serves as a fictionalization of the Battle of Poitiers and as a hunt for the sword La Malice.
Characters[]
- Thomas of Hookton
- Brother Michael
- Sam
- Genevieve
- Bertille
- William, Lord of Douglas
- Sir Robert "Robbie" Douglas
- Cardinal Louis Bessières
- Father Marchant (or Father Calade)
- The Count of Labrouillade
- Sir Roland de Verrec
- Éamonn Óg Ó Keane
- King Jean of France
- Edward, Prince of Wales
- William Bohun, Earl of Northampton
- Hugh (son of Thomas, presumably "Hugh of Hookton")
- Sculley
- Sire Ferdinand de Rodez (or Fra Ferdinand)
- Pope Innocent VI
- The Count of Mouthoumet
- Giacomo
Publisher's summary[]
Bernard Cornwell, the "master of martial fiction" (Booklist), brings Thomas of Hookton from the popular Grail Quest series into a new adventure in 1356, a thrilling stand-alone novel.
On September 19, 1356, a heavily outnumbered English army faced off against the French in the historic Battle of Poitiers. In 1356, Cornwell resurrects this dramatic and bloody struggle—one that would turn out to be the most decisive and improbable victory of the Hundred Years' War, a clash where the underdog English not only the captured the strategic site of Poitiers, but the French King John II as well.
In the vein of Cornwell's bestselling Agincourt, 1356 is an action-packed story of danger and conquest, rich with military strategy and remarkable characters—both villainous and heroic—transporting readers to the front lines of war while painting a vivid picture of courage, treachery, and combat.
Plot[]
In 1356, Thomas has achieved his ambition of leading his own mercenary company of archers and men-at-arms. They are based in Castillon d'Arbazon, the castle in Gascony he captured years before (as recounted in the previous novel, Heretic). He and his wife Genevieve have a young son named Hugh.
Thomas is hired by the grossly obese French Count of Labrouillade to assault a castle and retrieve his beautiful, young runaway wife, Bertille. Thomas succeeds, but when Labrouillade cheats him out of part of his pay, Thomas ambushes and captures the count on his way home, releasing him after receiving payment. Genevieve talks Thomas into allowing Bertille to come with them. Later, Labrouillade persuades Sir Roland de Verrec, the finest tournament champion in Europe, to challenge Thomas one-on-one for Bertille, but Thomas mocks him and sends him away.
Brother Michael, a young monk from England, brings Thomas a message from the Earl of Northampton, his liege lord. Northampton wants him to find yet another holy relic, la Malice, the sword used by Peter to defend Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. (The Black Friars have spread stories of its alleged powers throughout Europe.) Meanwhile, Fra Ferdinand, a Black Friar, retrieves the sword from its hiding place at the request of an old friend, only to learn that his friend has been murdered by men who claim they were sent by the Pope at Avignon to search for it.
Thomas searches for information in hostile France, hiding his identity. In Avignon, he meets an old foe, the ambitious Cardinal Louis Bessières, for the first time face-to-face. Bessières, who is also searching for la Malice, unintentionally gives him a clue by directing a painter to immediately cover up a scene on a wall. Father Marchant, Bessières' henchman/interrogator, becomes suspicious, so Thomas hastily departs.
Later, when Thomas seeks a scholar, he encounters Roland de Verrec, who denounces him. In the ensuing chase, he hides in the room of a dowager countess, who identifies the obscure saint in the painting Bessières wanted covered up as Junien, to whom la Malice was supposedly entrusted. Thomas gets away, but Genevieve and Hugh are captured. Roland takes them to Labrouillade. Father Marchant interrogates Genevieve, blinding her in one eye. Her screams cause Thomas's old friend Robbie Douglas and Roland to rescue her and Hugh, with the help of Sculley, a huge, murderous Scottish warrior, and reunite them with Thomas. Roland is unwilling to switch sides at first, but then he and Bertille see each other; it is love at first sight for both. Roland is famous for vowing to remain a virgin (after he had a vision of Mary) until he marries. Thus he must first dispose of Labrouillade.
Thomas is ordered to join Edward, the heir to the English throne, on his chevauchée (large-scale destructive raid) in France. On his way, he discovers that Junien's abbey is nearby. He finds Bessières and his men already there. Bessières has found the sword. Before Bessières has Thomas executed with it, the English Earl of Warwick arrives and rescues him. Sculley, however, escapes with la Malice.
Thomas and his men join the English army, which is being pursued by a much larger force commanded by Jean, King of France. When the English, tired, thirsty and hungry, are trapped on a hill, Edward accepts severe terms of surrender, but the indecisive Jean is persuaded to attack instead. He is heartened when Bessières shows him la Malice; according to legend, whoever possesses it is invincible. Oh the eve of battle, Sculley demands the sword, and Bessières gives it to him.
However, in the Battle of Poitiers, the French are routed after a long, hard-fought fight, panicking after being attacked in the rear by a small force led by the Captal de Buch and including Thomas and many of his archers. Thomas's men take prisoner the Archbishop of Sens and an enemy, Count Joscelyn, whose ransoms will enable him to purchase an estate in his home county of Devon. Thomas kills Sculley and takes possession of la Malice. He stabs Bessières and Father Marchant to death with it. He also kills Labrouillade for Roland and Bertille's sake. Afterward, he purposely discards la Malice in a pile of unwanted weapons that are to be melted down.
Worldbuilding[]
Groups[]
- Thomas commands the Hellequin - a group of mercenaries for hire who work for basically anyone (as long as they don't plan to attack England) and who boast that "they [cannot] be defeated because their souls [have] already been sent to Hell" (thus the name Hellequin).