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Robert de Bruce, scion of one of the most noble houses in Scotland,
is propelled into rebellion by the "Hammer of the Scots." Edward
Plantagenet, king of England, who uses Scotland's inherently
unstable clan system to seize power and claim the disunited country
as his own.
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Dark Destiny (Paperback)
Jane Starr Weils, Charles Randolph Bruce; Jeanne Treat
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R554
Discovery Miles 5 540
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Dark Destiny is book three in the Dark Birthright Saga. It's 1648.
The English civil war is over. The imprisoned King and his
lieutenants are in trouble. Gilbert Gordon is one of them. What
will the Gordon brothers do? You will meet the next generation -
young Maggie, James, Luc, and George. James' supernatural abilities
endanger his father and threaten the peace of the family. England
executes the King and declares itself a Republic, but the Scottish
government refuses to follow. The King's son tries to gain his
thrones, starting with Scotland. Unfortunately, he was given a
directive by his father to execute Lord Dughall Gordon. Scotland is
in turmoil. Battles are fought and fortunes are lost. What will
happen to the Gordons? Will they abandon Scotland for the British
Colonies?
Using guerilla warfare, Robert the Bruce, King of Scots, has been
successfully keeping England's army, the most powerful in the
European world, from taking over all of Scotland. In June 1313
Robert returns to the mainland after his success in capturing the
Isle of Man only to discover that his brother, Lord Edward Bruce,
has made a bargain with the Scottish warden of English-held Castle
Stirling: if the English do not relieve the castle by mid-summer
1314, the warden will hand Stirling over to the Scots. Robert is
furious Now, King Edward has reason to invade Scotland in force.
Elated, the English king sees the agreement as a way to reclaim his
dwindling power at home. He uses the time to strengthen his ties
with his magnates and draw in the best knights from across Europe
with promises of lands, titles, and wealth... once the battle is
won. The next June, King Edward brings north 2,500 barded knights
and 20,000 men-at-arms to a place called Bannok, and a nearby
stream called Bannok Burn. His train "in good order" stretches 20
miles. King Robert has no barded knights and only 5,500
men-at-arms, most of whom are armed with long spears. His only
advantages are his cunning, Scots courage, and his arrival at the
battlefield before the English. Far from the supposed goal of
capturing Castle Stirling or the Scottish crown, Robert knows the
battle at Bannok Burn is for Scotland herself.
Robert de Bruce, having taken up the crown of Scotland to free his
nation from English rule, finds that his throne will be but a
figment of his imagination unless he brings the anti-Bruce Magnates
and bishops under his peace. Half of Scotland wants him dead, and
most of the rest don't care. He and his small, rag-tag army are
alone, under death warrants, and ex-communicated by the Pope. How
can they survive the long cold winter?
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