1070, four years after the Battle of Hastings; Eadgyth, in hiding from the conquering King William of Normandy, relates her tale of passion and conflict.
Her story begins when she is sold into marriage to Gruffydd ap Llewellyn, leader of the Welsh; a man old enough to be her grandfather. She is saved from sorrow by love but the romance she finds is not in the arms of her husband. When Harold Godwinson launches a surprise attack. Gruffydd escapes but Eadgyth falls into the hands of the Saxons.
Eadgyth is taken to the court of King Edward the Confessor. There she befriends the queen and her feminine charms enable her to infiltrate the sticky intrigues of the Godwin family. However her happiness is threatened as the portentous date of October 14th 1066 looms.
Eadgyth's story highlights the plight of women, tossed in the tumultuous sea of feuding Anglo Saxon Britain.
The Story Behind This Book
Eadgyth, daughter of the powerful Earl Aelfgar of Mercia, is sold into marriage at the age of thirteen to the former enemy of her father, Gruffydd ap Llewellyn, the king of the Welsh. At his court at Rhuddlan she finds freindship and love but ultimately is accused of treason and incest. During a raid on the castle by Harold Godwinson of Wessex she is detached from the household and taken to the English court. There, she befriends Queen Edith and King Edward, ultimately marrying Edith's brother, HArold on his accession to the throne. Her future happines is threatened as William the Conqueror gathers his army in the south and Harold Hardrada plans to invade from the north. The fourteenth of October, 1066 looms. Peaceweaver is a story of a girl plunged into the feuding, male dominated world of Anglo Saxon Britain.