- Sep 2017
-
ken-follett.com ken-follett.com
-
This book is not about religion, although I talk about religion. It's about religious tolerance and the fight for human rights; the first battlefront in public discourse about human rights.
Freedom of religion was the first base upon which other understandings of freedom have been built upon.
-
Research and background
"Not knowing is an obstacle to my imagination" RE: his dedication to narratives that could have taken place within the political climate of the day.
-
This is the story of 16th century Europe, and the political earthquake that was protestantism. The overarching historical narrative unfolds around the lives of fictional characters who might have lived in this historic period.
Follett's literary reenactment explores the intricacies of the Protestant Reformation through a cast of strategically diverse characters, whose stories span across multiple continents, nations, and cities. Each character is an important harbinger of larger historical trends. Within the masterfully established geo-political reality, each of their decisions serve to gradually reveal their distinct personalities and temperaments, belief systems and ideologies, and cultural identities.
Tags
- religious freedom
- Queen Elizabeth I
- History
- British Monarchy
- history
- British History
- Virgin Queen
- History of political thought
- Religious reformation
- Historic Retelling
- Tudor England
- Tudors
- History of religion
- Ken Follett
- Mary Tudor
- Identity
- Protestantism
- Religious tolerance
- Creativity
- European History
- Catholicism
- historical fiction
- Writing history
- Historic Fiction
- Human rights
- Mary Queen of Scots
Annotators
URL
-