Showing posts with label Civil War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civil War. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Spotlight on Glen Craney, author of The Cotillion Brigade (A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History)

 

Georgia burns.
Shermans Yankees are closing in.
Will the women of LaGrange run or fight?
 
Based on the true story of the celebrated Nancy Hart Rifles, The Cotillion Brigade is an epic novel of the Civil Wars ravages on family and love, the resilient bonds of sisterhood in devastation, and the miracle of reconciliation between bitter enemies.
 
Gone With The Wind meets A League Of Their Own.”
-- John Jeter, The Plunder Room
 
1856. Sixteen-year-old Nannie Colquitt Hill makes her debut in the antebellum society of the Chattahoochee River plantations. A thousand miles north, a Wisconsin farm boy, Hugh LaGrange, joins an Abolitionist crusade to ban slavery in Bleeding Kansas.
 
Five years later, secession and war against the homefront hurl them toward a confrontation unrivaled in American history.


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 Glen Craney
Some Facts
(Stuff you may or may not know!)

When I was a boy, a great-uncle took me to the American Civil War battlefield of Perryville, Kentucky, where his father served as a Union captain. It was a rare treat to talk to someone with such a close connection to the war. Years later, after his death, I discovered his father had a brother who fought at Perryville on the Confederate side, and they searched for each other after the battle. I’m not sure why my great-uncle never mentioned him. Hard feelings over the war, maybe?

 

Glen Craney and Uncle at Perryville 
(personal photo)

 As the only boy in my high-school typing class, I won the contest for tapping out the most words per minute. I now have two graduate degrees, but typing remains the most valuable skill I’ve ever learned.

A couple of years ago, I traced the Civil War route my great-great grandfather took in General Grant’s army. At the Louisiana battlefield of Mansfield, where he was captured, there was only one other visitor that afternoon, a man from Texas. His great-great-grandfather, fighting for the Confederacy, was killed on that same ground. We were stunned to discover that our ancestors had served in regiments that faced off against each other during the battle. Could my ancestor have fired the fatal shot?

 

Battlefield of Mansfield
 (taken by Glen Craney)

 I grew up on a turkey farm. There's an old saying: Only one creature on Earth is dumber than a turkey—the guy who raises them.

 

Turkey Farm
 (personal photo)

Before I turned ten, I single-handedly won a hundred Civil War battles and repulsed Santa Anna at the Alamo, all with one weapon: This Parris Kadet toy cap musket.


Parris Kadet Toy Civil War musket
 (personal photo)

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Buy Links

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Glen Craney

A graduate of Indiana University School of Law and Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Glen Craney practiced trial law before joining the Washington, D.C. press corps to write about national politics and the Iran-contra trial for Congressional Quarterly magazine. In 1996, the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences awarded him the Nicholl Fellowship prize for best new screenwriting. His debut historical novel, The Fire and the Light, was named Best New Fiction by the National Indie Excellence Awards. He is a three-time Finalist/Honorable Mention winner of Foreword Magazines Book-of-the-Year and a Chaucer Award winner for Historical Fiction. His books have taken readers to Occitania during the Albigensian Crusade, the Scotland of Robert Bruce, Portugal during the Age of Discovery, the trenches of France during World War I, the battlefields of the Civil War, and the American Hoovervilles of the Great Depression. He lives in Malibu, California.

 Connect with Glen:

 Webpage   Facebook   Twitter   Pinterest   Goodreads   Amazon Author Page



Thursday, January 18, 2018

The Last Civil War of the Roman Republic

Made from History


The Roman Republic ended in war. Octavian, Julius Caesar’s anointed heir, defeated Antony and his lover Cleopatra, the queen of Egypt, to rise to unchallenged power as Augustus, the first Roman Emperor. He ended a long cycle of internal conflict in the Roman world, a territory that Julius Caesar had realised was too big to be ruled by its old institutions.

 Caesar Leaves a Messy Inheritance
Julius Caesar’s extraordinary personal power was the prime motive for his assassins, who wanted to revive the power of the Senate in Roman politics. However, the dictator had been enormously popular, and the aristocratic plotters who killed him would soon be faced by men ready to fight to take his place.


Antony was Caesar’s man for years. He was his deputy when he crossed the Rubicon River into Italy in 49 BC to trigger the civil war with Pompey, and was his co-Consul when he died. He was powerful and popular with lots of military experience.

 Octavian was Caesar’s great-nephew and had been named as his heir and adopted son in a will made two years before Caesar died. He had proved effective in his short military career, and his links to Caesar gave him instant popularity, particularly with the army. He was only 19 when Caesar died and away from Rome, but would not stay so for long.

After putting down revolts in support of Caesar’s assassins, Octavian and Antony ruled as part of a Triumvirate with Lepidus until 36 BC, when they took joint power, splitting the Empire into Octavian’s West and Antony’s East.

 Swords Drawn: Octavian vs. Antony


Just two years later, Antony went too far when he struck a deal with Cleopatra, his lover, that handed Roman territory in Egypt to her and the son she had borne Caesar during her long affair with the Roman leader.

Octavian’s sister was Antony’s wife, and he’d already publicised his adultery. When Antony married Cleopatra in 32 BC and seemed on the verge of setting up an alternative Imperial capital in Egypt, Octavian persuaded the Senate to declare war on Cleopatra, who they blamed for seducing their former hero. As Octavian had foreseen, Antony backed Cleopatra, decisively cutting his ties with Rome and Octavian set off with 200,000 legionaries to punish the renegade pair.

The war was won in one decisive sea battle, off Actium in Greece. Octavian’s fleet of smaller, faster vessels with more experienced crews devastated Antony’s ships and his army surrendered without doing battle.

Antony fled with Cleopatra to Alexandria while Octavian plotted his next move.

He marched to Egypt, cementing the support of legions and Roman client kingdoms along the way. Antony was massively outnumbered, with around 10,000 men at his command who were quickly defeated by one of Octavian’s allies as most of the remainder of Antony’s forces surrendered.

The Lovers’ Suicides of Antony and Cleopatra


With no hope left, Antony messily killed himself on 1 August 30 BC, after apparently failing to strike a deal to protect Cleopatra.

 Cleopatra then attempted to secure a deal for herself and Caesar’s son, Caesarion, but Octavian refused to listen, having the young man killed as he fled and warning his mother that she would be paraded in his triumph back in Rome.

Octavian was desperate to keep Cleopatra alive. He wanted a high-status prisoner, and her treasure to pay his troops. Cleopatra was able to kill herself though – possibly using a poisoned snake.

Nothing now stood between Octavian and total power. Egypt was granted to him as his personal possession and by 27 BC the granting of the titles Augustus and Princeps confirmed him as Emperor.

Telling the Tale


The story of Antony and Cleopatra – the great Roman and the beautiful queen who caused him to turn his back on his nation – is compelling.

Romans and Egyptian no doubt told the tale many times and one surviving account has proved the most durable. Plutarch’s Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans was published in the late 1st century, pairing men from both civilisations.

Antony was paired with Demetrius, the king of Macedonia who died in enemy captivity and spent many years with a courtesan as his companion.

Plutarch was interested in character rather than history and his book was a defining text of the rediscovery of classical civilisation during the Renaissance. Among its most devoted readers was one William Shakespeare.

Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra is a fairly faithful telling of the tale, going so far as to lift some phrases directly from Sir Thomas North’s translation of Plutarch’s work.

Antony and Cleopatra would both be remembered by history as great public figures, but their love story – no matter how embellished – has taken them into different territory. Both, and Cleopatra in particular, have been portrayed in literature, film, dance and every other medium of art countless times. By Colin Ricketts Colin Ricketts studied history at the University of Birmingham, graduating in 1992. He's a qualified librarian, a former journalist and currently a freelance writer and editor.