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battle referenced in the novel had serious consequences for
Montrose's ability to recruit. Estimates of deaths vary from 50 to 170; referring to the later claim Irish troops forced people to remove their clothes before killing them, Somers records only that he 'never saw any stripped and dirked bodies.' Despite this, the historical details are generally accurate and the novel a well-balanced evocation of the time and place.
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The bitterness of the conflict in both
Ireland and Scotland was reflected in the Covenanter approach to their prisoners but the depredations of Montrose's army were remembered centuries later. Aberdeen was then and remained a stronghold of Royalist support but the three day sack that followed the
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in 1691. Walsh worked in
Scotland for many years; his local knowledge is put to good use, while his descriptions of the battles and events leading up to them are historically accurate, although he understates the reality of the campaign.
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by
Covenanter cavalry prior to Kilsyth; after the Royalist defeat at Philiphaugh, Somers and Tadg Mor rescue Isaebal from her fiancée and return to Ireland. The novel closes with the three living in the US state of
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Walsh appeals to the idea both of a united
Gaeldom by setting the story within Montrose's combined Scottish-Irish army and a united Ireland; the hero Martin Somers an Englishman and member of the Protestant
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While remembered today primarily for the film made from his short story 'The Quiet Man', in the 1930s and 1940s, Walsh was perhaps
Ireland's best selling popular author whose admirers allegedly included
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that followed the establishment of the Free State, fought with particular bitterness in his home county of Kerry. This included the war's most notorious atrocity at
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in
September 1645. In the course of the campaign, Somers and his foster-brother rescue two women, the first being Meg Anderson, whom they rescue from the
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during the sack of
Aberdeen that followed the battle. The second is Isaebal Rose, who takes refuge with them in order to escape an unwanted marriage.
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against the
Covenanter government. The protagonist and first person narrator is Martin Somers, 'Englishman and Adjutant of Women' (or surgeon) in
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170:. Walsh originally wanted to use the full slogan of 'Jesus and No Quarter,' but was persuaded otherwise by his wife and publishers.
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The story opens just before the battle of
Tippermuir in September 1644, then follows it through the Royalist victories of
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Bon Accord Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen, site of the 1644 battle when this area was outside the city.
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The novel is set during the 1644-1645 Royalist campaigns in Scotland led by
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BCW Project; British Civil Wars, Commonwealth and Protectorate 1638-1651
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Both women are attracted to Somers, but Meg is killed with other Irish
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Memorial to Anti-Treaty soldiers executed by Free State forces at
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Walsh was writing in the aftermath of the 1922-1923
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431:Novels set during the English Civil War
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356:"The Battle and Sack of Aberdeen 1644"
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241:Historical background and themes
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126:Sons of the Swordmaker
380:Hopkinson, Michael (1990).
16:1937 novel by Maurice Walsh
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326:Maurice Walsh, storyteller
148:Wars of the Three Kingdoms
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322:Matheson, Steve (1985).
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406:Census 2016 Results
382:Green Against Green
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210:Philiphaugh
164:Covenanters
420:Categories
391:0717116301
341:0863220622
301:References
279:Ballyseedy
251:Ballyseedy
160:no quarter
365:25 August
283:land mine
275:Civil War
64:Publisher
230:James II
226:Virginia
202:Auldearn
198:Aberdeen
183:Montrose
144:Montrose
97:Hardback
46:Language
206:Kilsyth
95:Print (
49:English
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36:Author
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386:ISBN
367:2018
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