The
Apothecary
(City of Dreams Book 1)
An
Author’s Inspiration
By Joan Fallon
I
have lived in Málaga, on and off, for more than thirty years now, and love
the city, which seems to get more interesting and more beautiful every year. In
the al-Andalus trilogy I had written at length about Moorish Spain, and Córdoba
in particular, so last year I felt that it was now time to discover what
it must have been like to have lived in Málaga almost a thousand years
ago, when it too was ruled by the Moors.
The alcazaba in Malaga. |
In
my new historical series ‘The City of Dreams’ I try to make sense of some very
turbulent times. Under the Omayyads, Moorish Spain had been a stable, peaceful
and united country, famed for its learning, culture and wealth. But all that was because of one man, Abd
al-Rahman III. When he died in 961 AD his son al-Hakim carried on his work,
until an attack of apoplexy cut short his reign. He left his only son, an
eleven-year-old boy, to succeed him. His son was no warrior and untrained in
statesmanship, so he soon fell under the complete control of his ministers. Although
nobody realised it at the time, that was the beginning of the end for the
Omayyad dynasty, and in 1009 AD the country became embroiled in a civil war
which lasted until 1013, by which time Córdoba had been razed to the ground, its universities and libraries
destroyed and its citizens killed or exiled. The Golden Age of Moorish Spain was over and al-Andalus had split into a number of warring
princedoms, which were referred to as 'taifas.' Málaga was one of those
taifas, but with a difference; the Hammudite prince who ruled the taifa had
decided to claim the title of caliph for himself. A move which was to cause
problems for him and his successors, none of whom lived more than a few years
after coming to the throne.
The
City of Dreams trilogy opens in 1035 AD, some twenty years after the family
escaped from Córdoba. In the first novel, ‘The Apothecary,’ Makoud
who was just a young lad in the previous series, is now a middle-aged man. Born
and bred in a city, he finds country life too restrictive for him and decides
to bring his family to Málaga, to make a new life for them all. At first
everything goes well. Makoud opens his own apothecary shop and his sons find
work. But when the caliph dies in strange circumstances and rumours suggest
that he has been poisoned, Makoud becomes worried that he may have been the one
who inadvertently sold the poison to the assassin. His eldest son, a soldier,
decides to investigate the caliph's death and soon finds himself caught up in a
web of intrigue, lies and murder. When he ends up in the dungeons of the
alcazaba under sentence of death, his family is horrified and know the only way
to save him is to find the perpetrator of these crimes.
As I
mentioned earlier, this was an uncertain
and turbulent time for everyone. You only have to look at the following
maps to see how the political borders changed dramatically as a few of the more
warlike rulers made their taifas stronger and more powerful, in particular
Abbad I of Seville, who had his eyes on the rich and strategically placed port
of Málaga.
Map of al-Andalus 1037AD/ |
Map of Seville in 1066 AD showing how it has swallowed up so many of its neighbours in a space of thirty years. And below that a map showing that by 1080 most of al-Andalus has been divided between the powerful taifas of Badajoz, Seville, Toledo and Zaragoza. Only Málaga, Granada and and Álmeria managed to hold out for a few more years.
In
this short extract from ‘The Apothecary’ Makoud’s son, Umar starts on an
investigation that will eventually lead to his arrest.
The khalifa was
dead. Umar felt strangely sad for this man whom he hardly knew and had only
seen on a couple of occasions. He remembered how impressed he’d been the first
time he’d seen him, such a proud, noble man; everything about him said he’d
been born to rule. Umar had felt privileged to serve him. He was a man who
deserved a warrior’s death, not to die in such a horrible way. Rumours had spread
through the alcazaba like wildfire. They said that on his death bed he cried
out in terror at phantoms only he could see, and writhed in pain as the
sickness worked its way through his emaciated body. It was said the physicians
still had no idea what had caused his death; they’d been able to do nothing to
help him. Now it was too late. According to the gossip they stood around his
bedside and had no explanation for such a rapid decline in a man still in his
prime. The grand vizier
had put out an announcement that Khalifa Yahya I had died from an injury
sustained in the battle of Qarmuña, but the rumour that Yahya had been poisoned persisted.
The
Apothecary
(City of Dreams Book 1)
By Joan Fallon
In the first novel in a new
historical series set in Moorish Spain, Joan Fallon sets the action in the busy
medieval port of Málaga. Following on from the successful al-Andalus series, we
meet up again with the younger members of the family who had escaped from the
besieged city of Córdoba.
Makoud,
now a middle-aged apothecary, has come to Málaga with his family to work.
Shortly after they arrive they hear of the sudden death of the caliph, Yahya I
and rumours that he was poisoned. Makoud is worried that the poison used by the
assassins was bought from his shop. His son, Umar, now a soldier in the
caliph’s army, decides to investigate but he underestimates the power of the
people behind the assassination, and instead he finds himself accused of murder
and locked in the dungeons. His father, family and friends pool all their
resources to try to help him but the closer they get to the truth, the greater
the danger they are all in.
Pick
up your copy of
The
Apothecary
Joan Fallon
Joan
Fallon was born in Dumfries, Scotland but spent most of her adult life in
England. Teacher, management trainer and business woman, she moved to Spain at
the beginning of the new millennium and became a writer. Her first published
work was a social history, 'Daughters of Spain', inspired by the women she met
in her adopted home. Her subsequent books too have grown out of her experiences
living and working in Spain. She is especially interested in Spanish history
and has set her novels in periods as distinct as the Golden Age of the Moorish
conquest and the Spanish Civil War. She is a member of the Society of Authors
and the Alliance of Independent Authors.
Connect
with Joan: Website
•
Facebook • Goodreads.
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See you on your next coffee break!
Take Care,
Mary Anne xxx