thelastsummoner
thelastsummoner
The Last Summoner
81 posts
A Medieval Time Traveler on a quest... "...to make her world a better world."
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
thelastsummoner · 10 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Brienne of Tarth (Gwendoline Christie), Lady Knight ... Knight of knights... True, faithful, chivalrous, noble and brave, she lights up the otherwise brutal and dirty GAME OF THRONES ...This show is getting excessively brutal... does it need to be this graphic? The women seem to be emerging more and more out of this growing cesspit as heroes in different ways... and it is this aspect that interests me and keeps me watching. One of these lights is the bulky knight Brienne of Tarth ... Was it on the shear strength of influence of her noble integrity that the miscreant Jaime rose with some element of moral redemption into a brief moment of honour and compassion...?
6 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Teutonic Knights...Northern Crusaders...
The harsh winters of Prussia, Livonia and Lithuania in the Northern Baltic, forced the Teutonic Knights to adopt a different strategy than their southern brethren. The winters were so fierce that the infantry died on the march; the snow was so deep that the cavalry rode single file through trenches where the snow had been cut away. At times the snow was too thick to travel through...A mild winter could be worse: frozen rivers might not be strong enough to support horses or mud would make tracks impassable. 
The severe winters took a great toll on the horses.The waterlogged ground provided ill ground for pasture, producing sour and tough grass. Sodden and spongy hooves broke under heavy burdens, skin saturated in raw muddy conditions produced rain scald and mud fever.
The Order's Tresslerbuch documented the loss of 50 destriers (war-horses), trotters and other horses during one campaign in western Lithuania in the summer of 1402.
Excerpt from The Last Summoner (Starfire) by Nina Munteanu on the eve of the Battle of Grunwald:
"I have a message for you from your Hospital Grossmeister," Vivianne cut Marschalk off and kept her gaze directed at von Jungingen. "He begs you to please reconsider placing the horses on higher ground out of the bog." She held out the note with a deep bow and dropped her gaze to the ground. The heat of the day, trapped in her knight's garb, was starting to get oppressive.
"Oh, does he..." von Jungingen said in a rather surly tone...finally snatching the note and skimming its contents. "Since when does Werner use castle riffraff to deliver his commandments?" He'd obviously recognized her castle knight trappings..."Perhaps," the Hochmeister went on, "Werner should have sent the drunken baron to find him some higher ground, though I can't imagine him finding anything outside of a pot of beer--"
"My father isn't that--" She cut herself off too late. She'd blurted it out.
Von Jungingen stared at her then suddenly frowned. He abruptly reached forward and gruffly pulled off her bascinet, forcing her head forward with a hard snap. Eyes now flashing, he pushed off her mail hood. Dark curls of long hair cascaded over her shoulders. 
Von Jungingen's eyes sparkled with amusement and he let out a sharp laugh. "Well, if it isn't von Grunwald's little brat!"
6 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Video
youtube
The Battle of Grunwald Trailer 2
Read about the battle and life in medieval Prussia in Nina Munteanu's historical fantasy The Last Summoner (Starfire)
1 note · View note
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Video
youtube
The Battle of Grunwald Trailer
Read about the battle and medieval life in Prussia in Nina Munteanu's historical fantasy The Last Summoner (Starfire) 
1 note · View note
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Recruitment to the Teutonic Knightly Order differed from other military orders mostly because of the ministeriales (Dientsmann=men of service), which meant servant. By the 1250s ministerialis made up over 75% of the Teutonic force, often coming from humble, artisan and serf backgrounds. Twelve percent of the brothers came from the upper aristocracy, 7% from knightly families and 4% from other classes. While essentially unfree serfs, the ministerialis began to enjoy recognition as noblemen, increasingly living in castles and entitled to 'judgement by their peers' and indulging in personal feuds. In medieval Germany they became a true 'aristocracy of service'. By the 14th Century--100 years before Vivianne's time and the Battle of Grunwald--the aristocratic status of German ministerialis was generally accepted and their bond of serfdom finally vanished. Many joined the Ritterschaft (class of knights) in Imperial Germany's many territorial principalities (including those within Prussia).
Read about the Battle of Grunwald in The Last Summoner, a historical fantasy about medieval Poland by Nina Munteanu.  
420 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Nina Munteanu signs copies of The Last Summoner at Chapters in Richmond, BC. Signing too were SF author Samuel Blondahl, Literary author Sarah Lane and the Reel Write Bros of graphic novel USNA 
http://sfgirl-thealiennextdoor.blogspot.ca/2013/07/authors-night-at-chapters-indigo-with.html
3 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Link
Nina Munteanu is touring with her latest book The Last Summoner, a historical fantasy published by Starfire World Syndicate.
2 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
dungeon in Chateau de Chillon, near Montreux Switzerland
Chateau de Chillon was an epicenter for witch hunts in Switzerland during the 1400s through to 1500s and many "witches" were kept there. The Pays de Vaud was the site of major witch-hunts during that time. More than 2,000 "witches" were burned there. Chillon Castle became an important detention centre for individuals suspected of witchcraft, either awating trial or execution. Golden Anna was the last person in Europe to be condemned as a witch. She was executed in 1982 in the Protestant canton of Glarus, Switzerland.
Nina Munteanu's historical fantasy THE LAST SUMMONER takes place in Poland during the 1400s. The main character, a young baroness living in 1410 discovers that she has strange powers and is hunted as a witch.
2 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
The reflections of a Lady Knight, Poland in 1410:
...The age of the chivalrous knight was dissolving, Vivianne lamented. Too many lords, like her father, had resorted to hiring mercenaries to battle for them. The plague, incessant war, increasingly inhospitable winters and famine, loss of critical trade routes and great unrest had conspired to reduce the work force and corrupt the joy in the world.
It was an interesting and troubled age she was living in, Vivianne contemplated. A world of great mistrust and growing evil...
excerpt from The Last Summoner by Nina Munteanu
(painting by Atkinson Grimshaw)
6 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Join Nina Munteanu at the coolest cafe in the Beaches, Toronto for great coffee, pastries and a discussion / reading from her latest Historical Fantasy
0 notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Teutonic Knights first swept into Prussia in the 1200s...they quickly established lands and built castles in Prussia until the Battle of Grunwald in 1410...when the Teutonic Knights met the end of their northern "crusade"
11 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Book signing of The Last Summoner by Nina Munteanu at Indigo at Yorkdale Mall (Toronto) May 11th 1 pm
1 note · View note
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
The Castle at Marienburg, Teutonic Prussian stronghold in 1410 
The Ironies and Intrigues of the Battle of Grunwald: Part 1 
The 1410 Battle of Grunwald was one of the largest and most significant battles in medieval history. Fought between the Polish and Lithuanian alliance against the Teutonic Order in what is currently Poland, the battle and ensuing events were, in fact, fraught with ironies and intrigue. The battle still conjures fierce nationalistic feelings on many fronts. As if to claim it as their own, it is referred to as Grunwald to the Polish, Tannenberg to the Germans and Zalgiris to the Lithuanians. 
The battle between Nazis and Russians in 1914 in the same location fuelled its use as a symbol of the struggle between Germans and Slavs and between Communism and National Socialism. It was as though this location hungered for fame and ironic notoriety. 
By some remarkable twist of irony, the 1410 Battle of Grunwald, while representing a decisive win for the Polish/Lithuanian alliance, was fought at the beginning of the conflict and not its end. This battle represents a 50-year war between the Teutonic Order and the united kingdom of Poland/Lithuania. But it was fought at the beginning of the conflict; not its end. Historian and scholar Stephen Turnbull tells us that “There can be few other examples in history of battle so decisively won and a subsequent campaign that so singularly failed to achieve its aims. Despite their crushing victory at Tannenberg, the Polish/Lithuanian army failed to capture Marienburg, key fortress and capital of the Teutonic state.”
They’d won the battle; now they had to win the war. And on the day after, on the morning of July 16th, 1410, the united kingdom of Poland and Lithuania could literally taste victory: thousands of the Teutonic Order’s troops and allies—including the Order’s best knights—lay dead alongside the corpse of their Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen. The Teutonic Order had been all but beaten. Over half of the Teutonic troops had been taken and virtually all of the Order’s high command were killed in the battle or executed soon after. All the alliance had to do was capture the Order’s Prussian headquarters at Marienburg, and wipe them out once and for all. Despite losing most of its knights and virtually all of her high command, the Teutonic Order was to survive. It survives to this day, though in very different form. 
Two days after its crushing win, the Polish/Lithuanian army marched at a slow pace to Marienburg. Too slow, as it turned out; it gave Heinrich von Plauen, the new Grand Master, a chance to reach Marienburg with some 2,000 men to defend the Prussian castle and associated Knights’ territories. It would be fifty years after Grunwald, when Grand Master Ludwig von Erlichshausen signed the second Treaty of Thorn, finally accomplishing King Wladislaw Jagiello’s objective to collapse the Teutonic Order. The final blow came when the Grand Master, faced with having to pay his mercenary knights, pledged over 20 of his towns, including Marienburg itself, to the soldiers.  A hundred years later, in 1511, the military Order of the Teutonic Knights disappeared and became a secularized entity.
  Reference: Tannenburg 1410, Disaster for the Teutonic Knights by Stephen Turnbull
15 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Join Nina in this Book Event in Toronto Area for medieval history buffs and those interested in world history. Nina Munteanu's Last Summoner explores the "what ifs" of significant historical events surrounding Poland's most significant battle in 1410, Wilhelm II's ascent to the thrown and his role in the First World War and Nicola Tesla's genius contribution to free energy and world peace...
2 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Prussia 800-1400 AD
The Old Prussians withstood many attempts at conquest preceding the Teutonic Knights. In the 13th Century Konrad of Masovia tried for years to conquer Prussia and called in the Crusades. The pope brought in the Teutonic Knights who created the Teutonic Order State through crusades from 1230 onward. They set up the Ordensburg Marienburg (today called Malbork) as the centre of Prussia. The Order's conquest of pagan Old Prussia included the historic regions of Courland, Gotland, Livonia, Neumark, Pomerelia and Samogitia (in the modern countries of Estonia, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia and Sweden). The military conquest paved the way for German colonization (Ostsiedlung) and the promulgation of laws modeled on German towns (e.g., Magdeburg and Lubeck).
141 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 12 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Archangel by Polish illustrator Mariusz Kozik (Lacedemon) of Lublin City
"Polish knights, like their German and other neighbours, were expected to arm themselves and their retainers, the numbers of the latter depending upon a knight's wealth and the value of his territorial fief. The most numerous military followings were those of the so-called barones or barons, while the nobiles or middle-ranking knights led smaller forces; the retinues themselves were made up of warriors who did not usually own land. Alongside these landless fighting men were the 'created knights', maintained or organized by the advocati or mayors of Poland's increasing number of towns, and the sculteti, who were effectively village administrators or headmen.
The ruler had the right to call upon these knights at any time he considered it necessary, and would employ two distinct forms of mobilization. The first system of service was known as infra terram, which meant a summons in defence of the realm. The second was called extra terram, which, as its name indicates, meant campaigning outside the country."
Excerpt from "Medieval Polish Armies 966-1500" (Osprey Publishing) by W. Sarnecki and D. Nicolle 
45 notes · View notes
thelastsummoner · 13 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Courageous knight…stern father…
…When he wasn’t glowering at her for doing something wrong, her father ignored her as if she didn’t exist…The only time he acknowledged her presence was to correct her eating habits in a gruff rebuke; it always silenced her like a bear’s harsh cuff to its cub.
In truth, she seldom saw him. Most of the time, he was away on campaigns, often for months, sometimes years, coordinating a raid or skirmish deep in Lithuanian territory. When he was home he spent most of the day behind the great doors of his council room with his war masters and monk warrior colleagues, or in meetings with his seneschal, the wiry old Berthold. In the evening he road to the village, just outside the castle, to drink and bicker with the gentry and vassal knights of his fief until late at night. Vivianne knew because sometimes he came home with several of them and they would continue their drunken carousing into the early morning. It made her wish her bedroom in the keep, which used to be her mother’s solar, lay further away from the great hall.
(excerpt from The Last Summoner by Nina Munteanu
12 notes · View notes