登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
A Captain for Welsh Harry
註釋The last battle on English soil can offer several different times and locations as to when and where it occurred, depending on how you define the word "battle." It is generally agreed that the last pitched battle on English soil was the Battle of Sedgemoor, which took place on the 6th July 1685. James Scott, The Duke of Monmouth, landed at Lyme Regis, Devon, on the 11th June 1685. From there he raised an army to depose the Catholic King, James II. The first book of this swashbuckling trilogy, "A Captain for Monmouth," chronicles how a young gamekeeper from Whitelackington, Somerset, became entangled in this brief civil war. This book commences where the other left off. It begins with the flight from the battlefield of the defeated Duke of Monmouth and relates how Captain Oliver Hardman fared from there. What is recognised is how harshly King James II treated his captured rebels, and one man, Judge Jeffreys, rose to infamy during this period by sentencing many of them to death by hanging. What is not widely known is that many prisoners were sent as White Slaves to the Caribbean to work the plantations. We follow Oliver in his journey..........