Queen of Charity: The Life and Times of St. Margaret of Scotland - Paperback
Queen of Charity: The Life and Times of St. Margaret of Scotland - Paperback
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by William Ford (Author)
In the turbulent aftermath of the Norman Conquest, as William the Conqueror tightens his grip on England, a storm-tossed ship crashes against the Scottish coast. Among the survivors stands Margaret-exiled Anglo-Saxon princess, educated in the sophisticated Hungarian court, destined by this seeming catastrophe to transform a nation.
This sweeping historical narrative follows Margaret's remarkable journey from refugee to Scotland's most beloved queen. Born with royal blood but raised in exile, Margaret brings to her unexpected Scottish home an education, refinement, and vision far beyond her time. When she marries the fierce warrior king Malcolm III-himself no stranger to exile and restoration-their unlikely partnership creates one of history's most consequential royal couples.
With intimate detail drawn from contemporary sources, we witness Margaret's methodical transformation of the Scottish court from rough warrior's hall to cultured European center. She debates theology with learned clerics, reforms religious practices, establishes international trade networks, feeds orphans with her own hands, and raises children who will continue her vision long after her death. All while navigating the delicate politics of being a foreign-born queen in an age of intense regional rivalries.
Beyond a mere biography, this definitive account reveals how one extraordinary woman permanently altered Scotland's trajectory through patience, wisdom, and strategic genius rather than military might. We follow Margaret through her canonization as Scotland's only royal saint and beyond, exploring how her legacy has been reinterpreted through centuries of religious upheaval, nationalist movements, and modern feminist scholarship.
Perfect for readers of Alison Weir, Helen Castor, and Dan Jones, this richly detailed narrative brings to life a medieval queen whose intelligence, compassion, and political acumen challenge our assumptions about women's power in the so-called Dark Ages. Margaret's story reveals that true transformation comes not through dramatic revolution but through the patient, persistent work of creating change that outlasts its creator-a lesson as relevant today as it was nearly a thousand years ago when a shipwreck delivered the "Pearl of Scotland" to her adoptive shore