summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/43646.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '43646.txt')
-rw-r--r--43646.txt5889
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 5889 deletions
diff --git a/43646.txt b/43646.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 2c2c47c..0000000
--- a/43646.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5889 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's Female Warriors, Vol. I (of 2), by Ellen C. Clayton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Female Warriors, Vol. I (of 2)
- Memorials of Female Valour and Heroism, from the
- Mythological Ages to the Present Era.
-
-Author: Ellen C. Clayton
-
-Release Date: September 5, 2013 [EBook #43646]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FEMALE WARRIORS, VOL. I (OF 2) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FEMALE WARRIORS.
-
-
-
-
-FEMALE WARRIORS.
-
-MEMORIALS OF
-
-_FEMALE VALOUR AND HEROISM, FROM THE MYTHOLOGICAL AGES TO THE PRESENT
-ERA._
-
-BY ELLEN C. CLAYTON (_MRS. NEEDHAM_),
-
-AUTHOR OF "QUEENS OF SONG," "ENGLISH FEMALE ARTISTS," ETC.
-
-
-IN TWO VOLUMES.
-
-VOL. I.
-
-
- LONDON:
- TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND.
- 1879.
- [_All Rights Reserved._]
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND CO.,
- 10, LITTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
-
-
-
-
- THIS SHORT RECORD IS
- Dedicated,
-
- IN TOKEN OF AFFECTION AND ESTEEM,
-
- TO
- MADAME RONNIGER.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- Page
- CHAPTER I.
-
- Mythology--Warlike Goddesses--The Amazons--The Sarmatians--The
- Machlyes and Auses--The Zaveces--More Modern Tribes of Amazons
- in Asia and Africa 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Semiramis, Queen of Assyria--Harpalyce, daughter of Lycurgus,
- King of Thrace--Atalanta (Argonautic Expedition)--Camilla, Queen
- of the Volscians--Tomyris, Queen of the Massagetae--Telesilla the
- Poetess--The Two Artemisias (I. and II.) Queens of Caria--Mania,
- Governess of AEolia--Cratesipolis of Sicyon--Arsinoe, Queen of
- Egypt 24
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Hypsicrates, Queen of Mithridates the Great--Cleopatra--Candace,
- Queen of Ethiopia--Boadicea and her Daughters--Ancient British,
- Caledonian, and German Female Warriors--Combats of Roman
- Ladies--Nero's Amazons--Victoria, Empress of the West--Zenobia,
- Queen of the East--Empress Hunila, and other Gothic Amazons--Mavia,
- Queen of Pharan--Pharandsem, Queen of Armenia 47
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE ARABS.
-
- Henda, Wife of Abu Sofian, an Arab Chief--Forka, an Arabian
- Lady--Woman of Yemaumah--Arab and Greek Heroines at the Siege
- of Damascus--Khaullah--Prefect of Tripoli's Daughter--Ayesha,
- Widow of the Prophet--Cahina the Sorceress, Queen of the
- Berbers--Saidet, Queen of Persia--Turkhan-Khatun, Sultana of
- Kharezme--Hadee'yah, title of a Maiden who precedes the Bedouin
- Arabs in battle at the present day 75
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Libyssa and Valasca, Queens of Bohemia--Wanda, Queen of
- Poland--Moors in Spain--Women of Tudmir--Female Knights of
- Tortosa--Alleged Origin of the word "Infantry"--Queen
- Carcas--Elfrida, Daughter of Alfred the Great--Igor, Grand
- Duchess of Russia--Richilda, Countess of Hainault 90
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE CRUSADES--French, German, and Genoese Amazons--Eleonora
- of Aquitaine--Matilda of Boulogne--Empress Maud--Aldrude,
- Countess of Bertinoro--Empress Constantia--Nichola de Camville
- (Barons' Wars)--Blanche of Castille, Queen-Regent of
- France--Women of Culm--Blanch de Rossi--Black Agnes, Countess
- of March--Countess de Montfort--Julia du Guesclin--Jane de
- Belleville, Lady of Clisson--Marzia--Margaret, Queen of Denmark,
- Norway and Sweden, the Semiramis of the North--Fair Maiden
- Lilliard (Chevy Chase)--Lady Pelham--Philippa, Queen of Denmark 102
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Jeanne d'Arc, the Maid of Orleans.--Margaret de Attendoli,
- Sister of Sforza--Bona Lombardi and Onorata Rodiana, Female
- Condottieri--Marulla (Turks in Europe)--Margaret of
- Anjou--Jeanne Hachette--Dona Aldonza de Castillo, and Dona
- Maria Sarmiento (Civil Wars in Castile)--Isabel the
- Catholic--Caterina Sforza 134
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Maria d'Estrada, and other Spanish Women serving under the
- command of Cortez--Catalina de Erauso, the Monja Alferez
- (Nun-Lieutenant)--Dona Maria Pacheco (Confederacy of the
- Holy Junta in Castile)--Eleonora of Toledo, Grand Duchess
- of Tuscany--Turks in Hungary--Courage of a Jewess at
- Buda--Bravery of the Women of Temesvar, Erlau, Valpon, Agria,
- and Szigeth in Hungary, and of Famagosta in Cyprus--Louise
- Labe--Mary of Hungary--Granu Weal--FEMALE WARRIORS OF THE
- REFORMATION--Kenan Simonz Hasselaar--Women of Alkmaar--Mary,
- Queen of Scots--Magdalaine de Saint-Nectaire--Constance de
- Cezelli--Christine de Lalaing, Princess d'Espinoy--Queen
- Elizabeth--English and Scottish Heroines--Barbara of Ernecourt
- (Thirty Years' War)--Christina of Sweden 164
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE AMAZONS IN SOUTH AMERICA 198
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- Lady Offaley (IRISH REBELLION, 1641)--Lady Arundell--Lady
- Bankes--Countess of Derby (CIVIL WARS IN ENGLAND)--Helena
- Zrinyi, Wife of Tekeli, the Hungarian Patriot--Incident at
- the Coronation of William and Mary--Lady Newcombe (James II.
- in Ireland)--Madame de Vercheres--Mademoiselle de la Charce 208
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL AUTHORITIES CONSULTED.
-
-
- Beloe's Herodotus.
- Booth's Diodorus Siculus.
- Hearne's Justin.
- Murphy's Tacitus.
- Suetonius (Bohn's Classical Library).
- Abbe Guyon. Histoire des Amazones. Paris, 1740.
- Rollin. Histoire Ancienne.
- Grote. History of Greece.
- Gibbon. Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
- Mills. History of Mohammedism.
- Neale. Islamism: its Rise and Progress.
- Miss Strickland. Queens of England and Scotland.
- Mrs. Matthew Hall. Queens of England before the Conquest.
- Mrs. Forbes Bush. Queens of France.
- Michaud. Histoire des Croisades.
- Lingard. History of England.
- Sir J. Mackintosh. History of England.
- Tytler. History of Scotland; and Worthies of Scotland.
- Wolfgang Menzel. History of Germany (Mrs. Geo. Horrocks).
- Kelly. History of Russia.
- Coxe. House of Austria.
- Motley. Rise of the Dutch Republic.
- Berriat St. Prix. Jeanne d'Arc. Paris, 1817.
- Lebrun des Charmettes. Hist. de Jeanne d'Arc. Paris, 1817.
- Jollois. Hist. Abregee de la Vie et Exploits de Jeanne d'Arc.
- Paris, 1821.
- Prescott. Conquest of Mexico.
- Ralegh's Guiana. With Introduction and Notes, by Sir Robert Schomburgh
- (Hackluyt Society).
- Life of Mrs. Christian Davies, _alias_ Mother Ross. London, 1741
- (Defoe).
- Lamartine. Hist. of the Girondists. (Capt. Rafter)
- Sir John Carr. Tour through Spain.
- Maria Graham. Journal of a Voyage to Brazil, etc.
- Garibaldi. An Autobiography. Edited by Alexandre Dumas.
- Scenes of the Civil War in Hungary, with the Personal Adventures of
- an Austrian Officer. London, 1850.
- Ferishta. History of Mahommedan India (Jo. Briggs). 1828.
- Ferishta. History of the Dekkan, and History of Bengal (J. Scott).
- 1794.
- Gladwin. History of Hindostan.
- Francklin. History of Shah Aulum, Emperor of Hindostan.
- Private Life of an Eastern King.
- Nolan. Illustrated History of British India.
- Bruce's Travels.
- Winwood Reade. Savage Africa. 1864.
- Duncan. Travels in Dahomey. 1847.
- Captain Burton. Mission to Dahome. 1864.
- Matilda Betham. Cyclopaedia of Female Biography.
- Mrs. Ellet. Women Artists.
- Fullom. History of Woman.
- Mrs. Hale. Woman's Record.
- Mrs. Starling. Noble Deeds of Woman.
- Watson. Heroic Women of History. Philadelphia. 1852.
- Wilson's Wonderful Characters. 1821.
- Kirby's Wonderful and Eccentric Museum. 1820.
- Annual Register.
- Notes and Queries.
- Illustrated London News. Galignani.
- Edinburgh Annual Register.
- Biographie Universelle.
- Etc. etc.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-FEMALE WARRIORS.
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
- Mythology.--Warlike Goddesses.--The Amazons.--The Sarmatians.--The
- Machlyes and Auses.--The Zaveces.--More Modern Tribes of Amazons
- in Asia and Africa.
-
-
-WERE it not for fear of Mrs. Grundy, whose awful visage is to the
-modern Briton what the Gorgon's head was to the ancient Greek, it might
-be said that Popular Prejudice is the deaf, deformed sister of Justice.
-Popular Prejudice makes up her mind on certain subjects, and is grandly
-unconscious of any fault within herself; ignorant that she is deaf, and
-that she is morally blind, although able to see every petty object that
-passes within her range. Popular Prejudice, like her stately cousin,
-Mrs. Grundy, arranges fixed rules of etiquette, of conduct, even of
-feeling, and never pardons the slightest infringement of the lines
-she marks out. A man may lay down his life for "an idea," but if it
-be outside the ramparts of Popular Prejudice, he does so as a rebel,
-maybe a fool. A man may have high aspirations, but if by the breadth
-of a hair's line they run not parallel with the views of Popular
-Prejudice, let him be anathema maranatha, let him be bound in chains,
-away with him to outer darkness, to the company of the few who share
-his--"crotchets."
-
-Whisper it not in Gath that a woman should dare ever to transgress
-the lines laid down by Popular Prejudice. A woman is a subordinate
-accident in Creation, quite an afterthought, a supplementary notion, a
-postscript, though Humour might laughingly say, much like the famous
-postscript to a lady's letter. Man (though he is permitted to include
-in his superb all-comprehensive identity, Woman) is big, strong, noble,
-intellectual: a Being. Woman is small, weak, seldom noble, and ought
-not to be conscious of the significance of the word Intellectual.
-
-The exception is supposed to prove the rule. A woman may be forgiven
-for defying Popular Prejudice, if she is very pretty, very silly, and
-very wicked. Popular Prejudice has the natural instinct of yielding to
-any little weakness that may be imagined to flatter a Man. But Popular
-Prejudice is superbly angry with a woman who is perhaps not pretty,
-yet ventures to claim good sense and personal will, and who may be
-innately good. Popular Prejudice is the fast friend of lean-faced Envy;
-and woe betide the woman (or even the man) who would presume to sit
-down at the board of these allies uninvited.
-
-Popular Prejudice, having decided that woman is a poor, weak creature,
-credulous, easily influenced, holds that she is of necessity timid;
-that if she were allowed as much as a voice in the government of her
-native country, she would stand appalled if war were even hinted at.
-If it be proved by hard facts that woman is not a poor, weak creature,
-then she must be reprimanded as being masculine. To brand a woman
-as being masculine, is supposed to be quite sufficient to drive her
-cowering back to her 'broidery-frame and her lute.
-
-Popular Prejudice abhors hard facts, and rarely reads history. Yet
-nobody can deny that facts are stubborn things, or that the world
-rolls calmly round even when wars, rumours of wars, revolutions, and
-counter-revolutions, are raging in every quarter and sub-division of
-its surface.
-
-War is, undoubtedly, a horrid alternative to the average woman, and
-she shrinks from it--as the average man shrinks. But, walking down the
-serried ranks of history, we find strange records of feminine bravery;
-as we might discover singular instances of masculine cowardice, if we
-searched far enough.
-
-As argumentation is unpleasant and unprofitable, be it counted only
-idle pastime gathering a handful of memories from the playground of
-history.
-
-Opinion among the ancients on all subjects was as fairly divided as it
-has been among moderns. Naturally, however, in that uncivilised stage
-of the world's development, men and women inclined more towards brute
-force than they now do. Plato, the Athenian philosopher, lamented
-that the lives of women should be wasted in domestic, and sometimes
-servile, duties; arguing that if the girls were trained like the boys,
-in athletic sports and warlike exercises, and were taught to endure
-fatigue, they would soon cease to be the weaker sex, and could not only
-fight as well as their lords and masters, but might take the command of
-armies and fleets.
-
-But though the counsels of the great Athenian were followed in many
-things, they were entirely declined on this question. His countrymen,
-even in cases of the direst necessity, were loth to swell their ranks
-with female recruits; and it was only during the degenerate days of
-the Empire that Rome publicly authorised the combats of women in the
-amphitheatre.
-
-Very few people deny that woman did, occasionally, fight in olden
-times. All nations, from the rudest barbarians to those most advanced
-in civilisation, hold this belief. An old Chinese tradition says that
-but for the wisdom of certain mandarins in days gone by, the weaker sex
-might possibly be now the stronger in the Celestial Empire. Once upon
-a time, so the story runs, the Chinese women, discontented with the
-unequal share accorded to them in the government, rose in rebellion.
-The revolt so very nearly became a revolution that the Emperor and
-his ministers, to prevent a recurrence of the danger, decreed that
-henceforth the feet of girls throughout China should be bandaged in
-such a way as to put it out of their power ever again to take the field
-as warriors. And thus, says the fable, originated the famous Golden
-Lilies.
-
-The ancients were all familiar with the idea of women sometimes
-exchanging the spindle and distaff for the spear and shield. Not only
-did they believe their goddesses to take part occasionally in the
-battles of mortals, but the supreme direction of military affairs was
-assigned to a female, as Goddess of War; and this deity, combining
-wisdom and courage, frequently proved more than a match for the brutal
-if not blundering God of Battles. "Which, indeed," observes Pope, "is
-no more than just, since wisdom is generally averse to entering into
-warlike contests at all; yet when engaged, it is likely to triumph
-over brute force, and to bear off the laurels of the day." No general
-amongst the ancients would have dared to enter an enemy's country,
-besiege a city, or risk an engagement without first sacrificing to the
-Goddess of War.
-
-All nations alike held the same belief. The Egyptians offered
-sacrifices to Neith, the Goddess of War, Philosophy, and Wisdom, to
-whom lions were subject, and whose fitting emblem was the vulture. The
-Greeks and Romans adored Minerva, the Thunderer's armour-clad daughter:
-and Bellona, sister, or perhaps wife of Mars, whose chariot she was
-said to drive through the din and tumult of the fight, lashing the
-foaming horses with a bloody scourge. And Victoria, whose name denotes
-her office, was so greatly honoured both in Greece and Rome, that
-Hiero, King of Syracuse, to flatter the Romans, once sent them an idol
-figure of this goddess, three hundred and twenty pounds in weight, made
-of solid gold; while the Egyptians, who worshipped her under the name
-of Naphte, represented her in the form of an eagle, because that bird
-is the strongest of aerial warriors, and invariably victorious over
-all the feathered race. The Brahmins, who claim an antiquity as great
-as, or greater than, Egypt, worshipped, and still worship, Durga, or
-Katyayini, whose ten arms and hands, each of which grasps a warlike
-weapon or emblem, prove how formidable a foe she is believed to have
-been. Our ancient British forefathers prayed to Andate, or Andraste,
-Goddess of Victory, and called upon her in their hour of need. The
-northern races, Goths, Vandals, Germans, who over-ran Europe during the
-decline of the Roman Empire, assigned a somewhat analogous place in
-their mythology to the Valkyrias, or Disas--
-
- "Those dread maids, whose hideous yell
- Maddens the battle's bloody swell."
-
-These beautiful women were believed to take a leading part in every
-battle fought on earth. Mounted on swift steeds, armed with helmets and
-mail, drawn swords in their hands, they rode wildly over the field to
-select those heroes destined by Odin for the slaughter, and lead them
-to Valhalla, the Paradise of the Brave.
-
-Nor is the belief in warlike goddesses confined to the Old World. When
-Cortez entered Mexico, he found the subjects of Montezuma worshipping,
-amongst other deities, all more or less repulsive to the eye, a horrid
-basalt monster named Teoyamiqui, Goddess of War. She was supposed to be
-wife of the equally terrible Huitzilopochtli, or Tlacahuepancuexcotzin,
-the Mexican Mars. Like the Valkyrias, her chief duty was to conduct
-those warriors who fell in defence of the gods to the house of the Sun,
-the Elysium or Valhalla of the Mexicans, where she transformed them
-into humming-birds.
-
-The present age is a decidedly sceptical one.
-
-It is the fashion nowadays to sneer at the traditions venerated by our
-grandfathers. Those chapters in the world's history which have not
-been _proved_ by _facts_, have passed, in the opinion of many well
-educated people, into the category of fable and nursery-rhyme. The
-early histories of Greece and Rome, and of our own country too, are
-now taken, if taken at all, _cum grano salis_. King Arthur, Hengist
-and Horsa, and many another hero of whom we were once so proud, have
-been cast, by most matter-of-fact writers, on the same dusty shelf
-with Achilles and Hector, Romulus and Remus, side by side with Jupiter
-and Mercury, Jack the Giant-Killer and Blue Beard. Scarcely anybody in
-our days is so credulous as to believe that the Amazons ever existed.
-"Amongst barbarous nations," observes Gibbon, "women have often
-combated by the side of their husbands; but it is almost impossible
-that a society of Amazons could have existed in the old or new world."
-His opinion has been endorsed by most subsequent writers, some of whom
-are even more positive in their expressions of incredulity.
-
-Ancient writers are divided on the question. Strabo denies that there
-ever was or could have been such a community, and adds, to believe in
-their existence we must suppose "in those days the women were men and
-the men women." Plutarch, more moderate, half believes they did exist,
-but doubts most of their marvellous achievements, which, he thinks,
-"clearly resemble fable and fiction." Amongst those who speak for the
-defence, Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus, Justin, and Quintus Curtius stand
-prominently forward.
-
-Their origin, as related by Justin, though curious, is far from being
-impossible or even improbable in the remote days when they lived.
-Some years previous to the reign of Ninus, king of Assyria, two young
-princes of the Scythian blood-royal, Hylinos and Scolopitos, being
-driven from their native country by a faction of the nobility, induced
-several hundred young men and women to emigrate with them. After a
-toilsome march through barren wilds they settled at last in Cappadocia,
-on the rugged banks of the Thermodon. This little river, which now
-bears the name of Termeh or Karmili, falls into the Black Sea, between
-Trebisond and Sinope.
-
-For a number of years, the new-comers carried on a species of border
-warfare with the natives of the Themiscyrean plains--stealing their
-cattle, tearing up their corn, destroying their homes by fire and
-sword. At last the aborigines surprised and massacred the male
-settlers, by means of an ambush. The wives of the latter, having now
-no one to whom they could look for protection, armed themselves and
-expelled the foe from their territory.
-
-From this time they laid aside all thoughts of marriage, "calling it
-slavery and not matrimony." And, to enforce this law, it is said, they
-murdered a few men who had escaped the fury of the natives in the
-general massacre. The Amazons were thenceforth forbidden even to speak
-to men, save during certain days in the year. At the appointed time,
-throwing aside their military character, they visited the surrounding
-nations, and were permitted, by special treaties, to depart again
-unmolested. Justin says they strangled all their male children directly
-they were born; Diodorus, that they distorted their limbs; while
-Philastratus and others affirm that they sent them back, uninjured, to
-the fathers.
-
-The girls were bred, like their mothers, "not in idleness, nor
-spinning, but in exercises of war, such as hunting and riding." In
-early childhood the right breast was burnt off, that they might, when
-grown up, be more easily able to bend the bow and hurl the dart.
-From whence, some say, they derived the name of Amazon, which is
-formed of two Greek words, signifying "wanting a breast." Bryant,
-the antiquarian, rejects this theory, and suggests, though with less
-probability, that the name comes from Zon, the Sun, which was the
-national object of worship.
-
-The bow was their favourite weapon, and from constant practice they
-acquired such proficiency as to equal, if not surpass the Scythians and
-Parthians, who were the most skilful archers of ancient times. With the
-Greeks and Romans it was not uncommon to speak of a very superior bow
-or quiver as "Amazonian."
-
-The nation soon became formidable, and in due time grew famous
-throughout the world. At one time the dominion of the Amazons extended
-over the entire of Asia Minor and Ionia, besides a great part of Italy.
-So renowned did they at last become, that Jobates, king of Lycia,
-commanded Bellerophon to effect their subjugation, feeling certain that
-the hero would never return; great indeed was his astonishment to see
-the redoubtable conqueror of the Chimera return victorious, and he no
-longer hesitated to confess the divine origin of the hero. It is said
-that Cadmus, the founder of Thebes, was married to an Amazon named
-Sphynx when he carried letters from Egypt to Greece, about 1550 B.C.
-
-Lampedo and Marpesia were the first Amazon queens whose names became
-known beyond their own dominions. To give greater _eclat_ to their
-numerous victories, they claimed to be daughters of the God Mars--a
-common expedient in the olden times. Taking it in turn to defend the
-frontier and invade foreign countries, they speedily conquered Iberia
-(Georgia), Colchis (Mingrelia), Albania, the Tauric Chersonese (the
-Crimea), and a great part of Asia.
-
-To commemorate the achievements of Queen Marpesia during her passage
-over the craggy and snow-capped Caucasus, when every peak, every ridge
-was bravely defended by hordes of desperate mountaineers, the name of
-Mount Marpesia was bestowed upon one of the loftiest rocks.
-
-It was Marpesia who founded Themiscyra, the capital of the Amazons, on
-the banks of the Thermodon. She adorned this city with many stately
-buildings, conspicuous amongst which was the royal palace. Many cities
-in Asia Minor owed their origin to the same queen--amongst others,
-Ephesus, Thyatira, Smyrna, and Magnesia.
-
-On the death of Marpesia, who was surrounded by the barbarians during
-an expedition into Asia, and, together with her entire army, put to
-the sword, Orithya, Orseria, or Sinope, and her sister Antiope, or
-Hippolyte, ascended the throne. Orithya, the most famous of all the
-Amazon queens, inherited the beauty, together with the military skill
-of her mother, Marpesia. Under her rule the nation became so renowned,
-that Eurystheus, fancying he had at last found a task beyond the powers
-of Hercules, commanded the hero, as his ninth labour, to bring him the
-girdle of the Amazon queen. The hero succeeded, however.
-
-Hercules, accompanied by Theseus, Castor and Pollux, and most of the
-young princes of Greece, sailed to the Euxine with a fleet of nine
-ships, landed at the mouth of the Thermodon, during the temporary
-absence of Orithya with the best part of the army, and gained an
-easy victory over Antiope, whose sister Menalippe he made prisoner;
-restoring her to liberty in exchange for a suit of the royal armour,
-including, of course, the girdle.
-
-Historians differ as to the expedition of Theseus. Some say he took
-away Hippolyte or Antiope, at the same time that Hercules captured her
-sister; others, however, relate that he undertook a separate voyage
-many years after that of Hercules, and carried Antiope to Greece, where
-he made her his queen. Plutarch, in his life of Theseus, gives many
-details of this latter expedition.
-
-When Orithya heard of the invasion, and of the part which the Athenian
-prince had acted in it, she vowed not to rest till she was revenged.
-Calling her subjects together, she soon found herself at the head of
-many thousand warriors. At her entreaty, Sagillus, king of Scythia,
-furnished a squadron of horse, commanded by his nephew, Panasagorus.
-Passing through Colchis, over Mount Caucasus, and crossing an arm of
-the Cimmerian Bosphorus, which, tradition says, was frozen, the Amazons
-marched victoriously through Taurica, Thrace, Thessaly, Macedonia,
-Attica, and entered the city of Athens. A hard-fought battle in the
-streets--described in detail by old Plutarch--ended by the total rout
-of the Amazons, who were compelled to take refuge in the camp of the
-Scythians--the latter, in consequence of a quarrel, having taken no
-part in the engagement.
-
-The fate of Orithya is unknown, and historians differ as to that of
-Antiope. Some say she fell in the battle by the hand of an Amazon,
-while fighting in the Athenian ranks, side by side with Theseus; but
-according to others, it was her mediation which brought about a treaty
-of peace some four months later.
-
-Theseus and the Amazon queen had a son named Hippolytus, or Demophoon,
-who afterwards ascended the throne of Athens.
-
-That the Amazons survived this defeat is evident, since, years after
-this, we find the Phrygians imploring aid of Priam, king of Troy,
-against Myrene, queen of the Amazons. Little is known about this war,
-save that the queen lost her life, and was succeeded by the beautiful
-Penthesilea, who not only made peace with Priam, but led a chosen
-band of Amazons to the assistance of Troy when it was besieged by
-the Greeks. She arrived shortly after the death of Hector, and, some
-declare, seemed, in the eyes of the old king, destined to take the
-place of the deceased hero. New life was infused into the dejected
-Trojans. But, alas! their joy was short-lived. The morning after her
-arrival Penthesilea fell by the hand of the invincible Achilles, who,
-struck by her exquisite beauty, repented too late of what he had done.
-The sarcastic Thersites jeered and derided, as usual, till the hero,
-in a fury, turned on the sneering old wretch and slew him. Diomedes,
-enraged at the death of his mocking old comrade, dragged the corpse of
-the Amazon queen from the camp, and flung it into the Scamander.
-
-Pliny ascribes the invention of the battle-axe to this queen.
-
-After the death of Penthesilea we learn nothing of the Amazons until
-the days of Alexander the Great. When that conqueror arrived at
-Zadracarta, the capital of Hyrcania, about the year B.C. 330, he
-is said to have been visited by an Amazon queen named Minithya, or
-Thalestris, who--like another Queen of Sheba--having heard of his
-mighty achievements, travelled through many lands to see him, followed
-by an army of female warriors. After staying thirteen days she returned
-home, greatly disappointed with the personal appearance of the
-Macedonian king, who, contrary to her expectations, proved, 'tis said,
-to be a little man.
-
-This is the last we ever hear of the great female nation. Some Roman
-authors affirm that the Amazons, in alliance with the Albanians,
-fought most valiantly in a battle against Pompey the Great, B.C. 66.
-But the only ground for this assertion consisted in the fact that some
-painted shields and buskins were found on the battle-field.
-
-If we may believe Herodotus, the Sauromatae, or Sarmatians, in Scythia,
-were descended from the Amazons. This historian relates how, after a
-victory gained by the Greeks over the Amazons near the Thermodon, the
-victors distributed their prisoners into three ships, and set sail for
-Greece. Once upon the open sea, the captives rose upon their guards
-and put them to death. Being totally ignorant of navigation and the
-management of sails, oars, or rudder, they resigned themselves to the
-mercy of winds and waves. They were carried to the Palus Maeotis (the
-Sea of Azof), where the liberated Amazons resumed their arms, sprang
-on shore, and meeting a stud of horses, mounted them, and commenced
-plundering the natives.
-
-The people, ignorant alike of the dress, the language, or the country
-of the invaders, supposed them to be a body of young men. A sanguinary
-battle, however, led to mutual explanations. The Amazons consented
-to accept an equal number of young Scythians as husbands; but afraid
-that their habits would never assimilate with those of the mothers
-and sisters of their husbands,--for the Scythian women, so far from
-going to battle, passed their days in the wagons--resolved to seek
-out some desert land where they would be free to follow their own
-manners and customs. Crossing the Tanais (the Don), they travelled six
-days' journey east and north, and set up their homes in an uninhabited
-country. The nation increased greatly in the course of two or three
-centuries, and, even in the days of Herodotus, retained the habits of
-their progenitors. The women pursued the chase on horseback, sometimes
-with, sometimes without their husbands, and, dressed like men, they
-fought in battle.
-
-No maiden was permitted to marry till she had first killed an enemy;
-"it sometimes, therefore, happens," quaintly adds the historian, "that
-many women die single at an advanced age." Hippocrates says they were
-condemned to single-blessedness till they had slain at least _three_
-enemies.
-
-Yet, in spite of this, there was only one Sarmatian queen who became
-famous for her deeds on the battle-field. This was Amagia, whose
-husband, King Medosac, having given himself up to indolence and
-luxury, permitted the affairs of the nation to fall into disorder. At
-last Amagia took the reins of government into her own hands, received
-ambassadors, took the command of the army, went in person to reinforce
-the frontiers with troops, and not only repelled several invasions but
-even made some incursions into foreign countries to assist such of her
-allies as were in peril. Very soon she became an important personage,
-and was more than once chosen as mediatrix by the various petty
-monarchs of the Chersonese.
-
-As a ruler, Queen Amagia had not her equal in those days throughout
-Scythia. Her judgments were sound; and both as a general and as
-a governor, she was respected by all. Her justice was severe and
-unbending, and untempered with mercy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The African Amazons, who are said to have existed for some centuries
-prior to those of Thermodon, were not, like the latter, a community
-of women only, but the men were kept in close subjection to their
-better-halves, by whom they were treated as women are usually treated
-in barbarous countries. While the women conducted the government or
-fought with their neighbours, the men staid at home, attending to the
-household duties. They were not permitted, under any circumstances, to
-serve as soldiers or hold any public office. The girls were not allowed
-to marry till they had served a certain number of years in the army;
-and, like the Asiatic Amazons, one breast was burnt off.
-
-This nation, Diodorus tells us, originally dwelt on a large island
-called Hesperia, on the western coast of Africa. This isle, which,
-the historian says, abounded "with all sorts of fruit trees," is
-supposed to have been one of the Canaries. The climate was then, as
-now, delicious, the soil more than ordinarily fertile, and the natives
-possessed "many herds of cattle and flocks of sheep and goats."
-
-The Amazons, more warlike than their neighbours, speedily conquered
-the entire island; and, crossing into Africa, subdued great part of
-Numidia and founded a large city named Chersonesus, in the Tritonis
-Morass. This gigantic fen was situated near the Atlantic Ocean, under
-the shadow of the lofty Mount Atlas.
-
-When Queen Merina ascended the throne, she determined to accomplish
-mightier deeds than her ancestors. Assembling an army of thirty
-thousand foot and two thousand horse, dressed in coats of mail made
-from the skins of large serpents, she passed into Africa, conquered
-the Atlantides, the Gorgons, and many another nation, and formed an
-alliance with Orus, King of Egypt, the son of Isis. After making war
-successfully on the Arabians she conquered Syria and Cilicia, and the
-tribes around Mount Taurus, who, says Diodorus, "were both men of
-strong bodies and stout hearts"; marched through Phrygia, and passed
-along the shores of the Mediterranean, founding several cities, one
-of which she named after herself, and the others after her principal
-captains. Crossing to the Greek Archipelago, where she conquered
-Lesbos and other isles, Merina founded the city of Mitylene, and named
-it after her sister, who accompanied the expedition.
-
-Shortly after the return of the Amazons to Africa, Mompsus, a refugee
-from the court of Lycurgus, king of Thrace, and Sipylus, a banished
-Scythian, invaded the dominions of Merina. The queen was slain in the
-first battle, together with many thousand Amazons; and the rest of her
-subjects, after bravely contending in several engagements with the
-invaders, retired, it is said, into Lybia.
-
-We also read that Egee, another queen of the African Amazons, also
-raised a large army, with which she invaded Asia. Being opposed by
-Laomedon, King of Troy (who was afterwards conquered by Hercules), she
-defeated his troops in several actions, and took a quantity of valuable
-plunder. While re-passing the sea a storm arose, and Egee perished with
-her entire army.
-
-The nation was finally extirpated by Hercules when he undertook his
-journey into Africa, and erected the famous Pillars.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Herodotus mentions two Libyan tribes, the Machlyes and Auses, dwelling
-on the shores of Lake Tritonis, who trained their girls to the use of
-arms. Once a year, at the festival of Minerva, their patron-goddess,
-the maidens of each tribe formed themselves into two hostile armies,
-and attacked each other before the temple with sticks and stones,
-contending for the victory with the most desperate valour. On the
-conclusion of this _sham_ fight, the most beautiful of the survivors
-was presented with a magnificent suit of armour and a sword, and,
-amidst the noisiest acclamations from the spectators, escorted in a
-chariot triumphantly round the lake.
-
-The Zaveces, another African tribe mentioned by the same historian,
-employed their wives and daughters to drive their war-chariots on the
-day of battle, thus placing them in the front of the battle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From what certain modern travellers have reported, it would seem that
-even as lately as the eighteenth century the legend of the Amazons
-still held its ground in various parts of Asia and Africa. Father
-Archangel Lamberti, a Neapolitan monk, who travelled through Mingrelia
-in the seventeenth century, was told that a warlike and ruthless
-nation, amongst whom were several female warriors, dwelt somewhere in
-the neighbourhood of the Caucasus. They were often at war with the
-Calmuc Tartars and the various tribes living near them. Lamberti was
-even shown some suits of armour taken from the corpses of these warlike
-women, together with their bows and arrows and brass-spangled buskins.
-
-The Chevalier Chardin (a Huguenot jeweller, knighted by Charles II. of
-England), in travelling through Persia, between 1663 and 1680, was told
-that a powerful nation of Amazons dwelt to the north of the kingdom
-of Caket. The monarchs of the latter country, which was situated in
-the neighbourhood of the Caucasus, subjected these Amazons for a
-time, though they afterwards regained their liberty. The people of
-the Caucasus, and the Calmucs were always at war with these Amazons,
-and never sought to make peace or form any treaties, for they knew
-the warlike women had neither religion, laws, nor honour. Sir John,
-however, adds that he never met with anybody who had been in their
-country.
-
-Juan de los Sanctos, an early Portuguese traveller, in speaking of a
-kingdom named Damut, in Ethiopia, mentions a numerous tribe entirely
-composed of women, who had adopted (or perhaps retained) the habits of
-the ancient Amazons. The exercise of arms and the pastime of the chase
-were their principal occupations in times of peace, but their chief
-business and pleasure was war. They burnt off the right breast as soon
-as the girls were old enough to bear it; and, as a rule, they passed
-their lives in a state of celibacy, the queen setting a rigid example.
-Those who married did not rear their male children, but sent them back
-to the fathers. The neighbouring sovereigns esteemed themselves only
-too fortunate when they could secure the alliance of this people; and
-so far from seeking to destroy them, more than once aided them when
-they were attacked by others. This tribe was finally subjugated, says
-the Portuguese friar, by the successors of Prester John, the kings of
-Abyssinia.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
- Semiramis, Queen of Assyria--Harpalyce, daughter of Lycurgus,
- King of Thrace--Atalanta (Argonautic Expedition)--Camilla, Queen
- of the Volscians--Tomyris, Queen of the Massagetae--Telesilla the
- Poetess--The Two Artemisias (I. and II.) Queens of Caria--Mania,
- Governess of AEolia--Cratesipolis of Sicyon--Arsinoe, Queen of
- Egypt.
-
-
-SEMIRAMIS is the earliest female warrior of whose existence there
-is any certainty. But even her history is intermingled with much of
-fable and idle tradition. The exact period at which she reigned has
-never been positively determined. The following dates, assigned to her
-reign by various historians, ancient and modern, as compared by the
-antiquarian Bryant, show the diversity of opinion amongst chronologists
-upon the subject.
-
- B.C.
- According to Syncellus, she lived 2177
- Petavius makes the time 2060
- Helvicus 2248
- Eusebius 1984
- Mr. Jackson 1964
- Archbishop Usher 1215
- Philo Biblius Sanchoniathan (apud Euseb.) 1200
- Herodotus (about) 713
-
-"What credit," indignantly asked the learned Bryant, "can be given to
-the history of a person, the time of whose life cannot be ascertained
-within 1535 years?"
-
-The early life of this famous woman is enveloped in one of those
-mythological legends in which the ancients loved to shroud the origin
-of their heroes and heroines. According to tradition she was the
-natural daughter of Derceto, a Philistine goddess, and while yet a
-babe, was left to perish by her cruel mother in a wood near Ascalon,
-in Syria. But, as Romulus and Remus were suckled by a wolf, so doves
-came and fed the future queen. The birds were observed and followed by
-the neighbouring peasants; and Simma, or Sisona, chief shepherd of the
-Assyrian king, having no children of his own, adopted the babe, and
-gave her the name of Semiramis, a Syrian word signifying doves, or
-pigeons.
-
-At the early age of thirteen or fourteen, Semiramis was married to
-Menon, one of the principal officers of the king, who saw her at the
-hut of Sisona while inspecting the royal flocks. Captivated by her
-surpassing beauty and charming conversation, Menon induced her to
-return with him to Nineveh, the capital. For some months she was kept
-a close prisoner in her husband's palace; but her influence soon ruled
-paramount, and all restraints were removed. Two or three years passed
-thus, during which time Semiramis bore her husband two sons, Hypates
-and Hydaspes.
-
-When Ninus invaded Media, Semiramis, who only waited for some
-opportunity to distinguish herself, insisted upon accompanying
-her husband, who, as one of the principal courtiers, held an
-important command in the invading army. The campaign was at first an
-uninterrupted series of successes. One city fell after another before
-the Assyrian hosts. But the army was suddenly checked in its onward
-career of victory before the impregnable walls of Bactria. The city was
-defended with such obstinate bravery that Ninus at last resolved to
-retreat. But Semiramis presented herself before the assembled council
-of war, proposed an assault on the citadel, and offered to lead, in
-person, the storming party.
-
-When the decisive moment arrived, Semiramis proved herself fully equal
-to the emergency. Amidst vollies of arrows and showers of stones,
-before which the bravest men turned pale, she led the forlorn hope to
-the foot of the citadel. Animating all by her courage, shaming cowards
-by the thought that a young and lovely woman was sharing, nay, braving,
-the same dangers as themselves, the intrepid heroine rushed up the
-scaling ladder, and was the first to reach the battlements. A struggle
-ensued, short, but fierce, and in a few moments the golden standard of
-Assyria floated from the walls. The capital of Media had fallen.
-
-The king, violently smitten with love for the brave girl, earnestly
-besought her husband to give her up. He even offered his own royal
-sister, Sosana, in exchange. But promises and threats were alike
-vain; and Ninus, in a fury, cast Menon into prison. Here, after being
-deprived of sight, the wretched husband terminated his existence with
-his own hands.
-
-Ninus married the young widow; and after their return to Nineveh, she
-bore him a son called Ninyas.
-
-'Tis said Ninus paid very dear for his marriage. Semiramis, by her
-profuse liberality, soon attached the leading courtiers to her
-interest. She then solicited the king, with great importunity, to place
-the supreme power in her hands for five days. Ninus at last yielded to
-her entreaties; and, as his reward, was cast into prison, and put to
-death,--either immediately, or after languishing some years.
-
-To cover the meanness of her origin, and to immortalise her name,
-Semiramis now applied her mind to great enterprises. If she did not, as
-some suppose, found Babylon the Great, she adorned it with beautiful
-and imposing edifices, and made it worthy to be called "the Golden
-City."
-
-Not satisfied with the vast empire left by Ninus, she enlarged it by
-successive conquests. Great part of Ethiopia succumbed to her power;
-and during her stay in this country she consulted the Oracle of
-Jupiter-Ammon as to how long she had to live. The answer was, that she
-should not die until conspired against by her son; and that, after her
-death, part of Asia would pay her divine honours.
-
-Her last and most famous expedition was the war with India. For this
-campaign she raised an army of more than ordinary dimensions. Ctesias
-puts down the number at three million foot, fifty thousand horse,
-and war-chariots in proportion; but this is, no doubt, a slight
-exaggeration. The chief strength of the Indians lay in their countless
-myriads of elephants. Semiramis, unable to procure these animals in
-sufficient numbers, caused several thousand camels to be accoutred like
-elephants.
-
-Shahbrohates, King of India, on receiving intelligence of her hostile
-approach, sent ambassadors to inquire her motive for invading his
-dominions. She returned a haughty answer; and, on reaching the Indus,
-she erected a bridge of boats and attempted to cross. The passage was
-disputed, and although the Indians at last retreated, the victory was
-more disastrous to the Assyrians than many a defeat.
-
-But Semiramis, carried away by the blind infatuation which guided all
-her movements in this war, marched into the heart of the country. The
-king, who fled deceitfully to bring about a second engagement further
-from the river, faced about, and the two armies again closed in deadly
-combat. The counterfeit elephants could not long sustain the attack
-of the genuine animals, who, crushing every obstacle under foot, soon
-scattered the Assyrian army. Semiramis performed prodigies of bravery
-to rally her broken forces, and fought with as little regard for her
-own safety as though she had been the meanest soldier in the army.
-Shahbrohates, perceiving the queen engaged in the thick of the fight,
-rode forward and twice wounded her. The rout soon became general,
-and the royal heroine, convinced at last that nothing further could
-be done, gave the rein to her horse, whose swiftness soon placed her
-beyond the reach of the enemy.
-
-On reaching the Indus a scene of the most terrible disorder ensued. In
-the wild terror which possessed the minds of all, officers and soldiers
-crowded together on to the bridge, without the slightest regard for
-rank or discipline. Thousands were trampled under foot, crushed to
-death, or flung into the river. When Semiramis and all who could save
-themselves had crossed over, the bridge was destroyed. The Indian king,
-in obedience to an oracle, ordered his troops not to cross the river in
-pursuit.
-
-Semiramis was the only sovereign amongst the ancients, except Alexander
-the Great, who ever carried a war beyond the Indus.
-
-Some time after her return to Babylon, the queen discovered that her
-son, Ninyas, was conspiring against her. Remembering now the oracle
-of Jupiter-Ammon, and believing that her last days were approaching,
-Semiramis voluntarily abdicated the throne. Some chroniclers give a
-different version of the story, relating that the queen was slain
-by her son, and this latter account, though disbelieved by most
-historians, is the popular story.
-
-Semiramis lived sixty-two years, out of which she reigned forty-two.
-It is said the Athenians afterwards worshipped her under the form of a
-dove.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The early lives of Harpalyce and Atalanta, the first known female
-warriors who were natives of Greece, resemble in some respects that
-of Semiramis. It appears to have been a favourite custom, during the
-primitive ages, to have children nursed by birds or beasts. Harpalyce,
-daughter of Harpalycus, or Lycurgus, king of the Amymnaeans, in Thrace,
-having lost her mother during infancy, was fed with the milk of cows
-and horses. Her father trained her in every manly and warlike exercise,
-riding, racing, hurling the dart, using the bow and arrow. By-and-by
-she became a mighty huntress; and soon the opportunity came for her to
-prove herself a brave soldier and a skilful commander. The Getes, or
-Myrmidones of Thessaly invaded the dominions of King Lycurgus, defeated
-his best troops and made him prisoner. Directly Harpalyce learned this
-news she hastily called together an army, placed herself at its head,
-and falling on the foe, put them to flight and rescued her father.
-
-Lycurgus endeavoured to cure the Thracians of their drunken habits,
-and caused all the vines in his dominions to be rooted up, whereby he
-brought about a general insurrection, and was compelled to fly for
-safety to the isle of Naxos, where he went mad and committed suicide.
-Harpalyce turned brigand and haunted the forests of Thrace. She was
-so swift of foot that the fleetest horses could not overtake her once
-she began running. At last, however, she fell into a snare set by some
-shepherds, who put the royal bandit to death.
-
-Atalanta, too, was likewise bereft of a mother's care. Her father,
-Jasus or Jasion, unwilling to rear the babe, yet not sufficiently
-inhuman to see her slaughtered before his eyes, left her to her fate on
-Mount Parthenius, the highest mountain in Peloponnesus. Close by was
-the cave of an old she-bear who had been robbed of her cubs. In place
-of devouring the babe, the savage brute adopted it, and brought up the
-girl as her own daughter. Orson-like, the girl learned many of the
-habits of her shaggy nurse. But, she also, through constant exercise,
-acquired marvellous dexterity in using the bow and arrow; and with this
-weapon she once slew the Centaurs Rhoecus and Hylaeus.
-
-Atalanta was one of those brave warriors who sailed in the Argonautic
-expedition, B.C. 1263; and throughout the voyage she earned the praises
-of her comrades by her bravery and military skill. After her return to
-Greece she assisted in the chase of the Calydonian boar, a savage brute
-of monster size who was ravaging AEtolia. She was the first to wound
-this beast; hence Meleager awarded her the first prize. His uncles,
-jealous of the honour thus conferred upon a woman, endeavoured to
-wrest the trophies from her, and in the scuffle which ensued, Meleager
-unfortunately slew both his uncles.
-
-This heroine must not be confounded with another Atalanta, daughter of
-Schoenus, King of Scyrus, famous for her marvellous skill in running,
-and for the stratagem of the three golden apples by which she was at
-last defeated.
-
-It would seem that no Grecian or Trojan heroines distinguished
-themselves during the siege of Troy; though it is not unlikely that
-many of the Greek soldiers were secretly accompanied by their wives.
-When AEneas landed in Italy, a few years after the fall of Troy, he
-found, amongst the sovereigns confederated against him, Camilla, the
-Amazon queen of the Volscians, renowned for her high courage, her
-beauty, and her swiftness in running. Virgil says that she outstripped
-the winds in speed, and could have skimmed over the topmost stalks of
-standing corn, or along the surface of the ocean, without leaving a
-trace of her footsteps.
-
-From childhood she was dedicated by her father, King Metabus, to the
-service of Diana, and trained in martial exercises. She grew so fond
-of the chase, that even after the death of her father, she preferred
-leading the semi-barbarous life of a wild huntress to the prospect of
-domestic happiness as the wife of a Tuscan noble.
-
-She joined Turnus, King of the Rutulians, with a squadron of horse and
-a body of foot, equipped in bronze armour. Followed by her retinue of
-warlike maidens, she bore a prominent part in a battle fought near the
-walls of Latium. But after spreading death and terror on every side,
-she was herself slain by a Tuscan chief.
-
-Virgil's description of her death is one of the most beautiful passages
-in the AEneid.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cyrus, one of the greatest conquerors the world has ever seen, some
-say met his first and last defeat at the hands of a female general.
-Many historians describe him as dying peaceably in his bed, surrounded
-by his family; but others relate that, still thirsting for fresh
-conquests, he cast his eyes, in an unlucky moment, on the land of the
-Massagetae, a warlike people governed by Queen Tomyris, a widow, and a
-woman possessing both courage and energy. Her country extended beyond
-the broad stream of the Araxes, to the Caucasus. The Massagetae were a
-savage, hardy race, resembling the Scythians in their mode of life.
-Agriculture was neglected, and they subsisted entirely upon their
-cattle and the fish supplied by the Araxes. Though they had nothing to
-lose by a change, this nation was devotedly attached to its freedom;
-suffering death rather than the loss of liberty, and resolutely
-opposing every invader.
-
-It was against this indomitable race that Cyrus marched, at the head
-of two hundred thousand men, B.C. 529. By means of a stratagem he
-was at first successful. Knowing the Massagetae to be ignorant of
-Persian delicacies and the flavour of wine, he spread out a banquet,
-accompanied with flowing goblets of wine; and, leaving a few hundreds
-of his worst soldiers to guard the camp, retired to some distance.
-When the Massagetae, commanded by Spargapises, nephew of Tomyris, had
-taken the camp, they feasted and drank, till, overcome by drunkenness
-and sleep, they afforded an easy victory to Cyrus. The greater number,
-including Spargapises, were made prisoners, or slain.
-
-However, so far from despairing, Tomyris collected the rest of her
-forces, and having led the Persians into a narrow pass, attacked them
-with such fury that they were all slain, together with the king. Justin
-says "there was not one man left to carry the news home;" but as the
-news _did_ somehow find its way home, that fact is doubtful.
-
-The body of Cyrus was discovered after considerable search. Tomyris
-ordered the head to be cut off and flung into a vessel full of human
-blood.
-
-"Satisfy thyself now with blood," cried she, exulting over her dead
-foe, "which thou didst always thirst after, yet could never satisfy thy
-appetite."
-
- * * * * *
-
-A few years prior to the invasion of Greece by Xerxes, Cleomenes, King
-of Lacedaemon, who arrogated to his state the first rank in Greece, went
-to war with the people of Argos. Having learned from an oracle that
-he would be victorious, the Spartan king without loss of time invaded
-the Argeian territories, and routed the enemy in a sanguinary battle
-at Sepeia. Those Argives who escaped death on the battle-field took
-refuge in a grove sacred to Argus, their hero; where, however, they
-were surrounded and burnt alive by the enemy. Upwards of six thousand,
-the flower and strength of Argos, perished that day. Cleomenes marched
-direct to the city, which, decimated, almost depopulated though it was,
-made a gallant defence.
-
-There dwelt in the city a beautiful girl named Telesilla, famous
-throughout the land as a lyric poetess. Inspired by patriotism, she
-addressed the Argive women and incited them to defend their homes.
-The call was responded to with enthusiasm. Armed with weapons from
-the temples, or from private dwellings, the women of Argos, headed by
-Telesilla, ascended the walls, and compensated by their courage for the
-dearth of male warriors.
-
-The Spartans were repulsed; and Cleomenes, afraid of being reproached,
-even if successful, with fighting against helpless women and timid
-girls, commanded a retreat.
-
-Demeratus, Cleomenes' partner in the throne, is said by some historians
-to have accompanied this expedition; and they relate that whilst
-Cleomenes was besieging the walls, Demeratus attacked the Pamphyliacum,
-or Citadel, whence he was driven with great loss by Telesilla and her
-companions. This, however, is acknowledged to be mere tradition,
-for Herodotus says that the two kings, having quarrelled some years
-previously, never engaged together in the same war.
-
-Grote, for an even better reason, disbelieves the entire story, which,
-he says, "is probably a myth, generated by the desire to embody in
-detail the dictum of the oracle a little before, about 'the female
-conquering the male.'" Without for a moment denying that the Argeian
-women could or would have achieved the great deeds ascribed to them,
-he doubts their having done so, because, says he, the siege never took
-place at all.
-
-Great honours, so runs the legend, were paid to Telesilla and her brave
-companions, many of whom fell in the conflict. A statue of the poetess
-was erected by the grateful citizens and placed in the Temple of Venus.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The terrible danger of the Persian invasion caused all the internal
-wranglings and disputes of the Greeks to be hushed for a time. In the
-year B.C. 480, the Great King declared war on the (temporarily) united
-states of Greece, and sailed thither with a gigantic and overwhelming
-army and navy. Amongst the tributary sovereigns who followed him in
-this expedition was Artemisia, Queen of Caria. She was daughter of
-King Lygdamis, and her husband, the late king, having died while her
-son was a minor, Artemisia conducted, _pro. tem._, the government of
-Halicarnassus, Cos, Nisiras, and Calydne. Though she brought only five
-ships to the Greek war, they were almost the lightest and best equipped
-of any in the fleet.
-
-Herodotus says that amongst all the Persian commanders, naval or
-military, there was not one who gave the king such good advice as this
-heroine; but King Xerxes was not at that time wise enough to profit
-by her counsels. She was the only one who had the courage to raise
-her voice against the proposed sea-fight at Salamis, which Xerxes was
-resolved to risk.
-
-As the Carian queen foretold, the Persians were defeated. Yet, though
-she openly disapproved of the battle, Artemisia behaved most gallantly
-throughout. The Athenians, indignant that a woman should dare to
-appear in arms against them, offered ten thousand drachmas for her
-capture, alive or dead. The way she escaped displayed great presence
-of mind, though it also showed how unscrupulous she was in the choice
-of stratagems. Closely pursued by an Athenian ship (commanded by
-Aminias of Pallene, the brother of AEschylus), escape seemed impossible.
-But with her customary decision of mind, the queen hung out Grecian
-colours, and turned her arms against a Persian vessel. This cost her
-no feelings of regret, for on board the ship was Damasithymus, King of
-Calynda, with whom she had some private quarrel. Her pursuers, seeing
-her send a Persian ship to the bottom of the sea, concluded that she
-belonged to their navy, and so gave up the pursuit.
-
-Xerxes, from an elevated post on shore, saw the disgraceful flight of
-his own navy, together with the bravery of Artemisia. When he could
-no longer doubt that it was she who performed such gallant deeds, he
-exclaimed, in astonishment, that the men had behaved like women, while
-the women had displayed the courage of men.
-
-Like most warlike leaders, Artemisia was not at all scrupulous as to
-the means employed, provided the end answered her expectations. Wishing
-to possess herself of Latmus, a small city which lay temptingly near to
-Halicarnassus, she placed her troops in ambush, and under pretence of
-celebrating the feast of Cybele in a wood consecrated to that goddess,
-she repaired thither with a grand procession, accompanied by drums and
-trumpets. The people of Latmus ran out in crowds to witness the show,
-while Artemisia's troops took possession of the city.
-
-The ultimate fate of Artemisia proves how true it is that "love rules
-the court, the camp, the grove." She fell violently in love with a
-native of Abydos, a young man named Dardanus; but her passion was not
-reciprocated. To punish his disdain, she first put out his eyes, and
-then took the noted "Lover's Leap" from the promontory Leucas--now
-Santa Maura.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Artemisia II., who lived more then one hundred and thirty years after
-the former heroine, has frequently been confounded with her, as both
-were queens of Caria. The second of that name was daughter of King
-Hecatomus, and is principally famous for the honours which she paid to
-the memory of her husband, Mausolus, to whom she erected a magnificent
-tomb at Halicarnassus, which monument was afterwards reckoned as one of
-the Seven Wonders of the World.
-
-Most writers represent Artemisia as plunged in tears during her
-widowhood; but there are some who, on the contrary, declare that she
-made some important conquests at that time. Vitruvius relates that the
-Rhodians, indignant that a woman should reign over Caria, despatched a
-fleet to Halicarnassus to dethrone Artemisia. The queen commanded the
-citizens to appear on the walls directly the Rhodians came in sight,
-and to express, by shouts and clapping of hands, their readiness to
-surrender. The enemy, falling into the trap, disembarked, and went with
-all haste to the city, leaving their ships without even one man to
-guard them.
-
-Artemisia came out with her squadron from the little port, entered
-the great harbour, and seized the Rhodian vessels. Putting her own
-men on board she sailed to Rhodes, where the people, seeing their own
-ships return adorned with laurel-wreaths, received them with every
-demonstration of joy. No resistance was offered to the landing; and
-Artemisia seized the city, putting to death the leaders of the people.
-
-She caused a trophy to be erected, and set up two statues--one
-representing the city of Rhodes, and the other an image of herself,
-branding the former figure with a red-hot iron. Vitruvius says the
-Rhodians were forbidden by their religion to destroy this memorial; so
-they surrounded it by a lofty building which concealed it from view.
-
-Her death, which took place the same year (B.C. 351) probably
-reinstated the Rhodians in their liberty.
-
-During the reign of Artaxerxes Nmenon, King of Persia, and brother
-of Cyrus the younger, the province of AEolia was governed--under the
-authority of Pharnabasus, satrap of Asia Minor--by Zenis the Dardanian.
-When the latter died, Mania, his widow, went to Pharnabasus with
-magnificent presents, leading a body of troops, and begged of him not
-to deprive her of the government. Pharnabasus allowed her to retain the
-province, and he had no reason to regret it. Mania acquitted herself
-with all the prudence and energy which could have been expected from
-the most experienced ruler. In addition to the customary tributes, she
-added magnificent presents; and when Pharnabasus visited her province,
-she entertained him with greater splendour than any of the other
-governors throughout Asia Minor. She followed him in all his military
-campaigns, and was of great assistance not only with her troops, but by
-her advice. She was a regular attendant at all his councils, and her
-suggestions contributed to the success of more than one enterprise. The
-satrap knew how to estimate her merit; and the Governess of AEolia was
-treated with greater distinction than any of her fellow-governors.
-
-Her army was in better condition than that of any neighbouring
-province; she even maintained a body of Greek soldiers in her pay. Not
-content with the cities committed to her care, she made new conquests;
-amongst others, Larissa, Amaxita, and Colona, which belonged to the
-Mysians and Pisidians. In every war she took the command in person, and
-from her war-chariot decreed rewards and punishments.
-
-The only enemies she possessed were in her own family circle. Midias,
-her son-in-law, thinking it a reproach on him that a woman should
-command where he was subordinate, strangled her and her son, B.C. 399,
-and seized two fortresses in which she had secured her treasures. The
-other cities of AEolia at once declared against him; and he did not very
-long enjoy the fruits of his crime. Dercyllidas, commander of the Greek
-forces in Asia, arrived at this juncture. All the fortresses in the
-province surrendered, either voluntarily or by compulsion; and Midias
-was deprived of the possessions for which he had stained his hands in
-the blood of his relatives.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cratesipolis was the wife of Alexander, the son of one of Alexander the
-Great's captains.
-
-On the sudden death of Alexander the Great, his posthumous son and his
-half-brother were placed on the throne, under the regency of Perdiccas,
-the most talented of Alexander's captains. However, the generals
-soon began to quarrel among themselves; two years later, Perdiccas
-was assassinated, and the regency conferred on Antipater, governor
-of Macedonia and Greece. The latter, on his death-bed, bestowed the
-office of regent and the government of the provinces on Polysperchon,
-the eldest survivor of all the captains who had followed Alexander to
-India. Cassander, the son of Antipater, indignant at being set aside,
-went to war with the new regent.
-
-Alexander, the son of Polysperchon, was possessed of great military
-talent, and his father confided to him the defence of Peloponnesus.
-Cassander, knowing the abilities of Alexander, offered him the
-government of Peloponnesus, and the command of the troops stationed
-there if he would join the faction of the malcontents. The offer was
-accepted; Alexander established his head quarters at Sicyon. At the
-head of his troops he gained several victories. Cratesipolis, his
-wife, was the idol of the soldiers. They regarded her, and justly, as
-a woman who possessed the spirit of a hero and the talents of a great
-general. She interested herself in all their affairs--appeased all
-their differences, and did not disdain to think of their wants and
-their pleasures. She consoled those who were sad, relieved those who
-were in want, and strove to make all happy. Frequently she accompanied
-Alexander in his expeditions, and was as much respected by the officers
-as beloved by the privates.
-
-Alexander held his governorship for only a few months. The citizens
-of Sicyon, furious, and groaning under the yoke imposed upon them,
-conspired against their rulers. The governor was slain by Alexion and
-some companions who pretended to be Alexander's friends. The soldiers,
-who were setting out on an expedition, seized with terror when they saw
-their leader fall, fled in all directions.
-
-Cratesipolis gave way neither to grief nor despair. Rallying the
-broken forces, she assumed the command, and soon restored order and
-discipline. The Sicyonians, who never suspected that a woman could
-take the command of the army, rose in rebellion, and barred the city
-gates. Cratesipolis, enraged as much at the insult as at the treachery
-with which they had slain her husband, laid siege to Sicyon, routed
-the insurgents in a hotly-contested battle, and took the city by storm
-(B.C. 317), when, by her command, thirty of the ringleaders were
-crucified.
-
-Having assuaged her thirst for revenge, Cratesipolis entered Sicyon
-in triumph, and assumed the government. Appeasing all the troubles
-caused by the rebellion, she ruled with such wisdom and prudence as
-to excite the admiration of all. To the last she kept up a large
-and well-disciplined army, always ready at a moment's notice to set
-forth on an expedition. The soldiers, whose love and reverence had
-been increased by the courage with which she had acted during the
-insurrection, would, any of them, have gladly sacrificed his own life
-to save hers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Arsinoe, Queen of Egypt, was the wife of Ptolemy Philopater. She was
-a brave as well as prudent woman, and accompanied her husband when he
-invaded Syria, B.C. 217. In the battle of Raphia she rode up and down
-through the ranks, exhorting the soldiers to behave manfully during the
-fight. She remained beside her husband during the heat of the action;
-and by her presence she greatly contributed to the victory gained by
-the Egyptians.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
- Hypsicrates, Queen of Mithridates the Great--Cleopatra--Candace,
- Queen of Ethiopia--Boadicea and her Daughters--Ancient
- British, Caledonian, and German Female Warriors--Combats
- of Roman Ladies--Nero's Amazons--Victoria, Empress of the
- West--Zenobia, Queen of the East--Empress Hunila, and other Gothic
- Amazons--Mavia, Queen of Pharan--Pharandsem, Queen of Armenia.
-
-
-PONTUS, in Cappadocia, the _ci-devant_ home of the Amazons, passed through
-many changes and vicissitudes as time rolled on. Under Cyrus and his
-successors, Cappadocia was divided into two distinct provinces, whose
-governors made themselves finally independent of Persia, and ruled
-as kings till the days of Alexander. After the death of the great
-Macedonian, Pontus was not long regaining its independence: increasing
-rapidly in power and extent till the days of Mithridates the Great, who
-made it one of the chief empires of the East.
-
-This ambitious monarch, believing himself a second Alexander, cared
-for nothing but war; and through his bravery and his obstinacy, he
-contrived to make himself one of the most formidable rivals Rome
-ever had to cope with. Hypsicrates was his favourite wife--like most
-Oriental monarchs, he had more than one; and in respect of personal
-courage, she was worthy to be the companion of the royal tiger. They
-were romantically attached to one another; Mithridates, ruthless
-towards others, was loving and tender to his favourite sultana. She
-accompanied him in many of his perilous expeditions, and fought by
-his side in more than one battle. For this reason, her name, properly
-Hypsicratia, was changed to Hypsicrates; thus altering it from feminine
-to masculine, on account of her manly courage. Besides being valiant,
-she was exceedingly beautiful and highly accomplished, as a queen
-should be.
-
-After the defeat of Mithridates by Lucullus, the gourmand, on the
-plains of Cabirae, B.C. 71, the unfortunate monarch sent a messenger
-to the ladies of his court, enjoining them to die by their own hands
-rather than fall alive into those of the Romans. All obeyed save
-Hypsicrates. Though she feared death as little as any among them, yet
-could she not bear even this temporary separation from her lord.
-Mounting a swift steed, she overtook the king, after encountering and
-surmounting innumerable difficulties; and by her presence and counsel
-she restored to him his former energy and strength of mind.
-
-Five years later (B.C. 66), Mithridates fought a battle with Pompey the
-Great on the banks of the Euphrates. Hypsicrates appeared in the dress
-of a Persian soldier, and, mounted on a charger, fought beside the
-king so long as the action lasted. However, the battle was not of long
-duration. The barbarians were afraid to await the shock of the iron
-legions, and fled in wild terror. The Romans ruthlessly slaughtered the
-fugitives; ten thousand were slain on the field, and the camp fell into
-the hands of the victors.
-
-Mithridates and his brave queen, placing themselves at the head of
-eight hundred chosen horsemen, cut their way, sword in hand, through
-the ranks of the foe. But the eight hundred quickly dispersed, and
-left the king with only three followers, one of whom was Hypsicrates.
-She attended him during his flight, grooming his horse, and enduring
-great hardships through fatigue and want of food. At last they reached
-a fortress, where lay the royal treasures. Here Mithridates gave to
-each a dose of strong poison to be taken in case of dire necessity.
-But whether Hypsicrates finally swallowed the fatal potion, or by what
-death she passed from the world, historians have not told us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cleopatra, the beautiful and ambitious queen of Egypt, was at all
-times desirous to acquire renown as a great warrior. But she possessed
-neither the courage nor the prudence necessary for those who seek the
-laurel-wreath. She was too fond of her ease to take the command of an
-expedition, unless the occasion was one which rendered her presence
-absolutely necessary.
-
-She first appeared as a warrior in the year B.C. 48, when her brother
-Ptolemy deprived her of her share in the throne. She withdrew to Syria,
-raised troops there, and re-entered Egypt at the head of her forces
-shortly after the battle of Pharsalia. Pompey, routed by Caesar, fled
-to Egypt, where he was assassinated by order of the king. Scarcely
-had he breathed his last, when Caesar landed. He assumed the right to
-arbitrate between Ptolemy and Cleopatra. The former refused to accept
-him as referee, and for several weeks the great Caesar had to contend
-with the soldiers of the king as well as with the infuriated citizens
-of Alexandria. However, the war was soon terminated by the defeat and
-death of Ptolemy; and the crown was bestowed upon Cleopatra.
-
-After the assassination of Julius Caesar, Cleopatra declared for the
-Triumvirs, Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus. She prepared a powerful
-fleet, designing to take the command, and sail to the assistance of
-Caesar's avengers. Violent storms prevented the squadron from setting
-out; but some time subsequently the queen sailed with a well-equipped
-fleet to join the Triumvirs. Again she was frustrated by the elements.
-A terrible storm arose, wrecked many vessels, threw the queen on a bed
-of sickness, and compelled the fleet to put back to Alexandria.
-
-This love of warlike display finally caused her ruin and that of
-Antony. Against the advice of the most practised Roman officers, she
-insisted upon taking an active part in the war against Octavius. Before
-the decisive battle of Actium, Antony was counselled not to hazard a
-sea-fight; but the haughty Egyptian queen, like Xerxes of old, insisted
-upon it. So her advice was followed in preference to that of old and
-experienced generals.
-
-The battle was fought on the 2nd September, B.C. 31, at the mouth
-of the Ambracian Gulf, within sight of the opposing land armies who
-were encamped on each shore anxiously watching the struggle. A more
-magnificent sight could not have been seen than the fleet of Antony;
-and the most splendid object in it was the galley of Cleopatra, blazing
-with gilding and bright colours, its sails of purple, flags and
-streamers floating in the wind. Victory inclined to neither side till
-the flight of the Egyptian queen. Terrified by the horrid din of the
-fight, though in no personal danger, she fled from the scene of action,
-her example being followed by nearly all the Egyptian fleet, which
-numbered sixty ships. Antony, when he saw the queen's galley take to
-flight, forgot everything but her, and precipitately followed. And thus
-he yielded to Caesar not merely the victory, but the Sovereignty of the
-World.
-
- * * * * *
-
-About the time that Cleopatra sat on the throne of Egypt, the
-neighbouring kingdom of Ethiopia was ruled over by another warlike
-queen, Candace, whose kingdom comprised that part of the Nile valley,
-which, under the name of Meroee, contained numberless towns and cities
-in a high state of civilization. Very little is known concerning this
-queen, save what we glean from Strabo. The year before the battle of
-Actium, Candace invaded Egypt, and compelled the Roman garrisons of
-Syene, Elephantine, and Philae to surrender. Caius Petronius, Roman
-prefect of Egypt, marched against the Ethiopians, and routed Candace
-near Pselcha, after which the victor ravaged great part of Ethiopia.
-
-When Petronius left the country, Candace attacked the garrison he had
-left in Premnis. But directly the prefect heard of this he returned
-hastily to Meroee, again defeated the Ethiopians, and imposed a heavy
-tribute on the kingdom. Candace sent an embassy to Octavius, who was
-then at Samos, suing for peace. The dictator not only granted her
-prayer, but remitted the tribute levied by Petronius.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next female sovereign who defied Rome on the battle-field was
-of a very different stamp from Cleopatra, or even Candace. This was
-Boadicea, the "British Warrior Queen," the story of whose wrongs and
-bravery was for centuries a favourite subject with poets. Her name,
-which has been variously written Boadicea, Boudicea, Bonduca, Vonduca,
-Voadicea, or Woda, signified "the Woman of the Sword," and in the
-ancient British or Welsh language is equivalent to Victoria. She was
-the daughter of Cadalla, King of the Brigantes; and, through her
-mother, Europeia, daughter of Evanus, King of Scotland, she claimed
-descent from the kings of Troy and the Ptolemies of Egypt.
-
-Boadicea's career was a sad and a stormy one from first to last.
-At an early age she was compelled by her step-mother, the wicked,
-ambitious, Cartismandua, to marry Arviragus, son of that queen by her
-first husband, King Cymbeline. Arviragus was King of the Iceni, who
-possessed a great part of Essex, Norfolk, and Cambridgeshire. They are
-said by Tacitus to have been a rich and powerful nation. After the
-queen had presented her lord with a son and two daughters, the Emperor
-Claudius came to Britain. Arviragus, having suffered several defeats,
-was compelled to divorce Boadicea, and marry Gwenissa, the emperor's
-daughter. A general insurrection of the Britons was the result; and the
-natives, led at first by the famous Caractacus, brother of Boadicea,
-and ultimately joined by Arviragus himself, were defeated again and
-again by the Romans. Weary at last of the never-ending struggle,
-Arviragus and Boadicea accepted very humiliating terms from Vespasian,
-and were permitted to retain their dominions.
-
-Towards the close of his life Arviragus appears, for some unexplained
-reason, to have changed his name to Prasutagus. Dreading the rapacity
-of the Romans, he thought to secure their protection for Boadicea and
-her two daughters (her son died long before), by making the emperor
-Nero joint-heir to his dominions. He died A.D. 61. Scarcely had he
-ceased to breathe, when Catus, the Roman procurator, who commanded
-in the absence of Suetonius Paulinus, Governor of Britain, annexed
-the country of the Iceni, seized the personal effects of the deceased
-monarch, treated all his relations as prisoners of war, despoiled
-the wealthier Iceni, imposed heavy taxes upon the poor, and demanded
-from Boadicea the payment of large sums which her father, Cadalla,
-had bestowed upon the Romans. Unable to pay, the queen was publicly
-whipped, and her daughters were treated even more shamefully.
-
-Burning for revenge, Boadicea raised the standard of revolt. She was
-soon joined by patriots from all parts of Britain. Eighty thousand men,
-headed by the queen, rushed down like wild beasts on the colonies of
-Camulodunum (Malden), Colchester, and Verulam (St. Alban's), putting to
-death, in the first-named city, with every torture they could devise,
-more than seventy thousand persons of every age and sex.
-
-Shortly after the destruction of Camulodunum, Boadicea was joined by
-her brother Corbred, king of Scots. Together they marched to the attack
-on Colchester. Petilius Cerialis, the conqueror of Batavia, marched out
-from Verulam at the head of the ninth legion to oppose the victorious
-Britons. He had lately received from Germany reinforcements, amounting
-to eight auxiliary cohorts of one thousand horse. A furious battle
-ensued, resulting in the total defeat of the Romans. Upwards of six
-thousand Romans and three thousand confederate Britons (their allies)
-were slain.
-
-Petilius fled with his broken cohorts--for, it is said, not even
-one foot-soldier escaped the carnage--to his entrenched camp. Catus
-Decianus, the procurator, was severely wounded in the engagement, and,
-struck with terror, he continued his precipitate flight over sea into
-Gaul.
-
-Suetonius Paulinus, absent at the time on that expedition which
-concluded with the massacre of the Druids in Mona (the Isle of
-Anglesea), hastened back to South Britain. With ten thousand men, he
-entered London; but, despite the prayers of the people, he deserted it
-at once, and encamped at a short distance north of the city. Scarcely
-had he departed, when Boadicea marched directly on London, captured it
-after a slight resistance, and put the inhabitants to the sword.
-
-For some time Suetonius was afraid to venture on a battle against
-a victorious queen commanding a force so immeasurably superior to
-his own, amounting, according to Tacitus, to one hundred thousand,
-while Dio Cassius raises the number as high as two hundred and thirty
-thousand; while the Romans could muster scarcely ten thousand. At last
-an engagement took place on a wild spot, guarded in the rear by a dense
-forest.
-
-Before the battle, Boadicea passed up and down in her chariot,
-exhorting the warriors to avenge her wrongs and those of her daughters.
-Dio Cassius has described the British Queen, as she appeared on that
-memorable day. She was a woman of lofty stature, with a noble, severe
-expression, and a dazzlingly fair complexion, remarkable even amongst
-the British women, who were famous for the whiteness of their skin. Her
-long yellow hair, floating in the wind, reached almost to the ground.
-She wore a tunic of various colours, hanging in folds, and over this
-was a shorter one, confined at the waist by a chain of gold. Round
-her alabaster neck was a magnificent "torques," or collar of twisted
-gold-wire. Her hands and arms were uncovered, save for the rings and
-bracelets which adorned them. A large British mantle surmounted, but
-did not conceal the rest of her attire.
-
-Suetonius on his side used all his powers of oratory to excite the
-Romans to do their best, telling them to "despise the savage uproar,
-the shouts and yells of undisciplined barbarians," amongst whom, he
-said, "the women out-numbered the men."
-
-The battle was long and obstinately contested; but the steady order of
-the iron legions triumphed over the savage onslaught of the Britons.
-The latter were routed with terrible slaughter, leaving, Tacitus says,
-upwards of eighty thousand dead on the field. The Romans lost only five
-hundred. "The glory won on this day," adds Tacitus, "was equal to that
-of the most renowned victories of the ancient Romans."
-
-The exact scene of this engagement has been variously placed by
-different writers. Some decide that Battle-Bridge, King's Cross, marks
-the spot; while by others it has been settled as identical with the
-ancient camp called Ambresbury Banks, near Epping. Some even place it
-at Winchester.
-
-Boadicea, rather than let herself be taken alive, put an end to her own
-existence by poison. She was afterwards interred with due honours by
-her faithful adherents.
-
-The two daughters of Boadicea, completely armed, fought most valiantly
-in the battle; and even during the rout of their countrymen they strove
-wildly for victory. At last they were made prisoners, and brought into
-the presence of Suetonius, who expressed deep sympathy for them, and
-spoke with indignation of their oppressors.
-
-The elder princess, by the intervention of Suetonius, was married, some
-months later, to Marius, also styled Westmer, son of Arviragus and
-Gwenissa. This prince was acknowledged by the Romans as King of the
-Iceni, over whom he ruled for many years. His son Coel was the father
-of Lucius, the first Christian king of Britain. Boadicea, the younger
-daughter, inherited not only her mother's name, but her bold, dauntless
-spirit, and her relentless hatred of the Romans. Marius, fearing her
-influence over the Iceni, banished her from his court. She raised a
-formidable army of Brigantes and Picts, and sailed to Galloway, which
-was occupied by the Romans. Marching in the dead of the night, she fell
-on the encampment of the foe and slew several hundred men. The entire
-Roman army would probably have been put to the sword had not Petilius,
-the general, ordered his men to light torches. The Britons were driven
-off, and next morning Boadicea was attacked and defeated in her own
-camp.
-
-Next day Boadicea marched to Epiake, the Roman head-quarters in that
-district, and setting it on fire, destroyed the garrison. Shortly after
-this she was captured in an ambuscade. It is said by some that the
-young princess, expecting a horrible death, followed the example of her
-mother, and took poison. Others, however, declare that she was brought
-alive into the presence of the Roman commander, who interrogated her
-respecting the object of her invasion, when Boadicea, making a spirited
-answer, was slain by his guards.
-
-The bravery of Boadicea and her daughters was not so strange in those
-days as it might now be. The British and Caledonian women were, as a
-rule, brave and warlike, and invariably followed their husbands to
-battle. More than five thousand women enlisted under the banners of
-Boadicea, and fought, many of them, as bravely as the men. Women,
-even far advanced in years, marched with their male relations to the
-defence of king or country; and those who did not fight hand to hand
-with the foe, peppered him well from a distance with volleys of stones.
-To render themselves competent to share the perils and dangers of the
-battle-field, the women, in times of peace, practised the use of arms,
-and inured themselves to fatigue and hardship; as Holinshed says,
-"never refusing to undergo any labour or fatigue assigned them by their
-leader."
-
-The women of Caledonia were equally warlike. In a curious old book of
-engravings published in London during the last century, entitled a
-"Collection of Dresses of Different Nations, Ancient and Modern," there
-are three plates, one of which represents a Caledonian woman, after De
-Brii, dressed in a short garment, and armed with masculine weapons;
-the other two represent the wife and daughter of a Pict. The woman
-Pict is entirely naked, and is tattooed and painted with stars, rays,
-and various similar devices. In one hand she grasps a lance and in the
-other two darts. The girl differs from the mother only in being painted
-with divers floral ornaments in lieu of the astronomical adornments.
-
-The Gallic and German women also, joined frequently in the battles
-between rival tribes. Philostratus, probably for this reason, speaks
-of Amazons living on the shores of the Danube; and in Lucius Flaccus
-we also read of German Amazons. The Allemanni, the Marcomanni, the
-Quadi, and the other warlike tribes who dwelt beyond the Rhine were
-always accompanied by their wives and daughters whenever they set out
-on an expedition. During the battle, such of the women as took no share
-in the action, stood on the outskirts, cheering and encouraging the
-warriors. More than once a beaten army of Germans was stopped in its
-flight by the women, and obliged, through very shame, to turn again and
-confront the enemy. If their side was defeated the German women almost
-invariably committed suicide on the corpses of their friends. During
-the wars of Marcus Aurelius with the Marcomanni and Quadi, several
-women were found amongst the slain, many clad in armour.
-
-Under the patronage of the emperors the combats of Roman matrons in
-the amphitheatre afforded intense gratification to a pleasure-seeking
-public. Juvenal, the satirist, regards these female duels from a
-ludicrous point of view. "What a fine business it would be," he says,
-"for a man to cry out at an auction of his wife's equipment, 'Who bids
-up for my wife's boots? Who'll give most for her corslet, helmet, and
-gauntlet?'"
-
-The Romans, however, often tried to raise amateur corps of female
-warriors, in imitation of the ancient Amazons, whose warlike deeds were
-much admired in the imperial city. Suetonius tells us that Nero, when
-he learned the news of Galba's revolt, dressed up the women of his
-seraglio as Amazons, arming them with battle-axes and small bucklers,
-and intending to march at their head against the rebels.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the third century the Roman empire was in a state of dire confusion.
-So many governors of provinces and commanders of legions had assumed
-the purple, with more or less success, in various parts of the world,
-that at last the Emperor, who was recognised by the senate at Rome,
-though nominally sovereign of the universe, was, in fact, very little
-more than ruler of Italy. One of the first to dispute the imperial
-dignity in Europe was Posthumus, commander of the legions in Gaul. He
-so far acquired the affections of his soldiers that they proclaimed him
-Emperor of the West, A.D., 257. His dominion, the capital of which was
-Cologne, extended over Gaul, Spain, and Britain.
-
-There dwelt in Cologne a noble Roman lady named Victoria. Some say
-she was the sister of Posthumus. Be that as it may, she persuaded the
-emperor to raise her son, Victorinus, to the throne, as his colleague;
-and when Posthumus was murdered by the soldiers, three years later,
-Victorinus remained sole emperor of the West. He was a brave soldier
-and an able general, and reigned over Gaul for about a year longer,
-when he was slain by the troops, A.D. 269. His eldest son, named after
-himself, was now proclaimed emperor; but in a few days he, too, fell a
-victim to the fury of the legions.
-
-An ordinary mind would have sunk beneath this double misfortune; but
-the "Heroine of the West" was cast in a very different mould from
-most women. Exceedingly ambitious, she possessed both the courage and
-the ability to carry out her schemes. Even when her son was living,
-she held the reins of government. So great was her influence over the
-legions, they obeyed her behests in everything without a murmur. She
-passed much of her time amongst them, and received thence the title of
-Mater Castrorum,--"Mother of the Camp." When her son became emperor,
-she, as his mother, received the title of Augusta.
-
-Victoria bestowed the vacant throne first on Marius, a distinguished
-general, who was slain in a few days, and next on Tetricus, the chief
-noble in Aquitaine, a distant relative of her own. During his absence
-in Spain she continued to govern the Gallic provinces. Placing herself
-at the head of the troops, she maintained the authority she had seized
-against all the armies sent from Rome. Even during the early days of
-Aurelian's reign, she opposed the imperial forces with the same bold
-and undaunted spirit, and with equal success.
-
-Very soon Tetricus grew weary of being subordinate to Victoria. The
-empress, stung by his ingratitude, would have hurled him from the
-throne to which she had raised him; but Tetricus took care to prevent
-this by causing Victoria to be poisoned, A.D. 269, a few months after
-his own accession.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Since the days of Semiramis no female ruler in ancient times attained
-so high a pinnacle of greatness throughout the East as Zenobia. For
-more than five years, unaided, she set the Roman emperors at defiance,
-defeated their armies, and laughed equally at their threats and their
-underhand machinations.
-
-Septimia Zenobia was an Arab princess, and while some writers assert
-that she was a Jewess, the heroine herself claimed descent, through her
-father Amru, from the Ptolemies of Egypt. Truly she was as beautiful as
-any Egyptian queen--even the handsome Cleopatra. By some writers she
-has been cited as the loveliest woman of her age. An olive complexion,
-pearly teeth, large, brilliant, black eyes, which sparkled alternately
-with the fire of the heroine and the sweetness of the loving wife--such
-were the charms of her face. Her voice was rich and musical. She was
-conversant with Greek, Latin, Syriac, and Egyptian; and compiled for
-her own reading an epitome of Homer. Her tutor in philosophy was the
-famous Greek, Cassius Longinus.
-
-Zenobia was a widow, and the mother of a son, Vhaballathus, when
-she wedded Odenathus, Prince of Palmyra. The latter, however, was a
-widower, and also the father of a son--Ouarodes, or Herod, a weak and
-effeminate youth.
-
-Septimius Odenathus, who raised himself by his own genius and the
-fortune of war, to the sovereignty of the East, was, like his wife, an
-Arab. He was chief prince of the wild Saracen tribes who dwelt in the
-Syrian deserts, on the shores of the Euphrates. Odenathus early learned
-the rudiments of war in the exciting chase of wild beasts--a pastime
-which, to the last, he never wearied of, and in which he was joined
-with equal ardour by Zenobia. Together the royal pair, during the
-intervals of peace, hunted lions, panthers, or bears, through the woods
-and deserts of Syria.
-
-When the emperor Valerian was captured and flayed alive by Sapor, King
-of Persia, A.D. 260, Odenathus marched, at the head of an Arab host,
-against the Persians, defeated them near Antioch, compelled them to
-retreat, beat them again on the banks of the Euphrates, and finally
-drove them across the river; capturing, in the first battle, the
-greater part of the wives and treasures of Sapor.
-
-Zenobia accompanied her husband in this, as in all his subsequent
-expeditions, and bravely seconded his efforts. She proved herself as
-good a soldier as any, and endured, with the utmost fortitude, the
-same hardships as the meanest there. Disdaining the use of a covered
-carriage, she frequently marched several miles at the head of the
-troops.
-
-Pursued closely by Odenathus and Zenobia, Sapor fled through
-Mesopotamia, suffering many defeats, losing towns and cities, and at
-last took refuge in Ctesiphon, his capital, where the victors besieged
-him for some months.
-
-The Roman senate recognised the deeds of Odenathus by granting him
-the title of Augustus, A.D. 263. In the following year the royal pair
-undertook a second expedition against Sapor. New triumphs were added
-to the glories of the last campaign. The Persian king was once more
-forced to take refuge in Ctesiphon, which would no doubt have fallen
-had not the incursion of a horde of Scythian Goths into Syria compelled
-Odenathus to raise the siege.
-
-Surrounding nations soon learned to respect the brave prince of Palmyra
-and his no less warlike consort. Even Sapor, humiliated though he had
-been, was glad, not merely to make peace, but to join in close alliance
-with his conquerors, who were threatened by the underhand machinations
-of the contemptible emperor Gallienus. But the brilliant career of
-Odenathus was unexpectedly brought to a close by the hand of his
-nephew, who, believing himself insulted by the monarch, assassinated
-him, together with his son Herod, at a banquet in the city of Emesa,
-A.D. 267.
-
-The murderer gained nothing but the empty pleasure of revenge. Scarcely
-had he assumed the title of Augustus ere he was sacrificed by the royal
-widow to the memory of her husband, though some historians have accused
-her of being an accomplice in the double murder. Zenobia was proclaimed
-queen; and, passing over Timolaus and Herennius, her sons by Odenathus,
-she arrayed Vhaballathus in the purple, and showed him to the troops as
-their emperor.
-
-With the death of Odenathus ceased that authority granted him as a
-personal favour by the emperor and senate of Rome; and Gallienus
-despatched an army to dethrone Zenobia. But the queen soon compelled
-the Roman general to retreat into Europe with the loss of both army and
-reputation. Zenobia governed the East for more than five years; and
-by successive conquests she extended her dominions from the Euphrates
-to the Mediterranean and the borders of Bithynia; and added, besides,
-the land of the Ptolemies. Her power became so great that the warlike
-Claudius II., who succeeded Gallienus, was satisfied that while he was
-occupied in the defence of Italy from the Goths and Germans, Zenobia
-should assert the dignity of the Roman power in the East.
-
-Palmyra, the capital of the warrior queen, almost rivalled the
-Eternal City in the magnificence of its temples, its mansions, its
-public monuments, and the luxury of its citizens. It became the great
-centre of commerce between Europe and India, and its merchants grew
-wealthy through the trade of East and West. Arcades of lofty palms
-shadowed its streets of marble palaces; purling fountains, fed by icy
-springs, rendered it a perfect Elysium in the midst of burning arid
-sands. Schools, museums, libraries, fostered by the care of Zenobia,
-encouraged and aided the arts and literature.
-
-At last the stern, the inflexible Aurelian ascended the throne of the
-Caesars. Firmly resolved to rid the empire of every usurper, great or
-small, he began by re-conquering Gaul and making prisoner the Western
-usurper, Tetricus. He then passed into Asia, A.D. 272, when his
-presence alone was sufficient to bring back Bithynia to its allegiance.
-Of course Zenobia did not indolently permit an invader to approach
-within a hundred miles of her capital without taking measures to arrest
-his progress. She marched with all her forces to oppose him; but was
-signally defeated in two battles, the first near Antioch, the second
-near Emesa. In both engagements the queen animated the soldiers by her
-presence, though the actual command devolved on Zabdas, the conqueror
-of Egypt. The latter, Zenobia's principal general, has been by many
-supposed to have been Zabba, the queen's sister; this, however, is mere
-surmise.
-
-After the second defeat, Zenobia was unable to raise a third army. She
-retired within the walls of her capital, prepared to make a gallant
-defence, and boldly declared that her reign and her life should end
-together.
-
-Aurelian arrived before Palmyra, after a toilsome march over the sandy
-desert which separated the city from Antioch. His proposals being
-rejected with scorn, he was obliged to begin the siege; and, while
-superintending the operations, he was wounded by a dart.
-
-"The Roman people," he wrote in a letter, "speak with contempt of the
-war which I am waging against a woman. They are ignorant both of the
-character and of the power of Zenobia. It is impossible to enumerate
-her warlike preparations of stones, of arrows, and of every species of
-missile weapons. Every part of the walls is provided with two or three
-balistae, and artificial fires are thrown from her military engines. The
-fear of punishment has armed her with a desperate courage."
-
-Zenobia was at first supported in her determined resistance by the hope
-that the Roman army, having no means of getting provisions, would soon
-be compelled to retreat, and also by the expectation that Persia would
-come to her aid. Disappointed in both calculations, she mounted her
-swiftest dromedary and fled towards the Euphrates. But the Roman light
-cavalry pursued, and soon overtook the queen, who was brought back
-prisoner. Palmyra surrendered almost immediately after, and was treated
-with unexpected clemency by the victor.
-
-The courage of Zenobia entirely deserted her when she heard the angry
-cries of the soldiers, who clamoured for her immediate execution. She
-threw the entire guilt of her obstinate resistance upon her friends and
-counsellors, and the celebrated Longinus, amongst others, fell a victim
-to the emperor's rage.
-
-Vhaballathus, the only surviving son of Zenobia, withdrew into Armenia,
-where he ruled over a small principality granted him by Aurelian.
-
-When the emperor returned to Rome, in the following year (A.D. 274),
-he celebrated, after the manner of Roman conquerors, a magnificent
-triumph in honour of his many victories over the Goths, the Alemanni,
-Tetricus, and Zenobia. Elephants, royal tigers, panthers, bears,
-armed gladiators, military standards, and war-chariots passed in
-succession. But the great object of attention was the Eastern queen,
-who, completely laden with golden fetters, a gold chain, supported by
-a slave, round her neck, her limbs bending beneath the weight of the
-jewels with which she was decked, was compelled to precede, on foot,
-the triumphal car in which, not many months previously, she had hoped
-to enter the gates of Rome as a conqueror.
-
-After the conclusion of his triumph, Aurelian presented Zenobia with
-an elegant villa at Tibur (or Tivoli), about twenty miles from the
-capital; and here she passed the rest of her days as a Roman matron.
-She died about the year 300. Her daughters married into wealthy and
-noble families; some say, indeed, that Aurelian espoused one of them;
-and the family was not extinct even in the fifth century. Baronius
-supposes Zenobius, Bishop of Florence, in the days of Saint Ambrose, to
-have been one of the great queen's descendants.
-
-Amongst the numberless captives--Sarmatians, Alemanni, Goths, Vandals,
-Gauls, Franks, Dacians, Syrians, Arabs, Egyptians--who unwillingly
-graced the triumph of Aurelian, were ten Gothic women, captured in a
-battle between the Goths and Romans when the emperor was driving the
-barbarians out of Italy. Each party was distinguished in the procession
-by its own, or by some fancy name; these Gothic females were designated
-"Amazons." Besides these prisoners, many Gothic women and girls, in
-male attire, had been found dead on the field of battle.
-
-Hunila, or Hunilda, one of these Gothic women, was afterwards married
-to Bonosus, a wealthy and influential Roman general, Governor of
-Rhaetia. She was admired and distinguished amongst her new friends
-for her beauty, wit, and virtue. But the _ci-devant_ Amazon kept
-up communications with her own countrymen; and Bonosus, promised
-assistance by his wife's relations, assumed the purple. For a few
-months his authority extended over Gaul, Spain and Britain; but at last
-he was conquered by the Emperor Probus. To avoid falling into the hands
-of the victor, he put an end to his own life by hanging; whereupon some
-wit, alluding to his favourite vice (for Bonosus, they say, could drink
-as much as ten strong men) remarked that "there hung a bottle, not a
-man."
-
-Probus spared the life of Hunila, and granted her an annual pension for
-the rest of her days; he permitted her sons to enjoy their paternal
-estate.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mavia, Queen of Pharan, another of those troublesome women who defied
-the Roman emperors, was by birth a Roman, and by education a Christian.
-When very young she was carried away by a troop of Arabs, who brought
-her to their prince, Obedien, King of Pharan. The latter, who was
-himself a Christian, charmed by the beauty of his captive, made her his
-wife. At his death Mavia became sole ruler of Pharan. Placing herself
-at the head of a numerous army, A.D. 373, she invaded Palestine, and
-advancing as far as Phoenicia, defeated the forces of the emperors
-Valentinian, Valens, and Gratian in a series of battles extending over
-some months. The Roman governor of Phoenicia, unable to make head
-against the invader, was compelled to seek assistance of the general
-commanding the Eastern emperor's forces. The latter came speedily
-to his aid, and after bragging much and loudly of what he would do,
-engaged in battle with Mavia. He was signally beaten, his army cut to
-pieces, and he had to fly ignominiously.
-
-After this victory the Queen of Pharan gained many another battle,
-and she proved herself so dangerous an opponent that the Romans were
-compelled to sue for peace. Peace was at last concluded, on the
-condition (dictated by Mavia) that the anchorite Moses should be sent
-as bishop to Pharan. Having thus destroyed idolatry in Pharan, the
-queen remained for the rest of her days in friendly relationship with
-the Romans, to one of whom, Count Victor, she gave her daughter in
-marriage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Towards the close of the fourth century, one of the Sapors, King of
-Persia, invaded Armenia, which for many years previously had maintained
-its independence. He was resolutely opposed by King Tiranus and his
-wife Pharandsem, or Olympias; but after valiantly defending his throne
-for nearly four years, Tiranus was deserted by his nobles and compelled
-to surrender.
-
-Armenia was once more reduced into a Persian province, and divided
-between two of Sapor's favourites. The city of Artogerassa was the only
-stronghold which still dared to resist the Persians. It was defended
-by Pharandsem. The Persians were surprised and routed under the walls
-by a bold and concerted sortie of the besieged; but the former were
-constantly reinforced, while the latter steadily diminished in numbers,
-through famine and disease, rather than by the weapons of the foe.
-After a siege of fourteen months the city was compelled to surrender.
-Pharandsem, with her own hand, flung open the gates, when she was
-seized by the victors, and, by order of Sapor, impaled.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
- THE ARABS--Henda, Wife of Abu Sofian, an Arab Chief--Forka,
- an Arabian Lady--Women of Yemaumah--Arab and Greek heroines
- at the Siege of Damascus--Khaullah--Prefect of Tripoli's
- Daughter--Ayesha, Widow of the Prophet--Cahina the Sorceress,
- Queen of the Berbers--Saidet, Queen of Persia--Turkhan-Khatun,
- Sultana of Kharezme--Hadee'yah a Maiden who precedes the Bedouin
- Arabs in Battle.
-
-
-THE ARABS, even in "the days of their ignorance," were always a brave,
-warlike people. Their liberty, almost the only wealth they possessed,
-was jealously guarded with such courage and determination, that
-the greatest nations of antiquity were unable to subdue them. With
-the preaching of Mohammed began the glorious days of Arabia. Their
-semi-obscurity as a nation, hitherto, had been due solely to the want
-of some common bond of union, some link to bind together the princes
-of the various tribes. But when there was one leader to rally round,
-one faith to propagate, one Paradise for those who fell in conquering
-the heathen, the wild children of the Desert proved that they could
-conquer foreign countries as well as defend their native sands. During
-the early days of Islamism, a vast number of women, many belonging to
-the highest rank, followed their relatives to battle, and fought for or
-against the Koran as bravely as the men--nay, more than once it was the
-valour of the Arab women that retrieved the fortunes of the day.
-
-The Prophet had many obstacles to overcome before converting the
-great majority of his countrymen to the new faith. Scarcely had he
-promulgated his new doctrines, and gathered round him a few faithful
-adherents, when the neighbouring chiefs rose up, sword in hand, to
-stifle the new movement, ere it attained more dangerous dimensions.
-His principal opponent during the first few years of the Hegira was
-Abu Sofian, chief of the Koreishites, who were, to a man, idolators.
-The first military exploit of the Islamites was despoiling a wealthy
-caravan, led by that great chieftain, in the valley of Bedar. Abu
-Sofian, with three thousand soldiers, avenged this insult on Mount
-Ohud, where the Prophet, who had only nine hundred and fifty men,
-was defeated and wounded; barely escaping with his life. In this
-action, fought in the third year of the Hegira (A.D. 611), Henda, the
-wife of Abu Sofian, commanded the reserve of the Koreishites. She was
-accompanied by fifteen other women, of high rank. By exhortation and
-singing they animated the men to fight well. Indeed, the ultimate
-success of Abu Sofian was due, in a great measure, to their presence.
-
-Another of Mohammed's early opponents was Forka, an Arab lady
-possessing a castle and immense wealth. She was a kind of feudal
-peeress, and retained a body of soldiers to defend her domain. For
-some years she defied the Islamites; but at last Zeid, one of the
-principal Moslem leaders, was despatched to seize her castle. Forka
-defended herself for some time with obstinacy and resolution; but,
-after a troublesome and lengthy siege, the fortress was taken by storm,
-and Forka was slain, together with the best part of the garrison. Her
-daughter, with all her wealth, became the prey of the victors.
-
-The rapid success of Mohammed induced many Arabs to take up the
-prophetic office on their own account; imitators arose in various parts
-of Arabia, sometimes achieving a temporary success almost rivalling
-that of Mohammed. The most successful was named Mosseylemah, whose
-head-quarters were the city and suburbs of Yemaumah. During the
-life-time of Mohammed, little notice was taken of this rival by the
-"true believers;" but after the death of _the_ Prophet, A.D. 632, the
-Caliph Abubeker despatched Khaled, "the Sword of God," with a large
-force to capture Yemaumah. Mosseylemah and nearly all his followers
-were slain in a fierce action fought near the city. Mujaia, one of the
-impostor's principal officers, who had been made prisoner before the
-battle, wishing to save his fellow-citizens from total extermination,
-told Khaled that the city was still crowded with brave warriors ready
-to shed the last drop of blood in defence of their homes; and he
-recommended the Arab general to open negotiations at once. Leaving the
-latter to consider his advice, Mujaia found means to communicate with
-the inhabitants, whom he sent word to arm all the women and girls in
-helmets and mail, and to distribute them, armed with spears and swords,
-on the walls.
-
-Khaled perceiving the ramparts bristling with arms, began to fear that
-an assault on a stronghold so well defended might become an enterprise
-of some magnitude. So--though contrary to his pet war-cry, "No quarter
-given, and none received,"--the ruthless Islamite thought it best to
-accept a capitulation on comparatively mild terms.
-
-On entering Yemaumah, Khaled soon saw the deception practised upon him.
-But, with a generosity of which he was not often guilty, he permitted
-the people to enjoy the benefits of the treaty.
-
-During the siege of Damascus by Khaled, A.D. 633, several instances
-occurred of female heroism, both on the side of the Arabs and that of
-the Greeks. One day the governor of Damascus marched out to dislodge
-the besiegers; the latter, pretending to fly, led the Greeks to a
-considerable distance from the city. Then turning upon the foe, they
-assailed him on every side. Seffwaun the Salmian, a distinguished
-Moslem chief, seeing a Greek officer conspicuous for the splendour of
-his armour, knocked him down with a blow of his mace. He was about to
-strip the fallen chief, when he found himself fiercely attacked by the
-widow, who had accompanied her husband into battle, and whose death
-she now prepared to avenge. Seffwaun, wishing to avoid the dishonor
-of shedding the blood of a woman, contrived by dexterous manipulation
-of his sword to frighten his frail antagonist without wounding her or
-being himself wounded. She was soon compelled to retire for safety
-behind the swords and spears of her friends.
-
-Another day some Arab women were captured by the Greeks during one of
-the skirmishes. While the Greeks were carousing in their tents, a girl
-named Khaullah, one of the prisoners, urged her sisters in captivity to
-arm themselves with tent-poles, and brain anybody who approached them.
-She set the example by shattering the skull of a Greek soldier who was
-so imprudent as to venture within reach of her arm. A general conflict
-ensued; ending by Khaled and several Arab horsemen coming to the rescue
-and carrying off the Islamite damsels.
-
-Either this heroine, or another of the same name afterwards turned the
-fortunes of the day in the battle of Yermouks, which decided the fate
-of Syria. The Arabs, far out-numbered by the Greeks, fled to their
-tents, and refused to stir, despite the alternate taunts or encouraging
-words of the women. The latter at last, in despair, armed themselves,
-and withstood the foe till night closed in to end the combat. Next day,
-led by Khaullah, sister of one of their principal commanders, the women
-again marched to the attack. In leading the van, Khaullah was struck
-down by a Greek; but Wafeira, her principal female friend, ran to her
-aid and cut off the soldier's head. The Arabs, shamed into their former
-courage by the noble conduct of the women, attacked the Christians with
-such fury that the latter were speedily routed, with a loss, it is
-said, of one hundred and fifty thousand slain and about fifty thousand
-made prisoners.
-
-Khaullah, the leading heroine of this fight, was afterwards married to
-the ill-starred Caliph Ali.
-
-In the year 647, Abdallah, the Moslem governor of Alexandria, crossed
-the Libyan Desert and appeared before the walls of Tripoli, at that
-time the most important city on the Coast of Barbary. After surprising
-and cutting to pieces several thousand Greeks who were marching to
-reinforce the garrison, the Arabs, frustrated in an attempt to storm
-the massive fortifications, prepared to lay formal siege. The city was
-strengthened very soon by Gregorius, the Greek prefect, who arrived
-at the head of one hundred and twenty thousand men. He rejected
-indignantly the option of the Koran or tribute. For several days both
-armies engaged in deadly combat, from dawn till the hour of noon, when,
-from fatigue and thirst caused by the blazing sun, they were compelled
-to seek shelter and refreshment.
-
-The daughter of Gregorius, a young girl of great beauty, fought by her
-father's side throughout every engagement. She had been trained from
-early youth to excel in warlike exercises; and by the splendour of her
-arms and apparel she was conspicuous amidst the dust and confusion
-of the fight. Gregorius, to excite his soldiers to deeds of bravery,
-offered her hand and one hundred thousand pieces of gold to the man who
-brought him the head of Abdallah, the Moslem general. When the Arabs
-heard this they compelled their leader to withdraw from the field.
-
-The Moslems, discouraged by the absence of their chief, were rapidly
-giving way; but the counsels of Zobeir, a brave Arab warrior, turned
-the fortunes of the day.
-
-"Retort on the infidels," cried he, "their ungenerous attempts.
-Proclaim throughout the ranks that the head of Gregorius will be repaid
-with his captive daughter, and the equal sum of one hundred thousand
-pieces of gold."
-
-This was accordingly proclaimed. At the same time Zobeir resorted to
-a stratagem which took the Greeks completely by surprise, and gained
-an easy victory for the Arabs. The contending armies having, as usual,
-separated after the engagement, were retiring to their respective
-camps overcome by fatigue, when the two Moslem chiefs, who had placed
-themselves in ambush with fresh troops, rushed out upon the exhausted
-Greeks and routed them with fearful slaughter. The prefect himself was
-slain by the hand of Zobeir; his daughter, while seeking revenge or
-death in the thick of the fight, was surrounded and captured.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ayesha, daughter of Caliph Abubeker, was the favourite wife of the
-Prophet. After the death of her husband she lived in retirement, for
-twenty years, at Medina. But she possessed a restless, ambitious
-spirit, and had no inclination for a life of repose and obscurity.
-After the sudden murder of Caliph Othman, in 654, when Ali was
-elected, she refused to acknowledge the latter, and declared her belief
-that he had a share in the murder of his predecessor. The nation,
-divided into opposing factions, was soon plunged into civil war. The
-malcontents, headed by Ayesha, assembled in thousands at Mecca, and
-marched thence to Bassorah, where they expected to find warm support.
-
-Arrived before Bassorah they were astounded to find the gates shut
-against them. Ayesha, mounted on a camel, advanced to the walls and
-harangued those assembled on the battlements. But she was old and
-crabbed, with sharp features and a shrill voice--rendered even more
-shrill by the rapidity with which she spoke,--so the people only
-laughed at her. The louder they laughed, the shriller her accents grew.
-They reproached her for riding forth, bare-faced, to foment dissension
-among the Faithful; and they jeered at her followers for bringing their
-old grandmother in place of their young and handsome wives.
-
-However, a number of the citizens were secretly in favour of the
-malcontents; and the friends of Ayesha seized the palace one dark
-night, bastinadoed the governor, plucked out his beard, and sent him
-back to his master. Great, however, was the dismay of Ayesha when the
-Caliph encamped one morning before Bassorah; but, resolved not to give
-way, she rejected the proposals of Ali, and plunged both armies into
-a fierce engagement before very well knowing what she was about. But
-terrified at the horrors of war, to which until this day she was almost
-a stranger, the old woman besought Kaub, who led her camel, to throw
-himself between the combatants. In trying to obey her command he was
-slain.
-
-The large white camel of Ayesha soon became the rallying-point of the
-insurgents, around which the fury of the battle concentrated. The
-reins were held alternately by the Modian Arabs, who chanted pieces of
-poetry; and it is said that out of the tribe of Benni Beiauziah alone
-not less than _two hundred and eighty_ lost a hand on this occasion.
-The howdah, pierced all over with arrows, had something the appearance
-of a porcupine or a giant pincushion.
-
-After the battle had raged for several hours, the Caliph, seeing
-plainly that it would go on so long as the camel remained alive,
-ordered his chiefs to direct all their efforts towards cutting down the
-beast. First one leg was cut off; but the camel maintained its erect
-position. Another leg was cut off; yet the animal remained immovable.
-For a moment the soldiers of Ali thought the camel was a sorcerer or a
-genie. But a third leg was cut off, and the camel sank to the ground.
-
-The battle soon ended; all resistance ceased when the insurgents knew
-that their leader was taken. Ali treated his prisoner with that true
-chivalry which had already sprung up amongst the Arabs. He sent her
-home to Medina, escorted by female attendants disguised as soldiers,
-and while he lived she was not permitted to meddle in politics. After
-the murder of Ali she resumed her former position. Many years after,
-when Moawyah wished to make the Caliphate hereditary in his family, he
-purchased the influence of Ayesha by the gift of a pair of bracelets
-valued at one hundred and fifty thousand dinars, or nearly seventy
-thousand pounds.
-
-The "Battle of the Camel," as it is generally styled by Oriental
-historians, was fought in December, A.D. 656, (A.H. 36.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the reign of Caliph Abdul-Malek the Islamites in northern Africa
-found a most formidable opponent in Cahina the sorceress, Queen of the
-Berbers. Under the lead of this pseudo-prophetess, the original natives
-of Barbary made a determined stand for many years against the Koran.
-
-Cahina directed her followers to lay waste the lands that lay between
-Egypt and her dominions, telling them that it was the fruitfulness of
-those districts which caused the Arab invasions. Her commands were only
-too faithfully executed. Cities, towns, and villages were destroyed;
-fields desolated, trees cut down, and the entire face of the land
-changed from a beautiful garden planted with waving palms and lovely
-flowers, into an arid waste with scarcely a tree or blade of grass to
-be seen.
-
-But this scheme ultimately proved the ruin of Cahina. The natives
-of the ruined districts joyfully welcomed the Moslems on their next
-invasion. Cahina again took the field with all her forces; but her
-ranks this time were thinned by desertion. She was speedily defeated
-and made prisoner with her principal advisers. Rejecting the proposals
-of the Arab general--the Koran or tribute--her head was cut off, put in
-a camphor-scented casket of great price, and sent to the Caliph.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Although Persia was one of the earliest conquests effected by the
-followers of Islam, scarcely two centuries had elapsed before it was
-divided into a number of independent states, ruled by Arab, Turkish,
-or Persian princes. Towards the close of the tenth century, Queen
-Seidet, widow of one of these independent monarchs, governed the state
-as regent for her son, who was a minor. She ruled with so much wisdom,
-and under her guidance the kingdom flourished so greatly, that she had
-every reason to be offended when her son, grown old enough to take the
-reins of government, appointed Avicenna, the family physician, to be
-his Grand Vizier, and committed everything into his hands. Avicenna
-treated the queen with so little respect that the latter retired from
-court, raised troops, and marched against her son, whose forces she
-easily routed. Not wishing, however, to deprive him of the throne, she
-merely acted as his chief adviser, and aided him with salutary counsels
-so long as she lived.
-
-Sultan Mahmoud, founder of the Gaznevide dynasty, held Seidet in the
-deepest respect. While she lived he refrained from attacking her son's
-dominions; but after her death he annexed them without scruple.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In these days few persons, save students of Oriental history, have
-even so much as heard of Kharezme, in Tartary; yet in the eleventh
-and twelfth centuries it was considered by surrounding nations as the
-most powerful state in Asia, and its court the most magnificent. At
-the beginning of the thirteenth century, it was actually, although not
-nominally, governed by Turkhan Khatun, mother of the reigning Sultan.
-In those days the Mongols, under the irresistible Jenghiz Khan, were
-advancing with rapid strides towards Europe. It was not long before
-they besieged the capital of Kharezme. The city held out for twelve
-months against the Mongol hordes commanded by the three sons of
-Jenghiz Khan. The inhabitants, male and female, made a defence worthy
-of their ancient fame. Even the women aided in the numberless sorties
-made from the city. But at last, despite their bravery, the place
-was taken by storm. Men and women alike fought hand to hand with the
-Mongols, and retired from street to street, till scarcely any remained
-alive.
-
-According to the lowest computation more than one hundred thousand
-Kharezmians were slain during the siege. The valour displayed by the
-women became so famous throughout Asia, that many Oriental historians,
-by way of accounting for it, gravely assert that the people of Kharezme
-were descended from the Amazons.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Palgrave, who travelled through Arabia in 1862-3, says that it is
-customary amongst the Bedouin Arabs, when they go into battle, to have
-their army preceded by a maiden of good family, styled a Hadee'yah,
-who rides on a camel into the midst of the fight, encouraging the men
-to fight bravely by reciting pieces of extempore poetry, satirical or
-heroic, as best suits the occasion. Very frequently the Hadee'yah is
-slain. Such was the fate of a brave girl, noted for her eloquence and
-gigantic stature, who led on the Amjan Bedouins at Koweyt rather more
-than twenty years ago, against Abd-Allah, heir to the throne of Nejed.
-This "Arabian Bellona" was slain by the lance of a Nejdean warrior, and
-her death is said to have been the principal cause of the final rout of
-the Amjan army.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
- Libyssa and Valasca, Queens of Bohemia--Wanda, Queen of
- Poland--Moors in Spain--Women of Tudmir--Female Knights
- of Tortosa--Alleged Origin of the word "Infantry"--Queen
- Carcas--Elfrida, Daughter of Alfred the Great--Igor, Grand Duchess
- of Russia--Richilda, Countess of Hainault.
-
-
-EUROPE, during the two or three centuries after the downfall of the
-Roman Empire, bears a strong resemblance to Greece during the heroic
-age. In the Nibelungen, the Iliad of those days, we read of godlike
-heroes, Herculean warriors, giant princes, and Amazon queens. That was
-an age when might constituted right, when rulers led their own armies
-in the field, where the lead was given to the strongest or the most
-daring.
-
-The Salique law seems in those days to have been very generally
-disregarded--if indeed it had been introduced as yet; for we read of
-more than one queen who ruled alone over the more or less barbarous
-kingdoms of Europe. AEneas Sylvius narrates how a warlike queen named
-Libyssa ascended the throne of Bohemia on the death of her father,
-King Crocus. Her husband, Przemislas, whom she espoused in 632,
-being originally only a peasant, was probably a humble, weak-minded
-individual, ruled by his wife; for the queen proceeded to enrol the
-greater number of her female subjects into a species of militia. They
-were trained, like the Amazons, to the use of arms and to ride on
-horseback. After the death of Libyssa, the narrator further says that
-the principal favourite of the queen, Valasca, with the assistance of
-the female troops, seized the throne, and held it until her death,
-which occurred seven years later. Resolved to form a nation of Amazons,
-Valasca passed a law that all male children should have their right
-eyes put out and their thumbs cut off, to keep them from using bow and
-arrows. And this barbarous order was rigorously enforced while Valasca
-lived, the men not daring to raise any complaint. The demise of this
-Amazon-queen soon restored everything to its natural order.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wanda, the first Queen-Regnant of Poland, was unanimously elected by
-the people on the death of her father, Cracus, about the year 700. She
-was a talented woman, and esteemed herself fully capable of conducting
-the government without the assistance of a husband. To the numerous
-offers of marriage she received, a refusal was the invariable answer.
-At last Rudiger, a German prince, hoping to bring about a happy union
-by force of arms, invaded Poland with a great army.
-
-Wanda raised troops, and advanced to meet the invaders. When the
-opposing armies came in sight, Rudiger, believing that his warlike
-preparations must needs have terrified the queen, besought her to
-accept him, and thus save the lives of their soldiers. Wanda answered
-that no man should ever share her throne, because he would love her
-kingdom better than herself. When this spirited answer was spread
-amongst Rudiger's officers, they refused to fight against so heroic a
-queen. Surrounding the prince, they endeavoured to dissuade him from
-risking a battle; but finding their remonstrances vain, they refused to
-second his efforts, and Rudiger, in despair, flung himself on his sword.
-
-Wanda returned in triumph to Cracow. She never received another
-proposal of marriage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the year 711 the Moors, commanded by Tarik, crossed the Straits of
-Gibraltar and invaded Spain. Even after the defeat and death of their
-king, the Goths disputed every foot of ground before giving way to the
-Infidels. The latter, impeded at every step, were glad to grant peace
-on almost any terms. One of the principal Gothic leaders was Theodomir,
-or Tudmir Ben Gobdas, a Spanish noble belonging to one of the most
-honourable families in the land. He possessed large estates in the
-South, and his authority over them was so great that not only was the
-district named after him, the Land of Tudmir, but he was styled King.
-Having been totally routed in a battle, when the greater number of his
-soldiers were slain, he escaped to the fortified citadel of Tudmir,
-where he was soon besieged by the Moors.
-
-Finding his position grow daily more and more untenable, Theodomir
-resorted to an expedient, already practised by the people of Yemaumah
-when besieged by Khaled. He commanded all the women to put on male
-attire, to tie their hair under their chin (to imitate long beards),
-and to appear, armed with bows and arrows, lances, swords, and shields,
-on the towers and battlements, in sight of the Moors. He himself, with
-his few remaining soldiers, stood in front, to conceal as much as
-possible these feminine guards.
-
-The Moors, overrating the strength of the garrison, offered Theodomir
-advantageous terms, which he accepted. Although they afterwards
-discovered the fraud, the Infidels scrupulously observed the treaty.
-
-The women of Tortosa distinguished themselves so highly in some
-skirmishes with the Moors, that a military Order of Knighthood was
-conferred upon them.
-
-The word "Infantry" is said to owe its origin to one of the Spanish
-Infantas, who, hearing that her father had been defeated by the Moors,
-raised a body of foot-soldiers, and placing herself at their head,
-defeated the infidels. In memory of her bravery, foot-soldiers were
-henceforth styled Infantry.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Moors never could obtain a footing north of the Pyrenees; yet,
-despite the invariable want of success attending their attempts,
-they made constant incursions into France, besieging towns, burning
-villages, and ravaging the open country. Amongst other cities besieged
-by them was Carcassonne, situated on the banks of the river Aude,
-governed in those days by queen Carcas, famous for her military
-prowess. When Charlemagne, a few years previously, besieged the city,
-it was defended so courageously that he permitted the queen to retain
-the sovereignty.
-
-The Saracens, ridiculing the notion of a female warrior, declared that,
-in place of fighting, she ought to be spinning. This contemptuous
-speech, spoken immediately under the city walls, was overheard by queen
-Carcas. Arming herself with a lance, to which, as if it had been a
-distaff, she attached a quantity of hemp, she set the hemp on fire,
-and rushed into the midst of the Saracens, who fled, terrified, in all
-directions.
-
-The shield and lance of queen Carcas may yet be seen at Carcassonne.
-Over the city gate there is an effigy of the royal heroine, with the
-inscription "Carcas sum."
-
- * * * * *
-
-While the South of Europe was overrun by the Saracens, England,
-Ireland, and Scotland were harassed by the terrible Danes, who for
-several centuries kept these islands in constant terror. The most
-powerful opponent of the Danes in England was, as everyone knows, King
-Alfred the Great. During the latter years of his reign, the land was
-tolerably secure from invasion; but after his death the Vikings and
-their wild followers came swarming over the country again, burning,
-plundering, massacring, just as they had done before Alfred drove
-them away. Elfrida, the eldest daughter of King Alfred, inherited all
-her father's courage and warlike spirit, and, like him, proved an
-implacable foe to the Danes. She was married early to Ethelred, Earl
-of Mercia; and on his death the government of the province devolved
-upon the widow. And nobly did she fulfil her trust. Mercia was greatly
-harassed by the Danes--as, indeed, was the entire country in those
-days. The Welsh joined in alliance with the invaders, and would have
-marched to their aid but for the promptitude of Elfrida, who entered
-Wales, 916, at the head of an army, and took Brecknock by storm,
-capturing therein Queen Anghared and many of her attendants. The "Lady
-of Mercia" had another motive in this invasion, which rendered Wales
-tributary to the Saxons; and this motive was the desire to avenge the
-death of the good Abbot Egbert, whom the Welsh had slain.
-
-King Owen fled to Derby, where he was kindly received by the Danes.
-When Elfrida learned this she marched thither, and captured the city
-"before Lammas," 918. So reckless was she of her own safety on this
-memorable day, that it had almost proved to be her last. Pressing
-at the head of her troops through the narrow gateway where a vast
-multitude of Danes barred the way, many of her principal officers were
-struck down, and four of her guards were slain by the hand of the Welsh
-king. Gwynne, lord of Ely, and steward of Elfrida, perceiving the
-danger of the princess, set the gates on fire, and rushed furiously
-upon the Welsh and Danes, who gave way before his onslaught.
-
-Owen, unable to escape, preferred to fall by his own hand than yield
-himself prisoner to a woman.
-
-Two years later, in 920, Elfrida recaptured Leicester and York from the
-Danes; and besides repairing the fortifications of the former city,
-encompassed it with a massive wall of such strength that Matthew Paris
-styles it _indissoluble_.
-
-Shortly after this, and before the war was over, Elfrida died at
-Tamworth, in Staffordshire, leaving an unmarried daughter named
-Elswina. She was buried at Gloucester, in the porch of St. Peter's
-monastery, a building erected at her own expense.
-
-This heroine has been praised by all the old historians for her
-prudence, courage, and talent for governing. Ingulphus says that
-considering the great actions of her life, the cities she built, the
-castles she fortified, and the armies she raised, Elfrida "might have
-been thought a man." She was generally styled queen by the Mercians,
-who regarded themselves as her subjects.
-
- * * * * *
-
-According to tradition it was the same wild Vikings, the terror of our
-land, who founded the mighty Russian empire; and their successors,
-the Grand Dukes and Czars, have ever since retained that thirst for
-conquest which distinguished the roving Normans. The Grand Duke Igor
-was one of the first among the successors of Rurik who caused the
-Russian standard to be feared by surrounding states. After subduing
-most of the neighbouring towns, his victorious career was suddenly
-brought to a close in 945, during an expedition against the Drevlians,
-by whom he was surrounded, and put to the sword with all his troops.
-
-Igor was succeeded by his son Sviatoslaf, the first Christian sovereign
-of Russia. The prince being too young to conduct the government, his
-mother, Olga, undertook the regency. The Drevlians, fancying the royal
-widow would be easily intimidated, sent to demand her in marriage for
-their prince. But Olga, after causing their ambassadors to be slain
-(by various quaint stratagems which Nestor has preserved) called out
-her troops, placed herself at their head, and marched against the
-Drevlians, taking her son with her to teach him the art of war. After
-destroying all the towns and villages of the enemy, she laid siege
-to Karosten, their capital, which was built entirely of wood--the
-very name signifying "wall of bark." Finding the city too strong and
-too well defended, she made proposals of peace to the inhabitants,
-declaring that she would be satisfied with three sparrows and a pigeon
-from each house, as tribute. The people joyfully complied, and sent
-the birds to the Russian camp. Olga caused the birds to be let loose,
-with lighted torches tied to their tails; they, of course, flew back
-to their nests in the house-eaves of Karosten. The town was soon in
-a blaze from end to end. The terrified inhabitants, flying to escape
-the flames, were met by the swords and lances of the Russians. The
-Drevlian prince and his court perished in the massacre, as indeed, did
-nearly every one in the city, save the dregs of the population.
-
-Having glutted her thirst for revenge, Olga made a progress through
-Russia, taking Sviatoslaf with her. Towns and villages arose at her
-command, taxation was regulated on a better footing; and by various
-measures highly beneficial to the prosperity of the country, the
-Grand Duchess proved herself a most able ruler. In 955 she went to
-Constantinople to be baptised a Christian, and in the course of a
-few years the Greek faith spread through the land, and paganism was
-abolished.
-
-When Sviatoslaf grew old enough to rule his own dominions, Olga
-resigned the reins of government. She lived in retirement for several
-years, and died in 968 at an advanced age.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Middle Ages, chemistry and mathematics were things known to few
-people except the monks; any man who studied the sciences was styled
-an alchemist, and suspected of being in league with the Evil One. When
-it was a woman who gave herself up to learned studies, the people
-could scarcely be withheld from tearing "the sorceress" to pieces.
-Occasionally, however, despite what the world said, noble ladies,
-especially on the Continent, did apply their minds to what in those
-days went by the name of the Black Art. Amongst these was Richilda,
-Countess of Hainault, who married Baldwin the Good, eldest son of
-Baldwin, Marquis of Flanders, one of whose daughters, Matilda, became
-the wife of William the Conqueror, and another of Tosti Godwinsson, son
-of the powerful Earl Godwin. The fame of Richilda as a wicked sorceress
-caused her to be anything but a favourite in the country; and when her
-husband died, Robert le Frison, Count of Friesland, and brother of the
-deceased, endeavoured to wrest Flanders from her young son Arnulf, or
-Arnoul, who was little more than a boy. William the Conqueror espoused
-the cause of Richilda, and sent over Fitz-Osbern, Earl of Hereford,
-the tyrant of the Welsh, to her aid. The Countess also implored the
-assistance of her liege lord, the king of France.
-
-A battle took place on St. Peter's Day, 1071, at Bavinchorum, near
-Cassel; Richilda and Fitz-Osbern commanded their troops in person. The
-left wing of the foe was routed, and Robert le Frison made prisoner and
-sent to St. Omer. But this success was counterbalanced by the death of
-Fitz-Osbern and young Arnoul. Richilda's forces fled in confusion, and
-the heroine was made prisoner.
-
-An exchange was effected, by which Richilda and the Frison regained
-their liberty. The countess immediately set about raising fresh troops
-to avenge the death of her boy. The contending armies met again;
-this time at Broqueroi, near Mons, where the troops of Richilda were
-routed with so terrible a slaughter that the scene of the conflict was
-afterwards known under the name of "the Hedges of Death." All hope now
-fled the breast of Richilda. Escaping from the field, she took refuge
-in a convent, where the rest of her days were passed under the severest
-penances--to atone, as folks said, for her past dealings with the
-Prince of Darkness.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
- The Crusades--French, German, and Genoese Amazons--Eleonora of
- Aquitaine--Matilda of Boulogne--Empress Maud--Aldrude, Countess
- of Bertinoro--Empress Constantia--Nichola de Camville (Barons'
- Wars)--Blanche of Castille, Queen-Regent of France--Women of
- Culm--Blanche de Rossi--Black Agnes, Countess of March--Countess
- de Montfort--Julia du Guesclin--Jane de Belleville, Lady of
- Clisson--Marzia--Margaret, Queen of Denmark, Norway, and
- Sweden, the Semiramis of the North--Fair Maiden Lilliard (Chevy
- Chase)--Lady Pelham--Philippa, Queen of Denmark.
-
-
-IT would be difficult at the present day to appreciate the wild
-enthusiasm spread throughout Europe by the preaching of Peter the
-Hermit. Thousands from all classes--kings, princes, nobles, priests,
-peasants, beggars, all alike impelled by the same blind impulse, many
-amongst them scarcely knowing where they were going or for what they
-went to fight,--hastened to take up arms against the Infidel. The
-enthusiasm was not, as it would probably in our days, confined to one,
-nor even to three or four nations. "There were men," says Robert of
-Gloucester:--
-
- "Of Normandy, of Denmark, of Norway, of Bretagne,
- Of Wales, and of Ireland, of Gascony, of Spain,
- Of Provence, of Saxony, and of Allemayne,
- Of Scotland, and of Greece, of Rome and Aquitaine."
-
-Ay, and women too. The first Crusading armies which set out in the
-spring of 1096, commanded by Peter the Hermit, Gaultier-sans-Avoir, and
-other leaders of less reputation, comprised nearly as many women as
-men. Even where they did not contend hand to hand with the Saracens,
-these heroines cheered the warriors by marching with them in the ranks,
-by carrying food and ammunition to the battle-field, by speaking with
-enthusiasm of the cause for which they had armed. It was, indeed,
-owing as much to the courage and endurance of the women, who suffered
-without a murmur the miseries of cold, hunger, and want of clothing,
-as to their own indomitable bravery that the Templars owed the capture
-of Antioch. William of Tyre, speaking of the grand review held before
-Nice in 1099, says that exclusive of the cavalry, who, to the number of
-one hundred thousand were well armed in helmets and mail, there were
-found six hundred thousand Crusaders of both sexes, many of them little
-children.
-
-When the second Crusade was preached, many ladies, especially in France
-and Germany, formed themselves into squadrons and regiments of Amazons,
-and assumed the arms and armour of the Templars. The commander of the
-German Amazons, who, says Michaud, was more admired for her dress
-than her courage, received the title of the "Golden Footed Dame," or
-the "Lady with the Golden Legs," on account of her magnificent gilded
-buskins and spurs. She enrolled her troop under the banner of the
-emperor Conrad, who started for the East 1147. The French Amazons were
-commanded by their queen, Eleonora of Aquitaine (afterwards wife of
-Henry II. of England). Forming themselves into a squadron of light
-cavalry, they went through a regular course of military training, and,
-by constant exercise, they acquired tolerable proficiency in the use of
-arms.
-
-Mezerai, speaking of these "squadrons of females," declares that by
-their valour they "rendered credible all that has been said of the
-prowess of the Amazons;" but, certes, those who followed King Louis
-to the Holy Land rendered themselves more notable for rashness and
-folly than manly courage. They set out in the year 1147, with the bold
-determination to share all the fatigues and brave all the dangers
-incident to a crusade; but their first essay in the presence of the
-enemy proved sufficient to put an end to their gallant resolutions and
-cover their leader with ridicule. The corps of Amazons, escorted by a
-band of sterner warriors commanded by a distinguished knight, had been
-sent on in advance, with strict orders from the king to encamp on the
-heights of Laodicea, and there await his arrival. They reached the spot
-as the sun was setting, and the black, dreary rocks appeared to the
-romantic, but inexperienced eye of Eleonora, an exceedingly uninviting
-situation for a resting place. With the haughty imperiousness of her
-nature, she insisted on turning aside to a beautiful valley watered
-by cool streams, and overshadowed by lofty palms, where, despite the
-warnings and expostulations of the brave captain who led her escort,
-she encamped.
-
-In this charming but unprotected dale they were soon attacked by a
-party of Saracens. King Louis arrived barely in time to save the corps
-of Amazons from capture. Compelled to hazard an engagement under
-peculiarly disadvantageous circumstances against an enemy who received
-reinforcements from moment to moment, Louis was so near being made
-prisoner as to be obliged to seek refuge in a tree. The Christians were
-victorious, but it was with heavy losses. Eleonora and her followers
-retired to the court of her cousin Raymond, Prince of Antioch, and
-there passed the rest of the season.
-
-While the Crusades lasted, ladies continued to accompany husbands
-and lovers to the East. In the arsenal of the palace at Genoa there
-are, or were some few years since, several light cuirasses, made for
-a band of Genoese ladies, who, towards the close of the thirteenth
-century, wished to join in a crusade against the Turks. However, by the
-entreaties of Pope Boniface VIII., who wrote an autograph letter for
-the purpose, they were persuaded to relinquish their design.
-
-Pierre Gentien, an old French poet, who flourished at the latter end of
-the thirteenth century, has left a species of epic in rhyme, wherein
-he describes a tournament held by certain noble dames who were about
-departing with the knights beyond the seas. In this poem the author,
-describing how the combatants, to acquire proficiency in the use of
-arms, disputed the prize of valour with all the courage and enthusiasm
-of the knights of those days, takes the opportunity to name forty or
-fifty, the most beautiful ladies of their time. His poem has been
-therefore admired rather as being a memoir of the old French families
-than for the excellence of the poetry.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The somewhat ridiculous termination to her first essay in presence of
-the foe did not entirely quench the military ardour of Eleonora of
-Aquitaine. After she had been for some years the wife of king Henry
-II., she stirred up her sons, Richard and John, to rebellion against
-their father; and went so far as to appear in masculine attire, at the
-head of their forces in Aquitaine. And thus clad, she was made prisoner.
-
-When Prince Arthur was prosecuting his claims on the English crown,
-Philip Augustus, the French king, sent him with a military retinue into
-Normandy, then in the hands of the English. The French barons laid
-siege to Mirebeau, a fortified town near Poitiers. It was defended for
-King John by Eleonora, who, though she had then attained the age of
-four-score, was as active as ever, and had only just returned from a
-journey into Spain--a matter of some difficulty in those days. When the
-French had captured the town, the veteran Amazon threw herself into a
-strong tower which served as a sort of citadel; and here she held out
-bravely till the arrival of John with reinforcements, on the night
-between July 31st and August 1, 1202; when the besiegers were compelled
-to surrender.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the wars between the Empress Maud and Stephen, the latter was
-ably seconded by his queen, Matilda of Boulogne. For the first five
-years of his usurpation, the king was disturbed only by the revolt of
-Baldwin, Earl of Exeter, and the invasion of David, King of Scotland.
-Matilda showed herself to be an able politician and a brave soldier.
-In June, 1137, she laid siege to Dover Castle, which had been seized by
-the rebels, and, at the same time, sent orders to her Boulogne subjects
-to blockade the fortress by sea.
-
-In July, 1139, the empress, escorted by her brother Robert, Earl of
-Gloucester, landed in England. After several battles, of which little
-is known, she defeated and captured King Stephen near Lincoln, 1141.
-The empress was at once proclaimed queen of England, and after sending
-Stephen in irons to Bristol, she entered London. Matilda made humble
-suit for the liberty of her lord, and offered, in his name, to resign
-all claim to the crown; but the empress refused, save on the petitioner
-also surrendering her inheritance of Boulogne. The queen refused;
-and with the assistance of William of Ypres, Stephen's talented but
-unpopular minister, she raised the standard of the king in Surrey and
-Kent, where a large party were in favour of the royal captive.
-
-"In the pages of superficially-written histories," remarks Miss
-Strickland, "much is said of the prowess and military skill displayed
-by Prince Eustace at this period; but Eustace was scarcely seven years
-old at the time when these efforts were made for the deliverance of his
-royal sire; therefore it is plain to those who reflect on the evidence
-of dates, that it was the high-minded and prudent queen, his mother,
-who avoided all Amazonian display by acting under the name of her son."
-
-The empress, being warned that the Londoners, weary of her insolence,
-had a mind to serve her as she had served Stephen, fled from the city
-by night, and laid siege to Winchester Castle. The men of London and
-Kent, headed by Matilda, Eustace, and William of Ypres, were soon at
-the city gates, and Maud was closely invested for several days in
-her palace. To escape the horrors of a city in flames, the empress
-feigned herself dead, and her body was conveyed to Gloucester. Robert,
-her brother, was made prisoner, and his liberty was purchased by the
-release of Stephen.
-
-From this time the fortunes of the empress rapidly declined. She was so
-closely invested in Oxford during the inclement weather of 1142, that
-she was compelled to dress herself and her attendants in white, which,
-as the ground was covered with snow, more readily escaped observation,
-and so steal away from the town. The war continued to rage with the
-utmost fury for the next five years; but Maud, weary at last of the
-miserable struggle, returned to Normandy in 1147.
-
-Queen Matilda died at Henningham Castle, in Essex, on May 3rd, 1151, a
-little more than three years before her husband. The empress outlived
-both her rivals, and died abroad, September 10th, 1167.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The famous contest between the Guelfs and the Ghibelines, which for
-nearly three hundred years devastated Italy, broke out early in the
-twelfth century. The struggle was at first hardly more than a feud
-between two powerful families; but it soon developed into an obstinate
-war between two political parties--the Guelfs, who formed the papal and
-Italian party, and the Ghibelines, who favoured the German Emperors.
-
-One of the leading events of this war was the siege of Ancona, in 1172,
-by the Archbishop of Mentz, Frederic Barbarossa's deputy in Italy,
-backed by all the power of Ghibeline Tuscany. The citizens, reduced
-to the direst extremities, applied for aid to William degli Adelardi,
-a noble and influential citizen of Ferrara, and to the Countess de
-Bertinoro. Aldrude, the countess, who belonged to the illustrious
-house of Frangipani, has been immortalized by the Italian writers of
-those days, on account of her personal beauty, her generosity, and the
-magnificence of her court, which was the favourite resort of Italian
-chivalry, poetry, and art. She was married young to the Count de
-Bertinoro, who died, and left her a widow in the bloom of youth.
-
-The Countess and Adelardi, with their combined forces, hastened to
-the relief of the beleaguered city, near which they arrived at sunset.
-Having pitched their camp on a hill overlooking the Ghibeline tents,
-the soldiers were assembled, and harangued with exciting speeches,
-which they received with loud applause, mingled with the clashing of
-arms. However, they gained a bloodless victory. The besiegers, alarmed
-at the strength of the foe, struck their tents, and retired under cover
-of night.
-
-The famished Anconians, relieved from the presence of the imperial
-army, received a fresh stock of provisions. They came out to thank the
-countess and her ally, and offered them magnificent presents.
-
-On her homeward march, the countess fell in with a party of retreating
-Ghibelines. Numerous skirmishes took place, in which the troops of
-Aldrude were uniformly victorious.
-
-The date of this heroine's death is unknown.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The designs of the Hohenstaufen on the throne of Sicily drew their
-attention for a time from Lombardy. Henry VI., who ascended the
-imperial throne of Germany on the death of his father, Frederick
-Barbarossa, established a claim on the crown of the Two Sicilies in
-right of his wife, the daughter of King Roger. Constantia became the
-rightful queen of Sicily on the death of William the Good in 1189;
-but the throne was usurped by Tancred, her natural brother. Henry
-invaded the Neapolitan states in 1191; but though successful at first,
-a terrible mortality in his camp compelled him to raise the siege of
-Naples and retire from the country.
-
-After the death of Tancred, his widow resigned all claim to the crown;
-stipulating that her infant son, William, should be left in possession
-of Tarentum. But the cruel and perfidious emperor, who had failed in
-all his attempts on Naples and Sicily during the life-time of the king,
-cast the boy into prison, after putting out his eyes, imprisoned the
-queen and the princesses in a convent, and carried the royal treasures
-to Germany.
-
-When the emperor returned to his own land, Naples and Sicily rose
-against his tyranny. Hastening back with a mighty army, Henry defeated
-the rebels, and commanded that the leaders should suffer the most
-excruciating tortures. Constantia, shocked at his barbarity, quarrelled
-with her husband, cast off her allegiance, and stirred up the Sicilians
-to a fresh rebellion. Thousands flocked to her standard, and the
-empress, at this time fifty years old, led them against the German
-troops. Henry, who had sent away most of his soldiers to the Holy
-Land, was defeated, and compelled to submit to the terms dictated by
-Constantia.
-
-The emperor died at Messina in 1197, shortly after the conclusion of
-the treaty, and his wife has been accused of administering poison,
-to rid her people of a cruel and vindictive tyrant. After his death,
-Constantia lived peacefully in Sicily as regent of the island and
-guardian of her infant son, the Emperor Frederick II. She died three
-years later, in the year 1200.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Returning to England, we find Dame Nichola de Camville, a noted heroine
-of those days, personally engaged on the royal side during the Barons'
-wars. Nichola de Hara, widow of Gerard, Lord Camville was co-sheriff
-for the county of Lincolnshire. She held the Castle of Lincoln for King
-John against Gilbert de Gaunt, who had captured the city; and after the
-death of John she defended it for his son, Henry III. Shortly after the
-death of King John, the Count de la Perche, a French knight commanding
-the Confederate Barons, marched to Lincoln at the head of six hundred
-knights and twenty thousand soldiers, and besieged the castle. It was
-defended by Dame Nichola till the arrival of the Earl of Pembroke in
-May, 1217, when the battle, afterwards known as "Lincoln Fair," quelled
-for a time the rebellion of the English barons, and established Henry
-III. on the throne.
-
-Turn which way we will, we see nothing but civil wars and struggles
-for supremacy between crowned heads and nobles. Crossing to France,
-some nine or ten years later, we find the great vassals of the throne
-conspiring to deprive Queen Blanche of the regency. However, Blanche
-of Castille was not a woman easily intimidated. At the head of a large
-army, she went with the young king (her son) to Brittany, the seat of
-the conspiracy. The malcontent nobles, not being prepared to meet the
-royal forces in the field, submitted for a time.
-
-In the following year, 1227, the royal troops defeated and captured
-Raymond, Count of Toulouse, leader of the Albigeois, and the queen
-treated her noble captive so harshly that the French lords again took
-up arms, led by the Duke of Brittany. Despite the severity of the
-winter, the queen-regent and her son marched into Brittany; and after
-surmounting terrible obstacles from the cold, and from the snow and
-ice, which stopped both roads and rivers, laid siege to the stronghold
-of Bellesme. This fortress which from the thickness of its walls, was
-supposed to be impregnable, had a garrison of Bretons, supported by a
-body of English auxiliaries. The besieged were in hopes that the royal
-army, horribly decimated by the severe weather, would be compelled
-soon to retire. But the queen was not the one to yield when she had
-once resolved on anything. To preserve her soldiers, hundreds of
-whom perished from the bitter cold, she caused immense fires to be
-kept constantly blazing, and offered high rewards to all who brought
-wood into camp. To encourage the men she slept in the open air by the
-bivouac fires, conversed with the troops, and encouraged officers and
-privates alike by her affability and condescension.
-
-Queen Blanche pressed the siege with unyielding determination. After
-two assaults had been made the great tower was dismantled, and the
-garrison surrendered. The Duke of Brittany was made prisoner, though,
-through motives of policy, he was speedily set at liberty. The queen
-next took Nantes and Acenis; and the revolt was brought to a close in
-1230 by the surrender of the Count de Marche.
-
-From the courage and military tact displayed by the queen during the
-siege of Bellesmes, she received the complimentary title of "the Great
-Captain."
-
-The regency of Blanche ended in 1235, and Louis IX. took the government
-into his own hands; but she again took up the regency in 1248, when her
-son set forth on his crusade. She died in 1252, before St. Louis came
-home from his ill-starred expedition.
-
-So deep was the respect entertained for the memory of Blanche of
-Castille, that many of the queen-dowagers of France assumed the surname
-of Blanche, as the Roman emperors took the title of Augustus.
-
-Until the thirteenth century, Prussia was inhabited by heathen
-barbarians. In 1226, Conrad of Masovia gave the Teutonic Knights a
-strip of land on the Vistula, that they might protect Poland from the
-Prussian savages. For more than half a century the knights carried on
-a war of extermination against the natives; again and again were the
-Prussian tribes vanquished, again and again they rebelled. In 1240 a
-general insurrection of greater magnitude burst forth, and nearly all
-the knights were massacred. Those who escaped--principally the Knights
-of the Cross--took refuge in the castles of Thorn, Reden, and Culm,
-where they were soon beleaguered by the Prussians. The knights in
-Culm were induced by a stratagem to come out, when they fell into an
-ambuscade, and were all slain. The city would have fallen had not the
-women closed the gates, clad themselves in mail, and mounted the walls
-with spears in their hands. The Prussians, deceived by this stratagem,
-withdrew their forces, believing that Culm was still strongly
-garrisoned by sturdy knights.
-
-Prussia was at last converted to Christianity, and adopted the manners
-and customs of Germany, of which it is now the leading State.
-
-The contests between the Guelfs and Ghibelines proved fatal to Italian
-liberty. Might became right, tyrants arose on every side, and either
-by open force or by fraud, possessed themselves of the sovereign power
-in some one of the Lombardian cities and the adjacent territories.
-The various military leaders, whether Italians or Germans, were mere
-freebooters, accountable to no one for their acts, permitting the
-utmost license to themselves and their followers. One of the most
-infamous of these mercenaries was Acciolin, who was not a brutal and
-rapacious robber, but a man of refined cruelty. His favourite mode of
-torture was to fasten his prisoners to half-putrified corpses, and
-leave the living and the dead to rot away together.
-
-In 1253, this fiend in human shape captured Bassano by storm, after a
-tiresome siege. The garrison was commanded by John Baptista de Porta,
-who was either governor or lord of the place. Blanche de Rossi, his
-wife, a native of Padua, put on armour, mounted the ramparts, and
-fought by the side of her husband. When the town fell the governor
-was slain, and Blanche, after making a desperate resistance, was made
-prisoner and led in triumph before Acciolin. Directly the villain set
-eyes upon his beautiful captive, he was seized with a violent passion
-for her; and to escape him, she sprang, clad as she was in armour,
-through a window. But in place of death, she only met with a sprained
-shoulder. Directly she recovered from her swoon the tyrant sent for
-her again, and finding his renewed protestations were repulsed with
-loathing, he obtained by force what was denied to his prayers. Blanche
-then withdrew to the place where her husband's body had been thrown,
-and flinging herself into the open grave, was crushed to death by the
-falling earth and stones.
-
-In the year 1333, King Edward III., espousing the cause of Edward
-Baliol, invaded Scotland. The battle of Hallidon Hill, July 29th, in
-which the Regent Douglas was defeated, placed Baliol on the throne;
-and Edward, carried away by his ambitious designs upon the French
-throne, left his army in charge of the Earls of Arundel and Salisbury,
-and returned to England. Montague, Earl of Salisbury, laid siege to
-the castle of Dunbar, a place of great importance, esteemed as the
-key of Scotland, on the south-east border. It had been fortified
-very recently; and in the absence of the Earl of March, was defended
-by the countess, who, from the dark colour of her complexion, was
-popularly styled "Black Agnes." She was the daughter of Randolph, Earl
-of Moray, and inherited from her father a fierce, intrepid spirit.
-During the five months' siege she performed all the duties of a bold
-and skilful commander, and the garrison had the utmost confidence in
-her abilities. Constantly on the ramparts, she derided the English with
-biting sarcasms. When the battering-engines hurled stones against the
-walls, she scornfully told one of her female attendants to wipe off the
-dust with her handkerchief.
-
-The Earl of Salisbury knew well the kind of foe he had to deal with.
-One day he was superintending the siege operations, when an arrow from
-the castle whizzed past and struck a knight who stood by, piercing
-through his chain-mail haubergeon, and killing him on the spot.
-
-"There comes one of my lady's tire-pins," exclaimed the Earl. "Agnes's
-love-shafts go straight to the heart!"
-
-A monster called the "sow," a huge engine covered with hides, somewhat
-resembling the testudo of the Romans, was at last rolled to the foot
-of the walls. When the countess saw this ponderous machine coming, she
-cried in a loud, mocking voice:--
-
-"Montague, beware! your sow shall soon cast her pigs!"
-
-She quickly verified her words by hurling an immense piece of rock upon
-the "sow," crushing both it and its occupants to pieces.
-
-Salisbury finding he could not succeed by fair means, bribed the
-gate-keeper to leave the gates open on the following night. The porter
-disclosed this to the countess, who directed him to keep to his bargain
-and say nothing about it. The Earl, who commanded the party that were
-to seize the castle, rode through the darkness at the head of his
-soldiers, found the gates open according to agreement, and was about
-to enter, when one of his men, John Copeland, passed in front of him.
-The portcullis was suddenly dropped; Copeland, mistaken for his master,
-remained a prisoner. The Earl was saved by his men, who dragged him
-back just in time. Agnes, from a high turret, saw that the general had
-escaped.
-
-"Farewell, Montague!" she cried. "I intended that you should have
-supped with us to-night, and assisted in defending the fortress against
-the English."
-
-Salisbury, despairing of being able to take the place, either by
-treachery or by storm, turned the siege into a blockade, closely
-investing the castle by sea and land, and tried to starve the garrison
-out into a surrender. Alexander Ramsay, hearing of the extremities to
-which Black Agnes was reduced, embarked with a party of forty resolute
-men, eluded the vigilance of the English, and entered the castle, under
-cover of night, by a postern next the sea. Sallying out again, they
-attacked and dispersed the advanced guard of the besiegers. Salisbury,
-disheartened by so many reverses, withdrew his forces, after having
-remained before Dunbar for nineteen weeks.
-
-About this time the duchy of Brittany was the subject of contention
-between two rivals, John, Count de Montfort, son of the late duke, and
-Charles of Blois, who had married the duke's granddaughter. Philip de
-Valois, King of France, decided the dispute in favour of Charles, and
-despatched a large army to establish him in the capital. Edward III.,
-of England, at once declared for the Count de Montfort, as an enemy to
-the house of Valois, which he--King Edward--wished to drive from the
-throne of France.
-
-The count was betrayed into the hands of his rival by some malcontent
-nobles. But Jane, the brave countess, sustained his sinking fortunes
-"with the courage of a man and the heart of a lion." Directly the
-news of her husband's capture arrived at Rennes, where she resided,
-the countess assembled the citizens, showed them her infant son, and
-entreated them not to desert the last male heir of their ancient dukes.
-Her eloquence, beauty, and courage produced a magical effect. The
-people swore to defend her and her son to the last extremity.
-
-The countess next visited all the strongholds throughout Brittany, and
-excited the people to resist the French, and to adopt the requisite
-measures of defence. Then, sending her boy to England, she shut herself
-up in Hennebonne, and there awaited the reinforcements promised by King
-Edward.
-
-Charles of Blois entered Brittany, captured Rennes, and despatched
-a force, commanded by Prince Louis of Spain, to besiege Hennebonne.
-The garrison, animated by the presence of the valiant countess, made
-a resolute defence. Jane herself performed prodigies of valour.
-Clad in armour from head to foot, she stood foremost in the breach,
-sustaining every attack of the foe with the utmost _sang froid_, or ran
-from post to post, according as the troops required encouragement or
-reinforcement.
-
-One day the besiegers, engaged in an attack on the town, left their
-camp totally unprotected. The countess, perceiving their neglect,
-sallied forth by a postern-gate at the head of five hundred picked
-men, set fire to the enemy's baggage and magazines, and created such
-universal alarm that the besiegers gave over their assault on the town
-to intercept her return. Jane, seeing that her retreat was cut off that
-way, galloped towards Arrai, where she arrived in safety. In five days
-she returned, cut her way through the camp of Charles, and re-entered
-the town. By this time, however, the breaches in the walls had grown
-so numerous that the place was deemed untenable. The bishop of Leon,
-despite the entreaties, the prayers of Jane, resolved to capitulate,
-and opened negotiations with the enemy. Jane mounted the highest turret
-and turned her eyes towards the sea, with a last hope of seeing her
-deliverers. She descried some small specks far away in the distance.
-Rushing down into the street, she cried, with transports of joy:--
-
-"Succours! Succours! The English succours! No capitulation!"
-
-The English fleet soon entered the harbour, and a small but valiant
-body of English, headed by the chivalrous Sir Walter Manny, cast
-themselves into the town. The negotiations were at once broken off,
-and the besiegers, balked of their prey, renewed the attack with more
-determined vigour than ever.
-
-Sir Walter and his companions were at dinner with the countess when
-a huge mass of stone crashed through the roof of an adjoining house,
-terrifying the ladies assembled in the castle hall. Starting from his
-seat, Sir Walter vowed to destroy the terrible engine which had thrown
-this missile. In a few moments the English sallied forth, hewed the
-monster catapult in pieces, burned the sow, and threw the enemy's camp
-into confusion. The foe, recovering from their first astonishment,
-tried to surround the returning warriors; but the English knights stood
-their ground till the archers and men-at-arms had re-crossed the
-ditch. Then driving back their assailants they crossed the draw-bridge,
-and were received with acclamations by the townspeople, while the
-countess herself "came down from the castle to meet them, and with a
-most cheerful countenance kissed Sir Walter and all his companions, one
-after another, like a noble and valiant dame."
-
-Prince Louis abandoned his camp the same evening, and retired to that
-of Prince Charles before the Castle of Arrai.
-
-Charles, though unsuccessful in his attack on Hennebonne, soon became
-master of nearly the whole of Brittany. During the truce between
-England and France, the Countess de Montfort came to London, and asked
-King Edward to grant her further assistance. He commanded Robert of
-Artois to return with her, accompanied by a strong force, to Brittany.
-They encountered the French fleet near Guernsey; and during the
-engagement Jane displayed her accustomed bravery. The contending fleets
-were at last separated by a storm, and the English sailed to Brittany,
-took Vannes by storm, and massacred, not only the garrison, but even
-the townspeople. The French soon recaptured the town, when Robert of
-Artois was slain.
-
-Edward III. landed in Brittany in 1345, with twelve thousand men, but
-was not at first very successful. In June he was obliged to conclude
-a short truce with France, during which the Count de Montfort was set
-at liberty; but he died of a fever on Sept. 20th, when his son John
-was proclaimed duke. At the end of July, 1346, the English invaded
-Normandy. The Countess de Montfort, assisted by an English force under
-Sir Thomas Dagworth, defeated Charles of Blois, who was made prisoner.
-
-Charles was set free in May, 1360, when peace was concluded between
-France and England. The treaty, though it did not interfere with
-Brittany, brought about an arrangement some months later, by which the
-duchy was divided between the rival claimants.
-
-But Charles broke faith, and renewed hostilities with the assistance
-of France. The struggle was at last decided in favour of the Count de
-Montfort, by the death of Charles and his son John, both of whom were
-slain in the battle of Arrai, gained by the English, September 20th,
-1364, the same day of the month on which his rival died.
-
-The French heroine of this war was Julia du Guesclin, sister of the
-great Constable. When the English invaded Brittany to support the Count
-de Montfort, Julia, who was living with her sisters in a convent, was
-obliged to take refuge in the fortress of Pontsorel, which was soon
-besieged by the English. The garrison was small and the besiegers
-were many, but Julia, with a courage worthy of her brother Bertrand,
-persuaded the French not to surrender. Clad in a coat of mail (one
-of her brother's) she stood on the ramparts and hurled back all who
-attempted to scale the walls. Animated by her courage, the French
-made so sturdy a defence that the English were compelled to retire,
-discomfited. Julia then commanded the garrison to throw open the gates
-and pursue the foe. The retreating army, confronted unexpectedly by a
-strong force commanded by the Constable himself, who was returning to
-Pontsorel, and surrounded on all sides, were nearly all slain, while
-their commander was made prisoner.
-
-When the war was over, Julia returned to her convent, where she passed
-the rest of her days.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another heroine of this war was Jane de Belleville. Her husband,
-Oliver, Lord of Clisson, was accused of holding secret intelligence
-with the English; and in 1343 Philip de Valois, without waiting
-till the evidence should be well substantiated, caused him to be
-decapitated. The widow, burning for revenge, sold her jewels, and with
-the proceeds equipped three vessels. After sending her son, a lad of
-twelve, to England, to ensure his safety, Jane cruised about the coast
-of Normandy, attacking every French ship which came in her way, and
-ravaging the country for a mile or so inland. This female corsair was
-frequently seen, with a sword in one hand and a torch in the other,
-amidst the smoking ruins of a castle, or the smouldering heaps of a
-destroyed village, directing with inhuman exultation the ferocious
-cruelties suggested by her thirst for vengeance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-While King Edward and Philip de Valois were devastating France in their
-contests for the crown, the Romagna was the scene of a fierce struggle
-between the Pope, the Visconti, and the various nobles and cities of
-Italy. After having lost a great part of his territories, Innocent II.
-reconquered the States of the Church by means of the Cardinal Legate
-Egidius Albornez. But the Papal governors were so tyrannical that the
-nobles of the Romagna, with few exceptions, fought desperately to
-maintain their independence. Francesco d'Ordelaffi, lord of Forli, was
-the last to give way. He was ably seconded in his brave resistance
-by Marzia, his wife, a member of the house of Ubaldini. While he was
-defending Forli he entrusted the town of Cesena to his wife; and in
-the beginning of 1357 the husband and wife separated. Marzia took up
-her station in Cesena, with a garrison of two hundred knights and an
-equal number of common soldiers. She was accompanied by her son and
-daughter, and by Sgariglino de Petragudula, the wise counsellor of the
-Ordelaffi family.
-
-The town was soon invested by a force ten times as numerous as the
-garrison. At the end of April some terrified burgesses opened the gates
-of the lower town. But Marzia, recollecting the words of her husband,
-who declared that unless the Pope offered him honourable terms he would
-sustain a siege in every one of his castles, that when they were all
-taken he would defend Forli, the walls, the streets, his own palace,
-even to the last tower of his palace, before surrendering his rights,
-retreated to the upper town with those soldiers and townspeople who
-remained faithful. Sgariglino having proved to be a traitor, she caused
-him to be executed; his reeking head was flung from the battlements
-amongst the besiegers.
-
-Marzia took upon herself all the duties of governor and military
-commander. She wore her helmet and cuirass day and night, and scarcely
-closed her eyes at all. At last she was compelled to retire into the
-citadel with four hundred soldiers and citizens who swore to stand by
-her to the death. But the citadel, undermined by the Papal engineers,
-almost hung in the air. Marzia's father, permitted by the legate,
-entered Cesena and besought her to surrender. Her answer was firm and
-simple. Her husband gave her a duty to perform, and she must obey
-implicitly.
-
-At last the people began to murmur. Marzia was compelled to surrender.
-She conducted the negotiations herself; and so skilfully did she
-manage, that the Legate, afraid of driving her to despair, consented
-that her soldiers should return home unmolested, with their arms and
-accoutrements. On the 21st of June she opened the gate of the citadel.
-
-She had disdained to make terms for herself, so the legate cast Marzia
-and her children into prison.
-
-It is curious to note that there are now no remains of Cesena to
-commemorate the heroic valour of Marzia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The illustrious northern heroine, Margaret, whose military achievements
-gained for her the title of "Semiramis of the North," was daughter of
-Waldemar, King of Denmark, and was born at Copenhagen in 1353. On the
-death of her father, Margaret, through her exceeding popularity with
-the people, succeeded in placing Olaus, her son, on the throne. Haquin,
-King of Norway, Margaret's husband, died in 1380, and Olaus in 1387.
-The election of a female sovereign was not yet authorised by custom;
-but Margaret's superior talents, her beauty, and her profuse liberality
-prevailed, and she was chosen Queen of Denmark, and, soon after, she
-was elected Queen of Norway.
-
-By taking advantage of the internal dissensions in the kingdom of
-Sweden, Margaret gained over a faction of the nobility, who offered her
-the crown. She marched into Sweden with a large army, and after a war
-of seven years defeated and captured King Albert at Falkoeping. She
-kept him a prisoner seven years longer, at the expiration of which he
-resigned all claim to the Swedish crown.
-
-To effect a permanent union of the three Scandinavian crowns, Queen
-Margaret concluded the famous Union of Calmar, 1397. She restored
-tranquillity at home, and was successful against all her enemies
-abroad; but her latter years were disturbed by the ingratitude of Eric,
-whom she had chosen as her successor. She died in 1412.
-
- * * * * *
-
-According to Border tradition, a Scottish maiden named Lilliard
-fought at the battle of Otterburn ("Chevy Chase") on the 19th of
-August, 1388, and displayed the same style of valour attributed to the
-gallant Witherington, who fell in the same battle. It is said that the
-following inscription was, till within a few years ago, to be seen on
-her tombstone:--
-
- "Fair Maiden Lilliard lies under this stane,
- Little was her stature, but great was her fame,
- On the English lads she laid many thumps,
- And when her legs were off, she fought upon her stumps."
-
-One of the most faithful adherents of Henry Bolingbroke in his days of
-adversity was Sir John de Pelham, who had been squire to old John of
-Gaunt. When Lancaster was banished by king Richard, Pelham followed
-him abroad, leaving Pevensey castle in charge of his wife, Lady Joan.
-Sir John was one of the fifteen lances who disembarked at Ravenspur,
-in July, 1399, with Henry; and on the 4th of the same month, while
-he was sharing the fatigues and perils of what seemed then a rash
-enterprise, the partizans of Richard II. laid siege to Pevensey castle.
-Lady Joan, a noble and spirited woman, took upon herself the conduct
-of the defence, and directed all the efforts of the garrison with such
-prudence and decision that the besiegers were forced to retire.
-
-When the Duke of Lancaster ascended the throne as Henry IV., he
-remembered the services of his faithful adherents. Sir John de Pelham
-was created a Knight of the Bath, and appointed royal sword-bearer,
-treasurer-at-war, and chief butler to the king. The king further
-displayed his confidence in Sir John by sending James I. of Scotland
-as a prisoner to Pevensey castle. The courage of Lady Joan was also
-publicly recognised and applauded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Eric, Margaret's successor on the Scandinavian throne, proved to be a
-very inferior ruler to his illustrious aunt. Nearly all his reign was
-taken up with an inglorious war for the Duchy of Schleswig. The quarrel
-was decided in favour of Denmark by the Emperor Sigismund; but the
-Count of Holstein refused to accept the imperial decree, and the war
-waxed fiercer every day. The Hanseatic League, whose fleet then ruled
-the Baltic, joined the alliance against Denmark; and in 1428 a powerful
-armament, commanded by Count Gerard of Holstein, invested Copenhagen.
-The city would doubtless have fallen but for the courage of Eric's
-queen, Philippa, who was the daughter of Henry IV. of England. Throwing
-herself into the city, the queen, by her exhortations and example,
-inspired the garrison with such enthusiasm and patriotic fervour, that
-the foe were compelled to retire discomfited.
-
-Elated by her success, Philippa now resolved to carry the war into
-the enemy's country. So, while Eric was endeavouring to gather
-reinforcements of men and money in Sweden, the queen, with a fleet
-of seventy-five sail, invested Stralsund. But this time fortune was
-against the heroine. The Danish navy was almost entirely destroyed in a
-great sea-fight. Eric, without reflecting that he had himself suffered
-many a worse defeat, flew into a rage when he heard of this disaster;
-and carried away by his blind fury, he even struck the queen. The
-high-spirited Philippa, unable to forgive this brutality, retired to a
-convent, where she died shortly after.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
- Jeanne d'Arc, the Maid of Orleans--Margaret de Attendoli, Sister
- of the great Sforza--Bona Lombardi and Onerata Rodiana, Female
- Condottieri--Marulla (Turks in Europe)--Margaret of Anjou--Jeanne
- Hachette--Dona Aldonza de Castillo, and Dona Maria Sarmiento
- (Civil Wars in Castile)--Isabel the Catholic--Caterina Sforza.
-
-
-AT the beginning of the fifteenth century there dwelt in the little
-village of Domremy, on the banks of the Meuse, Jacques d'Arc, or Darc,
-a peasant, and Isabeau Romie, his wife. Though comparatively poor, they
-had the respect of their neighbours as being a hard-working, honest
-couple. They had three sons and two daughters, all of whom were bred,
-like their parents, to humble occupations. Joan, Jeanne, or Jehanne was
-born, according to different writers, in 1402, 1410, or 1412. She was
-exceedingly beautiful, with fine expressive features, and jet black
-hair. She was about the middle height, with a delicately moulded frame.
-Her education was the same as that of most peasant-girls, French or
-English, in those days--spinning, sewing, and repeating her Paternoster
-and Ave Maria. From her infancy Jeanne was employed in various duties,
-the chief of which was driving the cattle to and from pasture. She was
-of a religious, imaginative disposition, and as early as her thirteenth
-year began to indulge those superstitious reveries which afterwards
-made her famous. Although her gentleness caused her to be universally
-beloved, she shunned girls of her own age, and took but little interest
-in the amusements of others. While her young friends were playing under
-the "Fairies' Tree" near the fountain of Domremy, Jeanne was dancing
-and singing by herself in pious fervour, or weaving garlands for the
-Holy Virgin in the small chapel of Notre Dame de Bellemont.
-
-The villagers of Domremy were, without exception, staunch Royalists,
-while those of the neighbouring hamlet were zealous Burgundians. A very
-bitter hostility prevailed between the rival parties. On one occasion
-a band of troopers invaded Domremy and drove all the people from their
-homes. The family of Jeanne found shelter for a few days at an inn;
-whence arose the mistake of the English chroniclers, who state that
-the maiden was in early life an innkeeper's servant.
-
-For a quarter of a century, France had been torn by civil war, and
-the death of Charles VI. in 1422 plunged the country into hopeless
-confusion and anarchy. According to the Treaty of Troyes (concluded in
-1420), Henry VI. of England was proclaimed King of France, which his
-uncle, the Duke of Bedford, governed as regent. Queen Isabella and the
-Duke of Burgundy joined England; and the Dauphin, abandoned by his own
-mother, had a very small party indeed. The English army was commanded
-by several brave and talented warriors--the Earls of Salisbury,
-Somerset, Warwick, Suffolk, Shrewsbury, Arundel, and many gallant
-knights.
-
-The Dauphin, at the age of nineteen, was crowned at Poitiers, as
-Charles VII. On the 12th of October, 1428, the Earl of Salisbury laid
-siege to Orleans, the last stronghold of any importance held by the
-Royalists. It was bravely defended by Glaucour, Lahyre, and Dunois.
-Repeated messages were sent to the king imploring assistance. The city
-was naturally strong, and well-garrisoned, but the English commenced an
-elaborate system of counter-fortification, and cut off the supplies of
-the besieged.
-
-Jeanne d'Arc watched with eager anxiety the siege of Orleans. Even
-as a child she had learned to detest the English; and now she felt
-herself commanded, by frequent visions and supernatural admonitions,
-to undertake the deliverance of her king and country. Believing
-firmly that Heaven destined her to save France, she refused more
-than one advantageous offer of marriage. In February, 1429, being
-then, according to the most reliable authorities, barely eighteen,
-she was commanded by a vision of Our Lady to raise the siege of
-Orleans, and afterwards conduct Charles to Rheims to be crowned in
-state. She presented herself before Robert de Baudricourt, governor
-of Vaucoulour, a town situated a few miles from Domremy, and related
-her mission. Believing her to be insane, the governor twice sent
-her away, threatening the second time to box her ears; but when she
-returned a third time he thought it best to send her with letters of
-recommendation to the Dauphin, at Chinon, in Touraine.
-
-The fame of Jeanne d'Arc preceded her; and the king awaited with
-impatience the arrival of his extraordinary visitor. Although Charles
-disguised himself and mixed with his courtiers, Jeanne singled him out
-at once, and addressed him as king of France.
-
-After being subjected to the most severe examination during three
-weeks, by divines, counsellors of parliament and learned men, the
-king was satisfied that her story was true, and consented to accept
-her aid. She was furnished with a suit of armour, and armed with a
-sword marked on the blade with five crosses, taken by her directions
-from the tomb of an old warrior in the church of St. Catherine at
-Fierbois. In company with several nobles she was sent to the camp at
-Blois, thirty-five miles from Orleans. Her presence produced the most
-miraculous effect upon the drooping spirits of the soldiers. The French
-generals resolved now to make some great effort for the relief of
-Orleans; and ten thousand men, commanded by St. Severre, Lahyre, and
-the veteran Dunois were despatched to its aid. Most of the soldiers
-retreated in dismay when they saw the strong towers of the besiegers,
-but La Pucelle, followed by a small party, forced her way through the
-English camp, and entered Orleans on the 29th of April, 1429. She was
-clad in armour and mounted on a snow-white horse; her head was bare,
-and the long raven tresses, parted across her forehead, were tied at
-the back with ribbon. In her right hand she grasped a lance; by her
-side hung the consecrated sword and a small battle-axe.
-
-On the 4th of May a sortie was made against the English bastille
-of St. Loup, but the French were driven back with great slaughter.
-Jeanne, hearing the noise of the fight, mounted her horse and galloped
-to the spot, when she rode into the midst of the battle. The French,
-re-animated by her presence, again charged the English, drove them
-back, and captured the bastille.
-
-After this first success the rest was comparatively easy. On the 6th
-and 7th the remaining bastilles on the south bank of the Loire were
-carried by storm. The most important, that at the head of the bridge,
-defended by Sir William Gladsdale with five thousand picked men,
-yielded after an attack of fourteen hours. During the attack on this
-tower, Jeanne, having placed a ladder against the walls, was attempting
-to scale the battlements, when she was struck in the neck by an arrow.
-She plucked out the weapon immediately, but the loss of blood compelled
-her to leave the field. However, when she heard that her absence
-dispirited the soldiers, she insisted upon returning to the scene of
-action.
-
-The Earl of Salisbury died during the siege; and the Earl of Suffolk,
-who succeeded to the command, raised the siege on the 8th of May, and
-beat a hasty retreat.
-
-Jeanne d'Arc, the "Heaven-sent Maid," had now fully entered upon her
-extraordinary career of victory. The universal belief in her elevated
-mission--as much amongst the English as the French--produced marvellous
-results. Resolute and chivalrous, pious and gentle, she won the hearts
-of all,--even the roughest and most sceptical veterans. However, it was
-only in matters of moral discipline that she was implicitly obeyed;
-oaths or foul language were severely censured when they reached her
-ears. She compelled the entire army, generals and soldiers alike,
-to attend regularly at confession; and at every halt she ordered an
-altar to be established and the Holy Sacrament administered. But the
-generals, while they skilfully employed her to animate the soldiers,
-did not implicitly follow her counsels in military matters.
-
-Her tactics were very simple. "I used," she said, "to say to them 'go
-boldly in among the English,' and then I used to go boldly in myself."
-Her duties were chiefly confined to bearing at the head of the army
-the consecrated sword and the sacred banner--the latter made of white
-satin, semee with fleurs-de-lis, with the words "Jesus Maria," and a
-representation of Our Saviour in his glory embroidered on its surface.
-Her conduct was never stained by unfeminine cruelty. It appears from
-the documents relative to her trial, that, although she was herself
-wounded many a time, she never shed the blood of anyone. Some French
-historians, however, aver that she did sometimes, when hard pressed,
-use the consecrated sword as a weapon of offence.
-
-When the Earl of Suffolk retired from before Orleans he established
-his head-quarters at Mehun-sur-Loire, and afterwards at Jargeau.
-Jeanne hastened to Tours, where Charles was residing with his court,
-and urged him at once to go to Rheims to be crowned. The royal
-advisers, however, were afraid to venture on such a step when Rheims
-itself, together with all the intermediate towns, was still held by
-the English. The French next attacked the towns in possession of the
-English on the banks of the Loire. During the assault on Jargeau, which
-was taken by storm, La Pucelle, leading on the French, was seen on the
-highest step of one of the scaling-ladders, waving her banner over her
-head. A stone from the English engines struck her so violent a blow on
-the head, that her helmet was shattered, and she fell heavily to the
-foot of the wall. Rising on the instant, she cried:--
-
-"Amis, amis! sus, sus! Notre Seigneur a condamne les Anglais. Ils sont
-a nous. Bon courage!"
-
-The Earl of Suffolk was made prisoner during the assault.
-
-Beaugency and Mehun capitulated shortly after the fall of Jargeau; and
-the English, commanded by Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, the "English
-Achilles," retreated towards Paris. They were pursued and overtaken in
-April, 1429, at Patai, by the Maid of Orleans. Sir John Fastolfe, one
-of the bravest knights of his day (whatever Shakespeare may declare to
-the contrary), advised Talbot to continue his retreat with all speed;
-but the Earl scorned to fly before his enemies, even though, as on this
-occasion, they were twice as numerous as his own men. The English,
-struck with a superstitious dread of La Pucelle, fled, after making
-little resistance; and Talbot, after losing twelve hundred men, was
-captured. Eight hundred English were slain in the pursuit. Sir John
-Fastolfe, with a prudence long stigmatised as rank cowardice, continued
-his retreat to Paris, where he arrived safely without the loss of a man.
-
-Jeanne now insisted that the royal coronation should be no longer
-delayed. Every obstacle vanished at her approach. Troyes, Chalons, and
-other cities in rapid succession opened their gates; the people of
-Rheims expelled the English garrison, and Charles entered in triumph,
-July 16th, 1429. The consecration took place next day in the cathedral.
-The Maid stood by the side of Charles, clad in armour; and, taking the
-office of High Constable, held the sword over the king's head.
-
-Her mission being now concluded, Jeanne d'Arc entreated the king's
-permission to "return to her father and mother, to keep her flocks
-and herds as before, and do all things as she was wont to do;" but
-her presence was considered so necessary to animate the troops, that
-she was prevailed upon to stay. In September, Jeanne was wounded in
-an unsuccessful attack on Paris, when she requested, a second time,
-to be allowed to retire from the war. But she was again overruled.
-In December, a patent of nobility was conferred upon her; she was
-first styled Dalis, then Dulis, and finally Dy Lys. Her coat of arms
-contained two golden lilies and a sword, pointing upwards, bearing a
-crown. She obtained for the villages of Domremy and Greux an exemption
-from taxation, which they enjoyed until the equalisation of public
-imposts in 1789.
-
-In the spring of 1429, the Duke of Burgundy besieged Compiegne. Jeanne
-d'Arc threw herself into the town on the 21st of May. Believing that
-her presence now would work the same miracles as of old, she insisted,
-the evening of her arrival, that the garrison should make a sortie.
-After some hard fighting the French took to flight. Jeanne took the
-command of the rear-guard, and tried to rally her countrymen. A
-Burgundian archer pulled her from her horse; and while lying on the
-ground she was obliged to surrender to Lyonnel, the Bastard of Vendome.
-There is good reason for supposing that Guillaume de Flavy, governor of
-the fortress, envious of her military renown, betrayed Jeanne into the
-hands of her enemies.
-
-The English purchased Jeanne from the Duke of Burgundy for ten thousand
-livres; and Henry VI. also settled an annuity of three hundred francs
-upon her captor. Through many weary months the Maid of Orleans dragged
-out a miserable existence in a dungeon. In place of being treated as
-a prisoner of war, she was handed over to ecclesiastical justice,
-charged with heresy and blasphemy. At the instigation of several
-Frenchmen a process was instituted by the Bishop of Beauvais, in whose
-diocese she had been captured. The process lasted three months and had
-sixteen sittings. Jeanne denied resolutely the accusations of sorcery
-and witchcraft, and named St. Michael, St. Margaret, and St. Catherine
-as the bearers of the heavenly messages.
-
-The Bishop's Court, representing the Church and the University of
-Paris, condemned Jeanne d'Arc as a sorceress and a heretic. Charles
-VII. made little or no efforts to save her; and after four months'
-imprisonment, the innocent enthusiast was sentenced to be burned alive
-at Rouen. She was cut off from the Church, and delivered to the secular
-judges.
-
-On the 24th of May, 1431, she was carried to the stake, which had
-been erected in the Vieux Marche of Rouen. At sight of the pile her
-courage deserted her. She submitted to the Church, and confessed that
-her visions were the work of Satan. Her punishment was commuted to
-imprisonment for life, but it was not considered expedient to let her
-live; so she was condemned as a relapsed heretic, and dragged to the
-stake, May 30th. She was dressed in female attire; and on her head was
-a mitre, covered with the words "Apostate," "Relapse," "Idolatre,"
-"Heretique."
-
-She met her fate this time with terrible calmness. While they were
-putting the cap on her head, she said to one of the Dominican friars
-who stood by her side:--
-
-"Maitre, par la grace de Dieu, je serai ce soir en paradis."
-
-Falling on her knees, she prayed fervently for a few moments, not for
-herself only, but for the ungrateful king who had so cruelly deserted
-her. The judges, even the stern Bishop of Beauvais, were moved to
-tears. She was burned by a slow fire, and the pile was so high that her
-agony lasted for a considerable time. Her ashes were gathered together
-and flung into the Seine.
-
-There is a legend that, as she expired, a white dove rose from the
-flames. Another tradition says that after her ashes were removed, the
-heart was found entire.
-
-The Rouen theatre now occupies that part of the public square on which
-the stake was erected. It was remarked as a curious coincidence that
-when Soumet's tragedy of "Jeanne d'Arc" was performed at Rouen, in
-the autumn of 1865, the last act, which represents the death of the
-Maid, was played on the identical spot where the real tragedy had been
-enacted in 1431.
-
-Jeanne's father died of grief at her cruel fate; her mother survived
-for many years, supported by a pension from the city of Orleans. In
-1436 an impostor started up, who pretended to be the Maid of Orleans,
-giving a plausible account of her escape. She was for sometime
-successful, being acknowledged, even by the brothers, as the heroine
-herself. Within the last few years this idea of Jeanne's escape
-has been revived. Many French writers assert that there is ample
-documentary evidence to prove that the Maid of Orleans lived to be
-comfortably married, while another girl took her place at the stake.
-This notion is gaining ground, both in France and England.
-
-Among all the divines who condemned Jeanne, there was only one
-Englishman--the Bishop of Winchester, Cardinal Beaufort.
-
-In 1450 and 1451 measures were taken to revise the process of
-condemnation. In 1456 a court, presided over by the Archbishop of
-Rheims and the Bishops of Paris and Coutance, decided that Jeanne d'Arc
-was entirely innocent, and declared her to have been falsely condemned.
-
-The citizens of Orleans celebrate the annual Festival of Jeanne d'Arc
-on the 8th of May; the villagers of Domremy hold an annual fete on the
-6th of January, the birth-day of the heroine. It is said that the girls
-of the village have so much military _esprit_ that they will hardly
-deign to look upon a lover who has not served some years in the wars.
-
-The memory of Jeanne d'Arc has been preserved in France by several
-monuments. Louis XI. erected a figure of the heroine in front of her
-father's house; and in September, 1820, another memorial was raised
-in Domremy, with Jeanne's bust carved in marble. In the market-place
-of Rouen stands another figure of the Maid. In front of the Marie
-of Orleans is a statue, modelled by the Princess Marie, daughter
-of the Citizen King. In April, 1855, a colossal equestrian figure
-was uncovered in one of the public squares of Orleans, on the exact
-spot where she animated the French soldiers to attack the foe. It
-was remarked as a sign of the times that not only the English flag,
-but also the Turkish crescent stood out prominently from amongst the
-numberless standards which surrounded the monument.
-
-It has lately been proposed by the Bishop of Orleans, the Cardinal
-Archbishop of Rouen, and others, to add Jeanne d'Arc to the calendar of
-French saints. Shakespeare may thus prove once more a prophet; he has
-put into the mouth of King Charles, the words:--
-
- "No longer on Saint Denis will we cry,
- But Joan la Pucelle shall be France's saint."
-
-During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries Italy was terribly
-harassed by bands of mercenary soldiers, who sought service in every
-war, and fought neither through patriotism nor for the love of glory,
-but merely for pay and the opportunity of plunder. These bands, who
-counted their numbers by hundreds or thousands, according to the
-reputation of the Condottiere (leader) under whom they fought, offered
-their services to the prince or city that paid them best, without
-regard to law or justice. Many of the Condottieri, such as the Count
-of Werner, Montreal, Bracchia de Montone, and Francesco Sforza, became
-famous throughout Italy, not only as able generals, but sometimes even
-as skilful statesmen; yet, mostly they were ignorant, brutal men, with
-nothing to recommend them beyond reckless bravery.
-
-Sforza had a sister named Margaret de Attendoli, who shared his warlike
-spirit and enterprising courage. The family was of humble origin, but
-through the military genius of Francesco it rose, by rapid strides,
-to the highest rank and eminence. Before he assumed the sovereignty
-of Milan, Sforza was grand-constable of Naples; and in this capacity
-he was sent to meet the Count de la Marche, the betrothed husband of
-the Neapolitan queen. The count, dreading the power of Sforza, caused
-him to be cast into prison, with many of his relations. Sforza's
-sister was at Tricario with her husband, Michael de Cotignola, when
-the intelligence of Francesco's arrest reached her. The relatives
-speedily assembled an army, Margaret took the command, and a revolt
-began. According as the Count de la Marche grew more brutal towards
-his queen and more despotic to her subjects, the insurrection became
-more general; and at last Count Jaques was besieged in his castle. The
-besiegers demanded that Sforza should be set at liberty, and that the
-count should be content with the title of lieutenant-general of the
-kingdom; but he, knowing the value of his prisoner as a hostage, sent
-threatening messages to Margaret, demanding that Tricario should be
-given up, unless she would wish to be the cause of her brother's death.
-Margaret, indignant at the proposal, took the bold step of imprisoning
-the deputies, whose families, alarmed for their safety, importuned the
-count night and day, till he consented to set Sforza at liberty, and
-reinstate him in all his honours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Female Condottieri were by no means uncommon in those days; and some
-of the women acquired celebrity, even beyond the Italian borders, for
-their prowess and military skill. The story of one of these female
-soldiers is interesting.
-
-About the year 1432, Captain Brunoro, a Parmesan gentleman by birth,
-and a Condottiere by profession, was appointed by Piccinio, the
-Milanese general (who had just driven the Venetians from Vatellina),
-to maintain a camp in Morbego, as a central position whence he could
-command the conquered territory. While thus employed, he occupied his
-leisure time with hunting, and various open air amusements. One day,
-being tired, he stopped to rest in a sylvan grove, where some peasants
-were celebrating a rustic festival. Doubtless there were many pretty
-faces there; but one amongst them struck him more than all the rest.
-He entered into conversation with this pretty girl, who charmed and
-surprised him by her lively, spirited answers.
-
-On his return home he learned that the pretty peasant was quite a
-celebrity in the neighbourhood. Her name was Bona Lombardi (or, as some
-give it, Longobarba), and she was born in 1417, in the little village
-of Sacco, in Vatellina. She was the only daughter of humble people, of
-whom little is known except that her father, Gabriel Lombardi, was a
-private soldier in one of the Italian armies, and died while Bona was
-a child. Her mother did not long survive; and the little girl was left
-to the care of her uncle, a poor priest, and her aunt, an industrious
-countrywoman.
-
-Captain Brunoro remained in Morbego during the summer, and had thus
-frequent opportunities for meeting with Bona Lombardi. At last he
-decided that she was the woman of all others to make him happy, and
-they were married. The marriage was kept secret for some time; but to
-avoid even a temporary separation, Bona dressed herself in the costume
-of a Condottiere, and accompanied her husband in all his expeditions.
-
-Like all Condottieri Brunoro was obliged to adopt various masters;
-and thus he very often found himself opposed to one of his former
-employers. Once he made an enemy of Alexander, King of Naples, who
-took him prisoner by means of an ambuscade, and cast him into prison.
-He would probably have ended his days in a Neapolitan dungeon, but for
-the untiring efforts of his wife. Money, entreaties, threats, all were
-employed; till at last she procured his release.
-
-Bona learned the art of war to perfection. Her courage and military
-skill were so highly esteemed by the Venetians that they confided to
-her and her husband the defence of Negropont, against the Turks, who
-in those days were dreaded by the Christians as much as the Goths and
-Vandals were in ancient times. More than once she displayed valour and
-prudence of a superior order. During the Milanese war, the Venetians
-having been repulsed in an attack upon the Castle of Provoze, in
-Brescia, Brunoro was captured. Bona arrived soon after with a small
-body of fresh troops. Rallying the discomfited Venetians, she led
-them in person to a second assault on the castle. This time they were
-successful, and Bona had the pleasure of releasing her husband with the
-rest of the prisoners.
-
-Brunoro died in 1468, and Bona Lombardi, declaring that she could not
-survive her husband, built a tomb for the reception of their mutual
-remains. When it was finished, she sank into a state of languor, from
-which she never recovered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Onerata Rodiana, another female Condottieri, was, in addition, a
-celebrated painter. She was born, in the early part of the fifteenth
-century, at Castelleone, and while yet a girl her reputation as a
-painter became so great that the Marquis Gabrinio, tyrant of Cremona,
-engaged her to decorate his palace.
-
-One day, while thus occupied, a dissipated courtier, who happened to
-see her painting the walls of a room, attempted to take liberties. A
-struggle ensued, which was terminated by Onerata drawing a stiletto
-and stabbing her antagonist. She then fled from the palace, disguised
-herself in male attire, and quitted the city. Meeting with the band of
-Oldrado Sampuynano, the Condottiere, she enlisted under his banner.
-
-The marquis was furious when he discovered the flight of his
-court-painter, and he despatched soldiers in pursuit. Soon relenting,
-however, he issued a proclamation, in which he promised full pardon
-on condition that Onerata would return to her professional labours.
-But she preferred the life of a soldier, so she remained with her new
-comrades. By her courage she soon rose to the post of captain; and for
-thirty years she led the roving life of a free-lance, painting and
-fighting alternately. When Castelleone, her native town, was besieged
-by the Venetians in 1472, she hastened with her band to its assistance.
-She was victorious; but during the action she fell, mortally wounded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In those days the Grecian isles were a constant subject of contention
-between Venice and the Turks. The latter, growing stronger every
-day, soon made their name the terror of southern Europe. A few years
-after the fall of Constantinople (captured by Mohammed II. in 1453),
-the Ottomans besieged Coccino, capital of the isle of Lemnos, in the
-AEgean Sea. The city was defended with the most obstinate bravery by
-the inhabitants, men and women. Amongst the bravest of the women was
-Marulla, a beautiful, noble-looking creature, barely in her twentieth
-year. Her father, Demetrius, slew such numbers of the Turks that the
-gateway was half-blocked up with turbaned corpses. At last, pierced
-with myriad wounds, he fell on the bodies of his foes. Marulla, flying
-to her father's rescue, was wounded by the same blow which proved fatal
-to him; but so far from giving way to useless lamentations, she seized
-his sword, sprang from the walls, and fiercely attacked the Turks.
-Her fellow-citizens, inspired by her fire, drove the Turks away with
-terrific slaughter, and compelled them to take refuge in their ships.
-
-When the Venetian admiral arrived next day with the fleet, in place
-of a beleagured town he beheld the citizens in their holiday attire,
-headed by the magistrates in their robes of state, marching in
-procession to meet him, conducting the heroine Marulla, their deliverer.
-
-To reward her bravery, the Venetian commander ordered each of his
-soldiers to give her a present, and he promised that she should be
-adopted by the Republic. He offered her the hand of any one of his
-captains that she might prefer. But Marulla replied that "it was not
-by chance that she should choose a husband; for the virtues of a camp
-would not make a good master of a family; and the hazard would be too
-great."
-
-When the Venetian senate received the news of Marulla's bravery, they
-decreed that various privileges and exemptions from taxes should be
-settled upon her and her children for evermore.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Henry VI., after losing the crown of France through a female warrior,
-very nearly saved the crown of England through another; and, what
-is more remarkable, both were Frenchwomen. But the high-spirited,
-fierce Margaret of Anjou, though fully as brave, was very different
-from the peaceful, the angelic Maid of Orleans. However, had the king
-possessed half the spirit of his wife, the Wars of the Roses might have
-terminated very differently. When the feeble, almost imbecile king,
-wishing for peace at any price, publicly acknowledged the Duke of York
-as heir-apparent to the throne, Margaret refused her consent, and the
-war was renewed. Henry was made prisoner in the battle of Northampton;
-but the queen assembled a formidable army at York, where she awaited
-her rival.
-
-On the last day of the year 1460, the battle of Wakefield was fought.
-Within half-an-hour of the onset, nearly three thousand Yorkists lay
-dead on the field. This battle, in which Margaret is said to have taken
-an active part, terminated in a complete victory for the House of
-Lancaster. The Duke of York, covered with wounds, fell into the hands
-of the victors. His dying moments were embittered by the taunts of his
-captors; and afterwards, it is said, his head was cut off by order of
-the queen, crowned with a paper crown, and placed on one of the gates
-of York.
-
-The next year, 1461, Margaret defeated the Earl of Warwick in the
-second battle of St. Alban's, and recovered the king, who was now
-merely a passive agent in the hands of friends or foes. She advanced
-to London; but Edward, Earl of March, son of the Duke of York, having
-gained a victory at Hereford almost the same day as the battle of St.
-Alban's, obliged her to retreat towards the north. He then entered
-London, where a few days later, March 4th, 1461, he was proclaimed King
-of England, as Edward IV.
-
-Margaret soon increased her army to sixty thousand men, and Edward
-was obliged to hasten to the north. At Pontefract he passed in review
-nearly forty-nine thousand men. The armies met at Towton, in Yorkshire,
-March 29th, 1461. This was the bloodiest battle fought during the war.
-No quarter was given or expected on either side. The Lancastrians,
-routed with fearful slaughter, were intercepted in their flight by
-the river; and the pursuit of the Yorkists was unrelenting. The slain
-amounted to thirty or forty thousand. Henry VI. and his brave queen
-fled to Scotland.
-
-After vainly soliciting aid from the Scottish court, Margaret went over
-to France, and by promising to give up Calais, obtained ten thousand
-men. With these she landed in Scotland, where she was speedily joined
-by many of her partisans, and also by a band of freebooters. With these
-she entered England, and advanced to Hexham, where she was totally
-defeated, May 15th, 1464, by Lord Neville.
-
-The unhappy queen, compelled to fly with her son, with difficulty
-reached the coast, after suffering indignities at the hands of the wild
-freebooters who infested the kingdom, and sailed for Flanders. The
-rebellion of Warwick the King-Maker, in 1470, restored Henry VI., for
-a few short months, to the throne. Edward IV. fled to the Continent;
-Margaret and her son landed at Weymouth on the very day (April 14th,
-1471) that the Earl of Warwick was defeated at Barnet.
-
-When Margaret heard the news of her champion's defeat her courage
-seemed at first to forsake her. She took refuge with her son in the
-sanctuary of Beaulieu, in Hampshire. But her undaunted spirit once
-more led her to the field. She re-assembled her partisans and marched
-to Tewkesbury, where she was encountered by King Edward on the 4th
-of May, 1471. The total defeat of the Lancastrians was the result,
-and Margaret, with her son, was made prisoner. The latter was cruelly
-murdered, and Margaret was placed in the Tower of London.
-
-After remaining a prisoner for nearly four years, Queen Margaret was
-ransomed by Louis XI. for fifty thousand crowns. She died in 1482, "the
-most unfortunate Queen, wife, and mother," says Voltaire, "in Europe."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, one of the greatest warriors of
-the Middle Ages, was brother-in-law to Edward IV., whom he assisted,
-in 1471, with men and arms; the English King promising, in return, to
-aid Charles against his great enemy, Louis XI. The French King was
-terribly afraid of the Duke; and had not the latter been so rash and
-the former so crafty, King Louis might have lost his crown. In 1472
-Charles crossed the Somme at the head of eighty thousand men, and
-after capturing Nesle, where he massacred the people and burned the
-town, he laid siege, in June, to the town of Beauvais, in Picardy. The
-inhabitants were devoted to Louis XI., and, besides, they knew from the
-fate of Nesle, where the blood flowed "ankle-deep" in the street, what
-they might expect in the event of capture. So the defence was as stout
-as the attack was fierce.
-
-There dwelt in Beauvais a girl named Jeanne Fourquet, born November
-14th, 1454, the daughter of an officer in the king's guards. She
-was adopted, after her father's death, by a lady named Laisne. From
-childhood Jeanne had taken a great interest in tales of warlike
-valour; she always revered Jeanne d'Arc as a saint. She now displayed
-her military tendencies in such a way as to save her native town and
-immortalise her name. Arming herself with a _hachette_, or small axe,
-she placed herself at the head of a band of women, and led them to the
-ramparts, where they occupied themselves loading the cannon, pouring
-hot water, boiling oil, or molten lead on the heads of the besiegers,
-supplying the archers with arrows, or performing any other service
-their strength would allow.
-
-The Burgundians at last planted their ladders, and commenced scaling
-the ramparts; but the first man who planted the flag of Charles was
-hurled from the battlements by Jeanne Fourquet, who snatched the
-standard from his hands, and waved it over her head. This deed so
-animated the defenders of Beauvais, that they gallantly repulsed every
-assault. After a fierce contest of nine hours, the besieged were
-reinforced by the garrison of Noyen, and on the two following days by
-troops and provisions from Amiens, Genlis, and Paris.
-
-Charles battered the walls with heavy guns for nearly a month, and
-almost destroyed the town with fire-balls. Finding his troops still
-held at bay, he ordered a general assault on the 10th July, at seven
-in the morning. The attack was fierce, but the defence was resolute.
-The women, still led by Jeanne, displayed the same courage as before.
-Thrice the Burgundians scaled the walls, and planted their flag on the
-battlements; thrice they were repulsed with terrible losses. After the
-assault had lasted four hours, the Burgundians saw their efforts were
-fruitless, and sounded a retreat. During the night of the 22nd they
-broke up their camp, and marched away towards Normandy.
-
-Jeanne Fourquet deposited the flag she had taken in one of the churches
-of Beauvais--doubtless that of the Jacobins, where it was preserved for
-many years. It may now be seen at the Hotel de Ville. Louis XI. granted
-to her the privilege of bearing this standard at the head of the French
-army. Some years after this great event, Jeanne married Collin Pillon,
-when, not only was she herself exempted from taxation, but the same
-immunity was granted to her descendants.
-
-It is neither by the name of Fourquet nor Pillon that the heroine is
-famous. The weapon with which she was armed gave her a more illustrious
-surname; and since that valiant deed, for which her countrymen must
-ever remember her with gratitude, she has been known as Jeanne Hachette.
-
-Her portrait may still be seen at Beauvais; and in commemoration of
-her bravery, the anniversary of July 10th is celebrated by an annual
-procession, in which the women march before the men.
-
-Napoleon III., when President of the French Republic, inaugurated a
-statue of Jeanne Hachette at Beauvais.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the civil wars which agitated Castile towards the close of the
-century, the fortress of Toro was, by a curious coincidence, twice
-defended by female commanders, the wives of two brothers opposed to
-one another in politics. In 1475 it was held for Isabel the Catholic
-by Dona Aldonza de Castillo, wife of the Alcayde, Don Rodrigo de
-Ulloa, governor of the fortress. After the retreat of Ferdinand,
-husband of Isabel, she was compelled to surrender. In the following
-year the fortress was defended against the troops of Ferdinand and
-Isabel by Dona Maria Sarmiento, wife of Don Juan de Ulloa. All hopes
-of assistance having been dispelled, she obtained honourable terms of
-capitulation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The same year, 1476, Isabel the Catholic having received intelligence
-that the Portuguese meditated invading her dominions, resolved to
-superintend in person the defence of the frontiers. Despite the
-remonstrances of her council, she set out for Estramadura in the
-summer of 1477, and, after capturing several fortresses, and placing
-strong garrisons in Badajoz, Ciudad Rodrigo, and other frontier towns,
-established her head-quarters at Seville.
-
-Queen Isabel again displayed her wish to be a warrior during the
-contest between Ferdinand and the Moors. In 1487 and 1489 she
-encouraged the Spanish soldiers by her presence in the camp. In 1491
-Ferdinand commenced the siege of Granada. Isabel arrived towards the
-close of May. Attired in a magnificent suit of armour, and mounted on a
-richly caparisoned horse, she rode through the ranks, greeted on all
-sides with joyful acclamations.
-
-Wishing to obtain a nearer view of the renowned red towers of the
-Alhambra, the queen rode forward on the 18th June, escorted by the
-entire Spanish cavalry, to the village of La Zubia, situated at a short
-distance from Granada. But her curiosity was very near being the cause
-of her capture. A large body of Moorish troops sallied out from Granada
-and attacked the body-guard of the queen. Matters were growing serious,
-when the Marquis de Cadix came to the rescue with twelve hundred
-lances, and put the Moors to flight.
-
-During the conflict Isabel did not display exactly the courage of a
-heroine. Struck with abject terror, she remained on her knees all the
-time, praying earnestly; and made a vow that if she escaped she would
-erect a monastery on the spot.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Most of the great Sforza's immediate descendants were more or less
-distinguished for military talents. Caterina, or Catherine, the natural
-daughter of Galeas Sforza, was remarkable for valour, military skill,
-and also for her personal beauty. She was the wife of Jerome Ricario,
-Prince of Forli; and some time after their marriage he was assassinated
-by Francis Del Orsa, who had revolted against him. Caterina and her
-children fell into the hands of the assassin, but she soon escaped to
-Rimini, which still remained faithful. She defended the town, in 1466,
-with such determination that the besiegers, to frighten her into a
-surrender, threatened to put her children to death.
-
-Caterina was at last restored to sovereign power, and married John de'
-Medici, a man of noble family, though not very distinguished for genius
-or bravery. In 1500 she defended Forli against the talented Caesar
-Borgia; being compelled to surrender, she was imprisoned in the castle
-of San Angelo, at Rome. Soon, however, she was restored to liberty; but
-her dominions were never given back to her. She died shortly after her
-release.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
- Maria d'Estrada, and other Spanish Women serving
- under Cortez--Catalina de Erauso, the Monja Alferez
- (Nun-Lieutenant)--Dona Maria Pacheco (Confederacy of the Holy
- Junta)--Eleonora of Toledo, Grand-Duchess of Tuscany--TURKS IN
- HUNGARY--Courage of a Jewess at Buda--Bravery of the Women of
- Temesvar, Erlau, Valpon, Agria, and Szigeth in Hungary and of
- Famagosta in Cyprus--Louise Labe--Mary of Hungary--Granu Weal--THE
- REFORMATION--Kenan Simonz Hasselaar--Women of Alkmaar--Mary,
- Queen of Scots--Magdalaine de Saint-Nectaire--Constance de
- Cezelli--Christine de Lalaing, Princess d'Espinoy--Queen
- Elizabeth--English and Scottish Border Heroines--Barbara of
- Ernecourt (Thirty Years' War)--Christina of Sweden.
-
-
-THE discovery of America opened up a new field of enterprise for those
-brave, reckless, ne'er-do-weel soldiers of fortune by whom the Old
-World was overrun. Adventurers sailed from various ports of Europe,
-under the command of audacious leaders, such as Balboa and Pizarro,
-whose daring spirit and enterprising disposition gave them authority
-over their companions. Numbers of women, imbibing the spirit of the
-times, accompanied those bands of adventurers--sometimes disguised in
-male attire, but more frequently in the garments of their own sex.
-
-When Cortez sailed from Cuba, in 1518, on that voyage which terminated
-in the conquest of Mexico, he was followed by six hundred soldiers,
-many of whom were accompanied by their wives. These Castilian dames,
-preferring to endure the hardships of a campaign than be separated from
-their husbands, and probably feeling curious to see for themselves
-those marvels of the New World about which all Europe was talking, in
-no way disgraced the name of Spaniard by any feminine timidity. In the
-camp before Mexico, which Cortez was besieging, 1521, it was their
-fortitude which kept up the spirit of the soldiers, who, repulsed in
-several assaults on the city, and suffering from famine, had become
-gloomy and despondent. Several examples have been preserved of the
-bravery displayed by these Spanish wives. One of them would frequently
-mount guard to relieve her tired husband; another, seeing the Spaniards
-repulsed in an attack, hastily donned a soldier's _escaupil_, snatched
-up a sword and lance, rallied the retreating Christians and led them
-once more against the Mexicans.
-
-Cortez had requested the women to remain behind, at Tlascala, but they
-proudly answered him that "It was the duty of Castilian wives not to
-abandon their husbands in danger, but to share it with them--and die
-with them if necessary."
-
-The name of one of these female warriors was Maria d'Estrada, who
-fought by the side of her husband through every campaign, displaying
-the same courage as her companions in arms.
-
-Another Spanish-American heroine was Catalina de Erauso, the "Monja
-Alferez," or Nun-Lieutenant. Her life was the most romantic that could
-be imagined. She has written her own history in pure and classic
-Spanish, displaying as much literary ability in its composition as,
-in her warlike career, she had shown heroic valor, mixed with savage
-cruelty.
-
-She was born in 1592, daughter of a Spanish hidalgo of St. Sebastian,
-Don Miguel de Erauso, an officer in the royal army, and, after the
-fashion of those days, was destined for the Church. So, at the early
-age of four, she was sent to the Dominican convent, the prioress of
-which was her aunt. Here she remained till her fifteenth year; but
-during all these years she acquired so inveterate a dislike for the
-cloister that she contrived to make her escape from the convent,
-shortly before the day on which she was to take the veil. She hid in a
-chestnut grove for three days, cut her hair short, made her petticoats
-into male attire, and then started on her travels.
-
-She passed through various romantic adventures in Spain, acting in the
-different capacities of page, clerk, and servant. Thus disguised, she
-joined an expedition to South America, where she became a soldier. At
-different times she assumed one name or another; but that under which
-she was best known, and was promoted to the rank of lieutenant, was
-Alonzo Dias. Under this alias she was the victor in several skirmishes.
-So clear was her judgment that her opinion was frequently asked by the
-generals at their councils of war.
-
-During the intervals of military duty, Catalina gambled, drank, robbed,
-assassinated, cursed and swore, and behaved altogether very like an
-Alsatian bully. She chose for her associates the most desperate and
-reprobate characters, and seemed to take a fiendish delight in outdoing
-them. Sometimes she would pay attentions to a simple girl, and when the
-wedding-day was fixed she would disappear.
-
-One night, in a gambling-house in Chili, she quarrelled with, and
-stabbed a gentleman of great importance in the city. The relatives
-made the place so hot for Catalina, that she was compelled to make her
-escape across the Andes, into another province. Her lawlessness once
-brought her under the hands of the hangman; and a reprieve arrived
-just as, with the noose round her neck, she was about to be launched
-into eternity. She wandered over every part of Spanish America, taking
-up, at random, the profession of soldier, sailor, or even lawyer.
-
-The discovery of her sex was brought about by a curious accident. Her
-violent deeds having again provoked the guardians of the law, she was
-compelled to fly for refuge for sanctuary to a church at Guamango, in
-Peru. The bishop, a pious man, tried to convert the young criminal,
-animadverting on the wicked life the latter had been leading, and
-exhorting her to repentance. The stubborn heart of Catalina, inured to
-every kind of reproach and harsh language, was touched by the kindness
-with which the bishop spoke. For a few moments she maintained a dogged
-silence; then, falling on her knees and bursting into tears:--
-
-"Father," she sobbed. "I am a woman!"
-
-She then told the astounded prelate her extraordinary story. He pitied
-the unhappy young woman, and by his influence she was pardoned and
-permitted to return to Spain. She arrived at Cadiz in 1624, whither
-her fame had preceded her. During her journey through Spain and Italy
-the streets were crowded by wondering spectators. Pope Urban VIII.
-allowed her to retain her masculine costume for the rest of her days.
-It is not known in what year she died; according to an old manuscript
-preserved in a convent at Vera Cruz, she devoted her latter years to
-trade, and assumed the name of Antonio de Erauso. Her portrait was
-taken at Seville by Pacheco, a Spanish painter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the early years of the Emperor Charles V.'s reign, the nobles of
-Castile formed a confederacy called the Holy Junta, and took up arms
-to recover their traditional rights and privileges. John de Padilla,
-a young noble, was at the head of this insurrection; but it was his
-wife, Dona Maria Pacheco, who really conducted the confederacy. She
-was highly gifted and extremely ambitious, though, like most ambitious
-people, not at all scrupulous as to the means employed, so long as the
-event turned out according to her wishes.
-
-The Junta soon began to languish for want of money, so Dona Maria
-persuaded the people to strip the cathedral at Toledo of its plate and
-jewellery. In 1521 Padilla was captured, and sentenced to death. He
-wrote to his wife, telling her not to grieve, but rather to consider
-his death as his deliverance from a weary life. But his capture proved
-fatal to the confederacy. Toledo, the head-quarters of the rebels,
-was soon invested by the king's troops. Dona Maria used every means
-to secure her position. She even wrote to the French general on the
-Spanish frontier, inviting him to invade Navarre. By keeping the death
-of Padilla fresh in the minds of the citizens, she incited them to make
-a resolute defence. Sorties attended with varied success were made,
-sometimes daily, from the garrison.
-
-At last the canons of the cathedral, whom she had offended, worked
-on the minds of the ignorant, credulous multitude, telling them that
-Maria's influence over them was due entirely to witchcraft. The loss of
-three hundred men in a desperate sortie so humbled the citizens that
-they drove Maria into the Alcazar, and opened the gates to Charles's
-troops.
-
-Maria defended herself four months longer in the citadel. But at last,
-reduced to the utmost extremities, she fled into Portugal, where many
-of her relatives and friends resided, and there passed the remainder of
-her days in great poverty.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Eleonora of Toledo, the first Grand-Duchess of Tuscany, was a woman
-possessing great courage and a powerful, ambitious intellect. In 1543
-she married Cosmo de'Medici, Duke of Florence. Eleonora took an active
-part in the wars between her husband and his hereditary enemies, the
-Strozzi; and in the bloody and terrible battles fought during the
-struggle, she never left him. Her courage aided greatly to turn the
-fortune of war. One day, while riding out with an escort of fifteen
-horsemen, she encountered Philip Strozzi, commander of her husband's
-enemies, reconnoitring the Florentine camp. Although he had a guard of
-forty-five men, Eleonora, with her accustomed bravery, attacked him,
-slew nearly all his men, and took himself prisoner. Philip, knowing
-that he could not expect quarter--which had never been granted to
-prisoners on either side during the war--committed suicide sooner than
-perish ignominiously on the scaffold. Eleonora was so shocked that she
-prevailed on her husband to spare the lives of his prisoners henceforth.
-
-Eleonora also took a leading part in the war between Charles V. and
-Francis I. Together with her husband she was actively engaged in the
-storming of Sienna. She urged Cosmo to have himself crowned king; but
-he was unable to carry out her project. Pope Pius V. at length changed
-his title from Duke of Florence to Grand-Duke of Tuscany.
-
-Eleonora's ambition being now satisfied, she gave up the rest of her
-life to the encouragement of the fine arts, national education, and
-founding charitable institutions. The date of her death is unknown.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Under Solyman the Magnificent, the Turks conquered the greater part of
-Hungary; whose king, Louis II., was routed and slain in the disastrous
-battle of Mohacz, 1526. And during the next hundred and fifty years
-Hungary was the scene of endless strife between the Crescent and the
-Cross. For a long time victory inclined to the side of the infidels.
-Women, as usual, took a prominent share in the terrible scenes of
-bloodshed and carnage. Wherever there was a town to be defended, women
-immediately took up arms and aided the men to keep off the common enemy.
-
-This female courage showed itself on both sides during these dreary
-wars. In 1529, during the absence of Solyman, the Christians laid siege
-to Buda, the capital of Hungary. One day, having overpowered the Turks,
-they were rushing into the town, when a Jewess tearing a strip of rag
-from her gown, lighted it, and fired off an immense cannon which the
-Ottomans in their flight had overlooked. It caused such havoc amongst
-the Hungarians that they were paralyzed with terror--thus gaining time
-for the Janizaries to rally; and the result was the final repulse of
-the Christians.
-
-Tradition declares that Solyman, when he heard of this courageous act,
-ordered the Jewess's gown to be girt with a circle of pure silver.
-
-In 1552 Solyman besieged Temesvar, which was defended by the brave
-Lasonczy. The wife of the latter led an army to the relief of her
-husband, and attacked the Turkish camp, but she was soon defeated.
-The revolt of the German garrison soon after compelled Lasonczy to
-surrender.
-
-The town of Erlau, besieged at the same time, withstood gallantly
-the repeated assaults of a numerous army. Its fortifications were of
-the poorest description, and the garrison small, but the valour, the
-patriotism of the townspeople supplied every deficiency. Old men and
-young girls, sword and spear in hand, aided in the defence. One woman
-was fighting beside her husband when he fell, pierced by a Turkish
-bullet. Her mother, who was also assisting to defend the wall, now
-wished to remove the body, and suggested that they should devote
-themselves to seeing it honourably interred. But the young widow
-refused to leave the scene of action.
-
-"May God," she cried, "never suffer the earth to cover my husband's
-corpse, till his death has been amply avenged. This is the hour of
-battle, not a time for funeral and for tears."
-
-She seized the shield and sword of her dead husband, and rushing upon
-the Turks, refused to leave the breach, till by the slaughter of three
-infidels she had satisfied her thirst for revenge. Then she raised the
-corpse of her lord, and bore it to the principal church in the town,
-where she paid to it the last honours with great splendour.
-
-When the Turks were besieging Alba, several women, whose husbands had
-been slain, volunteered to defend the walls. The Turks were amazed at
-the cool bravery with which these female warriors defended the various
-posts assigned to them. For several hours they held a bastion, the
-possession of which was deemed highly important by both Turks and
-Christians. Every Turk who endeavoured to scale the bastion had his
-head struck with a scythe.
-
-For more than three months, thanks to the valour of the women, the town
-of Valpon set the Mussulman power at defiance, backed though the latter
-was by all the appliances of war.
-
-The same resistance met them at Agria, not far from Valpon, where the
-wives and daughters of the citizens carried oil, pitch, boiling water,
-molten lead, etc., to pour on the heads of the Turks. One woman was
-struck down by a cannon ball just as she was about to hurl a big stone
-on the skulls of the infidels. Her daughter, seeing her fall, was
-filled with the thirst for revenge. Rushing to the breach, she fought
-with the desperate bravery of a lioness deprived of her cubs, slaying
-and wounding on all sides. At last she was herself slain. One of the
-citizens fighting on the ramparts observed his son-in-law struck dead
-by a musket-ball. Turning to his wife, he asked her to carry away the
-corpse and render to it the last offices.
-
-"There is another duty more pressing," replied she. "That of defending
-our religion and our country comes before love. To them I will give the
-last drop of my blood."
-
-During the siege of Szigeth, in 1566, which cost the Turks twenty
-thousand men, orders were given one day for a general assault. A
-Hungarian officer, wishing to save his wife from falling into the hands
-of the infidels, took the cruel resolution of putting her to death. But
-his young wife, less attached to her life than to her husband, declared
-that she would accompany him to battle, there to receive death or
-glory. Dressing herself in a suit of his clothes, she armed herself and
-went with him to the field. No one displayed greater courage than she
-did. Without once quitting her husband, she slew every Turk who came
-within reach of her sword. She continued to fight with the same ardour
-till the close of the engagement, and wherever she was seen a Turkish
-corpse remained to mark her presence. At last her husband was slain,
-and she herself, severely wounded by the Turkish arrows, lay on her
-husband's breast. After receiving the last sacrament, she expired in
-great agony.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the siege of Famagosta, in Cyprus, by Mustapha Pacha, in 1571,
-the noblest Cypriote dames, undismayed by the iron fire of the Turkish
-batteries, aided to defend the city. Not only did they carry round
-food and ammunition to the soldiers, but, during the assault, they
-rolled huge stones on the heads of the Turks assembled in the ditch
-below or climbing to the attack.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the annals of French poetry few names stand higher than that of
-Louise Labe, _La Belle Cordiere_. She was born at Lyons in 1526 or
-1527. Nature was lavish in her gifts; to personal beauty and an
-exquisite voice, were added talents for literature and music. Her
-education included music, languages, riding, and military exercises.
-The last named acquirement excited in the mind of Louise a wish to
-enter the army. At the age of sixteen she served, under the name of
-Captain Loys, in the campaign of 1542, which ended in the siege of
-Perpignan. Some say she followed her father, others her lover to the
-field; but whatever was the cause of her presence in camp, she earned
-great praises for her courage. But the French were obliged to raise the
-siege; and Louise Labe, after sharing in the fetes and tournaments held
-by the Dauphin, gave up the military profession, henceforth devoting
-her time to music and poetry.
-
-She married Ennemond Perrin, a wealthy rope-maker, and thus acquired
-the opportunity to follow her literary inclinations. She possessed a
-valuable library of books in Greek, Latin, Spanish, and Italian, which
-languages she knew perfectly. Her spacious and tastefully laid-out
-gardens became the resort of nobles, poets, savants, wits, artists,
-musicians, and men of genius of every kind; and at these re-unions the
-musical skill of _La Belle Cordiere_ showed to advantage. She excited
-at the same time the admiration of the poets and the envy of the
-ladies. The street in Lyons where she lived was christened after her.
-She died in 1566, one year after her husband, who had left her sole
-heir to his large property.
-
-Her chief works were an "Epistle to Clemence de Bourges," the "Debat
-de la Folie et de l'Amour," a drama in prose, three elegies, and
-twenty-four sonnets. The first edition of her writings appeared in 1555.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mary of Hungary, wife of the unfortunate Louis II., who was slain in
-the battle of Mohacz, was celebrated throughout continental Europe for
-her military prowess and her love of field-sports. From the latter
-she acquired the soubriquet of Diana, while from her habit of mixing
-with the soldiers she was styled (like the Empress Victoria) "Mother
-of the Camp." She was the daughter of Philip I. of Spain, and handsome
-even for a Spanish princess, majestic in her carriage, yet affable and
-charming in her manners. Her brother, the Emperor Charles V., had so
-high an opinion of her political abilities that he entrusted to her
-charge the government of the Netherlands; and her court soon became
-famous for the magnificence of its tournaments and spectacles.
-
-Mary commanded during several expeditions against the troops of France;
-and during the various battles and skirmishes which ensued, she would
-frequently march on foot, or ride with the soldiers to encourage them
-by her presence. In 1553, when Charles V. was besieging Metz, which was
-defended by the Duke of Guise, Mary caused a diversion, by invading
-Picardy, to prevent Henry II. from succouring the besieged. By this
-raid she caused terrible havoc, destroying seven or eight hundred
-villages, and burning Folembrai, a favourite palace of Francis I.
-
-Henry II., in retaliation, burned some of the most populous towns in
-the Netherlands, together with the royal palace of Bains, which was one
-of the architectural wonders of the age. Mary vowed that France should
-repent this deed. She kept her word; and more than once her conduct
-savoured of gross cruelty. Henry directed his soldiers to try their
-utmost to make Mary a prisoner; for, said he, he would like to try
-whether she would retain, in captivity, her haughty, courageous spirit.
-
-Mary resigned the government of the Netherlands in 1555, and returned
-to Spain, where she died three years afterwards.
-
-Graine-ni-Mhaile, Granu Weal, or Grace O'Malley, a famous Irish heroine
-who lived during the latter half of the sixteenth century, was daughter
-of Owen O'Malley, a noted chief who commanded a small navy. He used
-to make voyages from port to port, partly for commerce, but more
-especially for piracy. During childhood, Grace frequently accompanied
-her father on his expeditions. After his death, her brother being a
-minor, she took command of the galleys, and made several voyages. Her
-chief rendezvous was at Clare island, off the coast of Mayo, where she
-kept her larger vessels moored. Here, too, she had a fortress. Her
-smaller ships she kept at Carrigahooly Castle, which was her favourite
-residence, and chief stronghold.
-
-Her piracies at length became so frequent and so daring that a reward
-of five hundred pounds was offered by the English Government for her
-apprehension. Troops were sent from Galway to Carrigahooly; but after
-a siege of more than a fortnight, they were compelled to retire. The
-people of Connaught relate numerous adventures and extraordinary
-actions performed on the high seas by Granu Weal.
-
-Her first husband was O'Flaherty, chief of West Connaught. After his
-death she married Sir Richard Burke, and became reconciled to the
-English. After her second marriage, she frequently assisted the
-English with her troops in Connaught; for which Queen Elizabeth wrote
-her an autograph letter, thanking her and inviting her on a visit to
-the court, at London. Graine-ni-Mhaile, with several galleys, sailed
-to London in 1575. She was received with great distinction by the
-queen, who offered to make her visitor a countess; but Grace declined
-this honour, and answered with much spirit, that both of them being
-princesses, they were equal in rank, and could not therefore confer
-titles or honours upon each other. But, she said, her majesty might
-confer any rank she pleased on young Burke (son of Grace), who was
-born on board ship during the voyage to England; named from this
-circumstance, Tioboid-na-Lung, signifying Theobald of the Ships. Queen
-Elizabeth, it is said, knighted him under the title of Sir Theobald
-Burke; he was afterwards created Viscount of Mayo by Charles I.
-
-On her voyage home Granu Weal landed at Howth for provisions. She was
-greatly surprised to find the gates of the castle closed, because
-the family were at dinner. Indignant at this dereliction from Irish
-hospitality, Granu seized a little boy whom she found playing with
-an attendant near the sea-shore. Finding that he was the infant heir
-of Howth, she brought him to Connaught: refusing to restore him till
-Lord Howth had entered into an agreement that his gates should never
-again be closed during dinner. The abduction of the infant heir of St.
-Lawrence forms the subject of a painting at Howth Castle.
-
-Grace O'Malley was buried in a monastery which she had herself endowed,
-on Clare island. There are yet some remains of her monument to be
-seen there. Her name has always been familiar in the mouths of Irish
-peasants; and she is still sung as a heroine in various ballads,
-English and Irish.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the fiercely contested wars brought about by the efforts of
-the Roman Catholic princes to stop the Reformation, women, as usual,
-took their share of the dangers and privations endured by all for the
-sake of their faith. They displayed as much courage and fortitude as
-the men, whether, as the wives and daughters of citizens they aided to
-defend their homes, or whether as princesses they boldly headed their
-troops in defence of their religion and their dominions.
-
-Kenan Simonsz Hasselaar was heroine of the famous siege of Haarlem.
-The revolting cruelty of Spain in her first efforts to stamp out the
-rebellion in the Netherlands, only stimulated the Dutch to bolder
-and more desperate efforts for freedom. Haarlem was one of the most
-important cities; and the Spaniards, resolved to capture it at any
-price, despatched twelve thousand men, commanded by Frederic of Toledo,
-to besiege the city in December, 1572. On the 12th, during a severe
-frost, the place was invested. Bravely did the inhabitants, both
-soldiers and citizens, resist the Spaniards. Women cheerfully shared in
-all the toils and dangers, the manifold privations of the defence.
-
-Kenan Simonsz Hasselaar, a widow about fifty years old, of a noble
-family, raised a troop of three hundred women for the defence of the
-walls. At the head of her corps she was constantly seen pressing
-forward to attack the Spaniards, or aiding in the erection of new
-defences. Even the besiegers, who were repulsed with great slaughter in
-several assaults, could not help admiring the courage of this Amazon
-band.
-
-Holland still holds the name of Kenan Hasselaar very dear. One of the
-ships launched from the government dock-yards every year receives her
-name. A huge painting suspended in the hall of the Haarlem Stadthuis
-transmits her glorious deeds to posterity; and her portrait hangs in
-the Treasure Chamber of the Municipality, amongst the commanders of St.
-John, the relics of the Spanish wars, the town insignia, and the other
-precious nick-nacks and antiquities collected together, accumulated by
-generations of thrifty and patriotic burghers.
-
-The women of Alkmaar (which was besieged by Don Frederic immediately
-after the fall of Haarlem) displayed the same courage. During the
-general assault made by the Spaniards on the 18th September, 1573,
-the women aided the soldiers by hurling down fragments of stones and
-red-hot iron, and pouring boiling oil, molten pitch, rosin, and lead on
-the besiegers, of whom a terrible carnage was made.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mary Queen of Scots, the unfortunate rival of Elizabeth, was a
-high-spirited, courageous woman, possessing great talents for ruling;
-and had she lived before the Reformation, she might possibly have
-been more successful than her ancestors, most of whom came to an
-untimely end. But the bitter hostility of John Knox was too powerful
-for the queen, though for some years she contrived to keep her throne.
-In 1565, shortly before her ill-starred marriage with Darnley, the
-Congregational citizens of Edinburgh, stirred up to rebellion by the
-secret machinations of the queen's "base brother, Moray," turned out in
-hostile array, and encamped at St. Leonard's Crags. Mary, undismayed by
-the fierce looks and big words of these staunch Protestants, rode to
-meet them at the head of a mere handful of troops. The rebel leaders
-fled, and the rest, under promise of pardon, returned to their homes.
-
-In July of the same year the queen wedded Darnley. This was the
-signal for an open insurrection on the part of the Scottish nobles.
-Again Queen Mary showed herself a worthy descendant of the Stuarts.
-"She acted in this emergency," remarks Miss Strickland, "with energy
-and spirit indicative of the confidence inspired by her popularity,
-and showed herself no whit behind the most distinguished of her
-predecessors in courage and ability." At the head of five thousand men
-she left Edinburgh, August 26th, together with her husband, the lords
-of the council, and her ladies-in-waiting. She was attired in a scarlet
-and gold-embroidered riding-habit, which, it was said, covered a light
-suit of armour, while her hood and veil were understood to conceal a
-steel casque. Pistols hung at her saddle-bow. Darnley, with a vanity
-inherent in his nature, wore a gorgeous suit of gilded armour.
-
-On the 29th the queen reached Glasgow; and next day the rebels
-retreated from Paisley towards Hamilton. The queen set out in pursuit.
-The confederate lords, disappointed in their expectations of a general
-Protestant rising, were obliged to retreat from place to place before
-the queen and her army. The bravery and endurance of Mary gained the
-love and respect of many amongst her subjects.
-
-Mary returned to Edinburgh for a short time; and on the 8th of October
-she marched again, this time at the head of eighteen thousand men, to
-renew the war. The rebel lords, terrified at the approach of their
-royal mistress, fled across the English border, and took refuge in
-Carlisle.
-
-Queen Mary had no further opportunity of displaying her courage till
-after the murder of Darnley, in 1567, when the base conduct of Bothwell
-and the consequent insurrection of nearly all the Scottish nobles
-forced her once more to take the field in person. When the opposing
-armies met, June 14th, at Carberry Hill, she rode with her followers
-to the field, though neither she nor they had broken their fast that
-morning.
-
-After this followed the captivity of Mary in Loch-Leven Castle. In 1568
-she made her escape, and assisted by a few friends, made a last effort
-to recover her throne. The Earl of Murray (regent during the minority
-of king James), with a large army intercepted the queen's march at
-Langside, two miles from Glasgow.
-
-It is not quite clear whether Mary took an active part in the battle
-of Langside, which for ever crushed her hopes. Brantome declares "the
-Queen-mother of France assured him that Mary mounted her good hackney
-and rode into the battle like another Zenobia, to encourage her troops
-to advance, and would fain have led them to the charge in person. But
-she found them all quarrelling among themselves, and insensible to her
-eloquence, and more inclined to exchange blows with each other than to
-attack the rebel host."
-
-According to the popular tradition, however, it was beneath the
-spreading boughs of a hawthorn, which is still known as "the Queen's
-thorn," halfway up the green hill behind Castlemilk, that the
-unfortunate sovereign stood and watched the battle, surrounded by her
-ladies and a few devoted adherents. Legend also points out another
-"Queen's thorn" on the hill behind the ruins of Cathcart Castle.
-According to a local history, Lord Livingstone, at the head of "the
-bairns of Falkirk," rode with the queen to the battle-field, and
-afterwards aided her to escape; and this would seem to corroborate what
-Brantome has said.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Amongst those heroines who distinguished themselves during the
-religious wars in France, was Magdalaine de Saint-Nectaire,--also
-called Se' nectaire, or Sennetaire. She was a staunch Protestant, and
-after the death of her husband, Gui di Saint Exuperi, she retired to
-her chateau at Miremont, in Limousin, armed sixty of her retainers,
-and commenced a series of raids against the Roman Catholics. In
-1575, during the reign of the weak and frivolous Henry III., Montal,
-Lieutenant du Roi, in Limousin, whose soldiers had often been defeated
-by Magdalaine, resolved to besiege the heroine in her chateau. With
-fifteen hundred foot and two hundred horse he arrived before the gates.
-Magdalaine made a sally, and cut to pieces a detachment of fifty men;
-but on her return she found that the chateau had been captured. She
-gallopped to Turene, a neighbouring town, to gather reinforcements,
-returning thence with four companies of mounted arquebusiers. Montal
-awaited her in a defile of the mountains; but he was vanquished and
-mortally wounded. His soldiers, discouraged by the fall of their
-leader, withdrew the same evening to a neighbouring castle, where
-Montal died four days later.
-
-The year of this heroine's death is not recorded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another heroine of these wars was Constance de Cezelli, a loyal
-supporter of Henry IV. When that monarch, after his accession to the
-throne, was struggling for supremacy with the League, the troops of
-the latter, in 1590, besieged the town of Leucates, in Languedoc.
-It was defended by the Huguenots, under the command of M. de Barri,
-governor of the place. The latter was captured by means of a pretended
-conference; but he contrived to write to his wife, Constance de
-Cezelli, bidding her to take the command and defend the town so long as
-there was any hope of success. Constance, according to his commands,
-maintained order in Leucates, and encouraged the soldiers by frequently
-appearing on the walls with a pike in her hand. When the Leaguers
-discovered who it was that commanded the garrison they thought to
-frighten her into a surrender by threatening to put her husband to
-death if she did not give up the town. She possessed much private
-property, which she offered as ransom for her husband; but she declared
-that she could never purchase his life by an act of treason.
-
-M. de Barri was put to the torture, for the besiegers thought that
-he would command his wife to open the gates. But he braved all their
-menaces, and when they were compelled, soon after, to raise the siege
-the governor of Leucates was strangled.
-
-Although Constance was overwhelmed with grief and horror, she would not
-allow the soldiers to avenge the death of M. de Barri on some Roman
-Catholic prisoners.
-
-Henry IV. sent Constance de Cezelli a commission appointing her
-governor of Leucates, with a reversion in favour of her son. She held
-this office for twenty-seven years, and proved herself thoroughly
-competent for the duties of governor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 26th July, 1581, the United Netherlands declared their
-independence, and invited the Duke of Anjou to rule over them. But,
-although the prince entered the country with five thousand horse and
-twelve thousand foot, the military genius of Alexander Farnese, the
-Spanish governor, together with the vacillating conduct of the Dutch
-themselves, frustrated all his efforts, and he was compelled to disband
-his forces and leave the country. The greater number of his soldiers
-joined the standard of the Prince d'Espinoy, governor of Tournai.
-
-Alexander Farnese laid siege, on the 1st of October, to the important
-city of Tournai. In the absence of the Prince d'Espinoy, the Princess,
-Christine de Lalaing, took the command, and conducted the defence in
-a manner worthy of her distinguished relatives Count Horn and Admiral
-de Montmorency. The Prince of Parma summoned Tournai to surrender,
-but Christine gave him a defiant refusal, and set so courageous
-an example to the soldiers that they made a resolute defence. The
-princess superintended all the defences in person, and directed all the
-officers. She appeared daily on the walls; and in one of the assaults
-was wounded in the arm, though, despite this, she refused to retire
-till the Spaniards had been repulsed.
-
-After a siege of two months' duration, it became impossible to hold the
-place any longer. The walls were gradually undermined from without,
-and the fidelity of the garrison was tampered with by Father Gery, a
-Dominican friar. The Protestants in the city, not knowing what moment
-an insurrection would break out amongst the Catholic inhabitants,
-insisted upon surrendering the place. Christine finding herself
-deserted by both Protestants and Catholics, obtained honourable terms,
-and left the city with all the honours of war, carrying all her
-personal property with her. Farnese, moreover, accepted one hundred
-thousand crowns in place of sacking the city.
-
-As the princess passed through the gates she was received with an
-outburst of applause from the Spanish army, with whom she had acquired
-a high reputation through her courage. Parma entered the city on
-November 30th.
-
-In September, 1863, a statue was raised to Christine de Lalaing in the
-city, which, nearly three centuries before, she had so nobly defended.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In 1588 a panic flew from one end of England to the other on the
-threatened invasion of the Spanish Armada. As it was supposed that
-the invaders would attempt to sail up the Thames, several thousand
-volunteers were assembled at Tilbury, under command of the Earl of
-Leicester. "Vnto the sayd army," says Richard Hackluyt, "came in proper
-person, the Queen's most roiall Maiestie, representing Tomyris, that
-Scythian princesse, or rather diuine Pallas her selfe."
-
-On the 8th of August, Queen Elizabeth, mounted on a white charger, a
-marshal's _baton_ grasped in her hand, rode through the camp, where
-she was received with enthusiastic acclamations by both volunteers
-and regulars drawn up on a hill near Tilbury church. Forbidding any
-of her retinue to follow her, she was attended only by the Earls of
-Ormonde and Leicester, the latter bearing before her the Sword of
-State. She was also followed by a page, who had the honour of carrying
-her "white-plumed regal helmet." The queen's costume was a mixture of
-the military uniform and the fashionable ladies' attire of the period.
-Beneath a corslet of polished steel descended "a farthingale of such
-monstrous amplitude, that," observes Miss Strickland, "it is wonderful
-how her high-mettled war-horse submitted to carry a lady encumbered
-with a gabardine of so strange a fashion."
-
-Riding bare-headed through the ranks, she addressed the warriors in an
-oration well calculated to inspire them with enthusiasm. It concluded
-amidst vociferous and long continued cheering.
-
-After the dispersion of the Invincible Armada, Elizabeth celebrated a
-triumph, in imitation of the ancient Romans. She rode in a triumphal
-chariot from her palace to St. Paul's cathedral, where the "enseignes
-and colours of ye vanquished Spaniards," were displayed to the
-delighted gaze of the citizens.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the Border Wars between England and Scotland women had frequent
-opportunities of local distinction. Holinshed, speaking of a skirmish
-which took place at Naworth, in 1570, between Lord Hursden and Leonard
-Dacres, says the latter had in his army "many desperate women, who
-there gave the adventure of their lives, and fought right stoutly."
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Duchy of Lorraine, or Lothringen, was, for many centuries, a
-subject of contention between France and Germany. It was for a
-long time a fief of the German empire; but from the middle of the
-sixteenth century, the royal family of France became connected with
-its rulers, and assumed thenceforth a right to interfere in its
-internal arrangements. During the Thirty Years' War the French drove
-Duke Charles from his throne, on account of his close connection with
-Austria.
-
-It was during this war that Madame St. Balmont, who has been styled a
-second Joan of Arc, performed the gallant deeds for which she became
-so famous. Barbara of Ernecourt, was born in 1609, at the Castle of
-Neuville, situated between Verdun and Bar. She belonged to a good
-family in Lorraine, and from her earliest childhood she trained herself
-in military exercises and the use of arms. Her chief delight was
-hunting, and every kind of field sport, which the Abbe Arnould remarks,
-"is a kind of war." One day when she was engaging in her favourite
-pastime, she met with the Count de St. Belmont, and, being mutually
-charmed, they married shortly after.
-
-Barbara was scarcely more than a girl when she married, and at this
-time her face was excessively pretty, though it was afterwards spoiled
-by the small pox--when, so far from being made unhappy by the loss of
-her beauty, "she was as pleased," says the Abbe Arnould, "to be marked
-with it as other women are afflicted on a similar occasion, and said
-that it would enable her to look more like a man." Her figure, however,
-was small and clumsily made; but she was robust, and able to bear a
-considerable amount of fatigue without being overcome by it.
-
-When the French invaded Lorraine, the Count de St. Belmont, who had
-always occupied a high place in the estimation of the duke, now
-actively employed himself resisting the invaders, while Barbara
-remained as custodian of his castle and estates. Unfortunately, the
-duke's high opinion of M. de St. Belmont's military talents led the
-latter into a serious dilemma; for, being given the command of a
-fortress, he felt himself bound in honour to defend it for several
-days against the French. In those days there was, it would seem, a
-rigid code of the military law--doubtless first introduced through
-humane feelings--by which officers in charge of strongholds refusing
-to surrender, after all hope of success was gone, were to be punished
-in the most degrading manner. When this feeble stronghold was taken,
-the French leaders seriously debated the expediency of hanging their
-antagonist.
-
-Meanwhile the countess, having been contemptuously treated by a cavalry
-officer who had taken up his abode on one of her husband's estates,
-despatched a cartel, signed "Le Chevalier de St. Belmont," purporting
-to be written by her husband's brother. They crossed swords, and
-Barbara almost immediately disarmed her opponent; then, picking up his
-sword and handing it to him with a gracious smile, she said:--
-
-"You thought, sir, I make no doubt, that you were fighting with Le
-Chevalier de St. Belmont; it is, however Madame de St. Belmont of that
-name who returns you your sword, and begs you in future to pay more
-regard to the requests of ladies."
-
-The officer, not caring to show his face in the vicinity, disappeared
-immediately and was never heard of again.
-
-Barbara's reputation was considerably raised by this duel; several
-gentlemen in the neighbourhood took refuge in the village and put
-themselves under her orders. At their head she made frequent raids
-into those parts of the country occupied by the French. She was always
-victorious, and almost invariably brought home some trophies in arms
-or baggage, for, in addition to courage, she possessed great prudence
-and foresight.
-
-The Peace of Westphalia, in 1648, put an end to the Thirty Years' War,
-and settled, for a time, the affairs of Lorraine. Barbara laid down
-the sword and took up the pen, which she wielded quite as skilfully.
-Her first work, "Les Jumeaux Martyrs," appeared in 1651; other works
-of equal merit followed. After the death of her husband she gave
-herself up entirely to religion, to which she had always been devotedly
-attached, and retired into a convent. She died before taking the veil,
-May 22nd, 1660, at the age of fifty-one.
-
-Although there was none of that unfeminine coarseness which so often
-attaches to women who pass the greater part of their lives in camps,
-Barbara was always more at her ease in male society than in that of
-her own sex, in which she felt embarrassed, awkward. While her courage
-rendered her famous throughout France and Germany, her charity and the
-zeal which she displayed in the service of the poor, rendered Madame de
-St. Belmont respected and beloved by persons of every rank who dwelt in
-the neighbourhood.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Christina of Sweden, daughter of Gustavus Adolphus, the great
-Protestant hero of the Thirty Years' War, inherited her father's native
-love for battles, soldiers, even the smell of powder--all, in fact,
-that pertains to a warrior's life. When she was about two years old,
-her father took her to Calmar. The governor did not know whether to
-give the customary salute, afraid lest the child might be frightened
-by the noise of the cannon. But Gustavus, whom he consulted, replied,
-after a moment's hesitation:--
-
-"Fire! The girl is the daughter of a soldier, and should be accustomed
-to it early."
-
-The salute was therefore given. Christina clapped her hands in delight.
-
-"More! More!" she cried.
-
-Pleased to see her evident predilection for the taste of gunpowder,
-Gustavus Adolphus took his daughter, soon after, to see a grand review.
-She displayed even greater delight than before, and Gustavus said, with
-a smile:--
-
-"Very well; you shall go, I am resolved, where you shall have enough of
-this."
-
-However, the early death of Gustavus Adolphus hindered him from ever
-fulfilling this promise; and Christina, in her memoirs, regrets that
-she was not permitted to learn the art of war under so illustrious a
-master.
-
-In 1647, at the age of twenty-nine, Christina resigned the crown of
-Sweden. Passing through Denmark and Germany, she proceeded to Belgium;
-and from Innspruck she went to Rome, which she entered in state,
-attired in the costume of an Amazon, and mounted on a war-horse.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-IX.
-
-THE AMAZONS IN SOUTH AMERICA.
-
-
-DOWN from the lofty Andes rolls the majestic Amazon, the largest river
-in the world. From its sources to the Atlantic the length is upwards of
-four thousand miles. The banks are clothed with immense impenetrable
-forests of pine, cedar, red-wood, holly, and cinnamon, affording a
-haunt to savage jaguars, bears, leopards, tigers, wild boars, and a
-great variety of venemous serpents; and abounding, too, in birds of the
-most beautiful plumage, and apes of the most fantastic appearance. The
-waters swarm with alligators, turtles, and almost every description of
-fish. The shores and islands were formerly peopled by numerous tribes
-of Indians, who have either become extinct or retired further up the
-mountains.
-
-This majestic river was first explored in 1540-41, by Francisco
-Orellana, a Spanish adventurer. Gonzalo Pizarro, brother of the Marquis
-of Pizarro, started with Orellana from Zumaque, where they met by
-accident. Together they descended the river Coca in search of the
-wondrous El Dorado, which, they had been told, was situated on the
-banks of a great river into which the Coca flowed. During the voyage
-they met with innumerable difficulties, and suffered great hardships,
-especially from the want of provisions. Several of their followers
-fell ill; and at last Pizarro constructed a brigantine, and embarked
-his invalids on board, with two hundred thousand livres in gold. He
-gave Orellana the command, and remained behind with the rest of the
-adventurers; desiring Orellana, if successful, to return with supplies.
-The latter, having entered at last a broad river, whose shores were so
-distant from each other that the waters seemed like those of an inland
-sea, was certain he had almost reached El Dorado. On the last day of
-December, 1540, he resolved not to turn back; so, letting himself go
-with the current, he abandoned his comrades under Pizarro to their fate.
-
-At the mouth of the Nayho, Orellana was cautioned by an old Indian
-chief to beware of the warlike women. At the River Canuriz, between the
-mouth of the Xingu and the Rio Negro, he encountered a hostile tribe
-of Indians who opposed his landing. Blows were exchanged; several fell
-on each side. Amongst the slain were several women, who had fought
-quite as bravely as the men. Orellana was, of course, the victor, and
-lived to carry home to Europe an account (improved and embellished) of
-a nation of Amazons who lived in South America, and made war on the
-Indians.
-
-Thenceforth a legend existed among the European adventurers that
-a nation of female warriors dwelt somewhere on the South American
-continent. The river, hitherto called the Maranon, from its first
-discoverer, was re-christened as the Amazons' river; and a large tract
-of country, with indefinable limits, was set down in the maps under the
-somewhat vague denomination of Amazonia.
-
-Whether the natives first told the Europeans, or whether the latter,
-with a view to increase the wonders of the New World, invented the
-story and told it to the natives, none can tell; but even before the
-voyage of Orellana, a tradition existed amongst both natives and
-colonists that a nation of armed women dwelt somewhere in America.
-Christopher Columbus was told that the small island of Mandanino, or
-Matinino (Montserrat), was inhabited solely by female warriors.
-
-Since the days of Orellana, there have been found plenty of travellers
-to confirm the story and add their testimony to its truth. Hernando de
-Ribeira, a follower of Cabega de Vega, the Conquistador of Paraguay,
-asserted in 1545 that he had been told of a nation of Amazons who lived
-on the western shore of a large lake poetically termed "The Mansion of
-the Sun," because that orb sinks into its waters every evening. Father
-d'Acugna, in his "Discovery of the River Amazon," declares that the
-various tribes of Indians (amongst others, the Toupinambous) dwelling
-around the Amazon, assured him again and again that a republic of
-female warriors did exist in that region; several chiefs said they
-themselves had been in the country of the Amazons on a visit. If, says
-d'Acugna, the tradition is not true, it is certainly the greatest of
-all the fables invented about the New World. The Indians all believed
-that the Amazons possessed vast treasures, sufficient to enrich many
-kingdoms; but no one dared to attack so warlike a nation, to whom
-liberty was dearer than all the riches in the world, and who knew how
-to send their poisoned shafts straight to the heart. D'Acugna fixes the
-residence of the Amazons on the banks of the Canuriz, on lofty, almost
-inaccessible mountains.
-
-"When their neighbours visit them," he says, "at a time appointed by
-themselves, they receive them with bows and arrows in their hands,
-which they exercise as if about to engage with enemies. But knowing
-the object of their visitors, they lay these weapons down, and welcome
-as their guests the strangers, who remain with them a few days."
-
-Andre Thevet, in his work "Les Singularites de la France Antarctique,"
-Paris, 1558, makes the arrival of the Amazons' guests the subject of a
-pictorial illustration.
-
-In 1595, Sir Walter Raleigh, wishing to make a fortune in a hurry,
-undertook an expedition to Guiana to seek for the golden city of Manoa.
-Most probably he had read Thevet's work, an English translation of
-which, by Bynneman, appeared in 1568; and he made the most careful
-enquiries after the Amazons. But, like his predecessors, he was doomed
-to disappointment.
-
-"I made inqvirie," says he (in his book 'The Discourie of the Large,
-Rich, and Bewtifvl Empire of Gviana') "amongst the most ancient and
-best traueled of the _Orenoqveponi_, and I had knowledge of all the
-riuers betweene _Orenoqve_ and _Amazones_, and was uery desirovs to
-vnderstand the trvth of the warlike women, bicavce of some it is
-beleeved, of others not; though I digresse from my pvrpose, yet I will
-set doune what hath been deliuered to me for troth of those women, and
-I spake with a _Casiqve_, or lord of the people, that told me he had
-been in the riuer, and beyond it also, the nations of those women are
-on the sovth side of the riuer in a prouince of _Topago_, and their
-chiefest strength and retraicts are in the Islands scitvate on the
-sovth side of the entrance, some sixty leagves within the movth of the
-said riuer."
-
-After entering into some details about the reception of their guests in
-the month of April, when, he says, "this one moneth they feast, davnce,
-and drinke," he gives an account of the treatment of children, which
-bears a suspicious resemblance to the stories related of the ancient
-Amazons. He further tells us the South American Amazons were "said to
-be very crvell and bloodthirsty, especially to svch as offer to inuade
-their territories."
-
-In 1599 an abridged Latin translation of Raleigh's work appeared at
-Nuremberg, at the cost of Levinus Hulsius, geographer and collector.
-It was illustrated by five coloured plates; the third representing
-the joyful reception of the Amazons' visitors, and their subsequent
-amusements; the fourth showing the treatment bestowed on prisoners of
-war, who are seen hung up by the heels to trees, where they serve as
-targets for the skill of their captors, while their ultimate fate is
-hinted by the figures of several Amazons preparing huge fires.
-
-At the close of the seventeenth century, Father Cyprian Baraza, a
-Jesuit missionary who went among the South American Indians, gave
-an account of some Amazonian tribes who dwelt to the west of the
-Paraquay, in 12 deg. south latitude. M. de Condamine, who read a "Relation
-abregee d'un Voyage," etc., before the Academie des Sciences in 1745,
-brought forward several testimonies to the existence of the Amazons,
-whom he described as a society of independent women, who were visited
-by the sterner sex during the month of April only. Amongst other
-authorities he mentions Don Francisco Diego Portales, and Don Francisco
-Torralva, two Spanish governors of Venezuela, who agreed in declaring
-that a tribe of female warriors lived in the interior of Guiana.
-
-Thirty years later he was supported by a Portuguese astronomer, Don
-Ribeiro de Sampeio ("Diario da Viegem, no anno de 1774 et 1775") who,
-however, spoke only by hearsay. Gili, the missionary, was told by
-an Indian of the Quaqua tribe that the Aikeambenanos ("women living
-alone") dwelt on the banks of the Cuchinero, which falls into the
-Orinoco opposite the island of Taran, between Cayeara and Alta Gracia.
-
-Count Pagan, in his "Relation de la Riviere des Amazones," after
-testifying to the existence of the nation, observes, in his florid
-style "Que l'Asie ne se vante plus de ses comptes veritables ou
-fabuleuses des Amazones. L'Amerique ne lui cede point cet avantage....
-Et que le fleuve de Thermodoon ne soit plus enfle de la gloire de ces
-conquerantes les guerrieres."
-
-The Abbe Guyon, in his "Histoire des Amazons," Paris, 1740, expresses
-great faith in the story of these South American dames; and suggests
-that they were colonised by the African Amazons, who might, he
-suggests, have passed from the Old to the New World by the now
-submerged isle of Atlantis. But his testimony is of little value, as it
-evidently rests almost entirely upon D'Acugna's report.
-
-Even within the last twenty or thirty years, many Indian tribes have
-expressed their belief in the existence of the Amazons. Those who dwell
-on the Essequibo, the Rupunni, and the lower Corentyn, gravely assured
-Sir Robert Schomburgh, in 1844, that separate tribes of women still
-lived on the upper part of the Corentyn, in a country called Marawonne;
-and the narrators went so much into detail that Sir Robert and his
-companions were almost inclined to believe them. The natives further
-told them that when they had journeyed some distance above the great
-cataracts of the Corentyn, at a point where two gigantic rocks (named
-by the Indians Pioomoco and Surama) rose from either shore, they would
-be in the country of the Woruisamocos, or Amazons.
-
-Sir Robert, while travelling over the vast savannahs, frequently came
-upon heaps of broken pottery, which the Macusion Indians said were
-relics of the Woruisamocos, who had formerly dwelt there. The Caribs
-were especially persistent in declaring that an Amazonian republic
-still existed in the centre of Guiana "in those districts which no
-European had ever visited."
-
-The explorers of the river Amazon were formerly stopped by the great
-cataracts on the Rio Trombetas, and in many instances they were
-murdered by ferocious Indians who inhabit the upper branches. Naturally
-those parts of the river which remained unexplored were supposed to be
-the land of the "bellicose dames." In 1842-44 M. Montravel, commander
-of the French war-ship "La Boulonnaise," surveyed the Amazon from
-the sea as high up as the Rio Negro, and heard the same tale in the
-region of the Rio Trombetas. Thus, from the west as well as from the
-north, Europeans heard of a nation of Amazons dwelling in the central
-districts of Guiana.
-
-Humboldt believed to a certain extent in the tradition. His idea
-was that women, in various parts of South America, have now and
-then wearied of the degrading condition in which they are held,
-and occasionally united themselves into bands, as fugitive negroes
-sometimes do, and that the necessity of preserving their independence
-has made them warriors.
-
-Southey, in his "History of Brazil," makes a very trite observation
-concerning the female warriors of the New World. "Had we never," says
-he, "heard of the Amazons of antiquity, I should, without hesitation,
-believe in those of America. Their existence is not the less likely for
-this reason, and yet it must be admitted that the probable truth is
-made to appear suspicious by its resemblance to a known fable."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-X.
-
- Lady Offaley (Irish Rebellion, 1641)--Lady Arundell--Lady
- Bankes--Countess of Derby (Civil Wars in England)--Helena Zrinyi,
- Wife of Tekeli--Incident at the Coronation of William and
- Mary--Mademoiselle de la Charce.
-
-
-"THERE are three sorts of things in the world," says the Abbe Brotier,
-"that know no kind of restraint, and are governed by passion and
-brutality--family quarrels, religious disputes, and civil wars." The
-truth of these words is undeniable, more especially as the last is
-very frequently brought about by its forerunners. The war between
-Charles I. and the Parliament was prosecuted on both sides with so much
-bitterness, that, in certain instances, the conduct of the officers and
-generals savoured more of private feud than public zeal.
-
-The Irish Rebellion of 1641 was one of many unfortunate occurrences
-which precipitated the revolution at home, for not only did the
-Republican party take advantage of the King's difficulties to increase
-its own power, but the Irish rebels envenomed the bitterness between
-King and Commons by declaring that they were empowered, by Royal
-Commission, to defend his Majesty's prerogatives against a Puritanical,
-levelling Government.
-
-The Irish rebels stormed many a castle belonging to English nobles or
-gentry. Amongst others, they beleaguered, in April, 1642, the Castle of
-Geashill, in King's County, the residence of Lettice Digby, Baroness
-of Offaley. This lady, though upwards of sixty years old, and a widow,
-retained all the fire and energy of youth. She closed the gates,
-and made a most resolute defence, refusing to hear any proposal for
-surrender, for the castle, being defended on all sides by bogs and
-woods, was very difficult of access. She was at last relieved by the
-approach of Viscount Lisle and Sir Charles Coote with one hundred and
-twenty foot and three hundred horse. The castle having been provisioned
-and supplied with ammunition, Lady Offaley chose to remain there for a
-time; but being again menaced by the rebels, she was relieved by Sir
-Richard Grenville, in October of the same year, when she retired to
-her mansion at Coles Hill, in Warwickshire, where she died, December
-the 1st, 1658.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 25th of August, 1642, King Charles raised his standard at
-Nottingham. He was at once joined by thousands of Cavaliers; amongst
-others, by the Earl of Arundell, one of his most staunch adherents.
-The latter made himself so troublesome to the Parliament that they
-determined to seize Wardour Castle, his mansion. In 1643, they sent
-orders to Sir Edward Hungerford, commander-in-chief of their forces in
-Wiltshire, to accomplish this design. He arrived before the castle on
-the 2nd of May, and as Lord Arundell was absent, the Puritans expected
-an easy conquest. But Lady Blanche, who had been left in charge, was
-well supplied with provisions and ammunition: and although the garrison
-consisted of barely twenty-five fighting men, she resolved to make a
-brave defence.
-
-Sir Edward Hungerford, on the arrival of Colonel Strode with
-reinforcements, summoned the castle to surrender, pretending that it
-contained men and arms, money, and plate which he was ordered, by a
-warrant from Parliament, to seize. Lady Arundell declined to comply
-with his demands. Sir Edward immediately ordered up his heavy guns,
-and commenced a bombardment which lasted from Wednesday the 3rd to the
-following Monday. The besiegers, moreover, ran two mines under the
-walls, and so terrific was the explosion that the fortress was shaken
-to its foundations.
-
-During the siege, Sir Edward offered again and again to grant quarter
-to the ladies and children if the castle would surrender; but Lady
-Arundell and the other ladies rejected the proposal with disdain. The
-latter, too, together with the women-servants, aided in the defence in
-various ways; they loaded the muskets, and carried round refreshments
-to their gallant defenders.
-
-According as the garrison, exhausted by the continued struggle, relaxed
-in its efforts, the Parliamentary soldiers redoubled their attacks.
-They applied petards to the garden-door, they flung balls of wild-fire
-through the dismantled windows, causing much damage to the apartments
-in the castle, destroying valuable pictures, rich carvings, statuettes,
-costly vases, chairs and couches, mirrors, and various works of almost
-priceless worth.
-
-After the siege had lasted nine days, Lady Arundell, finding the castle
-was no longer tenable, demanded a parley. Articles of surrender were
-drawn up, by which it was stipulated, firstly, that the garrison and
-all the inmates of the castle should be granted quarter; secondly,
-that the ladies and servants should have all their wearing apparel,
-and that sixty serving-men, chosen by the ladies themselves, should
-be permitted to attend them wherever they might please to retire;
-thirdly, that the furniture of the castle was to be saved from plunder
-or destruction.
-
-The Puritans violated, without scruple, the treaty, destroyed or
-mutilated everything of value in the castle, and left with the inmates
-nothing but the clothes they wore. Lady Arundell, with the women and
-children, was carried prisoner to Shaftesbury. Thither, too, five
-van-loads of costly furniture were borne in triumph as the spoils of
-the vanquished.
-
-The loss to Lord Arundell by the devastation and plunder of Wardour
-Castle was estimated at one hundred thousand pounds.
-
-The Parliament, thinking their prisoners were insecure at Shaftesbury,
-wished to remove them to Bath. But the town was infected with small-pox
-and plague; and Lady Arundell refused so stubbornly to consent, that
-her captors left her where she was, but took her children to Dorchester.
-
-Lady Arundell survived the siege only five years; and at her death, she
-was buried, with her husband, in the chapel of Wardour Castle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In point of heroic valour, Lady Arundell was outdone by Lady Mary
-Bankes, wife of Sir John Bankes, Lord Chief Justice of the Common
-Pleas. In August, 1643, Parliament despatched Sir William Earle with
-a strong force to reduce Corfe Castle, the family residence of Sir
-John, in the Isle of Purbeck. Thinking to gain possession by stratagem,
-Sir William sent a party of forty sailors to demand four field-pieces
-which were in the castle. Lady Bankes, suspecting their real object,
-went to the gate, and requested the sailors to show their warrant. They
-produced one, signed by several Parliamentary Commissioners. Thereupon
-Lady Bankes retired into the castle; and although there were only five
-men within the walls, they mounted the field-pieces with the assistance
-of the female servants, and having loaded one of them, fired it off,
-and drove the sailors away.
-
-Sir William Earle now tried to starve the castle into a surrender.
-Lady Bankes affected a wish to treat for the surrender of the guns;
-but her real object was, that the besiegers, relaxing in their careful
-blockade, would give greater facilities for introducing fresh supplies
-to the garrison. The event justified her hopes. She also obtained the
-help of Captain Lawrence, commanding a company of Royalists.
-
-The Puritans, about six hundred in number, assaulted the castle, and
-endeavoured to carry it by a _coup de main_. But the brave little
-garrison, sallying forth, drove away the besiegers and brought back
-nine oxen. Again the besiegers tried to take the castle by storm.
-Dividing their forces, one party attacked the middle ward, which was
-defended by Captain Lawrence and his company, while the other division
-assaulted the upper ward, held by Lady Bankes with her daughters, her
-female servants, and five soldiers, who hurled down huge stones and
-red-hot coals on the heads of the storming party. At last, after losing
-one hundred men in the assault, the Parliamentary forces retreated from
-before Corfe Castle. The blockade had lasted, altogether, six weeks.
-
-Lady Bankes lived to see the Restoration, and died in April, 1661.
-She was interred in the south aisle of Rislipp church. The following
-inscription was placed upon her monument by her eldest son:--
-
- "To the memory of
-
-"The Lady Mary Bankes, the only daughter of Rafe Hawtrey, of Rislipp,
-in the County of Middlesex, Esquire, the wife and widow of the
-Honourable Sir John Bankes, Knight, late Lord Chief Justice of his
-late Majesty's Court of Common Pleas, and of the Privy Council to his
-late Majesty King Charles the First, of blessed memory; who, having
-had the honour to have borne, with a constancy and courage above her
-sex, a noble proportion of the late calamity, and the happiness to have
-outlived them so far as to have seen the restitution of the government,
-with great peace of mind laid down her most desired life the 19th day
-of April, 1661. Sir Ralphe Bankes, her son and heir, hath dedicated
-this. She left four sonnes--first, Sir Ralphe; second, Jerome;
-third, Charles; fourth, William (since dead, without issue); and six
-daughters."
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Earl of Derby was one of the most prominent Cavalier leaders. In
-1643, while awaiting a siege at Lathom House, Lancashire, his family
-mansion, the earl received intelligence that Parliament had despatched
-troops to annex his miniature kingdom, the Isle of Man. Wishing to
-preserve the island as a final retreat for his royal master, in case of
-misfortune overtaking him, he left Lathom House in charge of Charlotte,
-his countess, and set off to the Isle of Man.
-
-On the 27th of May, 1643, Mr. Holland, governor of Manchester,
-despatched a messenger to Lathom, commanding Lady Derby either to
-subscribe to the propositions of Parliament or surrender the mansion.
-She refused compliance with either alternative; and for nearly a year
-contrived, though closely blockaded, to keep the enemy from coming to
-open hostilities. At last, on the 24th of February, 1644, Parliament
-despatched three colonels to Lathom House. Before their arrival, the
-countess hastened to lay in provisions and ammunition, and to arm a
-sufficient number of retainers to serve as a garrison.
-
-The countess determined not to surrender on any terms, and rejected
-every proposal. "Though a woman," said she, "and a stranger divorced
-from her friends and robbed of her estates, she was ready to receive
-their utmost violence, trusting in God for protection and deliverance."
-
-Hostilities having commenced, the Parliamentary army pushed the siege
-with great vigour. The countess conducted the defence in person; but,
-though she took the office of commander, she was not unmindful of the
-spiritual welfare of her people. She was present four times a day at
-public prayer, attended by her little daughters, Catherine and Mary.
-
-A few days after the opening of the siege, Sir Thomas Fairfax, the
-Parliamentary general, received a letter from the Earl of Derby, in
-which the latter, dreading the extremes to which his wife and children
-might be reduced, requested for them a free pass through the camp of
-the besiegers. When this was communicated to the countess, she thanked
-Sir Thomas for his courtesy in forwarding the missive; but replied
-that "she would willingly submit to her lord's commands, and therefore
-willed the general to treat with her; but till she was assured that
-such was his lordship's pleasure, she would neither yield up the house
-nor desert it herself, but wait for the event according to the will of
-God."
-
-She forwarded a similar message to her husband at Chester.
-
-On the 25th of April, Colonel Rigby despatched a peremptory message,
-demanding the surrender of Lathom House immediately. The countess
-refused: and the siege was prosecuted with renewed vigour; while the
-garrison, animated by the presence of Lady Derby, continued to defend
-the house with unabated courage. At last, on the 23rd of May, they
-learnt, to their inexpressible relief, that Prince Rupert and the Earl
-of Derby were in Cheshire, marching to their aid.
-
-When the Puritans heard of the approach of Prince Rupert, they
-retreated to Bolton. On the 29th, Prince Rupert "not only relieved, but
-revenged the most noble lady, his cousin," leaving one thousand five
-hundred of the besiegers dead on the field, and taking seven hundred
-prisoners. The next day he presented the countess with twenty-two of
-those standards which, three days previously, had been proudly waving
-before Lathom House.
-
-The countess and her children accompanied the earl to the Isle of Man,
-leaving the mansion in charge of Colonel Rawstone. The latter defended
-it till the following December, when the decline of the Royal cause
-obliged him to open negotiations with Fairfax. Before they were brought
-to a satisfactory conclusion, the house was treacherously surrendered
-by an Irish soldier.
-
-The earl and countess, in the midst of their devoted adherents in the
-Isle of Man, defied the threats of Parliament. The earl was one of
-the first to join the standard of Charles II. in 1651. Captured on the
-borders of Cheshire, he was carried to his own town of Bolton-le-Moors,
-where he was beheaded, October 15th. Misfortune never comes
-unaccompanied. The bereaved countess was betrayed, with her children,
-by a false friend, and thrown into prison. She regained her liberty at
-the Restoration; and for the rest of her life dwelt, with her remaining
-children, at Knowsley, near Lathom, where she died in 1663.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Although the Turks were expelled from Hungary in the sixteenth century,
-they by no means gave up their ambitious designs on that country.
-Taking advantage of the cruelty and oppression exercised by Austria
-towards the Hungarians, they secretly stirred up the nobles to revolt
-against their harsh masters. In 1678, an able leader was found in
-Emeric Tekeli, or Tokolyi, who, weary of vainly soliciting the Emperor
-Leopold to restore his paternal estates, resolved to take them for
-himself, together with the crown of Hungary. Setting up his standard
-in Transylvania, he was soon joined by thousands of malcontents. Day
-by day the revolt gathered strength; and had not the Emperor resorted
-to the arts of cunning and bribery, it is probable the rebellion would
-have terminated in a revolution.
-
-Tekeli was husband of Helena, widow of Francis Ragotsky (who died in
-1667), and daughter of Peter, Count Zrinyi, Ban of Croatia, who, with
-others, lost his head in 1671 for conspiring against Leopold. Helena
-was as brave as she was beautiful. By her first husband she had two
-sons, of whom the eldest, Francis, afterwards took a conspicuous part
-in the affairs of Hungary.
-
-Tekeli commenced the war in 1678, and in 1682 he entered Buda in
-triumph, where he was inaugurated Prince of Upper Hungary by the nobles
-and the Turkish Bashaw. In the following year, the Turks, following
-up these successes, advanced to Vienna, which would have fallen, but
-for John Sobiesky and his Poles. Leopold took care to foment the
-growing jealousies between Tekeli and the Turks; and on the failure
-of the Hungarian leader in an attack on Cassau, the Bashaw of Great
-Waradin sent the hero in chains to Constantinople. He was released
-the following year; but during his imprisonment the Turks were driven
-from Hungary and the rebellion crushed. Helena continued to defend the
-rock-fortress of Mongatz (or Munkacs) with great courage for two years
-after the arrest of her husband; but in 1688 she was overpowered by
-superior numbers, and reduced to capitulate and throw herself with her
-sons under the protection of the Emperor.
-
-Helena was thrown into a convent, while her children were educated
-under the auspices of Leopold. After a time she was exchanged for
-an Austrian general, and permitted to join her husband in Turkey.
-The Sultan, Mustapha, conferred upon Tekeli, Widdin, and some other
-districts, as a sort of feudal sovereignty; but he was afterwards
-neglected by the Turkish government, and compelled to start as a
-vintner in Constantinople, where he died in 1705, in his fiftieth year.
-Helena, after sharing the misfortunes and vicissitudes of his life,
-died two years before him, in 1703.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A somewhat ludicrous affair happened at the coronation of William and
-Mary, April 23rd, 1689. The champion of England, according to custom,
-entered Westminster Hall, and throwing down his mailed glove, gave
-the customary challenge to any one who should dare to dispute their
-Majesty's claim to the crown. An old woman came in on crutches (which
-she left behind her), snatched up the gauntlet, laid her own glove in
-its place, and made off as fast as she could, before any one was able
-to stop her. In the glove was found a challenge for the champion to
-meet her the following day in Hyde Park. This matter occasioned much
-merriment at the lower end of the hall.
-
-Next day an old woman, similarly dressed, was seen waiting at the
-appointed ground, and was conjectured by those who saw her, to be
-a soldier in disguise. The champion, however, wisely declining
-any warlike contest with one of the fair sex, refused to keep the
-appointment.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Madlle. de la Tour du Pin Gouvernail, better known as Madlle. de
-la Charce, heroine of the war between Louis Quatorze and the Duke
-of Savoy, was the daughter of Pierre de la Tour du Pin, Marquis de
-la Charce, lieutenant-general of the king's armies. In 1692 the
-Piedmontese invaded Dauphine. Madlle. de la Charce, arming the
-villagers on her estates, placed herself at their head, and harassed
-the enemy in the mountains; her mother, meanwhile, addressed the people
-in the plains, exhorting them to remain faithful. The sister of Madlle.
-de la Charce caused the cables of the enemy's vessels to be cut. This
-brave family contributed so greatly towards driving the Duke of Savoy
-from Dauphine, that Louis XIV. granted Philis a pension, the same as he
-would have given to a brave general, and allowed her to place her sword
-and armour in the treasury of St. Denis.
-
-Madlle. de la Charce was fond of literature, and composed some very
-pretty verses. An anonymous work appeared in 1731, under the title
-of "Memoires de Madlle. de la Charce." This little romance, says
-Langlet-Dufresnoy, is well written, and contains many historical
-anecdotes connected with the reign of the Grand-Monarque.
-
-
- END OF VOL. I.
-
-
- PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND CO.
- 10 LITTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
-
-
-
-
-TINSLEY BROTHERS' NEW NOVELS.
-
-
-A new Story of Modern Society, by the Author of "Jennie of 'The
-Prince's,'"
-
-GREAT GRENFELL GARDENS:
-
-A Story of Modern Society.
-
-By B. H. BUXTON,
-
-Author of "Nell--On and Off the Stage," "Jennie of 'The Prince's,'"
-"Fetterless," "Won," etc. 3 Vols.
-
-
-By the Author of "Denis Donne."
-
-A LONDON SEASON.
-
-By ANNIE THOMAS (Mrs. PENDER CUDLIP). Author of "Called to Account,"
-"Sir Victor's Choice," etc. 3 Vols.
-
-
-By the Author of "An Innocent Sinner."
-
-OUR BOHEMIA.
-
-By MABEL COLLINS, Author of "An Innocent Sinner," "In this World," etc.
-3 Vols.
-
-"You shall see great difference betwixt our Bohemia and your
-Sicilia."--_Winter's Tale._
-
-
-MOLLY CAREW: a New Novel.
-
-By E. OWENS BLACKBURNE,
-
-Author of "A Woman Scorned," "Dean Swift's Ghost," "Philosopher Push,"
-"The Quest of the Heir," etc. 3 Vols.
-
-
-By the author of "The Hazelhurst Mystery."
-
-RUTH EVERINGHAM.
-
-By JESSIE SALE LLOYD,
-
-Author of "The Hazelhurst Mystery," etc. 3 Vols.
-
-
-By the Author of "Woman and Her Master."
-
-THE FREEMASON'S DAUGHTER:
-
-A New Novel.
-
-By J. F. SMITH,
-
-Author of "Minnigrey," "Woman and Her Master," "Stanfield Hall," etc. 3
-Vols.
-
-
-By the Author of "Estella."
-
-MARGARET DUNBAR.
-
-By ANNABEL GRAY,
-
-Author of "Estella," etc. 3 Vols.
-
-
-GRACE.
-
-By HENRY TURNER.
-
-2 Vols.
-
-
-THE BACHELOR:
-
-An Original Novel.
-
-By ARTHUR MONTAGU BROOKFIELD.
-
-2 Vols.
-
-"Equal in power to anything that many of our well-known and
-best-established authors have written."--_Bells Weekly Messenger._
-
-
-PAOLO GIANINI:
-
-A new Novel.
-
-By PERICLES TZIKOS.
-
-3 Vols.
-
-"Is an interesting and promising romance."--_Athenaeum._
-
-"We can recommend it cordially to those who like a novel which treats
-of scenes and persons removed from the commonplace class of incidents
-and personages which form the stock of most English stories of the
-day."--_Morning Post._
-
-
- TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8, CATHERINE ST., STRAND.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Page xi, "Dona" changed to "Dona" (Dona Maria Pacheco)
-
-Page xiv, "theGirondists" changed to "the Girondists" (of the
-Girondists)
-
-Page xv, "SavageAfria" changed to "Savage Africa" (Savage Africa)
-
-Page xvi, "Ec." changed to "Etc." (Etc. etc.)
-
-Page 13, "vogage" changed to "voyage" (a separate voyage)
-
-Page 26, word "of" added to text original read (one the principal
-officers)
-
-Page 26, "paramont" changed to "paramount" (soon ruled paramount)
-
-Page 34, "a" changed to "at" (at the hands of)
-
-Page 34, "like" changed to "life" (their mode of life)
-
-Page 54, "siezed" changed to "seized" (Iceni, seized all his)
-
-Page 68, "ursurper" changed to "usurper" (usurper, Tetricus)
-
-Page 87, "twelth" changed to "twelfth" (eleventh and twelfth centuries)
-
-Page 95, "massacreing" changed to "massacring" (burning, plundering,
-massacring)
-
-Page 96, "Efrilda" changed to "Elfrida" (Elfrida recaptured Leicester)
-
-Page 97, "Elfleda" changed to "Elfrida" (Elfrida died at Tamworth)
-
-Page 97, "Elfleda" changed to "Elfrida" (Elfrida "might have been)
-
-Page 126, "heorine" changed to "heroine" (Another heroine of this war)
-
-Page 147, "Mairie" changed to "Marie" (the Marie of Orleans)
-
-Page 155, "though" changed to "through" (England through another)
-
-Page 171, "activly" changed to "actively" (was actively engaged in)
-
-Page 173, "corse" changed to "corpse" (my husband's corpse, till)
-
-Page 186, "surrrounded" changed to "surrounded" (surrounded by her
-ladies)
-
-Page 191, "addresed" changed to "addressed" (addressed the warriors)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Female Warriors, Vol. I (of 2), by Ellen C. Clayton
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FEMALE WARRIORS, VOL. I (OF 2) ***
-
-***** This file should be named 43646.txt or 43646.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/3/6/4/43646/
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
- www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
-North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
-contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
-Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.