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{{Infobox book series
{{Infobox book series
| name = ''The Saxon Stories''
| name = ''The Saxon Stories''
| books = ''[[The Last Kingdom]]''<br>''[[The Pale Horseman]]''<br>''[[The Lords of the North]]''<br>''[[Sword Song]]''<br>''[[The Burning Land]]''<br>''[[Death of Kings]]''<br>''[[The Pagan Lord]]''<br>''[[The Empty Throne]]''<br>''[[Warriors of the Storm]]''<br>''[[The Flame Bearer]]''<br>''[[War of the Wolf]]''<br>''[[Sword of Kings]]''<br>''[[War Lord (novel)|War Lord]]''
| books = ''[[The Last Kingdom]]''<br>''[[The Pale Horseman]]''<br>''[[The Lords of the North]]''<br>''[[Sword Song (Cornwell novel)|Sword Song]]''<br>''[[The Burning Land]]''<br>''[[Death of Kings]]''<br>''[[The Pagan Lord]]''<br>''[[The Empty Throne]]''<br>''[[Warriors of the Storm]]''<br>''[[The Flame Bearer]]''<br>''[[War of the Wolf]]''<br>''[[Sword of Kings]]''<br>''[[War Lord (novel)|War Lord]]''
| author = [[Bernard Cornwell]]
| author = [[Bernard Cornwell]]
| image =
| image =
Line 23: Line 23:
}}
}}


'''''The Saxon Stories''''' (also known as '''''Saxon Tales'''''/'''''Saxon Chronicles''''' in the US and '''''The Warrior Chronicles''''' and most recently as '''''The Last Kingdom''''' series) is a [[historical novel]] series written by [[Bernard Cornwell]] about the [[history of Anglo-Saxon England|birth of England]] in the ninth and tenth centuries. The series consists of 13 novels. The protagonist of the series is Uhtred of Bebbanburg, born to a [[Saxon]] lord in [[Northumbria]]. He is captured as a child and raised by a [[Danes (Germanic tribe)|Danish]] warlord. The name of the fictional protagonist comes from the historical [[Uhtred the Bold]]; Cornwell is a descendant of this family.<ref name=Emerson/>
'''''The Saxon Stories''''' (also known as '''''Saxon Tales'''''/'''''Saxon Chronicles''''' in the US and '''''The Warrior Chronicles''''' and most recently as '''''The Last Kingdom''''' series) is a [[historical novel]] series written by [[Bernard Cornwell]] about the [[history of Anglo-Saxon England|birth of England]] in the ninth and tenth centuries. The series consists of 13 novels. The protagonist of the series is Uhtred of Bebbanburg, born to a [[Saxon]] lord in [[Northumbria]]. He is captured as a child and raised by a [[Danes (Germanic tribe)|Danish]] warlord. Uhtred, despite his inclination otherwise, repeatedly fights and schemes to bring about [[Alfred the Great]]'s dream of uniting all English speakers in one realm over the course of a long life.


The first ten novels in the series were adapted for five seasons of the television series ''[[The Last Kingdom (TV series)|The Last Kingdom]]'', starring [[Alexander Dreymon]]. The first two seasons were made by the BBC. A third, fourth and fifth season were produced by [[Netflix]]. Cornwell subsequently posted a note on his web site that "''The Warrior Chronicles''/''Saxon Stories'' had been renamed ''The Last Kingdom'' series".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bernardcornwell.net/the-last-kingdom-series-formerly-the-warrior-chroniclessaxon-stories/|website=Bernard Cornwell|date=26 October 2015|title=The Last Kingdom Series (formerly The Warrior Chronicles/Saxon Stories) |access-date=30 December 2018 }}</ref>
The story begins with the conquest of all but one of the major Saxon kingdoms by the Danes, with [[Wessex]], the last kingdom, nearly overrun. [[Alfred the Great]], King of Wessex, rallies his forces and begins the long struggle to fulfill his ambition of uniting all English speakers in one realm. Uhtred, despite his inclinations otherwise, repeatedly fights and schemes to bring about Alfred's dream over the course of a long life.


==Inspiration==
The first ten novels in the series were adapted for five seasons of the television series ''[[The Last Kingdom (TV series)|The Last Kingdom]]'', starring [[Alexander Dreymon]]. The first two seasons were made by the BBC. A third, fourth and fifth season were produced by [[Netflix]]. Cornwell subsequently posted a note on his web site that "''The Warrior Chronicles''/''Saxon Stories'' had been renamed ''The Last Kingdom'' series".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bernardcornwell.net/the-last-kingdom-series-formerly-the-warrior-chroniclessaxon-stories/|website=Bernard Cornwell|date=26 October 2015|title=The Last Kingdom Series (formerly The Warrior Chronicles/Saxon Stories) |access-date=30 December 2018 }}</ref>
In an interview with Emerson College, Cornwell said:
<blockquote>
Years ago, when I was at university, I discovered Anglo-Saxon poetry and became hooked on that strange and often melancholy world. For some reason the history of the Anglo-Saxons isn't much taught in Britain (where I grew up) and it struck me as weird that the English really had no idea where their country came from. Americans know, they even have a starting date, but the English just seemed to assume that England had always been there, so the idea of writing a series about the creation of England was in my head for a long time.<ref name=Emerson>
{{cite web |url=https://emertainmentmonthly.org/2014/01/31/bernard-cornwell-talks-the-pagan-lord-the-challenges-of-historical-fiction-and-future-plans/ |title=Bernard Cornwell Talks The Pagan Lord, The Challenges of Historical Fiction, And Future Plans |date=31 January 2014 |work=Emertainment Monthly |last=Lafferty |first=Hannah |publisher=Emerson College |location=Boston |access-date=9 June 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140622142945/http://emertainmentmonthly.com/2014/01/31/bernard-cornwell-talks-the-pagan-lord-the-challenges-of-historical-fiction-and-future-plans/ |archive-date=22 June 2014 }}</ref>
</blockquote> The historical setting is the big story; writing historical fiction needs a little story so the history can be the background.


When he was 58, Cornwell met his birth father, William Outhred (or Oughtred), for the first time while on a book tour in [[Vancouver]], [[Canada]].<ref name=Emerson /> There was a [[family tree]] going back to the 6th century.<ref name=Emerson /> He learned the story of his own descent from the Saxons who possessed the fortress of Bebbanburg (now [[Bamburgh Castle]]), including the historical [[Uhtred the Bold]]. Thus was born Uhtred, the protagonist of the fictional tales.<ref name=Emerson />
==Background==
In an interview with Emerson College, Cornwell said: "Years ago, when I was at university, I discovered Anglo-Saxon poetry and became hooked on that strange and often melancholy world. For some reason the history of the Anglo-Saxons isn’t much taught in Britain (where I grew up) and it struck me as weird that the English really had no idea where their country came from. Americans know, they even have a starting date, but the English just seemed to assume that England had always been there, so the idea of writing a series about the creation of England was in my head for a long time."<ref name=Emerson>{{cite web |url=http://emertainmentmonthly.com/2014/01/31/bernard-cornwell-talks-the-pagan-lord-the-challenges-of-historical-fiction-and-future-plans/ |title=Bernard Cornwell Talks The Pagan Lord, The Challenges of Historical Fiction, And Future Plans |date=31 January 2014 |work=Emertainment Monthly |last=Lafferty |first=Hannah |publisher=Emerson College |location=Boston |access-date=9 June 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140622142945/http://emertainmentmonthly.com/2014/01/31/bernard-cornwell-talks-the-pagan-lord-the-challenges-of-historical-fiction-and-future-plans/ |archive-date=22 June 2014 }}</ref> The historical setting is the big story; writing historical fiction needs a little story so the history can be the background. When he was in his fifties, Cornwell met his birth father, named William Outhred (or Oughtred), and learned the story of his own descent from the Saxons who owned the fortress of Bebbanburg (now [[Bamburgh Castle]]). Thus was born Uhtred, the protagonist of the fictional tales.<ref name=Emerson />

In the interview, he revealed that there is a plan to adapt the series for television, in answer to a question of how many more books are planned for the series. "I wish I knew! I don’t know how the chapter I’m writing now will end, let alone the book, and the series? No idea! I suspect there will be a few more; I just heard that BBC Television have commissioned a series that will follow Uhtred’s escapades. The company that makes ''[[Downton Abbey]]'' will make the programs, which is wonderful, and I’ll need to keep them supplied with stories (I hope). So? Six more? Eight more? I just don’t know."<ref name=Emerson/>

When the television adaptation of the first two novels aired in autumn of 2015, Cornwell reiterated how the idea took shape in his mind when he met his birth father in Canada. Cornwell's paternal ancestors were traced to the time of Alfred; the family holding Bebbanburg was betrayed in the 11th century and fled to Yorkshire.<ref name=Brown />


==Overview==
==Overview==
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}}
}}


Uhtred, the protagonist, is the second son of a Saxon lord who rules from the nearly impregnable fortress at Bebbanburg (modern-day [[Bamburgh]]) in the [[kingdom of Northumbria]]. Danish raiders kill first his older brother, then his father. Uhtred himself is spared only because the Danish leader, Ragnar the Fearless, is amused when the youngster attacks him. Ragnar takes Uhtred home and raises the boy like one of his own sons. Uhtred abandons Christianity in favour of Danish pagan beliefs, such as the gods [[Thor]] and [[Odin]], [[Valhalla]], and the [[Norns]]. In particular, he believes that "''Wyrd bið ful āræd''" ("Fate is inexorable").
Uhtred is the second son of a Saxon lord who rules from the nearly impregnable fortress at Bebbanburg (modern-day [[Bamburgh]]) in the [[kingdom of Northumbria]]. Danish raiders kill first his older brother, then his father. Uhtred himself is spared only because the Danish leader, Ragnar the Fearless, is amused when the youngster attacks him. Ragnar takes Uhtred home and raises the boy like one of his own sons. Uhtred abandons Christianity in favour of Danish pagan beliefs, such as the gods [[Thor]] and [[Odin]], and [[Valhalla]]. In particular, he believes that the [[Norns]] control his destiny and that therefore "''Wyrd bið ful āræd''" ("Fate is inexorable").


When he is an adult, that fate drives him to serve [[Alfred the Great]], whom he dislikes but respects, and Alfred's dream of uniting all English speakers into a single kingdom, Englaland<!-- Not a misspelling !-->. To his great disgust, Uhtred finds himself saving Alfred's Christian kingdom of [[Wessex]] (and other Saxon kingdoms) time and time again from those who threaten it, primarily the pagan [[Danelaw|Danes who have settled in Britain]], despite despising Christianity and admiring the Danes. When Wessex is overrun and Alfred is at his lowest point, a fugitive with few followers hiding in a marsh, it is Uhtred who convinces him to fight back rather than give up and go into exile.
When he is an adult, that fate drives him to serve [[Alfred the Great]], whom he dislikes but respects, and Alfred's dream of uniting all English speakers into a single kingdom, Englaland<!-- Not a misspelling !-->. To his great disgust, Uhtred finds himself saving Alfred's Christian kingdom of [[Wessex]] (and other Saxon kingdoms) time and time again from those who threaten it, including the pagan [[Danelaw|Danes who have settled in Britain]], despite despising Christianity and admiring the Danes. When Wessex is overrun and Alfred is at his lowest point, hiding with a few followers in a marsh, Uhtred encounters him by chance, helps organize his slowly gathering army and plays a vital role in the crucial [[Battle of Edington|Battle of Ethandun]], which saves Wessex from destruction.


Uhtred's overriding ambition, however, is to take Bebbanburg, stolen from him by his uncle after his father's death.
Uhtred's overriding ambition, however, is to take Bebbanburg, stolen from him by his uncle after his father's death.


The story is told almost entirely from Uhtred's first-person perspective. The reader knows only what Uhtred knows or learns. (The prologue of ''[[The Empty Throne]]'' is written from the perspective of Uhtred's second son, before reverting to Uhtred's viewpoint.)
The story is told almost entirely from Uhtred's first-person perspective. The reader knows only what Uhtred knows or later learns. (The prologue of ''[[The Empty Throne]]'' is written from the perspective of Uhtred's second son, before reverting to Uhtred's viewpoint.)


Cornwell provides a "Historical Note" at the end of each novel in which he clarifies which characters and events are based on actual history and what liberties he took with them.
Cornwell provides a "Historical Note" at the end of each novel in which he clarifies which characters and events are based on actual history and what liberties he took with them.
Line 65: Line 65:
The series is frequently compared to ''[[The Warlord Chronicles]]'', not only because of similarities between the two protagonists (both were orphaned), but also in the similarities between the foreign menace in the form of the Danes in ''The Saxon Stories'' and the Saxons in ''The Warlord Chronicles''. Alfred also resembles Arthur in his mission as the only man to save his kingdom (England for Alfred, southern Celtic Britain for Arthur) from an unstoppable threat.
The series is frequently compared to ''[[The Warlord Chronicles]]'', not only because of similarities between the two protagonists (both were orphaned), but also in the similarities between the foreign menace in the form of the Danes in ''The Saxon Stories'' and the Saxons in ''The Warlord Chronicles''. Alfred also resembles Arthur in his mission as the only man to save his kingdom (England for Alfred, southern Celtic Britain for Arthur) from an unstoppable threat.


The main character, Uhtred of Bebbanburg (the old Saxon name of [[Bamburgh Castle]]), is an old man telling tales of events that took place decades earlier, starting from his childhood and going on, his story intertwining with the story of the British Isles in the end of the ninth century. He intersperses the narrative with often acerbic comments regarding the events and characters he describes. It is notable that the Saxon-born Uhtred, baptized Christian three times, has a very critical view of the Christian religion throughout the entire series. Though he takes an oath to serve Alfred, he admires the Danes, their way of life and their gods. This offers the reader a balanced picture of the tumultuous times, when it was uncertain whether there would be an England or a "Daneland" in the southern and central parts of the island of Britain.
The main character, Uhtred of Bebbanburg, is an old man telling tales of events that took place decades earlier, starting from his childhood and going on, his story intertwining with the story of the British Isles in the end of the ninth century. He intersperses the narrative with often acerbic comments regarding the events and characters he describes. It is notable that the Saxon-born Uhtred, baptized Christian three times, has a very critical view of the Christian religion throughout the entire series. Though he takes an oath to serve Alfred, he admires the Danes, their way of life and their gods. This offers the reader a balanced picture of the tumultuous times, when it was uncertain whether there would be an England or a "Daneland" in the southern and central parts of the island of Britain.


==Series titles==
==Series titles==
Line 71: Line 71:


==Bibliography of the Saxon Tales==
==Bibliography of the Saxon Tales==
[[Bernard Cornwell]] mentioned in the historical notes at the end of ''[[The Lords of the North]]'' (third novel) that he intended to continue writing ''The Saxon Stories''. On his website,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bernardcornwell.net/search/Uhtred/section/questions/tax/question_type/t/your-questions |title=Uhtred in Your Questions |date=3 October 2014 |access-date=2 November 2014}}</ref> Cornwell states "I need to finish Uhtred", the main character in ''The Saxon Stories''. On 5 March 2020, Cornwell announced on social media that the 13th book, ''War Lord'', would be the final novel in the series.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/bernard.cornwell/photos/a.10150941136705356/10156626030140356/?type=1&theater Facebook post by Cornwell]</ref>
[[Bernard Cornwell]] mentioned in the historical notes at the end of ''[[The Lords of the North]]'', the third novel, that he intended to continue writing ''The Saxon Stories''. On his website,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bernardcornwell.net/search/Uhtred/section/questions/tax/question_type/t/your-questions |title=Uhtred in Your Questions |date=3 October 2014 |access-date=2 November 2014}}</ref> Cornwell stated "I need to finish Uhtred". In an interview, in answer to a question of how many more books are planned for the series, he replied:
<blockquote>
I wish I knew! I don't know how the chapter I'm writing now will end, let alone the book, and the series? No idea! I suspect there will be a few more; I just heard that BBC Television have commissioned a series that will follow Uhtred's escapades. The company that makes ''[[Downton Abbey]]'' will make the programs, which is wonderful, and I’ll need to keep them supplied with stories (I hope). So? Six more? Eight more? I just don’t know.<ref name=Emerson/>
</blockquote>


On 5 March 2020, Cornwell announced on social media that the 13th book, ''War Lord'', would be the final novel in the series.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/bernard.cornwell/photos/a.10150941136705356/10156626030140356/?type=1&theater Facebook post by Cornwell]</ref>
The following novels have been published, with the UK publication date listed.

Following is a list of the novels with their UK publication years.


#''[[The Last Kingdom]]'' (2004)
#''[[The Last Kingdom]]'' (2004)
#''[[The Pale Horseman]]'' (2005)
#''[[The Pale Horseman]]'' (2005)
#''[[The Lords of the North]]'' (2006)
#''[[The Lords of the North]]'' (2006)
#''[[Sword Song]]'' (2007)
#''[[Sword Song (Cornwell novel)|Sword Song]]'' (2007)
#''[[The Burning Land]]'' (2009)
#''[[The Burning Land]]'' (2009)
<!-- Azincourt is not a Saxon stories book; book 5 is ''The Burning Land'' !-->
<!-- Azincourt is not a Saxon stories book; book 5 is ''The Burning Land'' !-->
Line 91: Line 96:


==Television adaptation==
==Television adaptation==
In July 2014, the BBC announced that production would begin in autumn 2014 on a television adaptation of ''The Saxon Stories'', to be titled ''[[The Last Kingdom (TV series)|The Last Kingdom]]''. Stephen Butchard was the writer. A series of eight 60-minute episodes was produced.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2014/the-last-kingdom |title=BBC Two announces new drama series, ''The Last Kingdom'' |access-date=24 July 2014 |author=Maguire, Una |date=9 July 2014}}</ref> [[BBC Two]], [[Carnival Films]] and [[BBC America]] are involved in the production. The series premiered on BBC America on 10 October 2015 and on BBC Two in the UK on 22 October 2015.<ref name="Brown">{{cite news|last1=Brown|first1=Maggie|title=Bernard Cornwell: BBC made The Last Kingdom due to its 'interesting echoes of today'|url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/oct/17/bernard-cornwell-bbc-last-kingdom-interesting-echoes-today|access-date=19 October 2015|work=The Guardian|date=17 October 2015}}</ref>
{{Main|The Last Kingdom (TV series)}}

In July 2014, the BBC announced that production would begin in autumn 2014 on a television adaptation of ''The Saxon Stories'', to be titled ''[[The Last Kingdom (TV-series)|The Last Kingdom]]''. Stephen Butchard is the writer. A series of eight 60-minute episodes was produced.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2014/the-last-kingdom |title=BBC Two announces new drama series, ''The Last Kingdom'' |access-date=24 July 2014 |author=Maguire, Una |date=9 July 2014}}</ref> [[BBC Two]], [[Carnival Films]] and [[BBC America]] are involved in the production. The series premiered on BBC America on 10 October 2015 and on BBC Two in the UK on 22 October 2015.<ref name="Brown">{{cite news|last1=Brown|first1=Maggie|title=Bernard Cornwell: BBC made The Last Kingdom due to its 'interesting echoes of today'|url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/oct/17/bernard-cornwell-bbc-last-kingdom-interesting-echoes-today|access-date=19 October 2015|work=The Guardian|date=17 October 2015}}</ref>


In an interview, Cornwell said he did not believe that the success of ''[[Game of Thrones]]'' led to the decision to produce ''The Last Kingdom''. "I don’t think so, [''Game of Thrones''] is fantasy, unless the appeal is brutal men in chain mail and leather beating the shit out of each other ... I can't see anything else we have in common. This is rooted in reality. And even though Uhtred didn't exist as I have written it, there is always that big story ... in the background".<ref name="Brown" /> The big story, in Cornwell's terms, refers to the history of Alfred and the start of England.<ref name=Emerson />
In an interview, Cornwell said he did not believe that the success of ''[[Game of Thrones]]'' led to the decision to produce ''The Last Kingdom''. "I don’t think so, [''Game of Thrones''] is fantasy, unless the appeal is brutal men in chain mail and leather beating the shit out of each other ... I can't see anything else we have in common. This is rooted in reality. And even though Uhtred didn't exist as I have written it, there is always that big story ... in the background".<ref name="Brown" /> The big story, in Cornwell's terms, refers to the history of Alfred and the start of England.<ref name=Emerson />


Two series had aired by early 2018. The third, fourth and fifth, each with ten episodes, were released exclusively by its sole producer [[Netflix]]; the BBC was no longer involved. Following the airing of the fifth season, Netflix announced that the series was cancelled and would be followed by a two-hour feature film, ''Seven Kings Must Die'', which finished filming in March 2022 in Hungary.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/last-kingdom-season-6-release-date/|title = Why won’t there be The Last Kingdom season 6? |work=Radio Times |date=14 March 2022 |first=David |last=Craig}}</ref> The movie aired on Netflix on the 14th April 2023.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.newsweek.com/seven-kings-must-die-release-date-cast-plot-last-kingdom-film-netflix-1691803|title ='Seven Kings Must Die' Release Date: Everything On 'The Last Kingdom' Film|date=25 March 2022|first=Molly|last=Mitchell}}</ref>
Two series had aired by early 2018. The third, fourth and fifth, each with ten episodes, were released exclusively by its sole producer [[Netflix]]; the BBC was no longer involved. The series concluded with the fifth season and would be followed by a two-hour feature film, ''[[Seven Kings Must Die]]'', which finished filming in March 2022 in Hungary.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/last-kingdom-season-6-release-date/|title = Why won’t there be The Last Kingdom season 6? |work=Radio Times |date=14 March 2022 |first=David |last=Craig}}</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
Line 119: Line 122:
[[Category:Novels set in the 9th century]]
[[Category:Novels set in the 9th century]]
[[Category:Novels set in the Viking Age]]
[[Category:Novels set in the Viking Age]]
[[Category:Fiction set in 9th-century Anglo-Saxon England]]

Latest revision as of 09:40, 31 May 2024

The Saxon Stories
The Last Kingdom
The Pale Horseman
The Lords of the North
Sword Song
The Burning Land
Death of Kings
The Pagan Lord
The Empty Throne
Warriors of the Storm
The Flame Bearer
War of the Wolf
Sword of Kings
War Lord
AuthorBernard Cornwell
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel
PublisherHarperCollins
Published2004–2020
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback) Audiobook

The Saxon Stories (also known as Saxon Tales/Saxon Chronicles in the US and The Warrior Chronicles and most recently as The Last Kingdom series) is a historical novel series written by Bernard Cornwell about the birth of England in the ninth and tenth centuries. The series consists of 13 novels. The protagonist of the series is Uhtred of Bebbanburg, born to a Saxon lord in Northumbria. He is captured as a child and raised by a Danish warlord. Uhtred, despite his inclination otherwise, repeatedly fights and schemes to bring about Alfred the Great's dream of uniting all English speakers in one realm over the course of a long life.

The first ten novels in the series were adapted for five seasons of the television series The Last Kingdom, starring Alexander Dreymon. The first two seasons were made by the BBC. A third, fourth and fifth season were produced by Netflix. Cornwell subsequently posted a note on his web site that "The Warrior Chronicles/Saxon Stories had been renamed The Last Kingdom series".[1]

Inspiration[edit]

In an interview with Emerson College, Cornwell said:

Years ago, when I was at university, I discovered Anglo-Saxon poetry and became hooked on that strange and often melancholy world. For some reason the history of the Anglo-Saxons isn't much taught in Britain (where I grew up) and it struck me as weird that the English really had no idea where their country came from. Americans know, they even have a starting date, but the English just seemed to assume that England had always been there, so the idea of writing a series about the creation of England was in my head for a long time.[2]

The historical setting is the big story; writing historical fiction needs a little story so the history can be the background.

When he was 58, Cornwell met his birth father, William Outhred (or Oughtred), for the first time while on a book tour in Vancouver, Canada.[2] There was a family tree going back to the 6th century.[2] He learned the story of his own descent from the Saxons who possessed the fortress of Bebbanburg (now Bamburgh Castle), including the historical Uhtred the Bold. Thus was born Uhtred, the protagonist of the fictional tales.[2]

Overview[edit]

The Saxon Stories is located in England
Beamfleot
Beamfleot
Bebbanburg
Bebbanburg
Ceaster
Ceaster
Cippanhamm
Cippanhamm
Dunholm
Dunholm
Gleawecestre
Gleawecestre
Eoferwic
Eoferwic
Ethandun
Ethandun
Fagranforda
Fagranforda
Lundene
Lundene
Teotanheale
Teotanheale
Wintanceaster
Wintanceaster
Locations of places in series

Uhtred is the second son of a Saxon lord who rules from the nearly impregnable fortress at Bebbanburg (modern-day Bamburgh) in the kingdom of Northumbria. Danish raiders kill first his older brother, then his father. Uhtred himself is spared only because the Danish leader, Ragnar the Fearless, is amused when the youngster attacks him. Ragnar takes Uhtred home and raises the boy like one of his own sons. Uhtred abandons Christianity in favour of Danish pagan beliefs, such as the gods Thor and Odin, and Valhalla. In particular, he believes that the Norns control his destiny and that therefore "Wyrd bið ful āræd" ("Fate is inexorable").

When he is an adult, that fate drives him to serve Alfred the Great, whom he dislikes but respects, and Alfred's dream of uniting all English speakers into a single kingdom, Englaland. To his great disgust, Uhtred finds himself saving Alfred's Christian kingdom of Wessex (and other Saxon kingdoms) time and time again from those who threaten it, including the pagan Danes who have settled in Britain, despite despising Christianity and admiring the Danes. When Wessex is overrun and Alfred is at his lowest point, hiding with a few followers in a marsh, Uhtred encounters him by chance, helps organize his slowly gathering army and plays a vital role in the crucial Battle of Ethandun, which saves Wessex from destruction.

Uhtred's overriding ambition, however, is to take Bebbanburg, stolen from him by his uncle after his father's death.

The story is told almost entirely from Uhtred's first-person perspective. The reader knows only what Uhtred knows or later learns. (The prologue of The Empty Throne is written from the perspective of Uhtred's second son, before reverting to Uhtred's viewpoint.)

Cornwell provides a "Historical Note" at the end of each novel in which he clarifies which characters and events are based on actual history and what liberties he took with them.

Style[edit]

The series is frequently compared to The Warlord Chronicles, not only because of similarities between the two protagonists (both were orphaned), but also in the similarities between the foreign menace in the form of the Danes in The Saxon Stories and the Saxons in The Warlord Chronicles. Alfred also resembles Arthur in his mission as the only man to save his kingdom (England for Alfred, southern Celtic Britain for Arthur) from an unstoppable threat.

The main character, Uhtred of Bebbanburg, is an old man telling tales of events that took place decades earlier, starting from his childhood and going on, his story intertwining with the story of the British Isles in the end of the ninth century. He intersperses the narrative with often acerbic comments regarding the events and characters he describes. It is notable that the Saxon-born Uhtred, baptized Christian three times, has a very critical view of the Christian religion throughout the entire series. Though he takes an oath to serve Alfred, he admires the Danes, their way of life and their gods. This offers the reader a balanced picture of the tumultuous times, when it was uncertain whether there would be an England or a "Daneland" in the southern and central parts of the island of Britain.

Series titles[edit]

This series of novels is known by several titles. Saxon Stories and Saxon Tales were the first titles in the US and the UK editions for the first five novels, and those titles continue in use for later novels. Starting with The Death of Kings, the UK editions bear the series title, The Warrior Chronicles. The series is also known as The Saxon Chronicles on US editions. In the autumn of 2015, a series of television programs based on the first two novels and using the title of the first novel – The Last Kingdom – has led booksellers to link the novels to the television series by referring to them as The Last Kingdom novels. The author renamed the series The Last Kingdom, according to a news notice at his website.[3]

Bibliography of the Saxon Tales[edit]

Bernard Cornwell mentioned in the historical notes at the end of The Lords of the North, the third novel, that he intended to continue writing The Saxon Stories. On his website,[4] Cornwell stated "I need to finish Uhtred". In an interview, in answer to a question of how many more books are planned for the series, he replied:

I wish I knew! I don't know how the chapter I'm writing now will end, let alone the book, and the series? No idea! I suspect there will be a few more; I just heard that BBC Television have commissioned a series that will follow Uhtred's escapades. The company that makes Downton Abbey will make the programs, which is wonderful, and I’ll need to keep them supplied with stories (I hope). So? Six more? Eight more? I just don’t know.[2]

On 5 March 2020, Cornwell announced on social media that the 13th book, War Lord, would be the final novel in the series.[5]

Following is a list of the novels with their UK publication years.

  1. The Last Kingdom (2004)
  2. The Pale Horseman (2005)
  3. The Lords of the North (2006)
  4. Sword Song (2007)
  5. The Burning Land (2009)
  6. Death of Kings (2011)
  7. The Pagan Lord (2013)[6]
  8. The Empty Throne (2014)[7]
  9. Warriors of the Storm (2015)[8]
  10. The Flame Bearer (2016)[9]
  11. War of the Wolf (2018)[10]
  12. Sword of Kings (2019)[11]
  13. War Lord (October 2020)[12]

Television adaptation[edit]

In July 2014, the BBC announced that production would begin in autumn 2014 on a television adaptation of The Saxon Stories, to be titled The Last Kingdom. Stephen Butchard was the writer. A series of eight 60-minute episodes was produced.[13] BBC Two, Carnival Films and BBC America are involved in the production. The series premiered on BBC America on 10 October 2015 and on BBC Two in the UK on 22 October 2015.[14]

In an interview, Cornwell said he did not believe that the success of Game of Thrones led to the decision to produce The Last Kingdom. "I don’t think so, [Game of Thrones] is fantasy, unless the appeal is brutal men in chain mail and leather beating the shit out of each other ... I can't see anything else we have in common. This is rooted in reality. And even though Uhtred didn't exist as I have written it, there is always that big story ... in the background".[14] The big story, in Cornwell's terms, refers to the history of Alfred and the start of England.[2]

Two series had aired by early 2018. The third, fourth and fifth, each with ten episodes, were released exclusively by its sole producer Netflix; the BBC was no longer involved. The series concluded with the fifth season and would be followed by a two-hour feature film, Seven Kings Must Die, which finished filming in March 2022 in Hungary.[15]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Last Kingdom Series (formerly The Warrior Chronicles/Saxon Stories)". Bernard Cornwell. 26 October 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lafferty, Hannah (31 January 2014). "Bernard Cornwell Talks The Pagan Lord, The Challenges of Historical Fiction, And Future Plans". Emertainment Monthly. Boston: Emerson College. Archived from the original on 22 June 2014. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  3. ^ "The last Kingdom series (formerly The Warrior Chronicles/Saxon Stories)". News. Bernard Cornwell. 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  4. ^ "Uhtred in Your Questions". 3 October 2014. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  5. ^ Facebook post by Cornwell
  6. ^ "The Pagan Lord (2013)". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  7. ^ "The Empty Throne". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  8. ^ Warriors of the Storm. Fantastic Fiction. October 2015. ISBN 978-0-00-750407-7. Retrieved 9 October 2015.
  9. ^ "The Flame Bearer". HarperCollins. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  10. ^ "War of the Wolf publication". News. Bernard Cornwell web page. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  11. ^ Sword of Kings. HarperCollins. 2019. ISBN 9780008183899. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  12. ^ Cornwell, Bernard (2020). War Lord. Harper. ISBN 978-0062563293. Retrieved 13 November 2020. published in the UK on 15 October 2020 and in the US on 20 November 2020.
  13. ^ Maguire, Una (9 July 2014). "BBC Two announces new drama series, The Last Kingdom". Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  14. ^ a b Brown, Maggie (17 October 2015). "Bernard Cornwell: BBC made The Last Kingdom due to its 'interesting echoes of today'". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  15. ^ Craig, David (14 March 2022). "Why won't there be The Last Kingdom season 6?". Radio Times.