1987 novel by Edward Rutherfurd
Sarum (also titled Sarum: The Novel of England) is a work of historical fiction by Edward Rutherfurd, first published in 1987. It is Rutherfurd's literary debut. It tells the story of England through the tales of several families in and around the English city of Salisbury, the writer's hometown, from prehistoric times to 1985.[1]
Characters
The main families of Sarum include:
- Forest
- Wilson
- Porters
- Mason
- Shockley
- Godfrey
Synopsis
The story covers major points of British history. The following chapter listing parallels major periods and events :
Old Sarum
New Sarum
- The Founding (the founding of New Sarum/building of Salisbury Cathedral, 1244–1310)
- The Death (the Black Death, 1348–1382)
- The Rose (the Rule of Lancaster, 1456)
- A Journey From Sarum (1480)
- New World (The Reformation, 1553–1580)
- The Unrest (The English Civil War/ the Exclusion Crisis, 1642–1688)
- The Calm (the eighteenth century, 1720–1779)
- Boney (the Battle of Trafalgar, 1803–1830)
- Empire (the British Empire, 1854–1889)
- The Henge II (World War I/the selling of Stonehenge, 1915)
- The Encampment (World War II, 1944)
- The Spire (Salisbury in 1985)
References