Creating his cycle about an incredible era that determined the future of beautiful France, Maurice Druon painstakingly worked in the National Archives, researching ancient documents. His grandiose historical cycle "The Damned Kings" ends with the novels "The Lily and the Lion" and "When the King Destroys France" - stories about exorbitant ambitions and inevitable collapse.
Edward III, the son of Isabella of France, ascends to the throne of England, who sends his lover to the gallows his mother Roger Mortimer, and she herself is removed from the royal court. But this is just the beginning: at the instigation of Robert Artois, expelled from France for forging documents, Edward III lays claim to the French throne - and so begins the Hundred Years' War. And in the final novel of the seven-volume saga, the garrulous Cardinal Elie Périgord talks about how the mighty have fallen: the war is depleting France, King John II the Good decided to give the British a decisive battle near Poitiers, and this becomes a disaster for both him and the country. In an atmosphere of palace intrigues, bloody massacres and coups, the descendants of Philip IV the Fair, once cursed by the Grand Master of the Templar Order, Jacques de Molay, who went to the stake, are destroying a previously powerful and rich country.
Author: Maurice Druon
Translation: Nadezhda Zharkova
Pages: 672 (offset). Hardcover
Dimensions: 220x145x33 mm
Series: Foreign literature. Big books