Tag: HISTORY

Explore the world of Atalan T’ea

The Hole Inside the Earth – epic quest from the far past to the far future!

Only the Vampire Priests understand the Blood Moon Prophecy: “A drop of His blood fills the cup and brings the Blood Moon Dawn.”

“Lots of cool action and drew me well in.” – AHF Magazine.

Both men, distracted, stepped back. She knew they would be unbalanced, so she executed the estoc, her sword strike entering one man’s exposed right armpit. He fell.

I, Zosimyache, mercenary of ancient Greece, wrote this.
I once asked Omacron what time seemed like for one who had survived for so long in a tumultuous world.
“Time is meaningless,” he said.
“Then, what does have meaning?” I asked.
“Memory.”
This, then, is the story, as recalled by me and those Rememberers, few in number, who survived the last war on Earth.  I wasn’t there at the beginning, but I am here now in the tale that continues.
– from The Garden, final chapter of Volume 15: The Sea of Lost Intentions

Take a sneak preview of a map of Atalan T’ea Llantu here

The Hole Inside the Earth trailer on YouTube

Introduction

A cup wrought at Earth’s birth, the Holy Grail is brought to Atlantis but lost.

Continue reading “Explore the world of Atalan T’ea”

How to Write a Good Vampire Book – 5. Varying Pace

pen5So you have your plot of Vampire Rudolph’s adventures all worked out and you know where the climax and twist will be. Now you are considering writing the climax and want to know how to show tension when Rudolph can’t get the tractor down a narrow alleyway, or gets stuck in a snowdrift. So how do you show the tension?

It’s not as easy as you might think!

Action Words and Expletives

The first rule is to use more action words when you are writing action sequences. These are words like ‘ripped,’ ‘spun,’ ‘yelled,’ ‘wrenched,’ and ‘panted.’ Continue reading “How to Write a Good Vampire Book – 5. Varying Pace”

East Sussex Lay Subsidy Rolls: 1550 – Rotherfield, Cuckfield, Horsham, Lewes and others.

There is a permanent page for this post here . Update: I recently attempted an analysis of what the cow hides actually list, which you can view at your own risk on the permanent page.

The 1550 Lay Subsidy was one of several mid‑Tudor tax assessments imposed during the reign of Edward VI, a period marked by economic strain, inflation, and the financial aftershocks of Henry VIII’s reforms. Subsidy rolls like these were compiled at the level of the Hundred and list householders who were taxed on goods, land, or wages, making them one of the most important surviving population records between the 1520s and the first parish registers. For East Sussex, the 1550 assessment is especially valuable: many parish registers begin decades later, and few other documents record ordinary residents with such precision. These rolls therefore provide a rare snapshot of local society in the years immediately following the Dissolution of the Monasteries, capturing the names, relative wealth, and settlement patterns of Tudor families across the county.

In 2009 I paid for the National Archives to copy these Lay Subsidy Rolls (tax payments collected on cow hides), because nobody has previously requested this be done, so they were not available. These rolls (rots) may also be relevant to other genealogists, so I am sharing high resolution images of them here. I still have a record of the receipts.

This post provides high‑resolution scans of the 1550 East Sussex Lay Subsidy Rolls, covering the Hundreds of Lewes, Horsham, Cuckfield, Rotherfield, Mayfield, and Hartfield. These rare cowhide roll images preserve the original Tudor‑era tax assessments, listing householders, valuations, and payments in remarkable detail. Although the handwriting is challenging and full transcription remains incomplete, many entries are legible and offer valuable insights for genealogists, local historians, and researchers of early modern Sussex. The scans are in the public domain and freely available here for study and analysis.

Key
Amounts are usually given in Pounds, Shillings and Pennies
The ‘j’ indicates the last penny of each amount

Note
It would take me far too long to order these rolls (rots) according to their Borough, village or district and I could easily make a mistake, because they are so hard to read. Thus I will simply list them with their Roll file index name and leave it to others to dig further! Continue reading “East Sussex Lay Subsidy Rolls: 1550 – Rotherfield, Cuckfield, Horsham, Lewes and others.”