The Heir to Rhodes Castle

The Heir to Rhodes Castle
Author: Patrick Wetenhall
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 465
Release: 2016-05-14
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1504995414

Eight months after his wedding Jim Sandy was finding, more or less, that marriage was indeed turning out to be the blissful experience that he had hoped it would be. There had, of course, been a few times when they had quarreled, but these petty altercations had never amounted to anything of any significance.

Journey to Rhodes Castle

Journey to Rhodes Castle
Author: Patrick Wetenhall
Publisher: Author House
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2014-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1496979079

In the days when the town of Cockermouth still had a railway line running through it Jim Sandy came one morning to the station. He was a police cadet based at Cockermouth, but he had a plan to travel by train to London to search for a different job. That day, however, his world was turned upside down when he met the beautiful Susan Dalmane, the Countess of Saint Helens, at Cockermouth station. And when Susan offered him an invitation that he cold not refuse he found himself embarking on a journey which was to bring him ultimately to Susan's home, Rhodes Castle.

Lost Worlds of Ancient and Modern Greece

Lost Worlds of Ancient and Modern Greece
Author: D. J. Ian Begg
Publisher: Archaeopress Publishing
Total Pages: 511
Release: 2021-04-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 1789699614

By day, young Gilbert Bagnani studied archaeology in Greece, but by night he socialised with the elite of Athenian society. Secretly writing for the Morning Post in London, he witnessed both antebellum Athens in 1921 and the catastrophic collapse of Christian civilisation in western Anatolia in 1922. While there have been many accounts by refugees of the disastrous flight from Smyrna, few have been written from the perspective of the west side of the Aegean. The flood of a million refugees to Greece brought in its wake a military coup in Athens, the exile of the Greek royal family and the execution or imprisonment of politicians, whom Gilbert knew. Gilbert's weekly letters to his mother in Rome reveal his Odyssey-like adventures on a voyage of discovery through the origins of western civilisation. As an archaeologist in Greece, he travelled through time seeing history repeat itself: Minoan Knossos, Byzantine Constantinople and Ottoman Smyrna were all violently destroyed, but the survivors escaped to the new worlds of Mycenaean Greece, Renaissance Venice and modern Greece. At Smyrna in the twentieth century, history was written not only by the victors but was also recorded by the victims. At the same time, however, the twentieth century itself was so filled with reports of ethnic cleansings on such a scale that the reports brutalized the humanity of the supposedly civilized people reading about them, and the tragedy of Smyrna disappeared from public awareness between the cataclysmic upheavals of the First and Second World Wars.