by Victoria Clark
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Product Description
Just before the year 1000, a young Viking named Thorvald turned his back on the pagan gods of his fathers to preach the Christian gospel. But his Icelandic countrymen mocked and outlawed him. Abandoning his homeland, Thorvald embarked on an epic journey to the heart of all medieval world maps—Jerusalem.
A thousand years later, Victoria Clark embarked on the same journey to discover to what extent the dramatic changes and conflicts sweeping Western Europe a millennium ago still resonate today. The Far-Farers is both the story of this twenty-first-century journey and a history of eleventh-century western Christendom.
In this remarkable book Clark illuminates a group of influential eleventh-century characters—Thorvald, emperors of eastern and western Christendom, abbots, saints, princesses, Crusaders—who form links in a historical chain extending down the century and all the way from Iceland to the Holy Land. Western Europe was struggling to unite then, expanding rapidly and changing utterly. Warfare, peacekeeping, multinational monasticism, institutional power struggles, mass pilgrim travel, and rising religious fundamentalism were a few salient characteristics of this world—a world more like our own than we might imagine.
The twenty-first-century people Clark encountered as she traveled through Iceland, central and Western Europe, the Balkans, Turkey, and the Middle East cast fresh light on both worlds. In the ancient capital of Poland, a young Catholic priest scorns the idea of Europe uniting in the name of human rights instead of Christ. At the Crusader stronghold of Krak les Chevaliers, a Syrian playboy highlights the deep and widening gulf between the West and Islam. A richly evocative and beautifully written work, The Far-Farers is neither conventional history nor travel, but a powerful and authoritative demonstration of our enduring connection with the distant past.
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Average Customer Review:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Fun to read, 2007-08-14 I enjoyed Victoria Clark's book, "The Far-Farers." The title is from the name given a Viking who lived ten centuries ago, Thorvald the Far-Farer. And Clark tried duplicating Thorvald's trip in a way, a little like William Dalrymple did as described in his book "From the Holy Mountain." I read and reviewed Dalrymple's book and I found it way too biased to suit my tastes. And this book is biased as well, although it's not as bad as Dalrymple's.
I know that the conversion of Iceland to Christianity, in the year 1000, was under duress. But I still regard it as a great tragedy. Clark regards it as a wise compromise. And I think that's overdoing it. And there's more politics when we get to Jerusalem, where Clark says that the Levantine Arabs have been "paying" for what happened to the Jews in Europe! Well, I think that's preposterous, and it's a little like saying that the Whites in the American South have been "paying" for what happened to the Blacks in Africa. I know that Clark (and Dalrymple) are free to say what they please. And this is Clark's book and she's done just that. Well, it is my review, and I'm saying what I think.
On the whole, I found the book, both the modern travelogue and the history behind it, worth reading. But I was put off by some of the bias Clark showed.

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