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- Tavish Walker
Tavish Walker

Dernière sortie
Cursed Bloodlines
Some families inherit land. Some inherit titles. Some inherit a warning. Across Europe, certain names gathered disaster so heavily that history began to darken into folklore. Cursed Bloodlines explores the families whose tragedies, deaths, illnesses, assassinations, failed heirs, broken estates, and repeated misfortunes became linked with the language of hereditary doom. These were the houses people whispered about after funerals, the names tied to old land grievances, the dynasties whose private suffering became public legend, and the bloodlines that seemed to carry more than memory from one generation to the next.
Inside this dark historical and folkloric study, Tavish Walker follows the borderland where recorded fact, family memory, genealogy, local tradition, and occult imagination meet. The book explores:The Habsburgs, whose dynastic marriage politics created one of the most infamous examples of inherited collapse in European historyThe House of Guise, where religious war, political ambition, assassination, vengeance, and royal fear turned power itself into a blood priceIrish clan curse traditions, where spoken doom, bardic satire, saintly anger, priestly judgement, land grievance, and ancestral memory shaped the fate of familiesThe O'Brien shadow, with traditions tied to old kingship, Killone, Knockanimana, sacred places, watery folklore, and the fear of a fading lineThe McInerney and O'Dubhda material, where local history, Irish speech, sacred landscape, and family memory preserve stories of inherited doomThe Worcestershire curse traditions, where rural names, old houses, parish memory, and regional legend reveal how family curses survived outside palaces and courtsThis is a book about names that became warnings, houses that carried unease, and histories that seemed to repeat themselves with terrible precision.
It follows the emotional power of curses as moral memory, social judgement, political accusation, and inherited fear. For readers of dark history, European folklore, Irish clan tradition, haunted genealogy, occult nonfiction, noble family tragedy, and the strange stories that gather around old bloodlines, Cursed Bloodlines opens the family vault and listens to what the past left behind. A surname can be a shelter.
It can also be a sentence.
Inside this dark historical and folkloric study, Tavish Walker follows the borderland where recorded fact, family memory, genealogy, local tradition, and occult imagination meet. The book explores:The Habsburgs, whose dynastic marriage politics created one of the most infamous examples of inherited collapse in European historyThe House of Guise, where religious war, political ambition, assassination, vengeance, and royal fear turned power itself into a blood priceIrish clan curse traditions, where spoken doom, bardic satire, saintly anger, priestly judgement, land grievance, and ancestral memory shaped the fate of familiesThe O'Brien shadow, with traditions tied to old kingship, Killone, Knockanimana, sacred places, watery folklore, and the fear of a fading lineThe McInerney and O'Dubhda material, where local history, Irish speech, sacred landscape, and family memory preserve stories of inherited doomThe Worcestershire curse traditions, where rural names, old houses, parish memory, and regional legend reveal how family curses survived outside palaces and courtsThis is a book about names that became warnings, houses that carried unease, and histories that seemed to repeat themselves with terrible precision.
It follows the emotional power of curses as moral memory, social judgement, political accusation, and inherited fear. For readers of dark history, European folklore, Irish clan tradition, haunted genealogy, occult nonfiction, noble family tragedy, and the strange stories that gather around old bloodlines, Cursed Bloodlines opens the family vault and listens to what the past left behind. A surname can be a shelter.
It can also be a sentence.
Some families inherit land. Some inherit titles. Some inherit a warning. Across Europe, certain names gathered disaster so heavily that history began to darken into folklore. Cursed Bloodlines explores the families whose tragedies, deaths, illnesses, assassinations, failed heirs, broken estates, and repeated misfortunes became linked with the language of hereditary doom. These were the houses people whispered about after funerals, the names tied to old land grievances, the dynasties whose private suffering became public legend, and the bloodlines that seemed to carry more than memory from one generation to the next.
Inside this dark historical and folkloric study, Tavish Walker follows the borderland where recorded fact, family memory, genealogy, local tradition, and occult imagination meet. The book explores:The Habsburgs, whose dynastic marriage politics created one of the most infamous examples of inherited collapse in European historyThe House of Guise, where religious war, political ambition, assassination, vengeance, and royal fear turned power itself into a blood priceIrish clan curse traditions, where spoken doom, bardic satire, saintly anger, priestly judgement, land grievance, and ancestral memory shaped the fate of familiesThe O'Brien shadow, with traditions tied to old kingship, Killone, Knockanimana, sacred places, watery folklore, and the fear of a fading lineThe McInerney and O'Dubhda material, where local history, Irish speech, sacred landscape, and family memory preserve stories of inherited doomThe Worcestershire curse traditions, where rural names, old houses, parish memory, and regional legend reveal how family curses survived outside palaces and courtsThis is a book about names that became warnings, houses that carried unease, and histories that seemed to repeat themselves with terrible precision.
It follows the emotional power of curses as moral memory, social judgement, political accusation, and inherited fear. For readers of dark history, European folklore, Irish clan tradition, haunted genealogy, occult nonfiction, noble family tragedy, and the strange stories that gather around old bloodlines, Cursed Bloodlines opens the family vault and listens to what the past left behind. A surname can be a shelter.
It can also be a sentence.
Inside this dark historical and folkloric study, Tavish Walker follows the borderland where recorded fact, family memory, genealogy, local tradition, and occult imagination meet. The book explores:The Habsburgs, whose dynastic marriage politics created one of the most infamous examples of inherited collapse in European historyThe House of Guise, where religious war, political ambition, assassination, vengeance, and royal fear turned power itself into a blood priceIrish clan curse traditions, where spoken doom, bardic satire, saintly anger, priestly judgement, land grievance, and ancestral memory shaped the fate of familiesThe O'Brien shadow, with traditions tied to old kingship, Killone, Knockanimana, sacred places, watery folklore, and the fear of a fading lineThe McInerney and O'Dubhda material, where local history, Irish speech, sacred landscape, and family memory preserve stories of inherited doomThe Worcestershire curse traditions, where rural names, old houses, parish memory, and regional legend reveal how family curses survived outside palaces and courtsThis is a book about names that became warnings, houses that carried unease, and histories that seemed to repeat themselves with terrible precision.
It follows the emotional power of curses as moral memory, social judgement, political accusation, and inherited fear. For readers of dark history, European folklore, Irish clan tradition, haunted genealogy, occult nonfiction, noble family tragedy, and the strange stories that gather around old bloodlines, Cursed Bloodlines opens the family vault and listens to what the past left behind. A surname can be a shelter.
It can also be a sentence.
Les livres de Tavish Walker
Nouveauté

Nouveauté

5,49 €
Nouveauté

4,49 €


