Priestess of Avalon

Priestess of Avalon
Author Marion Zimmer Bradley (completed by Diana L. Paxson)
Country United States
Language English
Series Avalon Series
Genre Fantasy, Historical novel
Publisher Voyager Books
Publication date
November 6, 2000
Media type Print (hardback & paperback) and audio-CD
Pages 382 pp
ISBN 0-00-224709-7
OCLC 44484323
813/.54 21
LC Class PS3552.R228 P75 2000
Preceded by Lady of Avalon
Followed by The Mists of Avalon

Priestess of Avalon is a 2001 novel by American writer Marion Zimmer Bradley, completed posthumously by Diana L. Paxson.[1] It follows detailing the life of Helena, first wife of Western Roman Emperor Constantius Chlorus and mother of Constantine.

The Avalon series is being continued by Diana L. Paxson.

Plot

Background

It begins by showing her birth, with a druid giving a prophecy of her life. It proceeds to show her as a young girl named Eilan, who becomes a priestess on the Isle of Avalon.

Summary

As a young woman, the British priestess Eilan, known to the Romans as Helena, falls in love with the charismatic Roman Constantius. The Roman noble takes her away from Avalon as she is banished for this forbidden love and, before long, Helena bears him a son, who will become Constantine the Great.

Helena's position in Roman society now gives her the freedom to travel about in the empire. When her son Constantine becomes Emperor, she slowly discovers brand-new roles. She faces the spread of the new Christian religion and seeks to understand the old knowledge of the goddess in light of the new religion. As Empress-Mother, Helena travels on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land to find the answers to questions that arise between the old religion and the new.

Characters

  • Eilan [Julia Coelia Helena, later, Flavia Helena Augusta] – the priestess of the story, protagonist. She is the daughter of Prince Coelius, consort of Constantius, mother of Constantine, and priestess of Avalon
  • Constantius – the Roman noble she marries
  • Constantine – Eilan's (Helena's) son, Emperor AD 306-37
  • Aelia – a young priestess, trained with Helena
  • Arganax - Arch-Druid during Helena's youth.
  • Atticus – Constantine's Greek tutor
  • Ceridachos – Arch-Druid when Dierna becomes High Priestess
  • Cigfolla – a priestess of Avalon
  • Julius Colius [King Coel] – Prince of Camulodunum, father of Helena
  • Corinthius the Elder – Helena's tutor
  • Corinthius the Younger – master of a school in Londinium
  • Crispus – Constantine's illegitimate son by Minervina
  • Cunoarda – Helena's Alban slave
  • Dierna – Helena's second cusion, later Lady of Avalon
  • Drusilla – cook in Helena and Constantius's household
  • Fausta – daughter of Maximian, wife of Constantine, and mother of his legitimate children
  • Flavius Pollio – a kinsman of Constantius
  • Ganeda – Helena's aunt, Lady of Avalon
  • Gwenna – a maiden being trained on Avalon
  • Haggaia – Arch-Druid when Helena returns to Avalon
  • Helena the Younger ("Lena") – a noblewomen of Treveri, wife of Crispus
  • Heron – a maiden being trained on Avalon
  • Hrodlind – Helena's German maid
  • Katiya – a priestess of Bast in Londinium
  • Lactantius – a rhetorician and Christian apologist, tutor to Crispus
  • Lucius Viducius - a pottery merchant trading between Gallia and Eburacum
  • Macarius - Bishop of Jerusalem
  • Marcia - midwife who delivers Constantine
  • Martha - a Syrian slave, healed by Helena
  • Maxentius - son of Maximian, Augustus in Italy and North Africa
  • Minervina - Constantine's Syrian concubine, mother of Crispus
  • Philip - Constantine's Servant
  • Quintillus - brother of the Emperor Claudius II, Constantius's great uncle
  • Rain - High Priestess of Avalon, Helena's mother
  • Severus - Caesar appointed by Galerius, executed by Maximian
  • Sian - daughter of Ganeda, mother of Dierna and Becca
  • Suona - a young priestness of Avalon
  • Victorinus - rebel Emperor in the West, AD 268-70
  • Vitellia - a Christian matron living in Londinium
  • Wren - a maiden being trained on Avalon

Release details

Reception

Publishers Weekly praised the novel, and wrote that "Paxson's own skill at bringing historical characters and places to vivid life enriches Helena's story. This final book in the Bradley canon is sure to please her devotees and win her more."[2]

References

  1. Gulley, pp. 334, 345–346.
  2. "Fiction review: Priestess of Avalon". Publishers Weekly. April 30, 2001. Retrieved August 6, 2013.

Sources

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