The Dalemark Quartet



A series of four books by British young adult fantasy author Diana Wynne Jones, best known for Howl's Moving Castle and Chrestomanci. The Dalemark Quartet is about a country called Dalemark with a troubled history. It differs from Wynne Jones's usual fare, in that it is a quite serious fantasy epic, whereas many of her works, such as The Tough Guide to Fantasyland, are satirical.

There are four books in the series. In order of publication, they are...


 * 1) Cart and Cwidder
 * 2) Drowned Ammet
 * 3) The Spellcoats
 * 4) The Crown of Dalemark

Chronologically, The Spellcoats takes place first, during Dalemark's prehistorical period. Cart and Cwidder and Drowned Ammet overlap somewhat, but Cart and Cwidder generally comes first, as its events are over before the action really starts in Drowned Ammet. The Crown of Dalemark takes place last.

Each book has a different protagonist, although all of the characters appear in the final volume, The Crown of Dalemark.


 * Moril - Short for Osfameron Tanamoril. A dreamy young boy from a family of traveling musicians. Carries a harp-like instrument with incredible mystic powers. Do not make him mad.
 * Mitt - Short for Alhammitt. Incredibly foul-mouthed boy from the slums of Holand. A member of Holand's La Résistance that does nothing...until Mitt convinces them to have him bomb the earl. Is actually    and one of the.
 * Tanaqui - Named after the scented rushes that grow on the riverbank. Has four siblings named after birds. Skilled at weaving and . She and her siblings are chased out of their village and escape by riverboat, which leads them into an encounter with the king and draws them into the struggle against an Evil Sorcerer. Her father was married to, and Tanaqui and her siblings are literally the .
 * Maewen - Short for Mayelbridwen, a pollution of Manaliabrid. A normal girl from modern Dalemark who winds up two hundred years in the past. Looks like Noreth Onesdaughter, a girl with a claim to the empty throne of Dalemark. Maewen must impersonate Noreth while keeping her true identity a secret. Follows the royal road as Noreth intended, but plans to pass the four royal artifacts off to Amil the Great, who unites Dalemark in her own history.

Tropes used:
"This grittling the boys on fayside were at trase with peelers, would you believe! They had sein right too, so it was all kappin and no barlay. We only had mucks. But Biffa was our surnam and you should have seen the hurrel. Now highside is doggers and we have herison from scap to lengday, and everyone looks up to us although we are to be stapled for it. In haste to trethers. Hildrida."
 * All Myths Are True - It's the "official" history of Dalemark that's in question.
 * All There in the Manual - The second volume (last two books) is followed by "A Guide to Dalemark," a sort of glossary of terms and characters. It includes supplementary information not defined in the text, as well as juicy tidbits about certain characters' futures.
 * Almost-Dead Guy - In Cart and Cwidder, Moril, without even realizing he's doing it, manages to use the magic of the cwidder to keep his father alive as he's dying.
 * Alpha Bitch - Hildy
 * Always Chaotic Evil - Big Bad Evil Sorcerer Kankredin.
 * Anachronic Order - The third book is chronologically the first.
 * Anarchy Is Chaos - No king means every earl can do whatever the hell he wants in his domain. The North manages fairly well, but in the South...
 * And This Is For - Moril.
 * Ancient Tomb - King Amil the Great's tomb in The Crown of Dalemark.
 * Ancestral Weapon - The Adon's sword.
 * Arranged Marriage - Hildy is arranged to marry Lothian, Lord of the Holy Isles; Robin is forced into a spur-of-the-moment engagement to the king of the Riverlands.
 * Automaton Horses - Subverted by Maewen's horse.
 * Awesome Moment of Crowning - completely unintentionally argues his way into getting the crown.
 * Badass Bookworm - Navis.
 * Badass Crew - Maewen's traveling party (minus Maewen) in The Crown of Dalemark.
 * Badass Family - Closti's sons and daughters.
 * Badass Normal - Mitt can call on supernatural powers, Moril has a magical cwidder, but Navis...is just extremely competent.
 * Barbarian Tribe - Played with in The Spellcoats: both warring peoples consider the other group "Heathens", but they're both equally civilized. Lampshaded when they meet and start calling each other Heathens.
 * Battle in the Rain - The climax of Cart and Cwidder.
 * Big Brother Is Watching - South Dalemark
 * Blood Brothers - In The Spellcoats, Kars Adon and Hern form this kind of bond...which.
 * Blow You Away
 * Blue Blood - Half the cast.
 * Bodyguard Crush - Moril and Mitt on Maewen.
 * Bolivian Army Ending - It's implied that this is what happens to.
 * A Boy And His Cwidder
 * Break the Cutie - Poor Moril.
 * Break the Haughty - Earl Keril of Hannart.
 * The Brigadier - Navis post-The Crown of Dalemark.
 * Broken Pedestal - When Mitt meets, he finds that he's a truly vile human being.
 * Busman's Vocabulary - Hilariously played with Hildy's use of lawschool slang.


 * Call on Me - Old Ammet and Libby Beer.
 * Call to Agriculture - This is what Mitt wants to do.
 * Changing of the Guard - Each book has a different main character, although The Spellcoats is actually set much farther in the past than the rest of the series.
 * Chekhov's Skill - Tanaqui's talented weaving turns out to be more than just a handy domestic skill.
 * Child Mage - Duck, Mori to an extent
 * The Chosen One - He came North on wind's road, with a great one to guide him behind and before.
 * City of Spies - Just about any city in the South.
 * Clingy MacGuffin - The Adon's ring, which adjusts its size to fit any finger of the rightful heir to the crown of Dalemark.
 * Cloudcuckoolander - Moril is a mild example.
 * Contemptible Cover - A lot of the covers are bad, but one particular Cart and Cwidder cover takes the cake.
 * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass - Navis in Drowned Ammet.
 * Crowning Music of Awesome - In-universe, Moril + Cwidder = This
 * Cute Shotaro Boy - Ynen, d'awwwwwwwwwwwwww.
 * Dark-Skinned Blond - The people of the North. In The Spellcoats, the Heathens.
 * Dawn of an Era - In two separate books: The Spellcoats marks the beginning of Dalemark history, with the crowning of the legendary King Hern, the first king of Dalemark; in The Crown of Dalemark, Dalemark's centuries of interregnum end with the ascension of King Amil the Great.
 * Deadpan Snarker - Navis, so much.
 * Didn't See That Coming - Keril was definitely not expecting to see one claimant to the throne crown the other.
 * Dirty Business - The Crown of Dalemark opens with Earl Keril and the Countess of Aberath ordering Mitt to assassinate a claimant to the throne.
 * Divided States of America - Or: Divided Earldoms of Dalemark.
 * Doorstopper - The omnibus editions.
 * Downer Ending - The Crown of Dalemark may or may not have one of these depending on whether.
 * The Dreaded - Harchad, Earl Hadd's second son. Mitt brushes Harchad's reputation off right up until he sees him...and then everything he's heard catches up with him and he practically wets himself in terror.
 * Earn Your Happy Ending - Good god, poor Mitt.
 * Ear Worm - In-universe, Dagner is good at composing these.
 * End of an Age - Although it's not quite so obvious, Amil's ascension to the throne marks the beginning of an age of reason. Before then, belief in the Undying was pretty much a given, so in Maewen's time, they're mostly considered a superstition.
 * Enemy to All Living Things - Kankredin
 * The Engineer - Alk
 * Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep" - The Countess of Aberath, whose real name is never even mentioned by her husband.
 * Everyone Is Related
 * Evil Sorcerer - Kankredin in The Spellcoats.
 * Fantasy Gun Control - Guns exist in Dalemark, but primarily in the wealthy South, where the earls (who have all the money) can afford to finance gunsmiths and arm their soldiers with guns. In the North guns are much rarer, restricted to a handful of moderately wealthy earls, and smuggled from the South. The North's and South's armor reflects this: soldiers in the South wear metal breastplates with exaggerated curves to deflect bullets.
 * Fantasy World Map - Left Justified Fantasy World Map
 * Fighting a Shadow - Kankredin
 * Final Battle - Averted. The Battle of Kernsburgh that we see in the fourth book is only the first battle of Dalemark's unification war.
 * Fire-Forged Friends - Moril and Kialian, Mitt and Moril.
 * Fish Out of Temporal Water
 * Five-Man Band - In the third and fourth books.
 * The Spellcoats
 * The Hero - Hern
 * The Lancer - Tanaqui
 * The Smart Guy - Duck
 * The Big Guy - Gull
 * The Chick - Robin
 * The Crown of Dalemark
 * The Hero - Mitt
 * The Lancer - Moril
 * The Smart Guy - Navis, who is also The Mentor
 * The Chick - Maewen
 * Tagalong Kids/Sixth Rangers - Ynen and Kialan
 * Forbidden Zone - The old mill across the River in The Spellcoats.
 * Four-Temperament Ensemble - Dagner, Brid, Moril, and Kialan
 * Geometric Magic - Tanaqui's weaving, which uses a form of writing.
 * Ghibli Hills - North Dalemark.
 * Girl Meets Boy - Maewen meets Mitt.
 * The Girl Who Fits This Slipper - The Adon's ring is said to fit any finger on either hand of the true heir, no matter how big or small.
 * God in Human Form - The Undying when bound. They still have supernatural powers, but they're extremely diminished.
 * God's Hands Are Tied - The bound Undying, especially the One.
 * Good Is Not Nice - A number of Northern earls, especially Earl Keril. Also Navis Haddsson, who is on the lighter side of good but noted by history to have been absolutely ruthless.
 * Half-Human Hybrid - Tanaqui and her siblings: human dad, Undying mom.
 * Hazardous Water
 * Hellish Horse -
 * Herald - Wend for Maewen.
 * Heroic Lineage - Left, right, and center.
 * Heterosexual Life Partners - Quite likely Mitt and Moril. Fandom loves portraying them like this.
 * How Do I Shot Web? - Moril logically breaks down how the cwidder works, but realizes in the end that he's too young and has too little life experience to use it at all times.
 * Huge Schoolgirl - Biffa
 * Human Popsicle - Tanamil turns Gull into one.
 * I Have Many Names - The Undying tend to rack up a number over time, with each name having a great deal of significance.
 * I Know Your True Name - Old Ammet's true names count though.
 * Immortality - The One has Complete Immortality, while the rest of the Undying seem to be either The Ageless or have a Healing Factor. Kankredin, meanwhile, is physically gone, but his soul continues to poison Dalemark by taking root in the land and feeding off of the chaos it causes.
 * Incest Is Relative - Pretty much every major character is related, albeit some (much) more distantly than others.
 * It's for a Book - Maewen's father takes her sudden and intense interest in the reign of Amil the Great to mean that she's writing a historical novel. He's just glad she's doing the research.
 * Jade-Colored Glasses - Earl Keril
 * Jumped At the Call - Mitt, who decides that becoming a revolutionary at the age of ten is a grand idea.
 * Kick the Dog - Tholian displays what an utter scumbag he is when he strings Kialan up in a very painful way, just so Tholian can watch him suffer.
 * The Kingdom - Dalemark. Missing a king at the moment, but they get there.
 * Large and In Charge - Alk
 * Last Girl Wins - Mitt winds up marry....!
 * Legacy Immortality - When he takes the throne, This binds him to The One's duty to root out Kankredin from the land, even after the end of his reign. He passes this name on to his son, as well.
 * Also, two of Clennen the Singer's children, Brid and Moril, are named after legendary historical figures, Manaliabrid and Osfameron. Their companion Kialan is . The similarities between some of their experiences (particularly Moril's) and their predecessors' are referenced a lot in Cart and Cwidder.
 * Literary Agent Hypothesis - A note at the end of The Spellcoats indicates that it's supposed to be a translation of the titular Spellcoats by historians in Hannart.
 * Luke, I Am Your Father - father turns out to be, which is short for.
 * The Magic Goes Away - Averted. Although people in the present no longer believe in the Undying, that doesn't stop them from hanging around and being as active as they've always been.
 * Magic Music - Moril's cwidder is a magic cwidder. Also, Mage Mallard, Tanamil's pipes, etc.
 * The Magnificent - King Amil the Great, the Bloody
 * The Magocracy - The Heathens of Haligland in The Spellcoats aren't actually ruled by wizards, but Kankredin has pretty much all of Haligland under the control of him and his college of sorcerers.
 * Mayfly-December Romance - Pick an Undying, any Undying. Then pick their lover (or one of them). Old Ammet and Libby Beer are notable exceptions, both being Undying themselves.
 * Meaningful Name - Osfameron Tanamoril, Cennoreth Manaliabrid, Alhammitt, Wind's Road, Ynen, Tannoreth...
 * Meaningful Rename - changes his name to Amil when he becomes king.
 * The Mole -
 * Music for Courage - "We are the men of the North, the North, / And I'll tell you how much we're worth, we're worth--"
 * Mythopoeia
 * Never Accepted In Their Hometown - Tanaqui and her siblings.
 * Never Got to Say Goodbye - Almost played straight in The Crown of Dalemark, then subverted hard.
 * Nice to the Waiter - Navis does this fairly early on and keeps it up. Notable because he's one of Hadd's sons, who are not, as a rule, known to be nice to anybody.
 * Obfuscating Stupidity - Clennen
 * Officer and a Gentleman - Navis
 * Older Than They Look - The Undying, who often look quite young, though they shift between this and looking old.
 * One Degree of Separation - Moril is directly descended from Osfameron, . Mitt is  . Maewen is quite possibly of The One's bloodline, considering her uncanny resemblance to Noreth Onesdaughter. Then there are all the earls and the earls' children and grandchildren.
 * Maewen is actually descended from both of them. Her father is descended from a line of singers, one of whom was "probably named Clennen," and her mother's line is related to Mitt's.
 * One Steve Limit - The reason takes on the name Amil.
 * Our Founder - Not a statue (although there are probably several), but a painting. The mural on ceiling of one of the rooms in the royal palace hilariously depicts King Amil wearing an absurd pair of violet breeches.
 * Overly Long Name - Clennen is overly fond of these, so his children and his horse all have one.
 * Pals with Jesus - Mitt, who receives regular visits from Old Ammet and Libby Beer
 * Parental Abandonment - Most of the main cast, to some degree.
 * Planet of Steves - The city of Holand, where half the men are named Alhammitt.
 * Plucky Girl - Brid, Tanaqui
 * Point of View - The Spellcoats is written in the first person, from Tanaqui's perspective.
 * Power Trio - Brid (Id), Moril (Ego), Kialan (Superego)
 * A Protagonist Shall Lead Them - Hern in The Spellcoats, in The Crown of Dalemark.
 * The Quest - The basic plot of the fourth book.
 * The Quiet One - Moril and Ynen are shades of this.
 * Rags to Royalty -, Hern
 * Reasonable Authority Figure - Kialan in the first book, Navis in the second, Kars Adon in the third, Alk in the fourth.
 * Requisite Royal Regalia - The goal of The Quest is to collect four of these: cup, ring, sword, and crown.
 * La Résistance - There are numerous freedom fighting organizations in the South, although they're all pretty much ineffective.
 * Subverted by, whose role in the series proper is sympathetic and fatherly. He's biding his time until a proper revolution begins, but the series glossary at the end details what happens to him. His epithet is.
 * Rewriting Reality - Cennoreth the Weaver, one of the Undying, can do this by unpicking and resetting her weaving. She's done it twice. Osfameron's cwidder can also do this, to an extent, by making an idea into the truth.
 * Rich Bitch - While Hildy's attitude is almost redeemable in Drowned Ammet, who didn't seriously want to slap her for how she treats Mitt in the fourth book?
 * Rightful King Returns
 * Robe and Wizard Hat - Kankredin's sorcerers wear robes that say things like "I sent the hidden death..." and "I tortured the beast..." The claims woven in these robes function as the sorcerers' names.
 * Rousing Speech - Hern's quite good at these in The Spellcoats.
 * Lampshaded in The Crown of Dalemark by Maewen, who's terrified of having to give these while she's impersonating Noreth.
 * Royals Who Actually Do Something - King Amil the Great, who united and modernized Dalemark, following the tradition of his ancestor, King Hern.
 * Samus Is a Girl - On the road to Adenmouth, Mitt encounters another hearthman named Rith...who turns out to be the girl Mitt has just been ordered to kill.
 * Say My Name - An interesting variation, wherein saying one of the true names of two of the Undying causes hurricanes to spring up out of nowhere and islands to grow out of the ocean.
 * Sealed Good in a Can - Undying can only be bound to godhead if their likeness is taken (portrait, photo, statue, &c.). The One's power was limited this way.
 * Silly Rabbit, Idealism Is for Kids - Earl Keril, whose experiences as a revolutionary in his youth have made him believe that change is pointless.
 * Simultaneous Arcs - The first book takes place during the first five chapters of the second.
 * Single Line of Descent - Although there are a number of characters related by virtue of centuries passing during the course of Dalemark's history, is the only claimant to the throne who is a direct descendent of the Adon.
 * Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism - In the first two books, South Dalemark is horrible and oppressed and North Dalemark is made out to be lovely and free. Then we actually get North in the last book.
 * Sour Supporter - Earl Keril, Hildy. Possibly other earls and lords of Dalemark were this, since their options during Dalemark's unification were: 1) support it, 2) take a permanent vacation abroad, or 3) dance for the hangman.
 * Spell My Name with an "S" - In-universe example: spelling and dialect vary between the North and the South, such as with Kialan, whose Southern names are Collen and Halain.
 * Spoiled Brat - Hildy
 * Stable Time Loop
 * Star-Crossed Lovers - Subverted by, but played straight if
 * Stay on the Path - Maewen's party sticks to the green roads, since they're guarded by the Undying.
 * A Storm Is Coming - Mitt, Ynen, and Hildy get hit by a massive autumn storm on their way north. Sure enough, next day, they accidentally rescue the man who shot the earl of Holand.
 * Succession Crisis - In Dalemark's past, this led to the current situation of the country being divided into its Earldoms.
 * Summon Magic - Mitt can do something like this by calling out Old Ammet's or Libby Beer's true names. The effect differs according to which name he calls.
 * Time Travel
 * Time Travel Romance - In the fourth book.
 * Trilogy Creep - Kind of. The fourth book was published almost four years after the third after Diana's publishers had been begging her for years, but it nicely ties together all three previous books and is quite good. Also, she never would have written it just because her publishers wanted her to if she didn't have an excellent idea of what to write.
 * Unreliable Narrator - The glossary, of all things. Some of it is straightforward history--meaning it was penned by someone who completely discounts Dalemark's myths.
 * Verbal Tic - The ultimate evil has one. Kankredin ends a lot of sentences with "eh?"
 * He must be Canadian.
 * Where It All Began - Maewen just in time to...!
 * The Wise Prince - Kars Adon
 * Wizards Live Longer - Nearly all the Undying seem to have magical abilities of some sort.
 * World Building
 * Xanatos Gambit - One way or another, Navis planned to get on the throne.
 * You Can't Fight Fate - becoming King