The Lions of Al-Rassan: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
prefix>Import Bot
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.TheLionsOfAl-Rassan 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.TheLionsOfAl-Rassan, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
m (Mass update links)
Line 11: Line 11:


* [[Bittersweet Ending]]
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]
* [[Cold Blooded Torture]]: Ishak ben Yonannon, Jehane's father, had his eyes and tongue cut out for saving the life of the king's concubine; that is, in order to properly save her during childbirth, he had to see her naked. His eyes were taken for having seen her naked; his tongue, so he would never describe her beauty to others. Note that this was the king's way of showing mercy - had he given in to the priests' demands, Ishak would have been killed.
* [[Cold-Blooded Torture]]: Ishak ben Yonannon, Jehane's father, had his eyes and tongue cut out for saving the life of the king's concubine; that is, in order to properly save her during childbirth, he had to see her naked. His eyes were taken for having seen her naked; his tongue, so he would never describe her beauty to others. Note that this was the king's way of showing mercy - had he given in to the priests' demands, Ishak would have been killed.
* [[Crystal Dragon Jesus]]: The Asharites are Muslims, the Jaddites are Christians, and the Kindath are Jews.
* [[Crystal Dragon Jesus]]: The Asharites are Muslims, the Jaddites are Christians, and the Kindath are Jews.
* [[Cue the Sun]]
* [[Cue the Sun]]
Line 23: Line 23:
* [[Grey and Gray Morality]]
* [[Grey and Gray Morality]]
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]: {{spoiler|Mazur ben Avren}}.
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]: {{spoiler|Mazur ben Avren}}.
** While not happening "on screen", Ishak ben Yonannon can arguingly count. See the [[Cold Blooded Torture]] example above, and take into account that (as we learn later in the book) {{spoiler|he was completely aware of what would be done to him, but went on anyway to abide by his oath as a physician}}.
** While not happening "on screen", Ishak ben Yonannon can arguingly count. See the [[Cold-Blooded Torture]] example above, and take into account that (as we learn later in the book) {{spoiler|he was completely aware of what would be done to him, but went on anyway to abide by his oath as a physician}}.
* [[Historical Fantasy]]
* [[Historical Fantasy]]
* [[Holier Than Thou]]
* [[Holier Than Thou]]
Line 33: Line 33:
* [[Triang Relations]]: Jehane, Ammar and Rodrigo. Type 3.
* [[Triang Relations]]: Jehane, Ammar and Rodrigo. Type 3.
** It's really more like Type 10. Type 8 is also implied. {{spoiler|Though angles of that are unrequited. Really it's five sides once you factor in Rodrigo's wife Miranda and Alvar's unrequited love for Jehane.}}
** It's really more like Type 10. Type 8 is also implied. {{spoiler|Though angles of that are unrequited. Really it's five sides once you factor in Rodrigo's wife Miranda and Alvar's unrequited love for Jehane.}}
* [[Two Lines No Waiting]]
* [[Two Lines, No Waiting]]
* [[What a Senseless Waste of Human Life]]
* [[What a Senseless Waste of Human Life]]
* [[Vestigial Empire]]: Al-Rassan, which has fallen far from its height.
* [[Vestigial Empire]]: Al-Rassan, which has fallen far from its height.

Revision as of 06:20, 9 January 2014

The Lions Of Al-Rassan is a 1995 fantasy novel by Guy Gavriel Kay. Its world is based off the Spanish Reconquista.

The story begins with murder. King Almalik of Cartada, the largest of the three Asharite kingdoms in Al-Rassan, has a number of his enemies slain in one afternoon. The Kindath physician, Jehane bet Ishak, inadvertedly keeps one of her patients from the execution, and is forced to flee. The assassin Ammar ibn Khairan knocks off Almalik at the behest of the king's son, and is exiled. Meanwhile, in the Jaddite-controlled north, Captain Rodrigo Belmonte, the man used to collect tribute from the southern kingdoms, is ordered south to quell a feud with his rival Garcia de Rada, and to do reconnaissance on the Asharite kingdoms in preparation for war.

The three meet in the city of Ragosa and soon become good friends. In the service of the Ragosian king, they fight thieves, hired killers, and religious fanatics. A Love Triangle begins to develop between Jehane and the two men. However, the shadow of war hangs heavy over them, and they know that soon they may see each other on opposite ends of the battlefield...

There have been rumours of a film adaptation, which have as yet come to nothing.


This work contains the following tropes: