Angélique (novel series)  

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"However, Angélique is soon recaptured, this time by Captain D'Escranville, a renegade French nobleman known as the terror of the Mediterranean. D'Escranville brutally rapes her but, weakened by her ordeals, she is saved from further assaults by falling into a month-long fever. Upon recovering, D'Escranville tries to woo her but when she rejects him he vows to strip her naked in the public slave market and sell her to the highest bidder, and tortures Angélique until she agrees to stand submissively on the auction-block.

In the slave market at Candia (Iráklion) in Crete, Angélique manages to communicate with the wealthy knights of Malta and promises she will repay them from her fortune if they outbid the other bidders. They agree to go to 20,000 piastres."[1]

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Angelique (original Angélique) is a series of 13 French historical adventure books by the novelist duo Anne and Serge Golon. The first 10 books have been adapted into English while numbers 11-13 have not. Some of these books were then adapted into 5 popular movies.

Contents

Plot

The eponymous protagonist is a 17th-century woman born into the provincial aristocracy in the west of France. In successive books she marries at a young age the romantic and talented Count of Toulouse; gets her domestic bliss destroyed when King Louis XIV has her husband executed on trumped up charges; descends into the underworld of Paris; emerges and through a turbulent second marriage gets admittance to the court in Versailles; loses her second husband in war, just as she had started to truly love him, and subsequently refuses to become the King's mistress; finds that her first husband is after all alive and is hiding somewhere in the Mediterranean; sets out on a highly risky search, gets captured by pirates, sold into slavery in Crete, taken into the harem of the King of Morocco, stabs the King when he tries to have sex with her, and stages a daring escape along with a French slave who becomes her lover; get back to France, to be put under house arrest in her ancestral home and raped by rampaging Royal soldiers; arousing the province in a rebellion which is brutally put down; finding refuge with a Huguenot family and - just as they are threatened at the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes - is saved in the nick of time by her long-lost first husband appearing at La Rochelle and taking them all to America in his ship; and being reunited also with her children, which she thought dead but were alive and well in America. Then there follow many more adventures in colonial North America - specifically, in French Acadia - involving French and English settlers, Indians and pirates.

Book series

  1. Book 1: Angélique, the Marquise of the Angels (1957)
  2. Book 2: Angélique: The Road to Versailles (1958) {Books 1 and 2 are sometimes combined into 1 volume called simply, Angélique}
  3. Book 3: Angélique and the King (1959)
  4. Book 4: Angélique and the Sultan {otherwise known as Angélique in Barbary} (1960)
  5. Book 5: Angélique in Revolt (1961)
  6. Book 6: Angélique in Love (1961)
  7. Book 7: The Countess Angélique (1964) {otherwise known as Angélique in the New World}
  8. Book 8: The Temptation of Angélique (1966)
  9. Book 9: Angélique and the Demon (1972)
  10. Book 10: Angélique and the Ghosts (1976) {actually known as Angélique and the Conspiracy of Shadows}
  11. Angélique à Québec (1980)
  12. Angélique, la Route de l'Espoir (1984)
  13. La Victoire d'Angélique (1985)
  • Angélique et le Royaume de France (will be released in November 2011)
  • A fifteenth book, still untitled, to conclude the series

Movie series

The movies were joint production of France, Italy and Germany. Director of the movies was Bernard Borderie and the main cast was Michèle Mercier as Angélique Sancé de Monteloup and Robert Hossein as Jeoffrey de Peyrac.


Film

See also

Angélique (films)




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Angélique (novel series)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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