Poul Anderson Appreciation
Monday, 15 June 2026
Historical Continuity
Molitor And Diocletian
The rule of the Terran Empire by force alone began with Hans Molitor. (Also here.)
So is Hans the Terran Diocletian? Apparently not because, during Hans's reign, Chunderban Desai says:
What Josip Said And Hauksberg Thought
What Cairncross Thought
their period is an age of plots, murders, revolutions, betrayals and upheavals;
Gerhart is widely believed to have killed his brother and predecessor, Dietrich;
however, Gerhart is tolerated because the Empire needs a strong hand against civil war, Merseians and barbarians;
the Molitors' only claim to the Throne is their strength;
they are not descended from the Founder.
The reader either already understands or will soon realize that Cairncross thinks that that strong hand should be his, not Gerhart's.
At least four men plot or attempt to seize the Throne by force during Flandry's lifetime:
Romans
Romans in fiction by Poul Anderson and Neil Gaiman inspired me to request Gaiman's source, The Twelve Caesars, from the Public Library. Understanding of how an author has woven diverse historical data into a coherent narrative enhances our appreciation of his fiction.
Other but not unrelated Romans in fiction:
Alan Moore's Top 10 series has a parallel Earth where the Roman Empire has survived into the twentieth century, the first visual clue being a Police Commissioner wearing a head-band engraved with "SPQR." Their "barbaric" customs ask newly arrived travellers whether they are carrying any strange gods. ("Barbaric" is a joke by a "Praet" (Praetorian guard/cop).)
At Blog Central, we have just received our copy of SM Stirling's To Turn The Tide. The AFTERWORD mentions the following relevant earlier works:
The Usurper's Three Sons
Sunday, 14 June 2026
What The Usurper Said
What The Founder Said
Emperors On The Empire: The Sources
Our sources are:
Imperial Phases: Terra
Technic civilization was first a republic (the Solar Commonwealth), then an empire (the Terran Empire).
Our main sources are two conversations of Dominic Flandry: