Alyce Chaucer: Fact and Fiction
Christina Hardyment
Tuesday, 1 April 2025
12:00pm
1 hour
Oxford Martin School: Seminar Room
£8 - £15
Writer and journalist Christina Hardyment talks about her Alyce Chaucer mystery novels based on the real-life great-granddaughter of Geoffrey Chaucer, who lived in Oxfordshire.
The real Alice Chaucer lived at Ewelme near Wallingford for 25 years. She was one of the wealthiest women in the country thanks to a series of advantageous marriages. She and her last husband, William Duke of Suffolk, lived at Ewelme Palace and rebuilt the church and founded a cloister of almshouses and a school in the village that are all still thriving today thanks to their endowment. Hardyment has written three novels based on discovering who murdered Alyce’s last husband in 1450, The Serpent of Division, The Book of the Duchess and Murder Will Out. The novels see Alyce investigating murder and facing challenges from ruthless neighbours.
Hardyment is also author of several works of non-fiction including The Pleasures of the Table, Writing the Thames and Novel Houses: Twenty Famous Fictional Dwellings.