Set in late twelfth-century England under Norman rule, Ivanhoe tracks the disinherited knight, Rowena, Rebecca, and the outlaw Locksley through the Ashby tournament, abductions, and the siege of Torquilstone. Scott marries swift romance to learned archaism and multiple viewpoints, effectively founding the modern historical novel. His antiquarian detail-heraldry, legal custom, monastic life-frames a meditation on conquest, religious prejudice, and national reconciliation that reshaped later medievalism and the Robin Hood myth. Walter Scott, Scottish advocate, poet, and tireless collector of chronicles and border ballads, had reimagined Scotland in the Waverley Novels when, in 1819, he turned to the Plantagenet past. Drawing on medieval law, romance, and chronicle, he probed the aftershocks of conquest and the status of outsiders-especially Jews-projecting debates on empire, union, and toleration through a medieval lens, all while maintaining the anonymity he then favored. Readers of historical fiction, medieval studies, or the history of nationalism will find Ivanhoe indispensable: a vigorous tale with an intellectual core. For its tournament spectacle, legal drama, and humane challenge to prejudice, it merits a place on syllabuses and the shelves of serious general readers. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Author Biography · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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