When my chronicle of Francis Crawford of Lymond ended, it seemed to me that there was something still
to be told of his heritage: about the genetic lottery, as well as the turmoil of trials and experience which,
put together, could bring such a man into being.
The House of Niccolò, in all its volumes, deals with the forerunner without whom Lymond would not have
existed: the unknown who fought his way to the high ground that Francis Crawford would occupy, and held it
for him. It is fiction, but the setting at least is very real.
The man I have called Nicholas de Fleury lived in the mid-fifteenth century, three generations before
Francis Crawford, and was reared as an artisan, his gifts and his burdens concealed beneath an artless
manner and a joyous, sensuous personality. But he was also born at the cutting edge of the European
Renaissance, which Lymond was to exploit at its zenith--the explosion of exploration and trade, high art
and political duplicity, personal chivalry and violent warfare in which a young man with a genius for
organization and numbers might find himself trusted by princes, loved by kings, and sought in marriage and
out of it by clever women bent on power, or wealth, or revenge--or sometimes simply from fondness.
There are, of course, echoes of the present time. Trade and war don't change much down the centuries:
today's new multi-millionaires had their counterparts in the entrepreneurs of few antecedents who evolved
the first banking systems for the Medici; who developed the ruthless network of trade that ran from
Scotland, Flanders, and Italy to the furthest reaches of the Mediterranean and the Baltic, and ventured from
Iceland to Persia; from Muscovy to the deserts of Africa.
Scotland is important to this chronicle, as it was to Francis Crawford. Here, the young Queen of Scots is a
thirteen-year-old Scandinavian, and her husband's family are virtually children. This, framed in glorious
times, is the story of the difficult, hesitant progress of a small nation, as well as that of a singular man.
Dorothy Dunnett
Edinburgh, Scotland