In medieval Wales, a princess becomes a bridge between kingdoms?and a target for revenge.
Branwen ferch Llŷr was given in marriage to the king of Ireland to forge peace between Britain and Ireland. The medieval Welsh Mabinogion tells how she became queen, bore a son who should have united two kingdoms, and succeeded in everything expected of her?until her half-brother's violence shattered the fragile alliance.
For three years, Branwen was punished for an offense she didn't commit. Stripped of her position, degraded from queen to kitchen slave, beaten daily, she was caught between two kingdoms with no voice in the decisions that shaped her fate. When she finally sent a secret message asking for rescue, her brothers invaded Ireland with an army.
The war that followed destroyed both kingdoms. Her son was murdered before her eyes. Branwen returned to Wales and died from a broken heart.
Drawing on the Mabinogion and Welsh tradition, this book explores Branwen's origins as a sovereignty goddess, her transformation in medieval texts, and why her story of sorrow and sacrifice still resonates today.