![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikqaauEv0i_oGz26HL2WKAK9i2I1rjhL8QHw609iyvjW_Wj934gceN8nY-8p9tvfm5Z0a1yf7OyearBLawURT6qHbpuEqRdoDeXHAjX2k9RetrHg-hD35_ajD_S3RD19U36X3f0ZcjLFU/s400/Tintin_cover_-_King_Ottokar%2527s_Sceptre%5B1%5D.jpg)
English-language materials were a bit scarce in Copenhagen in 1973. I borrowed British and American standards (Dickens, Steinbeck) from the small selection at the library.
More happily, I would spend my allowance at a particular toy store that sold Tintin books in English. I bought them one at a time and read them over and over, including, of course, King Ottokar's Sceptre.
Because I've never been close to my father, I got most of my history not from him but from sources like Herge. So... I've always been a bit confused as to what's actually real.
This weekend I'm reading along about the Great Moravian Empire for my Slovakia research, and--how 'bout that?!--did you know there really was an Ottokar in history, and a rather important one too, if you consider the history of the Great Moravian Empire important, which of course I do (now that Slovakia is mine, as Jen says)?
Yes indeed. King Ottokar II ruled a bunch of places thereabouts (sorry, I haven't yet untangled this geography), but he lost many of them to the Habsburgs in the 1200s.
Or Hapsburgs, if you prefer. Who held onto them until they lost WWI.
I think my old Tintin books, passed down to my little brother, may still be at my father's house. I must ask him to mail me this important historical document.
Or you can borrow my copy!
ReplyDeleteA ha! A reason to meet for coffee!
ReplyDelete