Anyhow my particular interest is the minutiae of history: the forgotten footnotes that don't appear in mainstream histories. If it were not fiction, Dashiell Hammett's description of the provenance of the maltese falcon would be the perfect example.
Here's another which is true, if little known, history. In February 1682, Thomas Thynne was shot dead in the Haymarket,London, while "taking the air in his coach". Jon Karl von Konigsmark and three followers were apprehended and tried. The three followers were steadfast in admitting to and shouldering the blame for the murder,maintaining that Konigsmark knew nothing about it. They were hanged (in the haymarket as the scene of the crime) and Konigsmark was acquitted.
It seems that the quartet arrived in England intent on murder about 3 weeks before and tried to leave the country immediately after the murder. There is a transcript of the trial in State Trials, Antonia Fraser gives a factual account in "The weaker vessel", A.E.W. Mason gave a fictionalised account in "Konigsmark",Allan Marshall refers to it briefly in "Intelligence & espionage in the reign of Charles II", and I saw a TV documentary on the lines of "you be the judge" which featured it.
There are 2 schools of thought: either it was a political assassination and the Duke of Monmouth may have been the target,he was in Thynne's coach earlier, or it was a struggle over an heiress, Lady Elizabeth Percy. Jon Karl fancied her, he was not the sort of man to actually be in love, and Thynne bribed her impecunious guardian into allowing him(Thynne) to marry Lady Elizabeth. She fled his house immediately after the wedding.
Whatever the truth may be there is general agreement the trial had a political element and the judge steered the jury toward acquitting Konigsmark.
