@Einar:
Einar of course couldn't get anywhere else than the Archives. The elderly man behind the counter glared at him and his bow.
"Yes?"
@Halldora:
The genealogies book had one, terrible flaw. Until Revus the Second, the genealogies didn't list the Emperor's wives, and his daughters were merely mentioned as 'and 3 daughters' 'and a daughter who died in infancy' and such...
But from Revus the Second, an Emperor two centuries in the past, the genealogies went into other extreme of the spectrum; each child had its spouse listed, and how many children they had together as well. There were even 'royal concubines' listed for each of the Emperors, most of them having children with the Emperor; because of this, sometimes there were up to twenty or even thirty names written tightly, in tiny font, in the same line.
There wasn't a single mention of Eleonore nor any foreign princess, which might be fault of the scarce, male-centered chronologies in the first part of the book.
@Nerea:
The monk stopped sweeping and looked up at Nerea. His face was chiseled with wrinkles of old age, but somehow he managed to retain the blackness of his facial hair.
"Welcome to Chapel of Isis, Lady of Dawn and Maiden of Dusk. How may I help you child? It is unusual for someone to come outside the prayer hours."