Jill Williamson is a chocolate loving, daydreaming, creator of kingdoms. She writes weird books for teens in lots of weird genres like, fantasy (Blood of Kings trilogy), science fiction (Replication), and dystopian (The Safe Lands trilogy). Find Jill on FacebookTwitterPinterest, or on her author website.

This post now part of the book Storyworld First: Creating A Unique Fantasy World For Your Novel by Jill Williamson.

I enjoy studying history, and our world has a fascinating one. So should yours.

Be careful, though. You only need enough history to tell your story. This is something many fantasy writers overdo when they slip huge sections of history into their book or have a “historical” prologue. I advise against both. It’s best to work in your history in ways that fit the story.

CREATE A TIMELINE
When I started my first fantasy novel, I didn’t know how to go about creating a history, and I wanted to make it simple. So I wrote a timeline of my land. And, really, it’s a timeline of only one group of people (Kinsman), starting when they arrived in the land and ending at the current day of my book.

I started with the year 0 and went up to the year 585, when Prince Gidon would turn sixteen. I used MS Word, and went down in a line and typed a number for every ten years. Then I added kings’ birth’s, coronations, and deaths, and I also added in some random wars, the discovery of new places, when a certain palace was built—whatever I thought might be worth remembering.

WRITE IT OUT

Click to explore Er’Rets

Another thing I did was write out a brief historical narrative for my land that included key events. It’s two pages long. I did this for my own knowledge so that I could better understand the world my characters lived in. You can read it by clicking here. (Keep in mind, I wrote it for me, so I never edited it. *grin*) And if you click on the map, it will take you to the large map where you can click on all my different cities and read stuff about them. Some of it is historical, some of it isn’t. But all this came about from my storyworld creation time. And none of this went in my book, at least not the actual histories I wrote.

DON’T USE IT?
That’s right. Fight the urge to cut and paste whatever cool histories you may have created. Instead, tell your character’s story. The history will come out if and when it needs to. Here are a few of the places I used my history in the actual books:
-Achan learns early on that he is Kinsman, a certain type of people.
-Achan and Vrell meet giants, Poroo people, and wolves, all of which were creatures that I created when I wrote my historical narrative.
-When Achan reaches the memorial tree in Allowntown, he thinks about the murder of the king and queen and the curse of darkness on the land.
-Throughout the book the reader is given different bits and pieces of the story of how the prince came to live with Lord Nathak.
-I have characters talk about the Great War here and there in the book.

The other times are very similar. Short and sweet, mostly. I don’t use a lot of the history in the actual book, but without having written it, I wouldn’t have had a foundation from which to create.

USE THE FOUNDATION
I already had a map with lots of locations. Now my history and map combined gave me a lot to work with. I had places that meant something. I knew why certain characters lived where they did. I knew where I needed them to go. I knew who would stand in opposition to them. And I knew what surprises might lie in wait as they traveled. If I got stuck, I’d think about where they were on the map and ask myself if there was something I could do with the area or the history of that place. And most of the time, my options were clear.

TIPS FOR CREATING HISTORY
-Start with a timeline
-Write a one to two-page historical narrative
-Consider rulers, changes of regime, wars, and other major world events

Don’t spend too long on this! A little goes a long way, and you can always stop writing and create more history if you need to. Remember, you’re writing a book, not a historical tomb. Still, who better to consult the art of a historical storyworld than Tolkien? Check out this timeline of Middle Earth. Pretty sweet, huh?