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The Life of Elizabeth I Kindle Edition
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“An extraordinary piece of historical scholarship.”—The Cleveland Plain Dealer
Perhaps the most influential sovereign England has ever known, Queen Elizabeth I remained an extremely private person throughout her reign, keeping her own counsel and sharing secrets with no one—not even her closest, most trusted advisers. Now, in this brilliantly researched, fascinating chronicle, Alison Weir shares provocative new interpretations and fresh insights on this enigmatic figure.
Against a lavish backdrop of pageantry and passion, intrigue and war, Weir dispels the myths surrounding Elizabeth I and examines the contradictions of her character. Elizabeth I loved the Earl of Leicester, but did she conspire to murder his wife? She called herself the Virgin Queen, but how chaste was she through dozens of liaisons? She never married—was her choice to remain single tied to the chilling fate of her mother, Anne Boleyn?
An enthralling epic, The Life of Elizabeth I is a mesmerizing, stunning chronicle of a trailblazing monarch.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBallantine Books
- Publication dateApril 24, 2013
- File size5692 KB
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Review
“An excellent account of the greatest of England’s remarkably great queens.”—Daily Telegraph (London)
“Weir succeeds in making Elizabeth and her subjects come to life in this clearly written and well-researched biography.”—Library Journal (starred review)
“An extraordinary piece of historical scholarship.”—The Cleveland Plain Dealer
From the Inside Flap
Against a lavish backdrop of pageantry and passion, intrigue and war, Weir dispels the myths surrounding Elizabeth I and examines the contradictions of her character. Elizabeth I loved the Earl of Leicester, but did she conspire to murder his wife? She called herself the Virgin Queen, but how chaste was she through dozens of liaisons? She never married--was her choice to remain single tied to the chilling fate of her mother, Anne Boleyn? An enthralling epic that is also an amazingly intimate portrait, The Life of Elizabeth I is a mesmerizing, stunning reading experience.
From the Back Cover
Against a lavish backdrop of pageantry and passion, intrigue and war, Weir dispels the myths surrounding Elizabeth I and examines the contradictions of her character. Elizabeth I loved the Earl of Leicester, but did she conspire to murder his wife? She called herself the Virgin Queen, but how chaste was she through dozens of liaisons? She never married, but was her choice to remain single tied to the chilling fate of her mother, Anne Boleyn? An enthralling epic that is also an amazingly intimate portrait, The Life of Elizabeth I is a mesmerizing, stunning reading experience.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
‘The Most English Woman in England’
The first act of Queen Elizabeth had been to give thanks to God for her peaceful accession to the throne and, as she later told the Spanish ambassador, to ask Him ‘that He would give her grace to govern with clemency and without bloodshed’. With the calamitous example of her sister before her, she had already decided that there should be no foreign interference in the government of England, not from Spain or Rome or anywhere else, and was resolved to be herself a focus for English nationalism – ‘the most English woman in England’.
Elizabeth could certainly boast of her English parentage. Her father, Henry VIII, had been of royal Plantagenet stock, with some Welsh blood from his father Henry VII, while Elizabeth’s mother, Anne Boleyn, had been an English commoner whose ancestors had been Norfolk farmers and merchants who had risen to prominence through their wealth and a series of advantageous marriages with daughters of the nobility. Through Anne’s mother, Elizabeth Howard, Elizabeth was related to the Howards, earls of Surrey and dukes of Norfolk, England’s premier peers, and through the Boleyns themselves to many other notable English families such as the Careys and the Sackvilles.
When Henry VIII fell in love with Anne Boleyn in approximately 1526, he had been married for seventeen years to a Spanish princess, Katherine of Aragon, whose maid of honour Anne was. Katherine had failed to provide Henry with the male heir he so desperately needed, and for some years he had entertained doubts about the validity of the marriage, on the grounds that the Bible forbade a man to marry his brother’s widow: Katherine had briefly been married to his elder brother Arthur, who died aged fifteen, but she stoutly maintained that the marriage had never been consummated.
Henry had had affairs before, but his passion for Anne Boleyn was all-consuming, and burned ever more fiercely after she made it clear that she would not be his mistress. Her virginity, she declared provocatively, would be the greatest gift she would bring her husband.
By early 1527, Henry VIII had decided to apply to the Pope for an annulment of his marriage. At around the same time, he resolved to have Anne Boleyn for his wife, as soon as he was free. But the Pope, scared of Katherine’s powerful nephew, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, refused to co-operate. The King’s ‘Great Matter’ dragged on for six years, by the end of which time the English Church had been severed from the Church of Rome, and Henry VIII had declared himself its Supreme Head. Thus liberated, he was able to have his marriage to Katherine declared null and void, and marry Anne, which he did as soon as she became pregnant in 1533. The new Queen was vastly unpopular among his subjects.
Henry and Anne had confidently anticipated that their child would be a son, and were disappointed when it turned out to be a girl. Named after both her grandmothers, Elizabeth of York and Elizabeth Howard, the Princess Elizabeth was nevertheless a healthy baby, and her parents were hopeful of providing her with a brother shortly.
This was not to be. Two, possibly three unsuccessful pregnancies followed, during which time Henry fell out of love with Anne and began paying court to one of her ladies, Jane Seymour. He had realised also that Anne was entirely unsuitable as queen, since she was over-flirtatious, immoderate in her public behaviour, and vengeful towards her enemies. She was, in the brief time allowed her, a good mother, incurring her husband’s displeasure by insisting on breastfeeding Elizabeth herself, which high-born mothers never did, and choosing pretty clothes for the child. She rarely saw her, however, for the Princess was given her own household at Hatfield House at three months old, and thereafter her mother could only visit when her other duties permitted.
The loss of a stillborn son in January 1536, on the day of Katherine of Aragon’s funeral, sealed Anne’s fate. Arrested with five men, one her brother, she was charged with plotting to murder the King and twenty-two counts of adultery – eleven of which have since been proved false, which suggests that the rest, for which there is no corroborative evidence, are equally unlikely. Anne was taken to the Tower, tried and condemned to death. After her marriage had been annulled and her daughter declared a bastard, she was beheaded on 19 May 1536.
Elizabeth was not yet three when her mother was executed, and no one knows when or how or what she found out about that tragic event. She was a precocious child, and soon noticed the change in her life, asking her governor why she had been addressed as my Lady Princess one day and merely as my Lady Elizabeth the next. The loss of her father’s favour can only have led to more awkward questions, so it is reasonable to suppose that she found out what had happened to her mother sooner rather than later. The effect on her emotional development can only be guessed at, but it must have been profound.
Nor do we know whether or not she believed in her mother’s guilt. She made only two references in adult life to Anne Boleyn, neither of them particularly revealing, although she was close to, and promoted the interests of, several relatives on her mother’s side. What is clear is that throughout her life she revered the memory of her sometimes terrifying father, who had had her declared baseborn and could not bear to have much contact with her in the years following Anne Boleyn’s disgrace. Those years brought a succession of stepmothers, all of whom took pity on the motherless child and did their best to restore her to favour.
Perhaps the worst episode in her childhood occurred when Elizabeth was eight. The King’s fifth wife, Katherine Howard, a cousin of Anne Boleyn, was a giddy young girl who unwisely admitted former lovers into her household and – it was later alleged – into her bed. Late in 1541 her crimes were discovered. The King wept when told, but would not see her. In February 1542, she met the same fate as Anne Boleyn.
It was around this time that Elizabeth told her friend, young Robert Dudley, son of the Earl of Warwick, ‘I will never marry.’ Some writers have suggested that the events of her childhood led her to equate marriage with death, and although there is no evidence to support this theory, there can be little doubt that this was a traumatic time for Elizabeth, with Katherine Howard’s execution reviving painful thoughts of what had happened to her mother.
It was not until Henry married Katherine Parr in 1543 that Elizabeth came to enjoy a semblance of family life, as the Tudors understood it, and even then she incurred her father’s displeasure for an unknown offence and was banned from seeing him for a year. They were reconciled before his death in January 1547, when his nine-year-old son Edward VI succeeded to the throne and Elizabeth went to live under the guardianship of Katherine Parr at the latter’s dower palace at Chelsea.
Henry VIII may have neglected his younger daughter in many ways, but he did ensure that from the age of six she should be educated as befitted a Renaissance prince. Katherine Parr made it her business to supervise the education of her stepchildren and engaged the best tutors for Elizabeth, among them William Grindal and the celebrated Cambridge scholar, Roger Ascham. Ascham and his circle were not only humanists, dedicated to the study of the ancient Greek and Latin classics and to the education of women, but also converts to the reformed faith, or Protestants, as such people were now known, and it is almost certain that Elizabeth was fired by their ideals at an impressionable age.
She had a formidable intelligence, an acute mind and a remarkably good memory. Ascham declared he had never known a woman with a quicker apprehension or a more retentive memory. Her mind, he enthused, was seemingly free from all female weakness, and she was ‘endued with a masculine power of application’; he delighted in the fact that she could discourse intelligently on any intellectual subject. There were many learned ladies in England, but Ascham was not exaggerating when he claimed that ‘the brightest star is my illustrious Lady Elizabeth’.
Like most educated gentlewomen of her day, Elizabeth was encouraged to become the equal of men in learning and to outdo ‘the vaunted paragons of Greece and Rome’. The curriculum devised for her was punishing by today’s standards, but she thrived on intellectual exercises and had a particular gift for languages, which she enjoyed showing off. As queen, she read and conversed fluently in Latin, French, Greek, Spanish, Italian and Welsh. She had read the New Testament in Greek, the orations of Isocrates and the tragedies of Sophocles, amongst other works. Her interest in philosophy and history was enduring, and throughout her life she would try to set aside three hours each day to read historical books.
Product details
- ASIN : B00C4BA3K0
- Publisher : Ballantine Books; Reissue edition (April 24, 2013)
- Publication date : April 24, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 5692 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 577 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 0345425502
- Best Sellers Rank: #101,157 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #47 in Biographies of Royalty (Kindle Store)
- #69 in Historical British Biographies
- #112 in Royalty Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
Alison Weir lives and works in Surrey. Her books include Britain's Royal Families, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, Children of England, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Henry VIII: King and Court, Mary, Queen of Scots and Isabella: She-Wolf of France.
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Customers find the book wonderful, excellent, and fun to read. They describe it as detailed, understandable, and intelligent. Readers appreciate the historical accuracy and quality of information. They mention the topic seems well-researched, informative, and relevant to their own interests. In addition, they say the book offers many new and interesting details.
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Customers find the book wonderful, excellent, and interesting. They say it reads like a novel and is one of the better accounts they've read of Elizabeth I. Readers also mention it's sensible and not sensational.
"...Mercurial, demanding, vain, whip smart and with an enormous capacity to understand her people, proud, generous, haughty, Elizabeth was a handful...." Read more
"Excellent book, well written, well researched, well "assembled"...." Read more
"Product arrives exactly as described with great care.Fantastic read. I recommend any of Allison Weir's nonfiction studies on the Tudor Period." Read more
"...It’s wonderful so far." Read more
Customers find the book detailed, well-written, and easy to read. They appreciate the author's ability to write clear, appealing prose. Readers also mention the book is well-documented and researched.
"...It was much more than that. Impeccably researched and beautifully written, Weir's work on arguably one of the most significant English historical..." Read more
"...The writing itself was well done as well...." Read more
"...have gotten confusing really quick, but Ms. Weir did an excellent job of presenting them in such a way that it was easy to keep track of who was..." Read more
"...learning about Elizabeth I. This is not a novel but it is an easy history to read...." Read more
Customers find the book packed with details on Elizabeth I and those who served and loved her. They say it's a readable, knowledgeable rendition of history presented in an interesting and entertaining way. Readers also mention the author is a great storyteller.
"...Mercurial, demanding, vain, whip smart and with an enormous capacity to understand her people, proud, generous, haughty, Elizabeth was a handful...." Read more
"...This was a glimpse into a fascinating era of history, one that fleshed out some of the vague stuff from old history lessons..." Read more
"...standing in the scholarly literature. The book did a great job of portraying how Elizabeth grew up around the intrigues of Henry VIII's court,..." Read more
"This book has so many interesting facts told in a flowing narrative that gives the reader many ways to admire and respect Elizabeth 1...." Read more
Customers find the information in the book to be well-researched, informative, and relevant. They say the book gives a fascinating insight into the life of England's King. Readers also appreciate the author's meticulous research and understanding of the topic.
"...Mercurial, demanding, vain, whip smart and with an enormous capacity to understand her people, proud, generous, haughty, Elizabeth was a handful...." Read more
"...(the defeat of the armada, Henry's wives...), and it was dense and informative and engaging all at the same time...." Read more
"Excellent book, well written, well researched, well "assembled"...." Read more
"...All in all this is a very scholarly study of the reign of Elizabeth I and you also get a little peek into her personal life and the times of her..." Read more
Customers find the book fascinating, informative, and relevant to their own interests. They say it offers many new and interesting details. Readers also mention the author brings the people to life and could be a reference book.
"...and it was dense and informative and engaging all at the same time...." Read more
"...Alison Weir successfully brings the relationships to life with many excerpts from personal letters written by the Queen and her favorites...." Read more
"...But what I most enjoyed in her "The Life of Elizabeth I" was her keen insight...." Read more
"...This book provides great insight into her life, and how her values were shaped...." Read more
Customers find the style interesting, colorful, and exciting. They say the book is artfully written and not overly embellished with the author's personal ideas. Readers also appreciate the splendid representation of the Elizabethan court and illuminating outlining of complex political and religious issues.
"...Then I saw the 1998 movie "Elizabeth" (not historically accurate but very stylish and engrossing) which deepened my interest...." Read more
"...Ms. Weir paints a vivid, larger than life picture of Queen Elizabeth I and the complexities of court life with all its politics and intrigue...." Read more
"A splendid representation of the Elizabethan court, with all the characters relationships fully explained, with their dealings for, with, and..." Read more
"...Weir's book engaging, informative, relevant to my own interests, and colorful; and it seemed reasonably balanced. [..." Read more
Customers find the book very accurate, factual, and substantiated by research. They also mention it's an excellent textbook.
"It's an excellent textbook, very technically accurate and thorough...." Read more
"...I love anything to do with Queen Elizabeth the 1st, and it is very factual, and the way it is written means it has never been boring...." Read more
"Impeccable accuracy. Reads like a novel, but diligently researched and factual. The most comprehensive book on the subject...." Read more
"The book was well written and substantiated by research. It was interesting to learn about Elizabeth's strong support of Protestant faith...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the length of the book. Some mention it's long enough to relax and soak in the flavor, while others say it's too long and a very long book report.
"...It was very long and I found myself wishing that it would come to an end...." Read more
"...I had trouble putting it down. And it was so long that I could relax and soak in the flavor of the times without that dread you get when you feel..." Read more
"...I did appreciate the breadth and depth but it just became so long and hard to hold my interest...." Read more
"Quite a long book, with very detailed information...." Read more
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The period leading up to Elizabeth's ascension to the throne is well known: the decapitation of her mother, Anne Boleyn, for apparent treason when she was only three; her half-brother Edward VI becoming king at nine, dying at 15 and, in order to ensure England remain Protestant removing his sisters', Catholic Mary and Protestant Elizabeth from the succession in favour of his cousin Lady Jane Grey; Lady Jane's ousting in favour of Mary after only nine days; England plunging into religious schism as Catholicism was restored and heretics burned, suspicion of heresy and treason falling upon young Elizabeth, who living with Henry's last wife, Katherine Parr had to endure the unwelcome (?) sexual attentions of her step-mother's new husband Thomas Seymour, as well as having to hide her Protestant leanings from her older sister- and that's just some of the events! Witness to so much turmoil, when Elizabeth finally took the throne at 25, in 1558, it's no wonder that she took a more moderate line on religion, refusing 'to open windows on men's souls' or that she was reluctant to relinquish her unexpected but hard won autonomy and power to a husband.
After 'Bloody Mary's' reign, Elizabeth was regarded by many as a saviour of the country, but her sex was always, even by those who respected her fierce intellect, ability with languages, and creativity (she was a gifted poet, musician and translator of the classics) struggled with her sex. Weir carefully explores the way Elizabeth kept both the Privy Council and the Commons dancing to her tune, enduring and appearing to consider their constant demand for her to find a husband and thus produce an heir while actually procrastinating continuously. Weir offers both psychological and practical reasons for Elizabeth's 'Virgin Queen' status that are fascinating and plausible.
Virgin or not, 'Gloriana' enjoyed and encouraged the attentions of men and was a consummate flirt. Men were attracted to her power and, one imagines initially at least, her beauty. Robert Dudley, the Earl Of Leicester, his “stepson”, the Earl of Essex, Raleigh, Drake, foreign princes and dukes came into her orbit, but only a fortunate few were not destroyed by the encounter. Mercurial, demanding, vain, whip smart and with an enormous capacity to understand her people, proud, generous, haughty, Elizabeth was a handful. Prone to tears and tantrums, she also succumbed to flattery, particularly in her declining years.
Not all men fell for or pretended to yield for her charms (though none could deny her intelligence) and the queen, Weir makes clear, had a knack for surrounding herself with talented and loyal men such as William Cecil (Lord Burghley), his son, Robert, and Francis Walsingham. Women too, while not Elizabeth's preferred company to keep, were among some of her closest and most beloved companions, such as Kat Ashby.
Earning the love of her people, the enmity of Catholic Europe, and the grudging admiration of her closest counselors, Elizabeth ruled England for decades, escaping assassination attempts, rebellions and Catholic uprisings, two papal bulls, never mind the Spanish Armada and countless attempts to marry her off. Weir not only gives us a fabulous portrait of the queen on the throne, but the woman beneath the white make-up, wigs and sumptuous gowns.
This is a marvellous biography that brings Elizabeth and the period to which she gave name to life. The problems - famine, greed, failed harvests, plague, disease, Catholicism - and the triumphs - the flourishing of the arts (theatre, writing, poetry, pamphlets, music, art) exploration, creativity, firmer establishment of the Protestant faith - with her unerring eye, gifted imagination and erudite mind. This is for lovers of history and those who enjoy a terrific read.
One negative, that I'm hesitant to even call "negative" since it's certainly not the author's fault, is that QE1's court had so very many people passing through that it was hard to keep them straight; this wasn't a novel where the characters were introduced in a way that supported the story! As hard as it could be at times to keep track of who's who - especially when you've got people who take up titles in favor of their names - I will say it gave a vivid picture of what life in the Elizabethan court must have been like. It also did a very nice job of taking the legend that is QE1 and making her real.
Weir was very careful to refer to her sources to back up the assertions she made, and she was similarly careful to point guesses out as guesses, and explain how she came to her conclusions. I suspect that while, on the one hand, someone very familiar with QE1's life (in a way I was not) wouldn't necessarily get much new information out of this...but on the other hand, I, who wanted the straight story rather than new tidbits, was personally reassured when I didn't have to work too hard at figuring out what to be skeptical of. The writing itself was well done as well. Weir didn't use Elizabethan English (except for the direct quotes), but she did manage to strike a tone that wasn't wholly modern, either. (Her insertions of definitions for her quotes, when they contained wholly unfamiliar words the average person couldn't be expected to puzzle out using context clues, was also appreciated.)
Incidentally, I also enjoyed the author's note at the end, where she critiques modern day films about QE1, and points out which are at least somewhat factual and which are made up out of whole cloth. I'm a little abashed to admit that it was one of the latter that got me interested in the queen in the first place, but I'm happy to have been set straight.
It's funny how, in some ways, that era is so different from what we have that it was almost like reading a fantasy. And then something else would come along that shows how little politics have changed.
This was a glimpse into a fascinating era of history, one that fleshed out some of the vague stuff from old history lessons (the defeat of the armada, Henry's wives...), and it was dense and informative and engaging all at the same time. I'll certainly be hunting down more of Alison Weir's work.
Most books about Elizabeth tends to focus on her relationship with Mary, Queen of Scots, and this one does too, but most of the focus of this book is about Elizabeth's relationships with her court, with the crowned heads of Spain, France and the Netherlands, the pope's interference in England, and daily life in 16th century London.
I couldn't put it down, just ordered Alison Weir's book about Mary, Queen of Scots. If it's as good as this one, it's definitely worth the price of admission.
Top reviews from other countries
She was truly a great Queen, she had her father’s temperament but her own mind and wisdom. This is a must read, it’s a long book but worth reading.
I read this book wirh great passion.