Henry V of England, the princely hero of Shakespeare s play, who
successfully defeated the French at the Battle of Agincourt and
came close to becoming crowned King of France, is one of the best
known and most compelling monarchs in English history. This new
biography takes a fresh look at his entire life and nine year
reign, and gives a balanced view of Henry, who is traditionally
seen as a great hero but has been more recently depicted as an
obsessive egotist or, worse, a ruthless warlord. The book locates
Henry s style of kingship in the context of the time, and looks at
often neglected other figures who influenced and helped him, such
as his father and his uncles, Henry and Thomas Beaufort. John
Matusiak shows that the situation confronting Henry at the outset
of his reign was far more favourable than is often supposed but
that he was nonetheless a man of prodigious gifts whose
extraordinary achievements in battle left the deepest possible
impression upon his contemporaries.
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