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Traditionally history is cerebral: what did they believe, what did
they think, what did they know? Woodsmoke and Sage is not a
traditional book. Using the five senses, historian Amy Licence
presents a new perspective on the material culture of the past,
exploring the Tudors’ relationship with the fabric of their
existence, from the clothes on their backs, the roofs over their
heads and the food on their tables, to the wider questions of how
they interpreted and presented themselves, and what they believed
about life, death and beyond. Take a journey back 500 years and
experience the sixteenth century the way it was lived, through
sight, sound, smell, taste and touch.
Traditionally history is cerebral: what did they believe, what did
they think, what did they know? Woodsmoke and Sage is not a
traditional book. Using the five senses, historian Amy Licence
presents a new perspective on the material culture of the past,
exploring the Tudors' relationship with the fabric of their
existence, from the clothes on their backs, the roofs over their
heads and the food on their tables, to the wider questions of how
they interpreted and presented themselves, and what they believed
about life, death and beyond. Take a journey back 500 years and
experience the sixteenth century the way it was lived, through
sight, sound, smell, taste and touch.
This retelling of the sixteenth century introduces the reader to a
gallery of amazing women, from queens to commoners, who navigated
the patriarchal world in memorable and life-changing ways. Amy
Licence has scoured the records from Europe and beyond to compile
this testament to female lives and achievements, telling the
stories of mistresses and martyrs, witches and muses, pirates and
jesters, doctors and astronomers, escapees and murderesses,
colonists and saints. Read about the wife of astrologer John Dee,
the women who inspired Michelangelo, the jester who saved the life
of Henry IV of France, the beloved mistress of the Sultan Suleiman
the Great, the wife of Ivan the Terrible, whose murder unleashed
terror, set against the everyday lives of those women who did not
make the history books. Introducing a number of new faces, this
book will delight those who are looking to broaden their knowledge
on the sixteenth century and celebrate the lost women of the past.
Anne Boleyn's unconventional beauty inspired poets - and she so
entranced Henry VIII with her wit, allure and style that he was
prepared to set aside his wife of over twenty years and risk his
immortal soul. Her sister had already been the king's mistress, but
the other Boleyn girl followed a different path. For years the
lovers waited; did they really remain chaste? Did Anne love Henry,
or was she a calculating femme fatale? Eventually replacing the
long-suffering Catherine of Aragon, Anne enjoyed a magnificent
coronation and gave birth to the future Queen Elizabeth, but her
triumph was short-lived. Why did she go from beloved consort to
adulteress and traitor within a matter of weeks? What role did
Thomas Cromwell and Jane Seymour of Wolf Hall play in Anne's
demise? Was her fall one of the biggest sex scandals of her era, or
the result of a political coup? With her usual eye for the telling
detail, Amy Licence explores the nuances of this explosive and
ultimately deadly relationship to answer an often neglected
question: what choice did Anne really have? When she writes to
Henry during their protracted courtship, is she addressing a
suitor, or her divinely ordained king? This book follows Anne from
cradle to grave and beyond. Anne is vividly brought to life amid
the colour, drama and unforgiving politics of the Tudor court.
For a King renowned for his love life, Henry VIII has traditionally
been depicted as something of a prude, but the story may have been
different for the women who shared his bed. How did they take the
leap from courtier to lover - perhaps even to wife? What was Henry
really like as a lover? Henry's women were uniquely placed to
experience the tension between his chivalric ideals and the lusts
of the handsome, tall, athletic king; his first marriage, to
Catherine of Aragon, was on one level a fairytale romance, but his
affairs with Anne Stafford, Elizabeth Carew and Jane Popincourt
undermined it early on. Later, his more established mistresses,
Bessie Blount and Mary Boleyn, risked their good names by bearing
him illegitimate children. Typical of his time, Henry did not see
that casual liaisons might threaten his marriage, until he met the
one woman who held him at arm's length. The arrival of Anne Boleyn
changed everything. Her seductive eyes helped rewrite history.
After their passionate marriage turned sour, the king rapidly
remarried to Jane Seymour. Henry was a man of great appetites,
ready to move heaven and earth for a woman he desired; Licence
readdresses the experiences of his wives and mistresses in this
frank, modern take on the affairs of his heart. What was it really
like to be Mrs Henry VIII?
Sisters Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf have long been celebrated
for their central roles in the development of modernism in art and
literature. Vanessa's experimental work places her at the vanguard
of early twentieth-century art, as does her role in helping
introduce many key names - Cezanne, Matisse, Picasso - to an
unsuspecting public in 1910. Virginia took these artistic
innovations and applied them to literature, pushing the boundaries
of form, narrative and language to find a voice uniquely her own.
Yet their private lives were just as experimental. Vanessa's
marriage to art critic Clive Bell was shaken early on by his
flirtation with her sister, and Virginia's marriage to Leonard
Woolf placed him more in the role of carer than husband as he tried
to meet the needs of his wife's fragile mental health. However,
forming the core of the Bloomsbury Group, they welcomed into their
London and Sussex homes a host of their talented peers, and caused
speculation and scandal by following their hearts, not society's
norms, in their continued pursuit of love. In Living in Squares,
Loving in Triangles, Amy Licence explores the brave, passionate and
innovative lives these remarkable women lived, and discovers where
their strength and talent came from.
Ida Nettleship was a flamboyant Bohemian who gave up a promising
artistic career to marry Augustus John. She had five pregnancies in
just six years, lived with Augustus and his mistress in a menage a
trois, and died exhausted in childbirth aged thirty. Ida's story of
unconventional love is equalled by two other Bohemian women of the
same era: Picasso's first love Fernande Olivier, who was prominent
in the Paris art scene, and the writer Sophie Brzeska, who lived
with the artist Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, nineteen years her junior -
he would die in the First World War and Sophie's slow descent into
mental instability would begin. Bohemian Lives follows the
achievements and sacrifices of the three women and how their lives
overlapped and contrasted, in education, childbirth, illness,
marriage - and psychological disintegration. All three women had a
huge influence on their more famous partner and challenged the
accepted model of male-female relations of the time. At once
touching and harrowing, their struggles for recognition in their
own right hold a mirror up to the prejudices of an age - and what
being 'bohemian' really meant.
1520 explores the characters of two larger-than-life kings, whose
rivalry and love-hate relations added a feisty edge to European
relations in the early sixteenth century. What propelled them to
meet, and how did each vie to outdo the other in feats of strength
and yards of gold cloth? Everyone who was anyone in 1520 was there.
But why was the flower of England's nobility transported across the
Channel, and how were they catered for? What did this temporary,
fairy-tale village erected in a French field look like, feel like
and smell like? This book explores not only the political dimension
of their meeting and the difficult triangle they established with
Emperor Charles V, but also the material culture behind the scenes.
While the courtiers attended masques, dances, feasts and jousts, an
army of servants toiled in the temporary village created specially
for that summer. Who were the men and women behind the scenes? What
made Henry rush back into the arms of the Emperor immediately after
the most expensive two weeks of his entire reign? And what was the
long-term result of the meeting, of that sea of golden tents and
fountains spouting wine? This analysis explores the extraordinary
event in unprecedented detail. Based on primary documents, plans,
letters and records of provisions and with a new focus on material
culture, food, textiles, planning and organisation.
1520 explores the characters of two larger-than-life kings, whose
rivalry and love-hate relations added a feisty edge to European
relations in the early sixteenth century. What propelled them to
meet, and how did each vie to outdo the other in feats of strength
and yards of gold cloth? Everyone who was anyone in 1520 was there.
But why was the flower of England's nobility transported across the
Channel, and how were they catered for? What did this temporary,
fairy-tale village erected in a French field look like, feel like
and smell like? This book explores not only the political dimension
of their meeting and the difficult triangle they established with
Emperor Charles V, but also the material culture behind the scenes.
While the courtiers attended masques, dances, feasts and jousts, an
army of servants toiled in the temporary village created specially
for that summer. Who were the men and women behind the scenes? What
made Henry rush back into the arms of the Emperor immediately after
the most expensive two weeks of his entire reign? And what was the
long-term result of the meeting, of that sea of golden tents and
fountains spouting wine? This quinquecentenary analysis explores
the extraordinary event in unprecedented detail. Based on primary
documents, plans, letters and records of provisions and with a new
focus on material culture, food, textiles, planning and
organisation.
Known to be proud, regal and beautiful, Cecily Neville was born in
the year of the great English victory at Agincourt and survived
long enough to witness the arrival of the future Henry VIII, her
great-grandson. Her life spanned most of the fifteenth century.
Cecily's marriage to Richard, Duke of York, was successful, even
happy, and she travelled with him wherever his career dictated,
bearing his children in England, Ireland and France, including the
future Edward IV and Richard III. What was the substance behind her
claim to be 'queen by right'? Would she indeed have made a good
queen during these turbulent times? One of a huge family herself,
Cecily would see two of her sons become kings of England, but the
struggles that tore apart the Houses of Lancaster and York also
turned brother against brother. Cecily's life cannot have been
easy. Images of her dripping in jewels and holding her own
alternative 'court' might belie the terrible heartache of seeing
her descendants destroy each other. In attempting to be the family
peacemaker, she frequently had to make heart-wrenching choices, yet
these did not destroy her. She battled on, outliving her husband,
friends, rivals and most of her children, to become one of the
era's great survivors.
A dynasty is defined by its men: by their personalities, their wars
and reigns, their laws and decisions. Their mothers, wives, sisters
and daughters are often depicted as mere foils, shadowy figures
whose value lies in the inheritance they brought, or the children
they produced. Yet the Tudor dynasty is full of women who are
fascinating in their own right, like Margaret Beaufort, who finally
emerged triumphant after years of turmoil; Elizabeth of York and
her steadying influence; Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn, whose
rivalry was played out against the backdrop of the Reformation; and
Mary and Elizabeth, England's first reigning queens. Then there
were all the others: Henry VIII's fascinating sisters who became
queens of France and Scotland, and their offspring, the Brandon and
Grey women, Lady Margaret Douglas and her granddaughter Arabella
Stuart. Many more women danced the Pavane under Henry's watchful
eye or helped adjust Elizabeth's ruff. These were strong women,
wielding remarkable power, whether that was behind the scenes or on
the international stage. Their contribution took England from the
medieval era into the modern. It is time for a new narrative of the
Tudor women: one that prioritises their experiences and their
voices.
The century spanning the Wars of the Roses and the reigns of the
Tudor kings was a volatile time of battle and bloodshed, execution
and unexpected illness. Life could be nasty, brutish and short.
Some met their end in battle, others were dragged to the block,
losing everything for daring to aspire to the throne. Some were
lost in mysterious circumstances, like Edward V, the elder of the
Princes in the Tower. But the majority of these young men died in
their teens, on the brink of manhood. They represent the lost paths
of history, the fascinating 'what-ifs' of the houses of York and
Tudor. They also diverted the route of dynastic inheritance, with
all the complicated implications that could bring, passing power
into some unlikely hands. This book examines ten such figures in
detail, using their lives to build a narrative of this savage
century.
Shakespeare's enduring image of Richard III's queen is one of
bitterness and sorrow. Anne curses the killer of her husband and
father, before succumbing to his marriage proposal, bringing to
herself a terrible legacy of grief and suffering an untimely death.
Was Anne a passive victim? Did she really jump into bed with the
enemy? Myths aside, who was the real Anne? As the Kingmaker's
daughter, she played a key role in his schemes for the throne.
Brought up in the expectation of a glorious marriage, she was not
the passive, manipulated pawn of romantic legend; in fact, she was
a pragmatist and a survivor, whose courage and endurance were
repeatedly pushed to the limit. In 1483 Anne found herself
catapulted into the public eye and sitting on the throne beside
Richard. The circumstances of their reign put unprecedented
pressure on their marriage; amid rumours of affairs and divorce,
Anne died mysteriously, during an eclipse of the sun, just weeks
before Richard's death on the battlefield. This fascinating and
elusive woman is shrouded in controversy and unanswered questions.
Amy Licence reassesses the longstanding myths about Anne's role,
her health and her marriages, to present a new view of the
Kingmaker's daughter.
A dynasty is defined by its men: by their personalities, their wars
and reigns, their laws and decisions. Their mothers, wives, sisters
and daughters are often depicted as mere foils, shadowy figures
whose value lies in the inheritance they brought, or the children
they produced. Yet the Tudor dynasty is full of women who are
fascinating in their own right, like Margaret Beaufort, who finally
emerged triumphant after years of turmoil; Elizabeth of York and
her steadying influence; Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn, whose
rivalry was played out against the backdrop of the Reformation; and
Mary and Elizabeth, England’s first reigning queens. Then there
were all the others: Henry VIII’s fascinating sisters who became
queens of France and Scotland, and their offspring, the Brandon and
Grey women, Lady Margaret Douglas and her granddaughter Arabella
Stuart. Many more women danced the Pavane under Henry’s watchful
eye or helped adjust Elizabeth’s ruff. These were strong women,
wielding remarkable power, whether that was behind the scenes or on
the international stage. Their contribution took England from the
medieval era into the modern. It is time for a new narrative of the
Tudor women: one that prioritises their experiences and their
voices.
When the tall, athletic Edward of York seized the English throne in
1461, he could have chosen any bride he wanted. With his dazzling
good looks, few were able to resist his charm and promises. For
three years he had a succession of mistresses, while foreign
princesses were lined up to be considered for his queen. Then he
fell in love. Enter Elizabeth Woodville, a widow five years his
elder. While her contemporaries and later historians have been
divided over her character, none have denied her beauty. When she
petitioned the king to help restore her son's inheritance, the
young Edward was immediately spellbound. This romance was not to be
just another fling. Conscious of her honour and her future,
Elizabeth repelled his advances. Edward's answer was to make her
his wife. It was to prove an unpopular decision. Since then,
Edward's queen has attracted extreme criticism from hostile
chroniclers, her actions interpreted in the bleakest of lights. In
this enlightening book, Amy Licence reassesses the tumultuous lives
of the real White Queen and the king she captivated.
As Tudors go, Elizabeth of York is relatively unknown. Yet she was
the mother of the dynasty, with her children becoming King of
England (Henry VIII) and Queens of Scotland (Margaret) and France
(Mary Rose) and her direct descendants included three Tudor
monarchs, two executed queens and, ultimately, the Stuart royal
family. Although her offspring took England into the early modern
era, Elizabeth's upbringing was rooted firmly in the medieval
world. The pivotal moment was 1485. Before then, her future was
uncertain amid the turbulent Wars of the Roses, Elizabeth being
promised first to one man and then another, and witnessing the
humiliation and murder of her family. Surviving the bloodbath of
the reign of her uncle, Richard III, she slipped easily into the
roles of devoted wife and queen to Henry VII and mother to his
children, and has been venerated ever since for her docility and
beauty. But was she as placid as history has suggested? In fact,
she may have been a deeply cultured and intelligent survivor who
learned to walk a difficult path through the twists and turns of
fortune. Perhaps she was more of a modern woman than historians
have given her credit for.
Learn what went on behind closed doors in the Tudor court.
Illegitimate children, adulterous queens, impotent kings, and a
whole dynasty resting on their shoulders. Sex and childbirth were
quite literally a matter of life or death for the Tudors -
Elizabeth of York died in childbirth, two of Henry VIII's queens
were beheaded for infidelity, and Elizabeth I's elective virginity
signalled the demise of a dynasty. Amy Licence guides the reader
through the births of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York's two sons,
Arthur and Henry, Catherine of Aragon's subsequent marriages to
both of these men, Henry VIII's other five wives and his
mistresses, and the sex lives of his daughters. This book details
the experiences of all these women, from fertility, conception and
pregnancy through to the delivery chamber, on to maternal and
infant mortality. Each woman's story is a blend of specific
personal circumstances, set against their historical moment: for
some the joys were brief, for others it was a question that
ultimately determined their fates.
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