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AEthelflaed, eldest daughter of Alfred the Great, has gone down in
history as an enigmatic and almost legendary figure. To the popular
imagination, she is the archetypal warrior queen, a Medieval
Boudicca, renowned for her heroic struggle against the Danes and
her independent rule of the Saxon Kingdom of Mercia. In fiction,
however, she has also been cast as the mistreated wife who seeks a
Viking lover, and struggles to be accepted as a female ruler in a
patriarchal society. The sources from her own time, and later,
reveal a more complex, nuanced and fascinating image of the 'Lady
of the Mercians'. A skilled diplomat who forged alliances with
neighbouring territories, she was a shrewd and even ruthless leader
willing to resort to deception and force to maintain her power. Yet
she was also a patron of learning, who used poetic tradition and
written history to shape her reputation as a Christian maiden
engaged in an epic struggle against the heathen foe. The real
AEthelflaed emerges as a remarkable political and military leader,
admired in her own time, and a model of female leadership for
writers of later generations.
The wife of King Henry I and the mother of the Empress Maud is a
woman and a Queen forgotten to history. She is frequently conflated
with her daughter or her mother-in-law. She was born the daughter
of the King of Scotland and an Anglo-Saxon princess. Her name was
Edith, but her name was changed to Matilda at the time of her
marriage. The Queen who united the line of William the Conqueror
with the House of Wessex lived during an age marked by transition
and turbulence. She married Henry in the first year of the 12th
century and for the eighteen years of her rule aided him in
reforming the administrative and legal system due to her knowledge
of languages and legal tradition. Together she and her husband
founded a series of churches and arranged a marriage for their
daughter to the Holy Roman Emperor. Matilda was a woman of letters
to corresponded with Kings, Popes, and prelates, and was respected
by them all. Matilda's greatest legacy was continuity: she united
two dynasties and gave the Angevin Kings the legitimacy they needed
so much. It was through her that the Empress Matilda and Henry II
were able to claim the throne. She was the progenitor of the
Plantagenet Kings, but the war and conflict which followed the
death of her son William led to a negative stereotyping by Medieval
Chroniclers. Although they saw her as pious, they said she was a
runaway nun and her marriage to Henry was cursed. This book
provides a much-needed re-evaluation of Edith/Matilda's role and
place in the history of the Queens of England.
In 1445 a fifteen-year-old French girl left her homeland to marry
the son of the great warrior Henry V. Sixteen years later, her
husband had lost his throne and she had fled into exile. For a
decade, she struggled to reclaim the throne of England before her
final and shattering defeat at the Battle of Tewkesbury. It marked
the final destruction of the House of Lancaster by Yorkist King
Edward IV and his brothers. Margaret lost more than her family: she
was also vilified. Shakespeare cast her as a sadistic killer who
murdered the noble Richard, Duke of York. History cast her as a
manipulative seductress whose destructive ambition was a major
cause of the Wars of the Roses. Margaret of Anjou remains one of
the most notorious consorts in medieval history, the queen we love
to hate. But is her reputation deserved, or was she simply caught
between the machinations and rivalries of powerful men? By
examining Margaret’s life and actions in detail, this biography
reveals a new side to the last foreign-born queen of medieval
England. Margaret came from a family of strong women. Faced with
hardship in the first years of her marriage, Margaret’s choices
arose from a conviction that it was natural for a woman to take
control in the absence of male leadership. A wealth of records have
been left behind, allowing historians to investigate Margaret’s
career as a beloved wife and, later, as the leader of a political
faction struggling to secure the crown for her family. If the
course of history had run differently, would she instead be
considered a heroic warrior queen today – perhaps even
England’s Joan of Arc?
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