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The House of Tudor

von Alison Plowden

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The House of Tudor changed the history of Britain forever. The Tudor monarchs have been immortalised in novels and films for generations. However, the true history of this incredible dynasty is often romanticised and fact is overlooked. Alison Plowden's accessible and beautifully written history traces the family's turbulent reign of power from Henry VII, the first Tudor monarch, who fathered the great Henry VIII. Henry VIII went onto revolutionise England's armed forces and implement controversial reforms in England. Yet, he is perhaps most remembered for his tumultuous love life and the fates of his six wives, including Anne of Boleyn, who sparked an international crisis. He fathered four known offspring, including Mary I and Gloriana - Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen, who reigned for 44 years in what is known as England's Golden Age. This book not only re-tells the familiar stories of these famous monarchs, revealing the truth behind the scandals; but it also recounts the history of the less well-known Tudor monarchs: Edward VI, Lady Jane Grey (the uncrowned Queen of England), and those who came directly before and after them - Edward IV and James I. If you read on history of the Tudors, make it this one - you are sure to be enthralled and surprised by how the facts are often more incredible than the fiction surrounding them.… (mehr)
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I’d like to have a beer with Lady Jane Grey. This is, of course, problematical, since the small, sad, headless corpse of Lady Jane has been under the floor of Saint Peter-Ad-Vincula since 1554, and I don’t drink beer. Nevertheless, the “what historical figure would you like to meet” game is always popular. At our hypothetical encounter I think I’d like to ask why “The Smartest Girl In England” let her extraordinarily smarmy relatives talk her into accepting the English crown. It’s intriguing to speculate what William Shakespeare would have come up with if he had decided to add Queen Jane to the histories. Or maybe if Donizetti had gone with his original plan of basing an opera on her life instead of switching to Mary Queen of Scots. As it is, poor Jane has to be content with a couple of not very good movies.


She’s just one, although the most tragic one, of the Tudors in this work by Alison Plowden. The book dates from 1976, but I just stumbled across it for next to nothing in a used book store. There’s plenty of room for Operatic or Shakespearian or Hollywood tragedy, comedy, and/or just plain history here.


The founder of the dynasty, Henry VII, goes from a barely solvent and mostly friendless political refugee with an amazingly tenuous claim to the throne - based on his maternal great-great-grandmother being Edward III’s third son’s mistress and his paternal grandfather marrying Henry V’s widow - to King of England by virtue of Richard III going slightly nuts at Bosworth and the Stanley family keeping up their tradition of changing sides in the middle of every battle they were ever involved in. Fending off various attempts to restore the Plantagenet line, including Perkin Warbeck and Lambert Simnel (who should get some sort of award for Strangest Names for a Pair of Royal Imposters) he manages to put England on sound financial footing and then conveniently dies young to set things up for his second son Henry (his first son, Arthur, has the luck of the Tudor males and dies young himself).


Henry VIII, of course, is well known for breaking with Catholicism and being responsible for the mnemonic Divorced-Beheaded-Died-Divorced-Beheaded-Survived, for remembering what happened to Catherine, Ann, Jane, Anne, Catherine, and Katherine. In the process he goes from “the handsomest Prince in Europe” to a huge tub of goo and checks out (relatively) young himself.


Edward VI, after providing material for a future Mark Twain novel, can’t shake the Tudor male curse and departs from TB, but only after dooming his cousin Lady Jane Grey by letting himself get talked into naming her heir, bypassing his sisters. I suppose you can’t expect a 16-year old who’s coughing himself to death to be very sharp about that sort of thing.


Jane goes to the scaffold and proves that while she might not have been wise, she was brave; only getting flustered at the end when, blindfolded, she had to grope around for the block. A kindly bystander eventually led her to it.


Mary, the rightful heir that Jane’s family attempted to bypass, is a sad case - all she wants is an ordinary life - to be happily married and have a family and be loved - and ends up with a loveless husband and a uterine tumor and the sobriquet “Bloody Mary”.



Elizabeth, the last Tudor, comes across as the most impressive of the lot - as she should be, even if the author has a soft spot for her. The 20-year-old Elizabeth manages to persuade her sister not to have her beheaded - a neat trick, because Mary is no longer the hopeful woman she was at the start of her reign, but a bitter wife estranged from her husband and not well disposed toward the daughter of the woman who seduced her father away from her mother. After this nerve-racking start Elizabeth goes on to goes on to be the greatest ruler England ever had.


So why is all this 500-year-old stuff interesting? It’s easy to fall into the Romance Novel Theory of History, where everyone is Lords and Ladies who have glamorous lives and, perhaps, tragic ends. Unfortunately that’s what we read because that’s all there is. There’s little or no record of how the lower and middle classes lived. Even with nobility the material is scanty; at least the Tudors have the benefit of the printing press and the revival of portraiture. But we still know orders of magnitude more about the life of Britney Spears than about the life of Henry VII or Jane Grey.


I’ve also just finished biographies of Eleanor of Aquitaine and Nefertiti. The total volume of written material on Nefertiti - every single inscription or ostracon or papyrus that mentions her name - would probably fill about two typewritten pages. There are a lot of fragmentary wall reliefs from Akhetaten, and the famous bust, but that’s all there is to document her life - all the rest is more-or-less educated speculation by Egyptologists. Eleanor is somewhat better documented but even with her there are huge gaps when there’s no written evidence - even though she’s Duchess of Aquitaine, ex-Queen of France, and Queen of England, there are periods of up to three years when she just vanishes. It’s not even clear what Eleanor looks like; there’s a stained glass window and a tomb effigy, but neither is especially reliable portraiture. The lives of ordinary people in 18th Dynasty Egypt or Plantagenet England would be fascinating, but they just didn’t get recorded.


Which leads me to speculate a little on historical changes in the idea of history. The Greeks and Romans had this history thing figured out, as did the Muslims and Byzantines. But throughout medieval and well into renaissance Europe, nobody caught on. I think there’s a couple of explanations; for one thing, literacy was low, but for another nobody really had the idea that things were different in the past and might be different in the future. Therefore, nobody kept diaries or wrote autobiographies, because nobody thought anybody in the future might be interested. (I was thinking about this when I posted elsewhere with an art history question, asking if anybody knew when people realized that there had been different modes of dress in the past: so many of the great Renaissance artists show Julius Caesar in plate armor or Kleopatra in a 16th century gown). Queen Victoria is reported to have written several thousand words a day in her diaries; what would we give to have one tenth that volume from Eleanor of Aquitaine or Elizabeth I? Or some random one of their subjects? Therefore, go forth and write down what you did today. Future historians will bless you. ( )
  setnahkt | Dec 23, 2017 |
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The House of Tudor changed the history of Britain forever. The Tudor monarchs have been immortalised in novels and films for generations. However, the true history of this incredible dynasty is often romanticised and fact is overlooked. Alison Plowden's accessible and beautifully written history traces the family's turbulent reign of power from Henry VII, the first Tudor monarch, who fathered the great Henry VIII. Henry VIII went onto revolutionise England's armed forces and implement controversial reforms in England. Yet, he is perhaps most remembered for his tumultuous love life and the fates of his six wives, including Anne of Boleyn, who sparked an international crisis. He fathered four known offspring, including Mary I and Gloriana - Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen, who reigned for 44 years in what is known as England's Golden Age. This book not only re-tells the familiar stories of these famous monarchs, revealing the truth behind the scandals; but it also recounts the history of the less well-known Tudor monarchs: Edward VI, Lady Jane Grey (the uncrowned Queen of England), and those who came directly before and after them - Edward IV and James I. If you read on history of the Tudors, make it this one - you are sure to be enthralled and surprised by how the facts are often more incredible than the fiction surrounding them.

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