Elizabeth IA&C Black, 1 мар. 2003 г. - Всего страниц: 450 Elizabeth I, who reigned over Shakespeare's England and defeated the Spanish Armada, is familiar both from her portraits and as Gloriana, the Virgin Queen. Yet the reality of her character and her personal attitudes are harder to detect behind the public mask. Elizabeth I, a major biography by a leading Tudor expert to mark the 400th anniversary of her death in 1603, looks in detail behind the public life at the private woman. It treats at length her early years and examines her actions and policies as queen. David Loades's biography brings out her remarkable talents and unique achievements. |
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Стр. ix
... sense the whole political life of later sixteenth - century England was a part of her life . The documentation is vast and bewildering in its complexity , having been created for many different purposes , and on many different agendas ...
... sense the whole political life of later sixteenth - century England was a part of her life . The documentation is vast and bewildering in its complexity , having been created for many different purposes , and on many different agendas ...
Стр. xiv
... sense . If she had been a simple gentlewoman , she would almost certainly have married Robert Dudley after his first wife's death . Their long , and sometimes stormy , relationship has all the marks of sexual fascination ; but it was ...
... sense . If she had been a simple gentlewoman , she would almost certainly have married Robert Dudley after his first wife's death . Their long , and sometimes stormy , relationship has all the marks of sexual fascination ; but it was ...
Стр. xvi
... sense ; and even her loyalest and most intimate servants found that hard to accept.18 When her servants commented upon her methods , they were therefore commenting as much upon what they perceived as what actually happened . They were ...
... sense ; and even her loyalest and most intimate servants found that hard to accept.18 When her servants commented upon her methods , they were therefore commenting as much upon what they perceived as what actually happened . They were ...
Стр. xix
... sense of a direct relationship with God placed her firmly in the Protestant tradition , but her sense of responsibility also extended to her Catholic subjects - at least at first . One advantage of episcopacy was that it retained a ...
... sense of a direct relationship with God placed her firmly in the Protestant tradition , but her sense of responsibility also extended to her Catholic subjects - at least at first . One advantage of episcopacy was that it retained a ...
Стр. 2
... sense of purpose . No one else shared her confidence , certainly not Henry , who had first written encouragingly , but then had repudiated the arrangement when he reached the age of fourteen , both on the instruc- tions of his father ...
... sense of purpose . No one else shared her confidence , certainly not Henry , who had first written encouragingly , but then had repudiated the arrangement when he reached the age of fourteen , both on the instruc- tions of his father ...
Содержание
1 | |
2 The Infant Princess | 25 |
3 The Kings Daughter | 41 |
4 The Kings Sister | 59 |
5 In Danger | 83 |
6 The New Queen | 123 |
7 Threats | 151 |
8 France and the Netherlands | 181 |
10 War with Spain | 231 |
11 The Earl of Essex | 257 |
12 The Final Years | 283 |
13 The Great Queen | 303 |
Notes | 321 |
Bibliography | 381 |
Index | 395 |
9 The Gathering Storm | 205 |
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ambassador Anjou Anne Boleyn appears April Armada Ashley became Bedingfield began believed bishops Burghley Calendar Cambridge Camden Camden Society Catherine Catholic chamber Chapuys Charles church clear councillors court Courtenay Cromwell crown daughter death December declared duke earl of Essex Edward Elizabeth London England English English Reformation favour February fleet France French Hawkins heir Henry VIII Henry's household Ibid intention Ireland Jane January July June king king's knew Lady Letters and Papers Loades London Lord Low Countries MacCaffrey marriage marry Mary Tudor Mary's Monarchy and Matrimony negotiations Norfolk Norris November October Oxford Papers Relating parliament person Philip plot political position prince princess Privy Council probably Protestant Queen Elizabeth realm reason Reformation reign religious Renard Robert Dudley royal rumours Scotland Scottish seems September servants Seymour ships Sir Francis Drake Sir John Sir Thomas sister Spain Spanish spite Stephen Gardiner succession Thomas Seymour William Cecil wrote