Elizabeth's Women
Elizabeth's Women
Tracy Borman
Kr 95,-
- Utgiver:
- Random House
- Forlag:
- Random House
- Utgitt:
- 2010-12-15
- Kategori:
- Arkitektur & Design
- ISBN:
- 9781446420904
- Språk:
- Engelsk
- Pris:
- Kr 95,-
- Format:
- Epub / Kopibeskyttet
Elizabeth I was born into a world of women.As a child, she
was served by a predominantly female household of servants
and governesses, with occasional visits from her mother,
Anne Bolyen, and the wives who later took her place.As
Queen, Elizabeth was constantly attended by ladies of the
bedchamber and maids of honour who clothed her, bathed her
and watched her while she ate.Among her family, it was her
female relations who had the greatest influence: from her
sister Mary, who distrusted and later imprisoned her, to
her cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots, who posed a constant and
dangerous threat to her crown for almost thirty
years.
Despite the importance of women in Elizabeth's life, most
historians and biographers have focused on her
relationships with men.She has been portrayed as a 'man's
woman' who loved to flirt with the many ambitious young men
who frequented her court.Yet it is the women in her life
who provide the most fascinating insight into the character
of this remarkable monarch.With them she was jealous,
spiteful and cruel, as well as loyal, kind and
protective.She showed her frailties and her insecurities,
but also her considerable shrewdness and strength.In short,
she was more human than the public persona she presented to
the rest of the court. It is her relationships with women
that hold the key to the private Elizabeth.
In this original chronicling of the life of one of
England's greatest monarchs, historian Tracy Borman
explores Elizabeth's relationships with the key women in
her life. Beginning with her mother and the governesses and
stepmothers who cared for the young princess, including her
beloved Kat Astley and the inspirational Katherine Parr,
Elizabeth's Women sheds new light on her formative
years.Elizabeth's turbulent relationships with her rivals
are examined: from her sister, 'Bloody' Mary, to the
sisters of Lady Jane Grey, and finally the most deadly of
all her rivals, Mary, Queen of Scots who would give birth
to the man Elizabeth would finally, inevitably have to
recognise as heir to her throne. It is a chronicle of the
servants, friends and 'flouting wenches' who brought out
the best -- and the worst -- of Elizabeth's carefully
cultivated image as Gloriana, the Virgin Queen, in the
glittering world of her court.















