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The Tudors Bookshelf Non fiction
| Tudors Fans Here is a page for you to review & recommend your favourite or not so favourite NON FICTION books about the Tudor period | | ||||||
| About the Book & Author | Reviews & Recommendations | ||||||
| Non-Fiction About the Author: Eric Ives Well respected British Historian who is Emeritus Professor at the University of Birmingham, England. He only writes about this period in history & doesn't write fiction. He has been awarded the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in recognition of his services to British history. Reviews: "The Best full-length life of Anne Boleyn and a monument to investigative scholarship" - David Starkey "The best book on Anne Boleyn ever written. This is a must for all lovers of Tudor history, academics and general readers alike." - Alison Weir, BBC History Magazine Books of the Year "Splendidly successful... Ives' Boleyn, a portrait at all points supported by the evidence he gives, is clever, independent-minded and politically astute. Ives has gone as far as anyone can....in solving the enigma of Boleyn in a narrative at once profoundly researched and lively" - Antonia Fraser "Eric Ives, a scholar utterly at home in early Tudor Politics, has been writing about the Boleyns for more than two decades. His book represents a triumphant culmination of all that research, presented with clarity, wit and human sympathy" - Diarmid MacCulloch "Magnificently researched. Eric Ives has written the finest, most accurate study of Anne Boleyn we are ever likely to possess. He leaves no stone unturned in his quest to discover the truth. Never has the historical Anne been so satisfyingly portrayed." - John Guy "What Ives doesn't know ... about the high politics and court life of Henry VIII's England will either never be known or is not worth knowing. If there is a truth about Anne Boleyn's rise and fall, he will tell it to us." - London Review of Books "Ives demonstrates triumphantly the potential of the biographical approach in a pre-modern setting. He evinces a deep empathy for his subject without ever becoming an apologist for her, and ... he provides a narrative which is genuinely moving. He has also given us a fully rounded and persuasive account of Anne's life as a whole, and its significance for understanding the politics and political culture of the early Tudor decades." - Reviews in History |
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| Non-fiction About the Author : David Starkey Presently, probably the highest paid British historian due to the fact that he works in both the literary media and Television. Has received the Norton Medlicott Medal for Services to History presented by Britain's Historical Association & awarded the CBE by Queen Elizabeth II. He is best known for writing and presenting the groundbreaking and hugely popular series Elizabeth and The Six Wives of Henry VIII. G.R. Elton was a mentor although it proved to be a stormy relationship. He has written over a dozen books on his speciality, Tudor & Stuart history. He is known for his balanced views of both Anne Boleyn & Katherine of Aragon rejecting the view that one was a sinner and the other was a "plaster of Paris" saint. Starkey's next book "Henry: Virtuous Prince" will be released in October 6, 2008 followed by a six part television documentary in 2009 to commemorate the 500th anniversary of Henry VIII's accession. |
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| Non-fiction About the Author : Antonia Fraser Popular biographer, historian, and mystery novelist. Lady Antonia Fraser is the daughter of the seventh Earl of Longford, Francis Pakenham, statesman, famed public crusader & writer. Her mother was the Countess of Longford, Elizabeth Pakenham, the author of a series of popular biographical studies of Queen Victoria, Wellington, Churchill, the Queen Mother, & Queen Elizabeth II. It was natural that Antonia should become a writer, coming from a family of writers, the "literary Longfords." As well as her father and mother, Lady Antonia's sister Rachel Billington was a novelist; another sister, Judith Kazantzis, was a feminist poet; a brother, Thomas Pakenham, was an historian; and her two eldest daughters, Rebecca and Flora, were both writers. In 1992, she published this book a year after Alison Weir's book of the same title, but academics felt that Fraser's work was more impartial. She is married to Harold Pinter, the 2005 Nobel Laureate of Literature and she, herself has received the CBE from Queen Elizabeth II. |
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| The Rise and Fall of Anne Boleyn: Family Politics at the Court of Henry VIII Non-Fiction About the Author : Retha M. Warnicke An American historian and professor of history at the Arizona State University specializing in gender issues c. 1400 - 1700. Her theories on Anne delivering a deformed foetus & subsequent accusations of witchcraft & her brother's homosexuality on which Philippa Gregory based her novel "the Other Boleyn Girl" have been harshly criticized by other historians including Eric W. Ives & G. W. Bernard. However, Warnicke has publicly distanced herself from the novel and its presentation of the Boleyns. |
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| Non-fiction About the Author : Alison Weir Before becoming a writer of both historical fiction and non-fiction, Weir was a teacher & ran her own school for special needs children. She was born in Westminster, London and now lives in Surrey,England with her husband and two children. |
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| The King’s Reformation: Henry VIII and the remaking of the English Church (Yale, University Press, 2005) Non-fiction About the Author: G.W. Bernard Editor of the English Historical Review & Professor of History at the University of Southampton, England. Reviews: "As the title clearly indicates, this book is a study of the English Reformation during the reign of Henry VIII. What the title does not reveal is that this is not merely a new interpretation but a very large, polemical work that challenges most of the accepted scholarship of the past half century. ... The fundamental thesis of the book is simple and straight forward: Henry VIII provided the inspiration and leadership for the Reformation from the inception of the divorce proceedings through the monastic dissolution until his death in 1547. The king's ministers and bishops, Thomas Wolsey, Thomas Cromwell, Thomas Cranmer, and Stephen Gardiner, played supporting roles in which they did as the king directed with very few exceptions. To achieve his objective the author challenges and rejects the scholarship of an impressive list of historians beginning with Sir Geoffrey Elton and including John Scarisbrick, John Guy, Diarmaid MacCulloch, Christopher Haigh, Michael Bush, and Susan Brigden. ...Bernard's interpretation of the Henrician Reformation contains echoes of the old concept of "Tudor despotism" and the views of A. F. Pollard.Whatever one's assessment of this book, it is a safe prediction that its conclusions will be vigorously debated and challenged, while the author will undoubtedly welcome the opportunity to reaffirm his major arguments." Barrett L. Beer, Department of History, Kent State University. |
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| Non-fiction About the Author : David Loades Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Wales and Research Professor of History at the University of Sheffield. He is the author of many books on the Tudor period including Chronicles of the Tudor Queens, Henry VIII and his Queens, and Mary Tudor: A Life. |
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| Non-fiction About the Author: Lacey Baldwin Smith Emeritus Professor of History at Northwestern University in New Jersey. Lives in Wilmette, Illinois Reviews: "The best book on Henry VIII that I have ever read. . . . Smith brings the inner man alive for us in a way no other historian has done. The portrait is as convincing as it is compelling, absolutely authentic, marvelously readable."––A. L. Rowse |
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| Non-fiction About the Author : J.J. Scarisbrick Professor Emeritus of History University of Warwick, England. |
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| Non-fiction About the Author : Diarmaid MacCulloch Professor of the History of the Church at the University of Oxford.His History of Christianity will be published in 2009, to accompany a BBC Television series. Other books, Henry VIII: Politics, Policy, and Piety (1995),Thomas Cranmer: A Life (1996) ,Tudor Church Militant: Edward VI and the Protestant Reformation |
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| Non-Fiction About the Author : Julia Fox Julia Fox was born in London. From a very early age, she set her heart on becoming a teacher and taught in a public and private schools in north London. She left teaching to concentrate on researching and writing 'Jane Boleyn'. She lives in London with her husband, the Tudor historian John Guy, and their two cats. |
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| Non-fiction About the Author: John Guy Fellow of Clare College, University of Cambridge, England where he teaches part-time so he can devote more time to his writing and broadcasting career. Read History under the supervision of Professor Sir Geoffrey Elton, the pre-eminent Tudor scholar of the late-twentieth century. Married to Julia Fox, author of Jane Boleyn. Other books, Thomas More & The Reign of Elizabeth I Reviews: `The most comprehensive history of Tudor England for more than thirty years.' Observer |
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| Non-Fiction Author : John Guy Reviews : Sunday Times - In his biography of Thomas and Margaret, John Guy brings Margaret conclusively out of the shadows. On the basis of his meticulous scholarly examination of the documentary record, she steps into the light as a heroine and a guide to our understanding of the turbulent doctrinal and political times through which she and her father lived, offering an arresting reassessment of More's motivation in the months before his death. |
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| Non Fiction Author: Herbert Norris |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: David Starkey [see above] |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Joanna Denny This is Joanna Denny's first Non Fiction biography, her second, released in 2008, is about Katherine Howard. Denny has written a fiction trilogy set in the Tudor Era. |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Chris Skidmore |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: David Loades [see above] Other books by David Loades on the Marian Period: "Mary Tudor, A Life", "Regin of Mary Tudor: Politics, Government, and Religion in England, 1553 - 58", "Intrigue and Treason: The Tudor Court, 1547 - 1558". |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Carolly Erickson Carolly Erickson holds a PhD in Medieval History and has written 20 non fiction books and 4 works of fiction. She specializes in the medieval period and writes primarly on the lives of European monarchs. |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Linda Porter |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Carolly Erickson |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Robert Hutchinson |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: G.R. Elton Pre-eminent British historian of the Tudor period who passed away in 1994.A very professional scholar and a formidable man with little time for those who failed to meet his exacting standards. Elton taught at the University of Glasgow and was the Regius Professor of Modern history.He was knighted in 1986. Elton worked as publication secretary of the British Academy and served as the president of the Royal Historical Society. He married a fellow historian, Sheila Lambert. |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Alison Weir [see above] |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Derek Wilson Reviews: "A dramatic story to tell in human terms...carried out with attractive energy and zest...[Derek Wilson] has written a useful and stimulating book about [Britian's] most important dynasty." - Antonia Fraser "I cannot praise too highly Derek Wilson's prose style, which is masterful and lively. He writes with great conviction and a breathtaking attention to the kind of personal detail that makes his books such compelling reading." - Alison Weir |
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| Non Fiction About the Author: Alison Weir [see above] |
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| God's Bestseller: William Tyndale, Thomas More, and the Writing of the English Bible Non Fiction About the Author: Brian Moynahan |
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| NonFiction About the Author: Susan Brigden Susan Brigden was a postgraduate student of G.R. Elton while attending Clare College, Cambridge. She has been a fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford since 1980. |
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| Non Fiction The Challenge of Anne Boleyn by Hester W. Chapman First American Edition, 1974 |
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| Non-Fiction Mary M. Luke |
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| Non -Fiction Edited by Anthony Harvey and Richard Mortimer | Submitted by: angelosdaughter Comments: The first comprehensive study of the 18 surviving funeral effigies - life sized figures of the deceased displayed in the funeral procession and left to stand over the tomb until the tomb monument was completed-, of kings, queens (four are Tudor: Elizabeth of York and Henry VII, parents of HenryVIII, and Mary I and Elizabeth I, his daughters, nobles, and even a non-noble, William Pitt, now displayed in the Undercroft Museum of Westminster Abbey. The collection was once dubbed the 'ragged regiment' for the state of disrepair into which the effigies had fallen. These figures are documented in fascinating detail, including their garments and accoutrements and the history of their construction and conservation. Many of the faces were constructed from life or death masks of the personages portrayed, making them extremely realistic. Indeed the recumbent figure of Edmund Sheffield, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, who died in Rome at the age of 19 and whose face and hands are based on post-mortem casts of the young man's face and hands is so realistically displayed on its coffin board in a glass case, that one feels oneself to be in the presence of his actual body. This, incidentally, is the last funeral effigy to be borne in a funeral procession. Interesting to students of history, funeral customs, costume, or anyone who has seen the effiges and wanted to know more, the volume is copiously illustrated in both color and black and white. An absorbing read. | ||||||
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Keyword tags:
Alison Weir
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Life and death of Anne Boleyn
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six wives of Henry VIII
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| Started By | Thread Subject | Replies | Last Post | |
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| Boudica | New book on the Grey sisters | 2 | Jul 15 2008, 8:41 PM EDT by wookieegirl | |
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Thread started: Jul 15 2008, 2:19 PM EDT
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Author Leanda de Lisle, who wrote "After Elizabeth", is coming out with a new history, a biography of the Grey sisters: Jane, Catherine, and Mary, entitled "The Sisters Who Would be Queen". It's due for release in the U.K. on September 1, 2008, perhaps later release in the U.S.?
Amazon U.K. is already taking pre-orders, which you can order together with David Starkey's much anticipated "Henry VIII: Virtuous Prince" for a discounted price.
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Keyword tags:
Alison Weir
Anne Boleyn
Atonia Fraser
David Starkey
Eric Ives
Henry VIII's six wives
John Guy
Life and death of Anne Boleyn
Retha Warnicke
six wives of Henry VIII
Tudor
Tudor book recommendations
Tudor book reviews
Tudor historians
Tudor history
Tudor non-fiction
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| MsSquirrly | New Book on Margaret More Roper | 5 | Jul 8 2008, 5:58 PM EDT by MsSquirrly | |
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Thread started: Jul 8 2008, 4:45 PM EDT
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For all you Thomas More Fans, a new non-fiction book on his daugther by John Guy has been released called " A Daughter's Love" which you may want to check out. The review in the Sunday Times was quite glowing. ( I just added it to the Bookshelf) Member reviews would be welcome :)
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Keyword tags:
Alison Weir
Anne Boleyn
Atonia Fraser
David Starkey
Eric Ives
Henry VIII's six wives
John Guy
Life and death of Anne Boleyn
Retha Warnicke
six wives of Henry VIII
Tudor
Tudor book recommendations
Tudor book reviews
Tudor historians
Tudor history
Tudor non-fiction
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| KatValois | Jane "Parker" Boleyn, (Lady Rochford) (page: 1 2 3 4 5) | 89 | Jun 20 2008, 12:23 PM EDT by Honeydutchess | |
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Thread started: Jan 19 2008, 8:09 PM EST
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Just thought I would throw this conversation out about Jane Parker Boleyn (Lady Rochford). I'm currently reading about her by Julia Fox (who is a Tudor Historian and past History Teacher).
I thought I would mention this book to you because of the extroidinary amount of information in this book. Even though it is about Jane Parker Boleyn (Anne's SIL by her brother George) and she covers a large amount of "historical information" but she has done it in such a way, that it is not boring at all and quite an enjoyable read. I know that some Tudor Enthusiasts say that Jane was a spy on her husband & Anne but occording to Julie Fox she wasn't. She was certainly questioned mercilessly by Cromwell and probably said something that was used against them, but nothing she said was news to Cromwell. She did "spy" for Cromwell though when Henry married Jane Seymore and kept Cromwell informed on the Seymore brothers (which allowed her back into Henry's court and graces). Those of you who are Tudor Purists might really enjoy this book since it is not slanted in Henry or Anne's favor and gives a view from a bystander who gained a lot and certainly lost a lot and then had to find a way to survive after the "fall" of her inlaws. There is also insight into Anne & George's "trial" and all involved along with who set in judgement of them.
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Keyword tags:
Jane Parker Boleyn
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the tudors showtime
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| Gigigirl2 | Anne Boleyn vs. Thomas More | 17 | Apr 28 2008, 12:35 AM EDT by angelosdaughter | |
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Thread started: Apr 22 2008, 4:46 PM EDT
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Why didn't the show highlight Anne Boleyn's hatred of Thomas More? She may have had some elements of kindness in her personality, but she hated Thomas More and really pushed to have him executed. She also was very conniving and hateful to Katharine of Aragon. The show seems to have highlighted her more positive attributes and ignored the more hateful aspects of her personality.
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| angelosdaughter | Jane Parker Boleyn | 3 | Apr 22 2008, 9:55 PM EDT by angelosdaughter | |
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Thread started: Apr 21 2008, 2:31 PM EDT
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I am over half finished with the new biography "Jane Boleyn" by Julia Fox. It really doesn't tell much more than we already know about Jane Parker. She is mentioned in relatively few records, and most of that during the trial of Katharine Howard whose amorous exploits she supposedly abetted, so most of what the author has to say so far is what she can infer from records mentioning George and Anne Boleyn. Most of her statements are conjectures such as "Jane was almost certainly...", "Jane would have...", etc. I think this book was a lucrative way to milk the craze generated by the broadcast of "The Tudors" and the movie "the Other Boleyn Girl". There is not enough factual documentation of Jane Boleyn's life to fill a book, so most of it is fluff, such as descriptions of the clothing she would have worn, events in which she may have been present, etc. Does anyone who has read this book agree?
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