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Elizabeth I : ruler and legend / Clark Hulse.

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Van Pelt Library DA355 .H86 2003
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hulse, Clark, 1947-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Elizabeth I, Queen of England, 1533-1603.
Elizabeth.
Queens--Great Britain--Biography.
Queens.
Great Britain.
Great Britain--History--Elizabeth, 1558-1603.
History.
Genre:
Biographies.
Physical Description:
xxi, 158 pages : illustrations ; 27 cm
Place of Publication:
Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [2003]
Summary:
Making history from the moment of her birth, England's Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603) was a legend within her own lifetime. To her supporters, Elizabeth I was Gloriana, the Faerie Queene, a dignified and powerful woman who ruled with cunning and skill for forty-four years. To her detractors she was the ruthless supporter of a false religion; the murderer of her cousin Mary Queen of Scots; a wanton woman, herself illegitimate, who sullied the crown with her licentious behavior.
The legends that have grown up around Elizabeth are fascinating, but as this book shows, the truth is just as remarkable. In Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend, Clark Hulse brings Elizabeth to life, combining text and images to tell her story through the objects handed down by history.
Published on the occasion of the four hundredth anniversary of Elizabeth's death, this handsome volume contains over one hundred photographs of books, manuscripts, maps, letters, paintings, clothing, furniture, and many more artifacts dating from her reign. Each of these objects tells a story, and Hulse uses them as a starting point for a broad and thorough examination of Elizabeth and the society in which she lived.
Beginning with an analysis of the political events surrounding her birth, the book describes Elizabeth's relationship with her father, Henry VIII, and the maneuvering that led to her eventual coronation upon the death of her half-sister Mary Tudor in 1558.
As queen, Elizabeth oversaw a period of breathtaking cultural achievement. She kept England from being torn apart by the religious wars raging across Europe, and she withstood both an assassination plot and the massive military threat of the Spanish Armada. This book addresses all these major events, as well as a whole host of lesser-known aspects of Elizabeth's reign.
Hulse includes discussions of topics such as the education of Elizabethan women; markers of identity; portraits of Elizabeth; the queen's style of communicating; her interest in America; music at the Tudor court; and literary depictions of Elizabeth by Shakespeare, Spenser, and other poets.
Contents:
The Royal House of Tudor xxi
Death and Birth 1
Princess Elizabeth 6
The Throne 29
Religion and the Crisis of Europe 48
Marriage and Virginity 65
Sedition and Succession 82
Armada 104
Death and After 118
Ruler and Legend 135
Exhibition Checklist 150.
Notes:
Published for the Newberry Library.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 157-158).
ISBN:
0252028937
0252071611
OCLC:
51942617

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