A new people emerged from the dark clouds of nuclear dust that filled the earth's atmosphere. Sweet, sensuous Tennae belongs to the elite group of Sector Seven's beautiful young virgins who wait happily for their wedding day. But the guarded secrets of her betrothed and her many countrymen hang omin
Elizabeth: Virgin Queen
โ Scribed by Jones, Philippa
- Publisher
- New Holland Publishers UK
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 475 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Gloriana', 'Faerie Queene', 'Queen Bess' are just some of the names given to Elizabeth I, the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. But the name for which she is perhaps best remembered and which best explains why Elizabeth was the last of the Tudor monarchs, was the 'Virgin Queen'.
But how appropriate is that image? Were Elizabeth's suitors and favourites really just innocent intrigues? Or were they much more than that?
Was Elizabeth really a woman driven by her passions, who had affairs with several men, including Thomas Seymour, while he was still the husband of her guardian Catherine Parr, and Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester โ a man adjudged to have been the great love of her life?
And, are the rumours of Elizabeth's illegitimate children true?
Was the 'Virgin Queen' image a carefully thought out piece of Tudor propaganda? Historian Philippa Jones, author of the acclaimed The Other Tudors, challenges the many myths and truths surrounding Elizabeth's life...
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''An intriguing slice of Elizabethan history.'' Publishers WeeklyA book of passion, of sixteenth-century England, of greed and political ambition unto death. Historians and novelists have written extensively about the various aspects of Queen Elizabeth I's long, rich, and tumultuous life. No one has
A source of endless fascination and speculation, the subject of countless biographies, novels, and films, Elizabeth I is now considered from a thrilling new angle by the brilliant young historian Tracy Borman. So often viewed in her relationships with men, the Virgin Queen is portrayed here as the p
A source of endless fascination and speculation, the subject of countless biographies, novels, and films, Elizabeth I is now considered from a thrilling new angle by the brilliant young historian Tracy Borman. So often viewed in her relationships with men, the Virgin Queen is portrayed here as the p