Tudors The history of England from Henry VIII to Elizabeth I

Peter Ackroyd, 1949-

Book - 2013

Ackroyd brings the age of the Tudors to vivid life, charting the course of English history from Henry VIII's cataclysmic break with Rome to the epic rule of Elizabeth I.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Thomas Dunne Books 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Peter Ackroyd, 1949- (-)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
x, 507 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 473-481) and index.
ISBN
9781250003621
  • List of illustrations
  • 1. Hallelujah
  • 2. All in scarlet
  • 3. Heretic!
  • 4. The woes of marriage
  • 5. Into court
  • 6. Old authentic histories
  • 7. The king's pleasure
  • 8. A little neck
  • 9. The great revolt
  • 10. The confiscation
  • 11. The old fashion
  • 12. The body of Christ
  • 13. The fall
  • 14. War games
  • 15. A family portrait
  • 16. The last days
  • 17. The breaking of the altars
  • 18. Have at all papists!
  • 19. The barns of Crediton
  • 20. The lord of misrule
  • 21. The nine-day queen
  • 22. In the ascendant
  • 23. Faith of our fathers
  • 24. An age of anxiety
  • 25. Nunc Dimittis
  • 26. A virgin queen
  • 27. Two queens
  • 28. The thirty-nine steps
  • 29. The rivals
  • 30. The rites of spring
  • 31. Plots and factions
  • 32. The revels now are ended
  • 33. The frog
  • 34. The great plot
  • 35. The dead cannot bite
  • 36. Armada
  • 37. Repent! Repent!
  • 38. The setting sun
  • 39. A disobedient servant
  • 40. The end of days
  • 41. Reformation
  • Further reading
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

In this study, the second of a planned six-volume history of England (e.g., vol. 1, Foundation: The History of England from Its Earliest Beginnings to the Tudors, 2012), Ackroyd recounts the reigns of four Tudor monarchs from the accession of Henry VIII in 1509 to the death of Elizabeth I in 1603. The author successfully illustrates how Tudor England left the medieval world behind and embraced the early modern era. At the heart of this volume is the story of the English Reformation, which, despite its many revisions and the turmoil it wrought, transformed not only the religious landscape of the nation, but its government, society, and culture as well. The story is familiar enough: Henry VIII's quest for a male heir and his determination to break with Rome; the sickly Edward VI's attempts (at the urging of his advisers) to further radicalize the new religion; Mary I's Counter-Reformation set against the backdrop of her tragic life; and strong-willed Elizabeth, whose less than popular moderate religious sentiment set the framework for the Anglican Church. Ackroyd's thoroughly researched narrative of the notorious Tudors is colorful, engaging, and highly accessible to general readers. Includes more than 40 high-quality illustrations. Summing Up: Recommended. Public libraries, general collections. M. Frasier-Robinson University Center Southern Oklahoma

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* The Tudor era was pivotal in English history and remains of perennial interest to the general reader. Ackroyd takes on this much-written-about family history in his new, highly engaging book. His bona fides as an author to trust and enjoy rest on many well-appreciated nonfiction titles, including London: The Biography (2001), and compelling novels, among them Chatterton (1987), a historical novel about poet Thomas Chatterton (1752-70). Ackroyd's primary interest here is how the reformation of the English church came about. From the time when Henry VIII's desperation over the lack of a male heir compelled him to set aside his first queen, Catherine of Aragon, to when his second wife Anne Boleyn's daughter, the glorious Elizabeth I, died after a long, complicated reign that nevertheless brought peace to the land, Ackroyd presents in rich prose and careful explanations how the English Reformation was not a movement of the people but a personal project of King Henry, who, Ackroyd insists, remained, despite his removal of papal authority over the English church, an orthodox Catholic. Under his immediate heir, the boy-king Edward VI, England veered sharply Protestant, but Edward's elder sister, Mary I, during her brief occupancy of the throne, forced England back to full Catholicism. The genius of the next and last of Henry VIII's children, Elizabeth I, was to establish a middle course between these two extremes.--Hooper, Brad Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The theme of novelist and historian Ackroyd's second title in his projected six-volume history of England (after Foundation) is the 16th-century religious reformation that began, as a dynastic matter, with Henry VIII's divorce from Katherine of Aragon in 1533. While there was neither an Inquisition in England as in Spain, nor the wholesale slaughter of citizens as in France's 1572 St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, the Reformation in England was marked by upheaval and bloodshed, as the Tudors imposed religious changes upon an initially reluctant populace. Henry VIII, for instance, dealt harshly with critics, ordering the executions of "a good number of the inhabitants of every town, village and hamlet" that dared join a 1536 popular revolt against the new order. And, while 300 English "heretics" were burned at the stake during Mary I's four-year reign, earning her the nickname, "Bloody Mary," Ackroyd points out that 200 Catholics were executed during Elizabeth I's 45-year reign. While the author focuses on the politics of religious change, this is an accessible account, made even more so by anecdotes revealing the personalities of the main characters (e.g., Henry VIII became so obese that his bed had to be enlarged to a width of seven feet, and Mary Stuart wore crimson underclothes at her execution in 1587). (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The second book of Ackroyd's projected six-volume history of England dives headfirst into its subject matter-with Henry VIII's ascension to the throne. Ackroyd (London: The Biography) covered the roots and earlier years of the Tudor dynasty, including Henry VII's reign, in his previous volume, Foundation. Readers wanting the author's views on the Tudors as a whole should take note. He interweaves his narrative of the Tudor monarchs here with a detailed exploration of the religious reformations and upheavals of the era, sparked by Henry VIII's break with the Roman church and destined to have tremendous and long-lasting effects on English history and culture at all levels. VERDICT A weightier and more focused read than Leanda de Lisle's study, below, this work should be of particular interest to those seeking an in-depth look at the religious changes of the Tudor period and the complex and often violent ways in which religious upheaval intertwined with politics.-Kathleen -McCallister, Univ. of South Carolina Libs., Columbia (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Prolific British novelist, biographer and critic Ackroyd launches the second volume of his sweeping history less than two years after beginning with Foundation (2012). Readers curious about 16th-century British daily life or culture must look elsewhere; Ackroyd concentrates on Britain's ruling Tudors--minus the first, Henry VII, covered earlier. This installment opens with the 1509 accession of Henry VIII (14911547). Few mourned his harsh and rapacious but also unwarlike father, who left a full treasury which Henry soon emptied in wars with France before plunging into the dynastic and religious quarrels that dominated his reign. Obsession with having a male heir, not lust, was responsible for his plethora of wives. No fan of the Protestant Reformation, Henry broke with the papacy over its refusal to grant a divorce from his first wife. Once he had destroyed papal authority and looted its property, he disappointed reformers by largely preserving Catholic credos such as priestly celibacy and transubstantiation. His death and the accession of 9-year-old Edward saw the Anglican Church's transformation into a recognizably Protestant body, which his Catholic sister and successor, Mary, could not reverse in a stormy five-year reign. By this point, readers may be wearying of interminable, fierce and bloody religious controversy, a feeling Elizabeth shared. But religion obsessed 16th-century Britons, so her efforts to cool matters were only partly successful, but she proved a prudent, less bloodthirsty ruler and the most admirable Tudor. As usual, Ackroyd is a fine guide. A solid multivolume popular history: readable, entirely nonrevisionist and preoccupied by politics, religion and monarchs--a worthy rival to Winston Churchill's History of the English Speaking Peoples.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.