Queens of the Crusades England's medieval queens, 1154-1291

Alison Weir, 1951-

Book - 2020

"Packed with incredible true stories and legendary medieval intrigue, this epic narrative history chronicles the first five queens from the powerful royal family that ruled England and France for over three hundred years. This remarkable recreation of the action-packed century that saw the murder of Thomas Becket and the signing of the Magna Carta covers the lives and reigns of the first five Plantagenet queens, who ruled England and France throughout the bloody 1200s, a particularly dramatic and violent period of European history. Wars, crusades, treachery, murder, passion, and the interplay between rival monarchs of Britain and France provide a surprising picture of these five ambitious women and their struggle for power. The queens ...covered in the book are Eleanor of Aquitaine, Berengaria of Navarre, Isabella of Angouleme, Alienor of Provence and Eleanor of Castile. One of these queens became legendary when, accompanying her husband on crusade, she saved his life by sucking the blood from his poisoned-arrow wound. Equally intriguing are the descriptions of their marriages, including one that was extremely tempestuous, and one that was a love match turned sour when the jealous husband discovered his queen's infidelity and retaliated by killing her lovers and hanging their bodies from the canopy of her bed. This second volume of historian Alison Weir's critically acclaimed Medieval Queens series brings these unfamiliar, fascinating royals to life, demonstrating how very much they resemble self-determining women of our own time"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

942.03/Weir
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 942.03/Weir Checked In
  • Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of Henry II
  • Berengaria of Navarre, Queen of Richard I
  • Isabella of Angoulême, Queen of King John
  • Alienor of Provence, Queen of Henry III
  • Eleanor of Castile, Queen of Edward I.
Review by Booklist Review

The queens of England fascinate historian Weir; she has written numerous historical novels about them and now brews her special blend of scholarship and storytelling in the second volume in a biographical series on the country's medieval queens. It covers the early Plantagenet period (1154--1291) with its quintet of women monarchs: Eleanor of Aquitaine, queen of Henry II; Berengaria of Navarre, queen of Richard I; Isabella of Angoulême, queen of King John; Eleanor of Provence, queen of Henry III; and Eleanor of Castile, queen of Edward I. Their stories are told in a single continuous narrative, and the result is like a magnificent tapestry, skillfully woven, ingeniously embroidered down to the smallest detail, and gloriously shot through with the glittering intrigues of the royal court. As Weir describes it, she tells "the story of the history of England through the perspective of its queens." Aimed at the general reader, this rich and robust account will appeal to readers interested in medieval England and some of its most fascinating royal women, whose stories are often left out of the history books.Women in Focus: The 19th in 2020

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

Novelist and historian Weir follows Queens of the Conquest with this meticulous group biography of the first five Plantagenet queens of England. Moving chronologically, Weir spotlights the historical context in which each queen lived and ruled to create a large-scale, though somewhat dry, record of their era. Citing recent scholarship, she brushes away long-standing legends, including the story of Eleanor of Castile (1241--1290) sucking poison from husband Edward I's stab wound, and contends that Henry II's wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122--1204), was not quite the literary patron she's often made out to be. Due to widowhood, many of these queens' stories overlap, though Weir shows how Richard the Lionheart's neglected queen, Berengaria of Navarre (c.1165--1230), largely faded from view because she had no children for whom to advocate after her husband's death. Notably, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Berengaria, and Eleanor of Castile accompanied their husbands on Crusades; later, Alienor of Provence (c.1222--1291), wife of Henry III, and Eleanor of Castile raised armies to free their husbands from captivity by rebellious English nobles. Weir skillfully documents the political, religious, and cultural issues of medieval England and France, but her wide-angled view keeps each woman from coming fully to life. Readers will miss the vibrancy that characterizes Weir's other work. (Dec.)

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

In the second volume of her series centered on medieval queens of England after Queens of the Conquest, Weir highlights the first five queens of the Plantagenet dynasty: Eleanor of Aquitaine, Berengaria of Navarre, Isabella of Angoulême, Eleanor of Provence, and Eleanor of Castile. Though only one of them (Eleanor of Aquitaine) participated in a Crusade, the title effectively evokes the turbulent era in which these women lived, when England and France scrapped over territories of the Angevin Empire and English barons established the rights contained in the Magna Carta. Well-practiced in writing for a popular audience, Weir moves briskly and easily through two hundred years of history, though unfortunately documentation for several of her subjects is thin at various points, leaving Weir to fill in gaps with informed supposition or more general information on events during their reigns. As a result, readers might come away with as much or more information about the royal husbands than the queens themselves, though bringing attention to lesser-known figures like Berengaria and Isabella is still laudable. VERDICT Existing fans of Weir's histories will enjoy this newest installment, while those interested in English queens of this time period will find this a suitable if occasionally patchy overview.--Kathleen McCallister, William & Mary Libs., Williamsburg, VA

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

The latest massively detailed British royal history/biography from the prolific historian and novelist. In this hefty follow-up to Queens of the Conquest (2017), Weir focuses on the period from 1154 to 1291, offering a meticulous tapestry that will appeal most to students of that and other medieval eras. The author begins with the greatest queen of the period, Eleanor of Aquitaine, the wife of Henry II, a natural ruler and mother of strong future kings who lived into her early 80s, an astounding feat for the time. During her first Crusade, she was a teenager married to young King Louis of France. However, according to Eleanor, she had married a monk, not a king," and the marriage was annulled. A more vigorous political match was made with Henry FitzEmpress, who founded the Angevin royal dynasty. By most accounts, she was his equal and proved to be a major force in bolstering her sons' rebellion against their father. Berengaria of Navarre, wife of Richard I, and Isabella of Angouleme, wife of John, were both kind of ciphers, without much political power of their own--except later in life as widows, and, in Isabella's case, in a second marriage to Hugh X. Alienor of Provence had a successful marriage to Henry III that lasted nearly 37 years while Eleanor of Castile, queen of Edward I, also a devoted and long-suffering wife, has a reputation as the ideal medieval lady. As the author shows, all of these women had to constantly wrestle to gain their rightful dowry and properties from rapacious spouses. Weir effectively interweaves her minutely chronological account into the context of religious wars and cultural currents, such as the courtly Arthurian legends and troubadours. As in previous books, the exceedingly knowledgeable author's prodigious research is impressive, but the narrative isn't consistently entertaining. Another treat for Weir fans but not for readers lacking serious interest in the period. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 "An Exceedingly Shrewd and Clever Woman" On Sunday, December 19, 1154, Henry II, the first Plantagenet King of England, was crowned in Westminster Abbey, along with his Queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine, amid great splendor and rejoicing. Monarchs had about them an aura of spiritual sovereignty, conferred on them at their anointing with holy oil. The coronation of a queen sanctified her and set her apart from lesser women. It enhanced the dignity of her husband the King--especially so in this case because, through his marriage to Eleanor, Henry II had become master of a great continental domain. The royal dynasty established on that day was to rule England for 331 years. There are many perceptions of Eleanor of Aquitaine. Debate rages over the extent of her political activity and her influence on culture. As a stateswoman, her influence was felt for over six decades--she was both notorious and respected. It is possible to regard her as a romantic heroine in the widest sense, even though the wilder myths about her have now been dispelled. She inspires the imagination today, just as she did in her own time. But the sources form an incomplete record, so there will always be room to ask the question: who was the real Eleanor? She was undoubtedly a forceful character. She was heiress to one of the richest domains in medieval Europe. In the twelfth century, Europe was divided into feudal domains, and what is now France then comprised the kingdom of France itself and several vassal domains, or demesnes. The county of Poitou and the duchies of Aquitaine and Gascony covered a vast region in the south-west, about one third of modern France. By comparison, the kingdom of France was small, centered mainly upon Paris and the surrounding area. As descendants of the Frankish Emperor Charlemagne, whose empire had encompassed much of western Europe, French kings were overlords of all the fiefdoms, including Aquitaine, in the region roughly corresponding to modern France. This often led to power struggles between the kings and their vassals. Aquitaine--named "land of waters" after its great rivers--had been established as a duchy by the middle of the tenth century, and it was now very prosperous. In 1058, the southern wine-producing duchy of Gascony, with its bustling port of Bordeaux, had been absorbed into Aquitaine. Poitou lay to the north, where its northern border marched with those of Brittany, Anjou and Touraine, and its chief city was Poitiers. Eleanor's was a rich inheritance. "Opulent Aquitaine [was] sweet as nectar thanks to its vineyards dotted about with forests, overflowing with fruit of every kind, and endowed with a superabundance of pasture." Aquitanians spoke the langue d'oc (Provençal), or Occitan, a Romance language derived from the dialect spoken by Roman invaders centuries before. North of the Loire, and in Poitou, they spoke Poitevin, or the langue d'oeil. The Aquitanian lordships and castles were controlled by hostile, feuding vassals who resented interference from their ducal overlords and were notorious for their propensity to rebel and create disorder. They enjoyed a luxurious standard of living compared with their unwashed counterparts in northern France, and were regarded by northerners as soft and idle, yet they could be fierce and violent when provoked. Successive dukes had consistently failed to subdue their vassals or establish cohesion within their own domains, and their authority still did not reach far beyond the vicinities of Poitiers and Bordeaux. They did not have the wealth or resources to extend their power into the feudal wilderness and forests beyond these areas. Nevertheless, the duchy was wealthy, thanks to its lucrative trade in wine and salt, and its religious life flourished. Successive dukes built and endowed many fine churches and monasteries, notably the Romanesque cathedrals in Poitiers and Angoulême. The twelfth century witnessed a great monastic revival, with the founding of several new orders: the Cistercians; the Augustinian canons, whose double houses admitted both men and women; the Carthusians, who lived under an austere rule requiring them to embrace a life of solitude and silence; and the Order of Fontevraud, especially dear to Eleanor of Aquitaine and her family. The nuns' necrology records that Eleanor "was from her earliest life a patron of the church of Fontevraud." Eleanor "sprang from a noble race" of dukes who had been blessed with pious, feisty wives. Her grandfather, William IX, married Philippa, heiress to Toulouse, which bordered Gascony in the south. It was an important fiefdom, for through it wound the major trade routes that linked Aquitaine with the Mediterranean. But Philippa's uncle, Raymond, Count of Saint-Gilles, had usurped her inheritance and she saw in William IX a ruler with the power and resources to recover it. This was an age of great religious fervor that witnessed thousands undertaking long, sometimes dangerous, pilgrimages to holy shrines, notably St. James's at Compostela, St. Peter's in Rome and Christ's burial place, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem. Since ad 640, Palestine had been under Arab rule. In 1095, Pope Urban II had exhorted Christians to take part in the First Crusade, in the hope of liberating Jerusalem. William IX, who did not don the cross that was symbolic of a vow to go on crusade, seized Toulouse in the absence of the usurping Raymond, who had led a crusading army to the East, having renounced his claim to Toulouse in favor of his son, Bertrand. William incurred the anger of the Church by violating the Truce of God, which required all Christians to refrain from invading the lands of a crusader during his absence. In 1099, news of the taking of Jerusalem prompted William belatedly to take the cross. In 1101, at Heraclea, his army was cut to pieces by the Muslims (or Saracens, as Christians called them) and he had to return home. Back in Poitiers, inspired by the culture of the East and the erotic works of Ovid, he began writing sensual poems celebrating female beauty and the pleasures of love, for which he is called the first of the troubadours. Feudal Europe was essentially a military society. Warfare was the business of kings and noblemen, increasingly conducted by the evolving rules of chivalry, a knightly code enshrining ideals of courage, loyalty, honesty, courtesy and charity. In this martial, male-dominated world, women had little place. The Church taught that the descendants of Eve were the weaker vessel and the source of all lechery. They were seen as feeble, irrational creatures who needed to be governed by men, and were expected to be chaste, humble, modest, sober, silent, charitable and well behaved. Kings and noblemen married for political advantage, and women rarely had any say in how they or their wealth were to be disposed in marriage. Heiresses and rich widows were sold off to the highest bidder, for political or territorial advantage. The betrothal of infants was not uncommon, although the Church laid down the minimum ages for cohabitation as twelve for girls and fourteen for boys. Personal choice and love were not paramount considerations. The early chansons de geste (songs of deeds) had celebrated military ideals of courage in battle, loyalty, honor and endurance, but the troubadours of the south popularized the concept of courtly love, revolutionary in its day. William IX's court at Poitiers quickly became renowned for this new literary trend, and by 1100 it had become the foremost cultural center in France. With this impetus, romantic literature flourished in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, particularly in Aquitaine and Provence. Drawing on Plato and Arab writers and influenced by the growing popularity of the cult of the Virgin Mary, the troubadours composed lyric poetry and songs. They deified women, according them superiority over men, and laid down codes of courtesy, chivalry and gentlemanly conduct. Thus were born ideals of honor and courtship that, in the centuries to come, would permeate European literature and culture to such a degree that their influence is still with us today. The rules of courtly love gave a mistress mastery over her humble, worshipping suitor, who had to prove his devotion before his love was even acknowledged. The mistress (the word was the female equivalent of "master") was an idealized figure, often high-born and frequently married, who was supposedly unattainable. In this aristocratic game--for such it was--the woman always enjoyed supremacy and the man was her servant. Her wishes and decrees were absolute, and any suitor who did not comply was deemed unworthy of the honor of her love. The ultimate favour was rarely to be granted, yet ideals of chastity permitted courtly lovers to sleep naked together so long as they did not have sex. The tenets of courtly love had little to do with contemporary notions of courtship and marriage, but, in the relaxed cultural atmosphere of the south, they flourished as an absorbing intellectual pastime of the upper classes; in the more sober north, courtly love was regarded as an excuse for adultery. There, a noblewoman who betrayed her spouse could be banished or imprisoned; for the man who cuckolded his overlord, the penalty was castration. Aquitanians, however, took a relaxed view of such matters. Excerpted from Queens of the Crusades: England's Medieval Queens Book Two by Alison Weir All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.