Queens of the age of chivalry England's medieval queens, 1299-1409

Alison Weir, 1951-

Book - 2022

"Packed with dramatic true stories from one of European history's most romantic and turbulent eras, this epic narrative chronicles the five vividly rendered queens of the Plantagenet kings who ruled England between 1299 and 1399. The Age of Chivalry describes a period of medieval history dominated by the social, religious, and moral code of knighthood that prized noble deeds, military greatness and the game of courtly love between aristocratic men and women. It was also a period of high drama in English history, which included the toppling of two kings, the Hundred Years' War, the Black Death, and the Peasants' Revolt. Feudalism was breaking down, resulting in social and political turmoil. Against this dramatic backdrop,... Alison Weir describes the lives and reigns of five queen consorts: Marguerite of France was seventeen when she became the second wife of sixty-year-old King Edward I. Isabella of France, later known as "the She Wolf," dethroned her husband Edward II and ruled England with her lover. In contrast, Philippa of Hainault was a popular queen to the deposed king's son, Edward III. Anne of Bohemia was queen to Richard II, but she died young and childless. Isabella of Valois became Richard's second wife when she was only six years old, but was caught up in events when he was violently overthrown. This was a turbulent and brutal age, despite its chivalric color and ethos, and it stands as a vivid backdrop to the extraordinary stories of these queens' lives"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
History
Published
New York : Ballantine Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Alison Weir, 1951- (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Originally published in hardcover in Great Britain by Jonathan Cape, a division of Penguin Random House Ltd., London, in 2022"--Title page verso."
Physical Description
xxviii, 546 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color), maps, genealogical tables ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781101966723
  • Maps
  • Family Trees:
  • The Plantagenets, 1299-1399
  • French Royal Connections
  • The House of Lancaster
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • Part 1. Marguerite of France, Second Queen of Edward I
  • 1. "When Love Buds Between Great Princes"
  • 2. "An Abundance of Splendour"
  • 3. "Like a Falcon Before the Wind"
  • 4. "All Men Died to Me"
  • Part 2. Isabella of France, Queen of Edward II
  • 1. "The Most Wretched of Wives"
  • 2. "Mortal Enemies"
  • 3. "Not the Least Pity"
  • 4. "A Special Kind of Love"
  • 5. "Childish Frivolities"
  • 6. "The King of England's Right Eye"
  • 7. "Someone Has Come Between My Husband and Myself"
  • 8. "Secret Conferences"
  • 9. "Pretences, Delays and False Excuses"
  • 10. "By Clamour of the People"
  • 11. "Away with the King!"
  • 12. "The Special Business of the King"
  • 13. "So Good a Queen Never Came to That Land"
  • 14. "The Shameful Peace"
  • 15. "A Secret Design"
  • Part 3. Philippa of Hainault, Queen of Edward III
  • 1. "The Most Courteous. Liberal, and Noble Lady That Ever Reigned"
  • 2. "Such Increase of Honour"
  • 3. "William le Galeys"
  • 4. "A Vile Accusation"
  • 5. "I Cannot Refuse You"
  • 6. "Great Anguish of Heart"
  • 7. "Protection Against the Attacks of the Devil"
  • 8. "The Purest Ladies on Earth"
  • 9. "No Remedy but Death"
  • Part 4. Anne of Bohemia, First Queen of Richard II
  • 1. "So Little a Scrap of Humanity"
  • 2. "Our Beloved"
  • 3. "Great Murmurings"
  • 4. "All Comfort Was Bereft"
  • Part 5. Isabella of Valois, Second Queen of Richard II
  • 1. "Our Beautiful White Pearl"
  • 2. "A Matter of Life and Death"
  • 3. "In Danger of Bitter Death"
  • 4. "Angry and Malignant Looks"
  • 5. "The Fairest Thing to Mortal Eyes"
  • Select Bibliography
  • Sources of Quotes in the Text
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Historian and novelist Weir follows up Queens of the Crusades with this solid third volume in her series on medieval England's queens. Focusing on the period between 1299 and 1409, Weir spotlights Marguerite of France (wife of Edward I), Isabella of France (wife of Edward II), Philippa of Hainault (wife of Edward III), Anne of Bohemia (first wife of Richard II), and Isabella of Valois (second wife of Richard II). Detailed and immersive profiles humanize these women, showcasing their range of personalities and experiences, from "peacemaker" Marguerite; to Isabella of France, who raised an army to depose her husband; to Isabella of Valois, who married Richard II at age six and was widowed by age 10. In the most evocative segment, Weir seeks to banish the perception of Isabella of France as a "she-wolf," depicting her as a flawed woman who nonetheless exhibited extraordinary courage and resourcefulness in toppling Edward, whose relationships with Hugh le Despenser and other male advisers caused turmoil in their relationship and between England and France. Throughout, Weir focuses on broader themes of chivalry that shaped the era's alliances and debunks the most scandalous court gossip. The result is a thorough and illuminating survey of the Plantagenet dynasty. (Dec.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

In this third in a four-volume series on England's medieval queens, New York Times best-selling historian and historical novelist Weir escorts readers on a visit to the Plantagenet queens who ruled England between 1299 and 1399: Marguerite of France; Isabella of France (aka "the She Wolf"); the popular Philippa of Hainault; Anne of Bohemia, the doomed first wife of Richard II; and Isabella of Valois, Richard's second wife.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Five consorts of 14th-century British kings, hitherto obscure, come vividly to life. The prolific Weir, a serious historian and diligent researcher, specializes in English royal women, having recounted the lives of Anne Boleyn, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Mary, Queen of Scots, and many others in both novels and books of nonfiction. This book completes the author's Medieval Queens trilogy, following Queens of Conquest and Queens of the Crusades. Weir points out that her subjects "grew up in an age in which society regarded women as inferior beings." The education of princesses emphasized piety and aimed "to increase their desirability in the royal marriage market and equip them to be the ornaments of courts." Some may not have been literate, and their public influence varied from negligible to considerable. As objects of diplomatic strategy, most were French, England's major rival, betrothed in childhood and married a few years later. In fact, 12 was considered the ideal age for marriage. Most of these royal women accepted their privileged but subordinate role, which featured a great deal of ceremony, religious observance, pregnancy, and family matters as well as occasional brushes with the nasty politics of the time. In addition to political matters, the author examines the women's wardrobes, hairstyles, jewelry, designs of their living quarters, architecture of their castles, travel itineraries, and their royal domestic routines. History buffs may skim some of these sections. Fortunately, Weir regularly steps back to assess 14th-century Europe, "an age that witnessed high drama: the toppling of two kings, the Hundred Years War, the Black Death and the Peasants' Revolt." At the same time, she writes, "England saw a burgeoning nationalism and the rise and prosperity of the merchant classes." The author includes helpful family trees for the Plantagenets and the French royal connections at the time. Well-researched, competent popular medieval history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 "When Love Buds Between Great Princes" In September 1299, the Princess Marguerite of France found herself on a ship crossing the English Channel, with the white cliffs of Dover drawing ever nearer as she sailed to England to marry its King, Edward I. He was sixty and she was twenty, and probably in awe of his fearsome reputation. Her body was to seal a peace between England and France. Her crossing was apparently smooth. Her half-brother, King Philip IV of France--known as "Philip the Fair" because of his good looks--had provided her with a retinue befitting a queen. The dukes of Burgundy and Brittany headed an impressive, elegantly dressed train of nobles and "people of knowledge." Among Marguerite's female attendants were seven French ladies, and two English ones sent by King Edward to wait on his bride and teach her English customs. When her ship docked at Dover, Marguerite was received "with great ceremony" and news of her coming was sent to the King, who had temporarily ceased fighting the Scots to attend his wedding and was awaiting her twenty miles away in Canterbury, where lavish preparations for the welcome of the royal parties had been put in place. As Edward gave thanks for Marguerite's safe landing, she settled into the chambers prepared for her in the twelfth-century Great Tower in Dover Castle, where she spent the night behind walls twenty feet thick. The next day, she set out for Canterbury. Edward I had been a widower for nearly nine years. His adored wife, Eleanor of Castile, a formidable and grasping woman, had died in 1290. In her memory, he had erected twelve beautiful crosses along the route taken by her funeral procession from Lincolnshire to Westminster Abbey, where she now lay buried in a magnificent tomb. "The impiety of death, which spares no man, has stricken our heart with vehement sorrow and turned the harp of our house into mourning," Edward had written of "our Queen of good memory, whom in life we dearly cherished, and whom, in death, we cannot cease to love." But now, driven by political imperatives, he was contemplating marrying a second time. Edward I was one of England's greatest medieval kings. "In build, he was handsome and of impressive stature, towering head and shoulders above the average." His body, well preserved when his tomb was opened in 1774, was six foot two inches tall. "His brow was broad and the rest of his face regular," apart from "a drooping of the left eyelid." Neither this nor a slight stammer or lisp detracted from his awe-inspiring majesty. He was formidable: autocratic, forceful, fierce-tempered, fearless, and full of boundless vigor. A born leader and a talented and dynamic ruler, he was magisterial and statesmanlike, yet unscrupulous, ruthless, cruel, and occasionally violent. Under Edward I, the prestige and authority of the English Crown reached its medieval zenith. In every respect, he personified contemporary ideals of kingship. A distinguished warrior, he had inflicted a devastating conquest upon Wales, and had since spent years relentlessly trying to conquer Scotland, his ultimate aim being the unification of Britain under his rule. He had streamlined the administration of his kingdom, enforced the royal prerogative, implemented far-reaching legal reforms that won him the epithet "the English Justinian," and promoted parliamentary government. He understood the need to curb the power of the great feudal lords and, by sheer force of character and judicious marriage alliances, he kept them firmly under control. Edward's great adversary was Philip IV of France, the most powerful ruler in Christendom. From 1296, Philip had been at war with both England and Flanders. The conflict was the result of a long-standing feud over England's possessions in France. In the twelfth century, through the marriage of Henry II to Eleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine, the empire of the Plantagenets, the ruling dynasty Henry had founded in 1154, had extended from the Scottish border to the Pyrenees and encompassed roughly the western third of France, while the French royal demesne had been limited to the regions around Paris. By 1204, Henry's son, King John, Edward I's grandfather, had lost most of the English Continental territories, including Normandy, to the ambitious Philip II "Augustus" of France, and there were further French encroachments under John's son Henry III, as successive French monarchs sought to broaden their domain. By the time of Edward I, all that remained of England's lands in France were the prosperous wine-producing duchy of Gascony (the southern part of the duchy of Aquitaine) and the counties of Ponthieu and Montreuil, which had come to the English Crown through the marriage of Edward I and Eleanor of Castile in 1254. In 1296, vigorously pursuing his predecessors' expansionist policy, Philip IV had seized Gascony. Edward was determined to get it back, while Philip wanted to drive a wedge between him and the people of Flanders, who had united against the French Crown. By 1298, the two kings were engaged in secret peace negotiations. That spring, Pope Boniface VIII wrote to Edward, urging him to marry Philip's eldest half-sister, eighteen-year-old Blanche, as a means of ending the war. The match appealed to Edward, who sent envoys to Paris to find out if she was beautiful and had a good figure. When told that no fairer creature could be found in the whole world, he offered for her. But after his brother, Edmund "Crouchback," Earl of Lancaster, arrived in France to conclude negotiations, he discovered that Blanche was already betrothed to Rudolph, Duke of Austria. Edward was angered by the deception, but Philip IV substituted her younger sister, "the Lady Marguerite, in whose least finger there is more goodness and beauty, whoever looks at her, than in the fair Idoine, whom Amadus loved," Idoine being the princess won by the knight in an English rhyming romance Sir Amadas. Edward may have met Marguerite in 1286 when she was seven and he and Queen Eleanor enjoyed a lengthy stay in Paris. Boniface now suggested a double marriage alliance between France and England: Edward I was to marry Marguerite, while his son and heir, Edward of Caernarfon, Prince of Wales (later Edward II), would wed Philip's daughter Isabella, then two years old. Once this peace had been sealed, Gascony was to be returned to King Edward. The plan was approved by both sides and the English Parliament. For Philip, it conjured up the tantalizing prospect of French influence being extended into England and his grandson eventually occupying the English throne. For Edward, it promised two brilliant marriages and the return of Gascony. Marguerite would be the first French princess ever to become queen of England, and the first English consort in 150 years not to hail from southern France or the Iberian peninsula. Marguerite and Isabella had been born into the most illustrious royal house in Christendom. In the early fourteenth century, France was the wealthiest and most heavily populated kingdom in Europe: it had an estimated twenty-one million inhabitants, compared to four and a half million in England, and eighty thousand of them lived in Paris, twice the population of London. French society was essentially feudal, and the royal domain now covered more than half of modern France; the rest was made up of vassal feudatories. The Capetian dynasty had ruled France since 987, the crown having passed unfailingly from father to son. The imperial blood of the great Emperor Charlemagne ran in its veins. It had gained its reputation largely through the successes of its thirteenth-century kings, and the canonization in 1297 of Marguerite's grandfather, Louis IX, one of the greatest of medieval monarchs. Isabella and Marguerite must have grown up with a strong sense of their importance. They would have been raised to believe in the sanctity of the royal line of Capet and its superiority over all other ruling dynasties. They would also have learned that royal and aristocratic marriages could bring about changes in the ownership of feudal territories, which sometimes led to kings and lords owning lands far from their own domains. Edward I's mother, Alienor of Provence, had been the sister of Marguerite of Provence, the wife of St. Louis. The family ties between the two royal houses had led to the signing of the Treaty of Paris of 1259, which had brought peace between England and France. These new marriages would preserve those ties. Excerpted from Queens of the Age of Chivalry: England's Medieval Queens, Volume Three 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.