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            {
    "id": 418497,
    "slug": "elizabeth-of-york-the-first-tudor-queen-alison-weir",
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    "title": "Elizabeth of York: The First Tudor Queen",
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Elizabeth of York: The First Tudor Queen

ID 418497
Slug elizabeth-of-york-the-first-tudor-queen-alison-weir
Contributors
Author : Alison Weir
Annotation
Description Elizabeth of York would have ruled England, but for the fact that she was a woman. The eldest daughter of Edward IV, at seventeen she was relegated from pampered princess to bastard fugitive, but the probable murders of her brothers, the Princes in the Tower, left Elizabeth heiress to the royal House of York, and in 1486, Henry VII, first sovereign of the House of Tudor, married her, thus uniting the red and white roses of Lancaster and York. Elizabeth is an enigma. She had schemed to marry Richard III, the man who had deposed and probably killed her brothers, and it is likely that she then intrigued to put Henry Tudor on the throne. Yet after marriage, a picture emerges of a model consort, mild, pious, generous and fruitful. It has been said that Elizabeth was distrusted and kept in subjection by Henry VII and her formidable mother-in-law, Margaret Beaufort, but contemporary evidence shows that Elizabeth was, in fact, influential, and may have been involved at the highest level in one of the most controversial mysteries of the age. Alison Weir builds an intriguing portrait of this beloved queen, placing her in the context of the magnificent, ceremonious, often brutal, world she inhabited, and revealing the woman behind the myth, showing that differing historical perceptions of Elizabeth can be reconciled.
Genres
Subjects No subjects available
NSTC
Publisher Vintage
Imprint
Language eng
Page count 576
Duration
Publication date first 2013-01-01
Publication date latest 2013-01-01
Cover URL
Editions No editions available

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