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  • W&N

Elizabeth: Renaissance Prince

Lisa Hilton

3 Reviews

Rated 0

Biography: royalty, Prose: non-fiction, British & Irish history, Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700

A definitive portrait of one of the most compelling monarchs England has ever had: Elizabeth I.

'We are a prince from a line of princes.'

Lisa Hilton's majestic biography of Elizabeth I, 'The Virgin Queen', uses new research to present a fresh interpretation of Elizabeth as a queen who saw herself primarily as a Renaissance prince, delivering a very different perspective on her emotional and sexual life, and upon her attempts to mould England into a European state. Elizabeth was not an exceptional woman but an exceptional ruler, and this book challenges readers to reassess her reign, and the colourful drama, scandal and intrigue to which it is always linked.

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Praise for Elizabeth: Renaissance Prince

  • Game-changing ... how history should be written

  • [Hilton] brings balance to the view that we must judge Elizabeth through the prism of her gender. It is refreshing to be confronted by challenging arguments instead of tired anecdotes. This biography is also full of unusual and interesting insights. I loved the observation that the three most important men in Elizabeth's life were Cecil, Robert Dudley (whom she loved) and Philip II of Spain. Apparently she kept a painting of Philip in her bedroom - THE SPECTATOR

  • In this book, which draws on new research from Italy, France, Russia and Turkey, the cliched image of 'a bewigged farthingale with a mysterious sex life' is replaced with Elizabeth, the Renaissance prince ... Hilton's biography manages an impressive balancing act; while eruditely analysing Renaissance ideas and Elizabethan realpolitik it retains all the sexiness we have come to expect from books about the Tudors - INDEPENDENT

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Lisa Hilton

Lisa Hilton is 27. After leaving New College, Oxford University, she studied Fine Art at Christie's in Paris. In 1999 she was runner-up for the Vogue Young Writer of the Year for Journalism.

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