14th October, 2024 in Biography & Memoir, History, Women in History
Emily Murdoch Perkins discusses her new book Regina: The Queens Who Could Have Been, a feminist ‘what if’ history looking at what would have happened if firstborn daughters had been crowned instead of firstborn sons. Where did the idea for the book come from? It all started…
19th September, 2024 in History, Women in History
Henry, the king who was married six times and started his own church. Mary, the first regnal queen. Elizabeth, the queen who refused to marry. These are the Tudor royals that we all know about – but there’s one who has slipped through the history books and yet is, in my opinion,…
30th April, 2021 in History, Military
The Wars of the Roses were complicated; roughly forty years of political instability and outright fighting across England, interspersed with family feuds and encroaching foreign rulers. The Battle of Tewkesbury falls in the middle, but it was very nearly the end. The seeds of Tew…
23rd October, 2019 in Biography & Memoir, History, Women in History
When we think of witch trials throughout British history, it’s usually James VI and I or Matthew Hopkins who come to mind. Historian Gemma Hollman, however, proves that women were also subjected to accusations of witchcraft in medieval England in her book, Royal Witches – of…
8th October, 2018 in History
Before the Wars of the Roses culminated in victory for Henry Tudor and the House of Lancaster at the Battle of Bosworth, one of English history’s most famous noble houses had a fascinating history. Edmund of Lancaster, Earl of Lancaster and Leicester (1245-96) A miniature of Edmu…
17th May, 2018 in Biography & Memoir, History
‘This is the stuff of which fairytales are made’, or are they? Royal marriages are of course a celebration (as with any marriage) but do royal marriages have a history of fairy tales or controversy? Let’s take a look at some of the more unusual marriages over the centuries that w…
18th December, 2015 in Biography & Memoir, Women in History
Whichever way one looks at it, Eleanor Talbot was the rock upon which the royal House of York foundered. Unwittingly, and for her part, surely, unintentionally, she brought about the downfall of a dynasty. Through her relationship with Edward IV she ultimately shook the Crown of…