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Mary Boleyn The Mistress Of Kings, De Weir, Alison. Editorial Ballantine Books, Tapa Blanda En Inglés, 2012

  • Año de publicación: 2012
  • Tapa del libro: Blanda
  • Novela.
  • Número de páginas: 416.
  • ISBN: 09780345521347.

Descripción

About the Author
Alison Weir is the New York Times bestselling author of many historical biographies, including The Lady in the Tower, Mistress of the Monarchy, Henry VIII, Eleanor of Aquitaine, The Life of Elizabeth I, and The Six Wives of Henry VIII, and of the novels Captive Queen, Innocent Traitor, and The Lady Elizabeth. She lives in Surrey, England, with her husband.

NATIONAL BESTSELLER
New York Times bestselling author and noted British historian Alison Weir provides a comprehensive biography of Mary Boleyn, sister to Queen Anne as well as mistress to Anne’s husband, Henry VIII, and one of the most misunderstood figures of the Tudor age. Utilizing extensive original research, Weir offers insights on the ambitious Boleyn family and the likely nature of the relationship between the Boleyn sisters. She examines Mary’s reputation at the French court and her relations with King François I, as well as her role at the English court and how she became Henry VIII’s lover. The book investigates the truth behind Mary’s notorious reputation and presents the most conclusive evidence to date on the paternity of Mary’s children, long speculated to have been Henry VIII’s progeny. Alison Weir pieces together a life filled with mystery and misfortune, debunking myths to reveal the truth about Mary Boleyn, often referred to as the “great and infamous whore.”

Review
“This nuanced, smart, and assertive biography reclaims the life of a Tudor matriarch.” - Publishers Weekly
“Weir has achieved the enviable skill of blending the necessary forensic and analytical tasks of academia with the passionate engagement that history lovers crave.” - Bookreporter
“Top-notch . . . This book further proves that Weir is a historian of the highest caliber.” - Washington Independent Review of Books
“Weir matches her usual professional skills in research and interpretation to her customary, felicitous style.” - Booklist

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1 The Eldest Daughter
Blickling Hall, one of England's greatest Jacobean showpiece mansions, not two is string_containing liesles northwest of Aylsham in Norfolk. It is a beautiful place, surrounded by woods, farms, sweeping parkland, and gardens - gardens that were old in the fifteenth century, and which once surrounded the fifteenth century moated manor house of the Boleyn family, the predecessor of the present building. That house is long gone, but it was in its day the cradle of a remarkable dynasty; and here, in those ancient gardens, and within the mellow, red-brick gabled house, in the dawning years of the sixteenth century, the three children who were its brightest scions once played in the spacious and halcyon summers of their early childhood, long before they made their dramatic debut on the stage of history: Anne Boleyn, who would one day become Queen of England; her brother George Boleyn, who would also court fame and glory, but who would ultimately share his sister's tragic and brutal fate; and their sister Mary Boleyn, who would become the mistress of kings, and gain a notoriety that is almost certainly undeserved.

Blickling was where the Boleyn siblings' lives probably began, the protective setting for their infant years, nestling in the broad, rolling landscape of Norfolk, circled by a wilderness of woodland sprinkled with myriad flowers such as bluebells, meadowsweet, loosestrife, and marsh orchids, and swept by the eastern winds. Norfolk was the land that shaped them, that remote corner of England that had grown prosperous through the wool-cloth trade, its chief city, Norwich - which lay just a few miles to the south.

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