The Tudors in Love: Passion and Politics in the Age of England’s Most Famous Dynasty
Sarah Gristwood. St. Martin’s, $29.99 (400p) ISBN 978-1-250-27142-6
Historian Gristwood (The Queen’s Mary) offers an engrossing look at how the Tudor dynasty employed the “stylish and stylised game” of courtly love. Popularized by medieval Arthurian legends depicting star-crossed lovers Guinevere and Lancelot, expressions of courtly love in 15th- and 16th-century England included romantic language professing devotion and such symbolic acts as a jouster wearing a woman’s emblem. In mesmerizing detail, Gristwood shows how the Tudors used these methods to their advantage. For example, Henry VIII wielded protestations of courtly love to establish his persona as a young romantic figure at the mercy of the current object of his affection but viewed similarly ritualistic displays—including Anne Boleyn’s tossing of her handkerchief to a jouster—as evidence of infidelity. Expertly deciphering the era’s flowery language, Gristwood shows that women’s oft-ignored denials gave them the illusion of control in a ruse-filled system designed to favor men. One of the rare women to hold real power in the complicated dance of courtly love, Elizabeth I employed it shrewdly to dangle potential marriage contracts with foreign princes and English nobles. Throughout, fascinating incidental details add insight and reveal personal connections between historical figures. The result is a fresh and tantalizing look at a much-scrutinized dynasty. (Dec.)
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Reviewed on: 09/07/2022
Genre: Nonfiction