Publication

2001 - Palgrave, New York, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

70,750 words, Guess

Page Count

283 pages

Identifiers

and 4 more

Classifications

  • DDC941.05/3
  • DDCB
  • LCCDA345 .M23 2001
and 1 more
  • LCCDA345.M23 2001

Description

xviii, 284 pages : 20 cm

First Sentence

Edward VI came to the throne of England on 28 January 1547, a boy of nine fathered in middle age by a king who died still middle-aged, before his son had the chance to grow up and observe his father's style of governance.

Description

The boy king Edward VI, the only surviving son of Henry VIII and the last of the male Tudors, died while still a teenager, his plans for his country's future soon to be overturned by his Roman Catholic half-sister Mary. Yet his reign has a significance in English history out of all proportion to its brief six-year span. In this lavishly illustrated book, Diarmaid MacCulloch underlines the significance of Edward's turbulent and neglected reign. He takes a fresh look at the life and beliefs of the young king and of the ruthless politicians who jostled for power around him and analyzes the single-minded strategy for bringing in the Protestant revolution. Although the regime collapsed in apparent failure and disgrace on Edward's death in 1553, the story does not end there; a second half-sister, Elizabeth, succeeded Mary and brought Protestantism back to the official Church, though in a subtly different form. The tensions between her vision of the Church and that of the dead boy king continued to haunt English religion. MacCulloch traces the strange afterlife of Edward's reign, its surprising connections with the civil wars which convulsed the British Isles a century later, and the effect it still has on English life.

Subjects

Genres

  • Biography

Links

Other Editions

  • The boy king: Edward VI and the protestant reformationPalgrave2001-01-01
Show 2 more editions

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