Books 2019 – on sale today – Carolina of Orange-Nassau: Ancestress of the royal houses of Europe by Moniek Bloks


Chronos Books


‘Carolina of Orange-Nassau (1743 1787) was born the daughter of William IV, Prince of Orange, and Anne, Princess Royal and was thus the granddaughter of King George II. It was upon the King’s orders that she was named after his wife, Caroline of Ansbach. She was the first of Anne and William’s children to survive to adulthood. When her father was at last made stadtholder of all seven united provinces, Carolina was included in the line of succession, in the event she had no brothers. A brother was eventually born, but due to his weak health, she remained an important figure. Carolina married Charles Christian of Nassau-Weilburg and suffered the loss of half her children, either in childbirth or infancy. Despite this, she acted as regent for her minor brother while heavily pregnant and remained devoted to him and the Dutch republic. Her children married well and her descendants sit upon the royal thrones of Europe, truly making her a grandmother of Europe.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Chronos Books

Further details – Amazon.co.uk



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Oxford’s Tudor Colleges: What if Lady Jane had stayed Queen? – Guest article by John Tepper Marlin


I am delighted to host this guest article by John Tepper Marlin.

John’s book, ‘Oxford College Arms: Intriguing Stories Behind Oxford’s Shields’ was published by Boissevain Books LLC in September last year.


(c) 2018 by Boissevain Books LLC


You can buy it from:

Amazon.co.uk

Amazon.com


Thank you to John for this article.


If Lady Jane Grey had extended her reign, how might the colleges at Oxford developed?



Six colleges were founded under the Tudors, whose dynasty started with Henry VII, son of Lancastrian Edmund Tudor and Margaret Beaufort, a descendant of Edward III. Henry VII was brought up in Wales but had exiled himself to France while the Yorkists were in power. When Yorkist Richard III acceded to the throne in 1583, he soon made himself unpopular. Henry VII returned to Wales and assembled an army that defeated and killed Richard III at Bosworth Field in 1485 and was crowned king in London. By marrying Elizabeth of York the following year, Henry VII united the Houses of Lancaster and York.

Brasenose College (1509). No Oxford colleges were formally founded during Henry VII’s reign. But two Oxford colleges were founded early in his son Henry VIII’s reign, by the Bishops of Lincoln and Winchester, i.e., Brasenose and Corpus Christi Colleges.

Brasenose was the first college to have a non-religious founder, a Cheshire lawyer, along with a bishop from Lancashire. It became a magnet for students from Cheshire and Lancashire, and was the home college of Rev. Lawrence Washington, great-grandfather of George Washington, whose ancestors came from near Newcastle, in the metropolitan area (since 1972) of Tyne and Wear.

Corpus Christi College (1517). Corpus Christi was founded by Richard Foxe, Bishop of Winchester, and became a center of humanistic study through the influence of Bishop Hugh Oldham of Exeter. The use of a pelican in the dexter third of the Corpus arms is based on the medieval idea that the pelican pierced its breast to feed blood to its young. The analogy to the sacrifice of Jesus is compelling. We now know that the pelican is actually thumping its beak on its breast to disgorge food from the pouch under its beak.

Both Brasenose and Lincoln use tierced coats of arms, their episcopal See in the center pale of the arms. Using the third pale is visually challenging, and including the arms of a See along with the personal arms of the founding bishop, is heraldically improper.

Christ Church (1546). Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, the leading churchman in the early years of the reign of Henry VIII, also planned for a college at Oxford to be named Cardinal College. He gave it his (created) episcopal coat of arms, which is a collection of symbols of his commoner origins. When Wolsey and Henry VIII parted ways over the king’s divorce of Catherine of Aragon, Henry in 1546 completed the foundation of the college, which he called Christ Church. It stills bears Wolsey’s arms.

Henry VIII was succeeded by his sickly son Edward VI, who only lived six years into his reign, which was controlled by his Protestant courtiers. In his will, Edward directed that Lady Jane Grey be named his successor. Lady Jane is known as the Nine-Day Queen, but her reign might be considered a few days longer. Lady Jane’s reign ended when an effort to capture a possible challenger, Catholic Mary Tudor, ended with Mary’s being championed and named the rightful heir to the throne. The plotters against Mary I were executed and so eventually was Lady Jane (and her husband); she was venerated for several hundred years as a Protestant martyr.

Trinity College (1555). During the reign of Mary I, two colleges were founded, on land previously occupied by Durham College, which was established by the Prince Bishop of Durham for the novices at his Benedictine monastery. The main buildings of the dissolved Durham College were used as the site for Trinity College, founded by Sir Thomas Pope, who had made his fortune during the reign of Henry VIII taking over and disposing of the monastic lands.

Consumed by guilt at his self-enrichment at the expense of the monks, and not having offspring to pray for his soul, Sir Thomas founded the college to ensure that his soul was prayed for daily, a wish that is still complied with by the college. The arms of the College are those of Sir Thomas.

St. John’s College (1555). The same year that Sir Thomas Pope founder Trinity College, his friend Sir Thomas White, also childless, founded St. John’s College. White was an ally of Mary I in the proceedings against Lady Jane, and was rewarded with a knighthood. White was a clothier and named the college after St. John the Baptist, who is said to have made his own garments.

White’s executor was an astute investor, and St. John’s prospered as the value of Oxford real estate grew. In 2018, it was at the top of the “Norrington Table”, which measures the academic performance of the colleges based on the undergraduate examination results.

Jesus College (1571). After the death of Mary I, her younger sister Elizabeth I took the throne for 44 years. Jesus College was the only Oxford college founded during her reign; its creation was instigated by the Treasurer of the Welsh St. David’s Cathedral, where Edmund Tudor is buried.

Jesus College bears the arms of Yorkshireman Thomas Rotherham, Bishop of Lincoln, and no one is sure why. Most likely when Jesus College was renting space from Rotherham, his arms were recorded and were assumed to be the arms of the college. Jesus College’s Welsh connections are widely known, and Welshman T. E. Lawrence (“Lawrence of Arabia”) studied there.

Summing Up. To answer the question posed at the opening, if Lady Jane Grey had extended her reign, Catholic Mary I would probably not have taken the throne and the two colleges founded during her reign, Trinity and St. John’s, would not have been founded by two Catholic knights looking for students to pray for their souls.




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To celebrate the publication of the paperback of ‘Daughters of the Winter Queen’ by Nancy Goldstone…


The paperback of ‘Daughters of the Winter Queen: Four Remarkable Sisters, the Crown of Bohemia and the Enduring Legacy of Mary, Queen of Scots’ by Nancy Goldstone is published today.


(c) W&N


Here is my 2018 interview with Nancy.


(c) Emily Goldstone


Daughters of the Winter Queen: Four Remarkable Sisters, the Crown of Bohemia and the Enduring Legacy of Mary, Queen of Scots.



Posted in Interview | Tagged | Comments Off on To celebrate the publication of the paperback of ‘Daughters of the Winter Queen’ by Nancy Goldstone…

Books 2018 – two books on sale today…


24th January 2019 – Cecily Duchess of York (paperback) by J.L. Laynesmith


Bloomsbury Academic


‘This is the first scholarly biography of Cecily Neville, duchess of York, the mother of Edward IV and Richard III. She was said to have ruled Edward IV ‘as she pleased’ and Richard III made his bid for the throne from her home. Yet Cecily has been a shadowy figure in modern histories, noted primarily for her ostentatious piety, her expensive dresses, and the rumours of her adultery. Here J. L. Laynesmith draws on a wealth of rarely considered sources to construct a fresh and revealing portrait of a remarkable woman. Cecily was the only major protagonist to live right through the Wars of the Roses. This book sheds new light on that bloody conflict in which Cecily proved herself an exceptional political survivor. Skilfully manipulating her family connections and contemporary ideas about womanhood, Cecily repeatedly reinvented herself to protect her own status and to ensure the security of those in her care. From her childhood marriage to Richard duke of York until her final decade as grandmother of the first Tudor queen, the story of Cecily Neville’s life provides a rich insight into national and local politics, women’s power and relationships, motherhood, household dynamics and the role of religion in fifteenth-century England.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk





24th January – Daughters of the Winter Queen: Four Remarkable Sisters, the Crown of Bohemia and the Enduring Legacy of Mary, Queen of Scots (paperback) by Nancy Goldstone


(c) W&N


‘Valentine’s Day, 1613. Elizabeth Stuart, the sixteen-year-old granddaughter of Mary, Queen of Scots, marries Frederick V, a German count and ally of her father, James I of England. In just five years a terrible betrayal will ruin ‘the Winter Queen’, as Elizabeth will forever be known, imperil the lives of those she loves and launch a war that lasts thirty years.

In a sweeping narrative encompassing political intrigue, illicit love affairs and even a murder mystery, Nancy Goldstone tells the riveting story of a queen in exile, and of her four defiant daughters.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – W&N

Further details – Nancy Goldstone

Further details – Amazon.co.uk



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My review of ‘Margaret Tudor: The Life of Henry VIII’s Sister by Melanie Clegg


(c) Pen & Sword History


This is a highly readable account of the life of the Tudor Princess who became Queen of Scotland, Margaret Tudor. Often overlooked in favour of her famous brother Henry VIII, Clegg brings Margaret vividly to life as we follow her from pampered princess, through her successful reign as Scotland’s Queen consort and then her struggles as Queen Dowager.

As her granddaughter (Mary, Queen of Scots) found to her cost, balancing the demands of the Scottish factions was a difficult task and Margaret did not make it any easier with her later marriage choices. Margaret showed the same iron will as her Tudor siblings but was often caught between her brother and her adopted country.

Although Henry VIII overlooked Margaret’s descendants in favour of those of his younger sister Mary, it was Margaret’s great grandson who inherited the throne of England when the Tudor line died out. This book goes a long way to restoring Margaret to the recognition she deserves.


Thank you to Pen and Sword History for my review copy




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