Who was Margaret Tudor? – Helen Castor on Woman’s Hour

Helen Castor discussed Margaret Tudor on Woman’s Hour BBC Radio 4 this morning.

‘It’s expected that the coming year will see the rules on male primogeniture overturned. Commonwealth leaders have agreed it, so it only remains for parliament to change the law and, if William and Kate’s firstborn is a girl, she will, one day, be queen. So how different might our list of kings and queens have been if the succession had passed to daughters. Louise Adamson met the historian Helen Castor who’s a Fellow of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge to find out about Margaret Tudor’s life and legacy.’

From Woman’s Hour

You can listen at the Woman’s Hour website. The interview is 17 minutes in, select Chapter 2:

Who was Margaret Tudor? – Woman’s Hour

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Books 2012: Published Today – Our Man in Rome

2nd February 2012 – Our Man in Rome: Henry VIII and his Italian Ambassador by Catherine Fletcher

‘1527. Gregorio ‘The Cavalier’ Casali is Henry VIII’s man in Rome. An Italian freelance diplomat, he charmed his way into the English service before he was twenty. But now he faces an almighty challenge. Henry wants a divorce from Catherine of Aragon, and Casali must persuade Pope Clement VII of his master’s case.

Set against the backdrop of war-torn Renaissance Italy, Our Man in Rome weaves together tales from the grubby underbelly of Tudor politics with a gripping family saga to reveal the extraordinary true story behind history’s most infamous divorce.

Through six years of cajoling, threats and bribery, Casali lives by his wits. He manoeuvres his brothers into lucrative diplomatic postings, plays off one master against another, dodges spies, bandits and noblemen alike. But as the years pass and Henry’s case drags on, his loyalties are increasingly suspected. What will be Casali’s fate?

Drawing on hundreds of unknown archive documents, Our Man in Rome reconstructs his tumultuous life among the great and powerful at this turning point for European history. From the besieged Castel Sant’Angelo in Rome to the splendours of Greenwich Palace, we follow his trail in the service of Henry VIII. Lavish ceremony and glamorous parties stand in contrast to the daily strains of embassy life, as Casali pawns family silver to pay the bills, fights off rapacious in-laws and defends himself in the face of Anne Boleyn’s wrath.

This vivid and compelling book will make us think anew about Henry, Catherine and the Tudor world.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk

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Review of 2011

After the two Lady Jane Grey exhibitions of 2010, 2011 was a much quieter year Jane wise. Although Dr Stephan Edwards thinks he has discovered an authentic portrait of the nine days queen.

In February, Helen Castor (author of ‘She Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth) announced that she was working on 3 documentaries based on her book (which featured Lady Jane) to be broadcast on BBC4 in 2012. On 6th February, the BBC programme, ‘Countryfile’ visited the National Trust property Dunham Massey in Cheshire. During the tour of the house, there was a glimpse of a portrait of Lady Jane.

Also in February, various sources reported that Delaroche’s painting, ‘The Execution of Lady Jane Grey’ had inspired the collection by Giles Deacon at London Fashion Week. ( London Fashion Week: England Reigns Supreme). You could buy a Giles Deacon Lady Jane t-shirt in December for £280! (The Independent – Christmas Gifts Gallery). The New York post had Helen Castor’s She Wolves as a required read.

In March, Linda Porter (author of ‘Mary Tudor: The First Queen’) very kindly answered my questions relating to Mary Tudor and Lady Jane Grey (Interview with Linda Porter). On March 21st, Leanda de Lisle (author of ‘The Sisters Who Would Be Queen’) gave a talk about Lady Jane and her sisters for the Friends of Charnwood Forest.

In April, Tracy Borman (author of ‘Elizabeth’s Women’) kindly answered my questions relating to the Grey sisters (Interview with Tracy Borman).

‘The French Queen’s Letters: Mary Tudor and the Politics of Marriage in Sixteenth-Century Europe’ by Dr Erin Sadlack was published in April as part of the ‘Queenship and Power’ series. I met up with Dr Sadlack the following month and had a very interesting discussion about Mary Tudor, Lady Jane and the tv show ‘The Tudors.’ (Interview with Dr Erin Sadlack).

Dr Stephan Edwards updated his research of two supposed portraits of Lady Jane at Wrest Park and Syon. He believes that the Syon Portrait is of Lady Jane Grey (Lady Jane Grey Revealed – The Syon Portrait ).

The National Gallery’s film about the 2012 exhibition ‘Painting History: Delaroche and Lady Jane Grey’ can be viewed at their website (Paul Delaroche: Lady Jane Grey).

Between March and May, ‘A Ballad of Love and Death: Pre-Raphaelite Photography in Great Britain, 1848-1875’ exhibition at the Musee d’Orsay in Paris, included ‘a fine 1860s historical study by Ronald Leslie Melville entitled ‘The Duke of Northumberland offering the Crown to Lady Jane Grey’ (Financial Times).

It was also announced in April that Alison Weir’s sequel to ‘Innocent Traitor’, called ‘Dangerous Inheritance’ is a novel about Catherine Grey and Katherine Plantagenet.

In May, Susan Higginbotham started blogging about the Greys. (The Letters of Frances Grey, Marchioness of Dorset, Signatures of Frances Grey and Adrian Stokes, Was Lady Jane Grey Precontracted to the Earl of Hertford?, How Old Was Guildford Dudley?, Did Jane Grey’s Parents Resent Her Because She Was Not A Boy?, Frances Grey’s Date of Remarriage, Revisited Mary Boleyn or Frances Brandon?, Christmas at Tilty: 1549).

Helen Castor was interviewed by the History Today Book Club in June ( Interview: Helen Castor) . She also took part in their podcasts (History Today Podcasts Part OnePart Two, Part Three). Dr Anna Whitelock kindly answered my questions about Mary Tudor (Interview with Anna Whitelock).

The August edition of BBC History Magazine was a Tudor special. Two of the articles mentioned Lady Jane, as did two of the podcasts.
‘Three Maids for a Crown: A Novel of the Grey Sisters’ by Ella March Chase was published in the UK this month (Interview with Ella March Chase).

In September, it was the 10th anniversary of this website. I also visited Syon Park, where Lady Jane Grey was told she was Queen. The paperback version of ‘Lady Jane Grey: A Tudor Mystery’ by Eric Ives was published. Also published was ‘Katherine Parr: Complete Works and Correspondence’ edited by Janel Mueller. Mueller suggests that not only did Katherine Parr give Jane Grey her prayer book but that Katherine wrote it herself.

In December, the British Library’s ‘Medieval and Earlier Manuscripts Blog,’ posted an article about Jane’s prayerbook. (Rival Queens, Precious Books). The British Library has digitised the prayer book and it can be viewed at Lady Jane Grey’s Prayer Book. Lady Jane Grey mugs were on sale from Culture Label

Dr Stephan Edwards transcribed and translated ‘Giulio Raviglio Rosso’s Historia delle cose occorse nel regno d’Inghilterra dopo la morte di Odoardo VI’ (History of the things that occurred in the realm of England, in relation to the Duke of Northumberland after the death of Edward VI)
(Some Grey Matter – History of the things that occurred in the realm of England, in relation to the Duke of Northumberland after the death of Edward VI).

Other books published this year that featured Jane include: Tower: An Epic History of the Tower of Londn by Nigel Jones, Katherine the Queen: The Remarkable Life of Katherine Parr (paperback) by Linda Porter, England’s Queens: The Biography by Elizabeth Norton, She-Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth (paperback) by Helen Castor and Mary I: England’s Catholic Queen by John Edwards.

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Illuminations: Private Lives of Medieval Kings – Part 3 Review

I have only seen about 5 minutes of part 3 so far, so luckily The Anne Boleyn Files and the British Library have reviewed the final part of this series.

The Anne Boleyn Files – Illuminations: The Private Lives of Kings – Libraries Gave Us Power

If you are outside the UK you can watch clips and read a review at the British Library’s Medieval and Earlier Manuscripts Blog.

British Library: Medieval and Earlier Manuscripts Blog

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Talks at the National Portrait Gallery

The following talks/tours are at the National Portrait Gallery in London:

Charlotte – The Forgotten Princess
Alexandra Loske
7 June 2012
13.15-14.00
Ondaatje Wing Theatre


Thomas Beckett – Warrior, Priest, Rebel, Victim
John Guy
21 June 2012
13.15-14.00
Ondaatje Wing Theatre


Tudor Rogues
Thomas Penn
28 June 2012
19.00
Free

Historian Thomas Penn, author of Winter King the biography of Henry VII, discusses the life of the Machiavellian monarch and his contemporaries in the Tudor Galleries.

Free tour ticket required, available from 17.00 on the day.


Double Take
Charlotte Bolland
10 July 2012
15:00
Meet in the Main Hall

Curator Charlotte Bolland examines this new display of five pairs of near identical portraits. Explore why and how multiple versions and copies were made in the 16th Century.


Rolling Heads
Alex Rodriguez
12 July 2012
19.30
Meet in the Main Hall.


Early English Kings
Alan Read
29 July 2012
15.00
Meet in the Main Hall.


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