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Creator
Date
2011
Location
New York,
New York (State)
United States
United States
Media format
Printed text
Extent
x, 266 p.
Language
English
Size
25 cm
Reference IDs
Folger bibliographic ID: 245451
Folger call number: DC108 .S23 2011
Folger holdings ID: 312179
Folger call number: DC108 .S23 2011
Folger holdings ID: 312179
Summary
The life of Mary Tudor the French queen, younger sister of Henry VIII, has been chiefly defined by the scandal of her secret marriage to Charles Brandon after the death of her husband, Louis XII of France. Such limited focus has obscured Mary's role as a political figure, one whom poets celebrated for bringing peace between England and France. In this biography, Erin A. Sadlack contends that Mary was neither a weeping hysteric nor a love-struck romantic, but a queen who drew on two sources of authority to increase the power of her position: epistolary conventions and the rhetoric of chivalry that imbued the French and English courts. By reading Mary's life and letters within the context of early modern political culture, this book broadens our understanding of the exercise of queenship in the sixteenth century. - - From back cover
Notes
Edition
1st ed
General notes
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents
A queenly education -- Becoming the queen -- Marrying where "my mynd is" -- Always the French queen : identity politics -- Appendix: Mary's letters
Also known as
Extended title: The French queen's letters : Mary Tudor Brandon and the politics of marriage in sixteenth-century Europe / Erin A. Sadlack
Subjects
Related names
author: Sadlack, Erin A.
subject: Mary, Queen, consort of Louis XII, King of France, 1496-1533
subject: Henry VIII, King of England, 1491-1547
subject: Mary, Queen, consort of Louis XII, King of France, 1496-1533
subject: Henry VIII, King of England, 1491-1547