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The Palace

From the Tudors to the Windsors, 500 Years of History at Hampton Court

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
'If a house could gossip, this is the book that Hampton Court would whisper. An enjoyable and readable stroll through 500 years of Hampton Court history: royal residents, common visitors, thieves, invaders and ghosts' PHILIPPA GREGORY For centuries, Hampton Court has been a place of power, scandal and intrigue: a stage for events that shaped the nation. The Palace raises the curtain on 500 years of British history with royals, politicians, criminals, and geniuses all playing their parts. Hampton Court has been an arc of monarchy, revolution, religious fundamentalism, sexual scandals, and military coups. In this rich and vivid history, Gareth Russell moves through the rooms and the decades, each time focusing on a different person who called Hampton Court their home. Beginning with the Tudors, Russell takes the reader from the kitchens of Henry VII and the dreams of Anne Boleyn to Elizabeth I's brush with death and the staging of Shakespeare's plays. To the commissioning of the King James Bible, the republican victories of Oliver Cromwell, the many mistresses of Charles II and their laxative-laced attempts to embarrass one another. The gossip and feuds of Georgian aristocrats lead into the era of the Windsors when Hampton Court becomes the place to host Elizabeth II's coronation ball and hide the last Tsar's sister. Fascinating and engaging, The Palace is as atmospheric as it is gossipy and through the many sovereigns and servants that lived and worked in its halls reveals the personal tragedy and political importance of this extraordinary place.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 9, 2023
      Historian Russell (The Ship of Dreams) offers an entertaining chronicle of England’s Hampton Court Palace, the only Tudor palace still intact and open to the public. Ranging from King Henry VII’s reign to Elizabeth II’s, Russell details how events at the palace, which was occupied periodically by most British monarchs until the mid-18th century, had a significant impact on England and Wales under the Tudors, on Scotland under the Stuarts, and on Ireland under Oliver Cromwell. Beyond the administration of nations, the palace was also the site of shenanigans, trysts, hauntings, and poxes. Russell reports not only on royals’ behavior upstairs but also on the activities of scullery maids and messenger boys downstairs, and he considers the inhabitants in “grace and favor apartments,” including the last Romanov tsar’s sister, Xenia, who was moved deep in the palace’s bowels to protect her from Russian assassins after the revolution. In an especially moving chapter, Russell follows one of the palace’s oak trees, felled by order of George V after WWI for the coffin of the Unknown Warrior, who is buried in Westminster Abbey. Throughout, Russell’s turns of phrase add levity, as when he describes a songbird killed by “a peckish feline who preferred a meal to a melody.” This is a delight.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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