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Read New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule Of The Tudors, 1485-1603 (2002)

New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors, 1485-1603 (2002)

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Rating
3.54 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0142001252 (ISBN13: 9780142001257)
Language
English
Publisher
penguin books

New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule Of The Tudors, 1485-1603 (2002) - Plot & Excerpts

Pretty uneven- the sections on Ireland were almost impossible to follow, and there was far too much about the endless, pointless court 'politics' of the Tudors. Do you really care to read functional history about Elizabeth's favorites? That stuff's best left to HBO. When Brigden writes about everyday life and religious strife, the book's much more interesting. When she writes about the structures of government at the time, it's not interesting in the same way but I can see those sections as an important part of understanding the times. She refers every now and then to the causes behind the Great Men and Women's actions (population rates, agricultural/ economic history, and so on) but never discusses them at any length. I'm also very confused, because although it's only 360 odd pages long, it feels like a 500 page book. Part of this is that it's just not a great read; but the pages also seem wide. Not much in the way of margins, either. Is this a cost-cutting measure? In any case, it took me forever to read.

I think of this book as my penance for enjoying all the naughty bits in HBO's the Tudors. The book is amazingly dense; I was not surprised to learn that the book is sometimes assigned for college history courses. The author does a great job of creating a conceptual framework of key concepts - the nobility, the English Reformation, how the judicial system evolved, landholding, power of the commons, the contrast of Ireland and Scotland - upon which to hang all the hundreds and hundreds of characters, dates, and historical events that made up the rule of the Tudors 1485-1603. It's a tough penance but I no longer feel guilty about watching the Tudors - the series proves to be quite accurate about all the pivotal changes that Henry VIII brought about.

What do You think about New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule Of The Tudors, 1485-1603 (2002)?

At school, my children have studied the Tudors in Year 1, Year 3, Year 6 and Year 9 and, looking ahead, they will probably turn up in years 11, 12 and 13 too - and that's not to mention Shakespeare in English, The Tudors on TV, Wolf Hall on stage and screen, and hundreds of other books, plays, films, series and shows. In an age of historical ignorance, we are left with 1066, Elizabeth, bluff King Hal and his wives and, er, that's about it. But the problem with all of this is its bittiness - we get parts, rather than the whole. Susan Brigden's book is a wonderful corrective to this, providing an overview of the whole period, from the grey penury of Henry VII through to the dog days of Elizabeth's reign. In fact, I'd say this is the best one volume history of the Tudors that I've read. Brigden is particularly good on the religious upheavals that made the Tudor era the definitive break between medieval and modern eras, and the revolution in world views that brought about and was caused by these changes.
—Edoardo Albert

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