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Queen Isabella by Alison Weir
Queen Isabella by Alison Weir












Queen Isabella by Alison Weir Queen Isabella by Alison Weir

I've read several of Alison Weir's works and I think she suffers from not having had a full education in history, personally she approaches things from a fresh perspective but she isn't always adding to the discussion because she hasn't read the beginnings of it, if you know what I mean. I read this book last year and I definitely felt the spin the problem is we know very little and it's hard to disprove anything as unlikely as it seems. We're trying to get away from this now, but as we're all human it's quite difficult this sort of thing is especially tricky because we know so little about Isabella that it's very easy to balance the information one way or the other. I've found her to have some bias, but almost all historians do and some, particularly Victorian ones, will twist the facts at will to suit their particular hypothesis. If you’re a newcomer to the history and politics of early-14th century England, I wouldn’t recommend this, however. Weir certainly has a way with words, and she’s very good about bringing historical figures to life on the page. All that’s really known about Isabella’s day-to-day life comes from her book of household accounts, and Weir continually tries to make presumptions about how the queen “might” have felt or “perhaps” have thought.Īll that said, however, I enjoyed the detail that Weir goes into in telling what little is known about Isabella’s life. It’s almost as though the author went into the research and writing of this book thinking, “I’m going to vindicate Isabella.” This is a work of popular history, and as such, I feel that Weir could have been more impartial in her assessment of Isabella’s story. Weir even goes so far as to blame Edward entirely for the breakdown of the royal marriage and for Isabella’s changed demeanor during it. My major problem with this book is Weir’s extreme bias in favor of Isabella. It’s actually a composite of things: a biography of Isabella’s most intimate household moments, drawn from her extensive household account books (want to know what was used as toilet paper in the English royal household? It’s in there), as well as an account of her relationship with her husband, his favorites, and her lover, Roger Mortimer.

Queen Isabella by Alison Weir Queen Isabella by Alison Weir

Queen Isabella: Treachery, Adultery, and Murder in Medieval England is a biography of the wife of Edward II.














Queen Isabella by Alison Weir