Eleanor of Aquitaine

  • USA 2014 (Pegasus); England, 1978 (David & Charles); 2001 (Penguin); 2013 (Thistle Publishing paperback and e-book)
  • USA, 1978 (The New York Times Book Company): 1980 (Dorset Press): 1985 (Marlborough)
  • 2016, Indonesian, Tiga Serangkai

Description

Dominating her own, twelfth, century, famous for her beauty and generosity Eleanor of Aquitaine was queen to Louis VII of France and then Henry II of England. Worshipped by troubadors, she had an uneasy relationship with her husbands, scheming against King Henry, who then kept her in prison for fifteen years. Emerging at his death to become regent for her son Richard I, she ordered the release of prisoners throughout England, announcing, ‘From my own experience, prisons are hateful to men and being released from them is a most delightful refreshment to the spirit.’ She also patronized the great abbey of nuns at Fontevrault, as a refuge for battered wives of brutal. Today her glamour, her patronage of the poets and her throwing off the constraints which shackled the women of her day are almost forgotten, as her gifts as politician and ruler. This book reconciles the paradoxes in the formidable personality of ‘a monstrous injurer of heaven and earth’, who was loved and admired by so many.

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Reviews of: Eleanor of Aquitaine

  • Well told … brisk, workmanlike.

    Daily Telegraph