âGame-changing . . . How history should be written.â â Andrew Roberts, author of Napoleon: A Life
[An] ambitious re-examination of the intersection of gender and monarchy.â â New York Times Book Review
Queen Elizabeth I was all too happy to play on courtly conventions of gender when it suited her âweak and feeble womanâs bodyâ to do so for political gain. But in Elizabeth, historian Lisa Hilton offers ample evidence why those famous words should not be taken at face value. With new research out of France, Italy, Russia, and Turkey, Hiltonâs fresh interpretation is of a queen who saw herself primarily as a Renaissance princeâan expert in Machiavellian statecraft.
Elizabeth depicts a queen who was much less constrained by her femininity than most accounts claim, challenging readers to reassess Elizabethâs reign and the colorful drama and intrigue to which it is always linked. Itâs a fascinating journey that shows how a marginalized newly crowned queen, whose European contemporaries considered her to be the illegitimate ruler of a pariah nation, ultimately adapted to become Englandâs first recognizably modern head of state.
âHilton transforms an irreverent, centuries-old vision of a âbewigged farthingale with a mysterious sex lifeâ into a resolute, steel-spined survivor who far surpassed Henry VIIâs wildest hopes for his new dynasty.â â Publishers Weekly