Part of the Penguin Monarchs series: short, fresh, expert accounts of
England's rulers in a collectible format
In the popular imagination, as in her portraits, Elizabeth I is the
image of monarchical power. The Virgin Queen ruled over a Golden Age:
the Spanish Armada was defeated; English explorers reached the ends of
the earth; a new Church of England rose from the ashes of past conflict;
the English Renaissance bloomed in the genius of Shakespeare, Spenser
and Sidney. But the image is also armour.
In this illuminating new account of Elizabeth's reign, Helen Castor
shows how England's iconic queen was shaped by profound and enduring
insecurity-an insecurity which was both a matter of practical political
reality and personal psychology. From her precarious upbringing at the
whim of a brutal, capricious father and her perilous accession after his
death, to the religious division that marred her state and the failure
to marry that threatened her line, Elizabeth lived under constant
threat. But, facing down her enemies with a compellingly inscrutable
public persona, the last and greatest of the Tudor monarchs would become
a timeless, fearless queen.