Upcoming books and exhibitions

Just a couple of books to mention this time –

Claire Ridgway of The Anne Boleyn Files has released her second book, The Fall of Anne Boleyn: A Countdown. US and UK Amazon Kindle editions linked below:

And probably one of the most eagerly-anticipated historical fiction books this year, Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel is out on May 8 and May 10 in the US and UK respectively.

And here are a couple of videos of Hilary Mantel speaking about the book and Anne Boleyn:

Exhibitions

Royal Devotion: Monarchy and the Book of Common Prayer

This exhibit will be at the Lambeth Palace Library from May 1 to July 14. Below are a couple of recent news articles:

* Royalty

Picture of the Week #173

Greenwich, England. Photo May 2003.

Today was a big day for the Royal Borough of Greenwich with HM The Queen re-opening the Cutty Sark and the Royal River exhibition at the National Maritime Museum. The pre-fire and pre-restoration Cutty Sark is at the left of this photo. St. Alfege Church in the center is the 18th century replacement of the medieval church that collapsed in 1710. It was the site for the baptism of Henry VIII and the burial place of composer Thomas Tallis.

Will in My World


Shakespeare’s Birthplace, Stratford-upon-Avon. Photo by me in May 1998.

When I sat down to write my Happy Birthday Shakespeare post I realized that I have a hard time putting into words the impact that Shakespeare has had on my life. I have been an Anglophile pretty much my whole life and became obsessed with the Tudors in junior high school, so becoming a fan of Shakespeare was just natural.

Like many people, my first exposure to reading Shakespeare was in school, and I have to admit that I didn’t like it very much. Seeing movies based on the plays (the Burton & Taylor Taming of the Shrew being an early favorite) gave me an appreciation the textbooks couldn’t. Then, my senior year, my English teacher had us read Macbeth and Hamlet aloud. Even with high school students in Texas reading the plays, I finally got it: these words weren’t meant to be silently read at a desk, they were meant to be sounded out so that the rhythm and poetry of the words came through.

Since then I’ve had the opportunity to see plays performed live, from Hamlet at the Globe in London to Hamlet done by a 6-person cast in an old opera house on a small island off the coast of Maine, have visited the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington DC several times, done a Shakespeare London Walk and visited Stratford-upon-Avon and the Shakespeare Birthplace on my first visit to England in 1998.

Parallel with my interest in British History from an early age was my love of astronomy and science fiction, and there is a relationship to Shakespeare there too – from a Bard-quoting Klingon in Star Trek VI (subtitled The Undiscovered Country – from Hamlet) to the myriad of astronomical references in the plays. When we studied Julius Caesar in 10th grade we had to memorize some number of lines and I of course chose a section with an astronomy reference:

…But I am constant as the northern star,
Of whose true-fix’d and resting quality
There is no fellow in the firmament.
The skies are painted with unnumber’d sparks,
They are all fire and every one doth shine,
But there’s but one in all doth hold his place…

(My favorite line from the play though, comes from Act I: “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves…”)

I guess the point of all this rambling is that Shakespeare has long been a part of my life, and in ways that I wouldn’t have necessarily expected. And that’s part of the true genius of Shakespeare.

Sunday Short Takes

* The Google Art Project (which I first mentioned back in February 2011) has expanded and now includes over 150 collections from 40 countries.

* Summer was the most dangerous time for TudorsFatal accidents were much more likely to take place during the agricultural peak season, a study of 16th Century coroner reports has revealed. (Related articles from last year based on the same research by Steven Gunn.)

* Audacious Magazine Call For Submissions – A new magazine is looking for submissions for their issue on Henry VIII

And finally, a couple of interesting video stories from the BBC:

* Sudeley Castle to host lectures on Henry VIII’s wife Katherine Parr

* A tour of the Mary Rose’s artefacts

Upcoming books, talks and exhibitions

Updates to previous books that are already out in the UK – Suzannah Lipscomb‘s A Visitor’s Companion to Tudor England will be out in hardback in the US on April 24th. It’s already available on Kindle in the US (and it’s already in my hands thanks to Suzannah and her publisher – review coming after I finish Winter King!). That same day A.N. Wilson’s The Elizabethans is due out in the US in hardback and Kindle.

Another title in Macmillan’s Queenship and Power series (click the link for all of the titles in the series) – Retha Warnicke’s Wicked Women of Tudor England is due on April 10 in the US and UK:

Just in time for Shakespeare birthday celebration time, I, Iago by Nicole Galland, a novel based on the famous character from Othello, is due out on April 24th in the US and UK:

Alison Weir will be giving a talk about her upcoming book A Dangerous Inheritance at the Mary Rose Museum on April 4th. Although the book isn’t due out for a few months, they will have copies on hand for her to sign. More details at the Mary Rose Museum website.

Exhibitions

Sudeley Castle is celebrating the 500th anniversary of the birth of Katherine Parr for the next six months, starting April 1st when they open for the 2012 season. They also announced last week that the Duchess of Cornwall will be patron for the celebrations. Click on the logo for more information:

And finally:

The National Maritime Museum in Greenwich will be presenting – Royal River: Power, Pageantry and the Thames an exhibition that will run from April 27, 2012 to September 9, 2012.

Sunday Short Takes

Short round-up this week. I’m sure there was stuff I missed during my crazy busy week!

* Peterborough Cathedral’s Spanish queenThe connection between Peterborough Cathedral and Henry VIII’s Spanish queen is little known outside the city.

* Cranmer’s Ambiguous Legacy – Archive article from History Today posted for the anniversary of Cranmer’s execution last week

* Tudor England beckons debut author – Nice profile of Nancy Bilyeau and her first book The Crown (which I read and thoroughly enjoyed and will eventually write a review of… hopefully before the sequel comes out!)

And finally, a video guide to Kenilworth Castle by Dan Snow. Somehow I missed this when it was posted back in September!

Sunday Short Takes

A few stories from the always-fascinating wreck of the Mary Rose:

* Mary Rose skeletons studied by Swansea sports scientists

* Acid damage is latest battle for the warship Mary Rose

And the latest History Extra podcast from BBC History Magazine features Suzannah Lipscomb talking about Tudor courtiers and Kate Hay talking about the Great Bed of Ware. Be sure to check out the related slide shows:

* The Vyne, Hampshire

* The Great Bed of Ware

Help edit the Devonshire Manuscript!

I received an email about this interesting project – using the Wiki platform to create a group-edited critical edition of a 16th century manuscript.

The Devonshire Manuscript is a verse miscellany from the 1530s to the early 1540s and contains works by Sir Thomas Wyatt, Henry Howard Earl of Surrey, as well as several items attributed to women writers, such as Lady Margaret Douglas (later Countess of Lennox) and Mary Howard Fitzroy (wife and then widow of Henry VIII’s illegitimate son Henry Fitzroy Duke of Richmond and Somerset). Previous work on the manuscript has concentrated on Wyatt’s poems but this one seeks to incorporate the whole work and place it into its broader context.

If you’re interested in helping out with the project (or just reading and following its progress) check it out at Wikibooks – The Devonshire Manuscript

Picture of the Week #167

Glastonbury Abbey. Photo May 1998.

I was looking back through the photos I have for the Picture of the Week and realized that I haven’t used one of Glastonbury since March 2009, so I thought it was time for another. As I mentioned before, Glastonbury was dissolved in 1539 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII.

Seventh blogiversary today!

I know it’s silly to keep marking these anniversaries but I just can’t help it. 🙂

On March 14, 2005 I took the plunge into the blogging world and replaced the old “What’s New” and “Tudor News and Events” page with a proper blog.

On a related note, I was looking back over some old records for a project I’m assisting on and was trying to figure out what date to use as the anniversary for the site as a whole. Some parts of the site actually date back to 1995 when it was part of my personal homepage for a while before it split off into what it is now. So I have mostly settled on July 1, 1997 since that was when I moved everything over to a dedicated for-pay webhost with it’s own URL (I bought the domain name three years later). So, I guess that means that I’ll be reaching 15 years this summer!

Eastbury Manor House

A while back I received an email from Eastbury Manor House about their upcoming events and looked into the property some more since I wasn’t familiar with it. Eastbury was built during the reign of Elizabeth I and is owned by the National Trust and managed by the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham, where it is located.

This summer they will have a special Tudor tie-in event to the Olympics:

Saturday 7 July Tudor Olympics!
Indulge in some Tudor games. Meet Amy barn Owl, Tink the hawk and have your picture taken for a pound with birds of prey. There will be the opportunity to stroke these birds and find out more but there will not be a flying display. Get ready for some action and meet two Tudor archers in camp. Have a go at archery all day, suitable for 5+ with demonstrations at 11.30 and 1.30 if you are brave enough. There will be Children craft activities.

You can find more information about the property at: National Trust: Eastbury Manor House and London Borough of Barking and Dagenham – Eastbury Manor House: A magnificent Tudor survival

Sunday Short Takes

Relatively short round-up this week:

* Portrait of Margaret Beaufort, mother and grandmother of kings, is unveiledHistorian David Starkey shows painting of ‘the most powerful woman in Tudor England’ at Hever Castle

* One That Got Away – Interesting story of a manuscript made for Henry VIII from the British Library manuscripts blog

* Time of the Tudors, 1485-1603 – From the People’s Collection Wales

* Experts confirm 16th century letter was written by Mary Queen of ScotsA MYSTERY letter unearthed in Blair Castle in Ayrshire has been confirmed as being written by Mary Queen of Scots. The letter, valued at