Queen Anne Boleyn (~1507-1536) failed to meet social norms during her time as Queen Consort to Henry VIII (1491-1548). By tracing concepts of queenship through the works of Chrétien de Troyes, Andreas Capellanus, Thomas Malory, and Juan Luis Vives this thesis demonstrates how Anne united the office of queen and mistress to bring her downfall and introduce a new construct of queenship
This thesis explores how queens in Shakespeare’s English history plays manipulate virtues, space, a...
The 1830s in France saw a revival of artistic interest in and representations of Anne Boleyn, the se...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...
This thesis focuses on issues of continuity and change in the evolution royal portraiture and examin...
Anne Boleyn (c. 1501 – 1536), the second wife of Henry VIII, was an influential and controversial fi...
This paper examines the role of queenship in the medieval and Early Modern era, and attempts to prov...
Between 1299 and 1369 there was a continuous succession of queen consorts and queen dowagers. Marga...
This thesis explores the development in the pictorial representation of four important French royal ...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots can be considered as the proto-feminist figures of ...
Elizabeth rarely spoke of her mother, and her feelings about her remain enigmatic. However there are...
Elizabeth Tudor succeeded to England\u27s throne during a time when misogynist societal ideology que...
This dissertation examines the literature of royal consorts in Stuart England. Critics and historian...
Much ink has been spilled in service of Henry VIII and his veritable parade of wives, but not nearly...
This thesis examines the power of the sober costume, or black, minimally ornamented dress, in portra...
This thesis explores how queens in Shakespeare’s English history plays manipulate virtues, space, a...
The 1830s in France saw a revival of artistic interest in and representations of Anne Boleyn, the se...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...
This thesis focuses on issues of continuity and change in the evolution royal portraiture and examin...
Anne Boleyn (c. 1501 – 1536), the second wife of Henry VIII, was an influential and controversial fi...
This paper examines the role of queenship in the medieval and Early Modern era, and attempts to prov...
Between 1299 and 1369 there was a continuous succession of queen consorts and queen dowagers. Marga...
This thesis explores the development in the pictorial representation of four important French royal ...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots can be considered as the proto-feminist figures of ...
Elizabeth rarely spoke of her mother, and her feelings about her remain enigmatic. However there are...
Elizabeth Tudor succeeded to England\u27s throne during a time when misogynist societal ideology que...
This dissertation examines the literature of royal consorts in Stuart England. Critics and historian...
Much ink has been spilled in service of Henry VIII and his veritable parade of wives, but not nearly...
This thesis examines the power of the sober costume, or black, minimally ornamented dress, in portra...
This thesis explores how queens in Shakespeare’s English history plays manipulate virtues, space, a...
The 1830s in France saw a revival of artistic interest in and representations of Anne Boleyn, the se...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...