This thesis explores Queen Elizabeth I’s and King James VI/I’s management of and involvement in noble marriages from 1558 to 1625 by merging two methodologies: an analysis of an extensive, custom-made database of 380 noble marriages with an examination of primary sources like state papers, personal correspondence, diaries, and ambassadorial reports. This study demonstrates that “noble-marriage management” was a single but efficient method for the implementation of many facets of early modern rule—this made it an important apparatus of the monarchical office and a significant conduit of power. Illuminated within this thesis are Queen Elizabeth’s and King James’s tactics for handling noble marital alliances which included participation and...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
After 1603 there was an outbreak of wedding fever at the English court, aptly summed up by John Cham...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This thesis explores Queen Elizabeth I’s and King James VI/I’s management of and involvement in nobl...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
Submission to the Friends of Fondren Library Research Awards, 2018.This paper was originally prepar...
That kings throughout the entire Middle Ages used the marriages of themselves and their children to ...
Dynastic marriages were an important tool of diplomacy utilised by monarchs throughout medieval and ...
Historically, the study of consorts has largely focused on how women performed the role – generally ...
This thesis explores the relationship between kinship networks and Elizabethan politics. Elizabeth I...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
Non-regnant queens played an integral role in maintaining amicable relations between rulers in the e...
The union of 1625 between Charles Stuart, the Protestant king of Great Britain, and Henrietta Maria,...
The thesis explores James Stuart\u27s distinct style of kingship as a self-proclaimed absolute monar...
The union of 1625 between Charles Stuart, the Protestant king of Great Britain, and Henrietta Maria,...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
After 1603 there was an outbreak of wedding fever at the English court, aptly summed up by John Cham...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This thesis explores Queen Elizabeth I’s and King James VI/I’s management of and involvement in nobl...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
Submission to the Friends of Fondren Library Research Awards, 2018.This paper was originally prepar...
That kings throughout the entire Middle Ages used the marriages of themselves and their children to ...
Dynastic marriages were an important tool of diplomacy utilised by monarchs throughout medieval and ...
Historically, the study of consorts has largely focused on how women performed the role – generally ...
This thesis explores the relationship between kinship networks and Elizabethan politics. Elizabeth I...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
Non-regnant queens played an integral role in maintaining amicable relations between rulers in the e...
The union of 1625 between Charles Stuart, the Protestant king of Great Britain, and Henrietta Maria,...
The thesis explores James Stuart\u27s distinct style of kingship as a self-proclaimed absolute monar...
The union of 1625 between Charles Stuart, the Protestant king of Great Britain, and Henrietta Maria,...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
After 1603 there was an outbreak of wedding fever at the English court, aptly summed up by John Cham...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...