This chapter analyses how the Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, Beatrice d’Aragona (1457–1508), negotiated her shifting marital status and identity in central Europe and southern Italy. She was twice married—the first marriage resulting in widowhood, and the second in exile—with her entire adulthood spent as an outsider in Hungary, or on the edge of courtly Naples. A close analysis of Beatrice’s exile shows that women could survive widowhood using natal networks, since, though their marital identities changed, their status as sister, daughter, and aunt did not. This chapter contributes to the literature on early modern European kinship networks by demonstrating that the presence of these networks protected women in difficult marital situations,...
In 1325, Isabella of France, Queen of England (1308-1358), raised an army and with her lover rose ...
Historically, the study of consorts has largely focused on how women performed the role – generally ...
This research project will explore interpersonal relationships in early modern Scotland. The early m...
This book explores the diplomatic role of women in early modern European dynastic networks through t...
As a widow,Margaret of Burgundy (1374-1441), former Countess of Hainault, Holland, andZeeland, owned...
Among the propertied classes of the late Middle Ages, widows and widowers tended to remarry promptly...
The study examines the social practices and cultural attitudes concerning kin-marriages of both the ...
My thesis approaches sixteenth-century European queenship through an analysis of the ceremonies and ...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
In 1217, Isabella of Angoulême, mother of the boy-king Henry III and his four younger siblings, left...
Dynastic marriage in the Europe of the ancien régime is built upon the assumption that a high-born w...
Research into twelfth-century English women has largely focused on royal and comital society and thr...
This thesis explores how Eleonora (1450-1493) and Beatrice d’Aragona (1457-1508), daughters of king ...
Widows as individuals and as a social group held fundamental importance to both the family and civic...
My study focuses on widowhood as emblematic of the dynamics of social conformity in early modern Eng...
In 1325, Isabella of France, Queen of England (1308-1358), raised an army and with her lover rose ...
Historically, the study of consorts has largely focused on how women performed the role – generally ...
This research project will explore interpersonal relationships in early modern Scotland. The early m...
This book explores the diplomatic role of women in early modern European dynastic networks through t...
As a widow,Margaret of Burgundy (1374-1441), former Countess of Hainault, Holland, andZeeland, owned...
Among the propertied classes of the late Middle Ages, widows and widowers tended to remarry promptly...
The study examines the social practices and cultural attitudes concerning kin-marriages of both the ...
My thesis approaches sixteenth-century European queenship through an analysis of the ceremonies and ...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
In 1217, Isabella of Angoulême, mother of the boy-king Henry III and his four younger siblings, left...
Dynastic marriage in the Europe of the ancien régime is built upon the assumption that a high-born w...
Research into twelfth-century English women has largely focused on royal and comital society and thr...
This thesis explores how Eleonora (1450-1493) and Beatrice d’Aragona (1457-1508), daughters of king ...
Widows as individuals and as a social group held fundamental importance to both the family and civic...
My study focuses on widowhood as emblematic of the dynamics of social conformity in early modern Eng...
In 1325, Isabella of France, Queen of England (1308-1358), raised an army and with her lover rose ...
Historically, the study of consorts has largely focused on how women performed the role – generally ...
This research project will explore interpersonal relationships in early modern Scotland. The early m...