Series: Book 1 in the Novels series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Historical, Lang:en
Summary
Eleanor of Aquitaine was a remarkable
woman. She was an important factor in the reign of four kings,
lived to the ripe old age of 82, bore 10 children and outlived
all but two of them. Her sons were kings of England and her
daughters queens of Castile and Sicily, while her later
descendants included a Holy Roman emperor and kings of France
and Spain, as well as a couple of saints. In an age of men, she
was indeed a powerful woman. Born in 1122 into the
sophisticated and cultured court of Poitiers, Eleanor of
Aquitaine came of age in a world of luxury, bloody combat, and
unbridled ambition. At only fifteen, she inherited one of the
great fortunes of Europe - the prize duchy of Aquitaine - yet
was forced to submit to a union with the handsome but sexually
withholding Louis VII, the teenage king of France. The marriage
endured for fifteen fraught years, until Eleanor finally
succeeded in having it annulled - only to enter an even
stormier match with Henry of Anjou, who would soon ascend to
the English throne as Henry II. With astonishing historic
detail, mesmerizing pageantry, and irresistible accounts of
royal scandal and intrigue, Weir re-creates not only a
remarkable personality, but a magnificent past era. As Weir
traces the fascinating intersection of public and private lives
in Europe's twelfth-century courts, Eleanor comes to life as a
complex, boldly original woman who transcended the mores of
society. Later, after sixteen years of imprisonment for
plotting to overthrow Henry, the humbled Queen emerged, at age
sixty-seven, to rule England.