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Vor diesem derben Hintergrund heben sich Elizabeths Intelligenz und gewaltiges politisches Geschick deutlich ab. Sie war vielleicht autokratisch, hinterhältig, sogar betrügerisch -- aber diese Eigenschaften waren notwendig, um 45 Jahre lang einen Balanceakt zwischen den zwei Großmächten Europas, Frankreich und Spanien, zu vollführen. Beide Länder waren darauf erpicht, das kleine, schwache England zu unterwerfen und seine unbequeme und unabhängige Königin sicher unter die Haube zu bringen. Die Autorin hebt Elizabeths schwierige Stellung als herrschende Frau in einer Männerwelt hervor. Sie legt plausibel dar, daß ein Leben ohne Mann für jemanden, der miterlebt hat, wie viele ehrgeizige Damen -- darunter ihre eigene Mutter -- aufgrund auch nur eines Anzeichens sexueller Indiskretion hingerichtet worden waren, nicht nur einen Reiz hatte, sondern auch politisch zweckdienlich war.
Alison Weirs Einschätzung von Schlüsselfiguren der Regentschaft Elizabeths, wie zum Beispiel des Earl of Leicester (wohl der einzige Mann, den sie je liebte) oder William Cecil (ihr treuester Berater), sind nicht nur überzeugend, sie berücksichtigen auch die psychologische Komplexität. Alison Weir ist es gelungen, diese immer noch aktuelle Geschichte für eine neue Generation nachzuerzählen. --Wendy Smith -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.
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The problem is, I really liked the book. Really. Sure, this is a popular treatment of Elizabeth I's life, but what does that mean? It means that Weir occasionally glosses over complexities and that her prose is jargon free. She doesn't enter any spiral-of-doom of arcane theory, and she seems to have a good time romping around the Renaissance. I couldn't put the darn book down.
Perhaps what shows the honesty of this book is an admission Weir makes herself: she set out to show Elizabeth I's private life, and found she could not. No reader should miss that this is a world in which the very concept of a private life has yet to be articulated in any way familiar to us. Weir didn't come up empty (as she seems to think); she enables us, through her presentation, to realize the ways in which privacy in the Renaissance *isn't*. Weir searched for the inner Elizabeth and didn't find her, making us wonder about the entire issue of interiority.
I wanted more, of course, more subtlety, more arcane documents, a more clearly articulated point-of-view (and less psychoanalysis, though there isn't much). But this book is sound -- and it's not to be condescended to. I dare attach my name to that.
These words by the Queen's Secretary of State describe the enigma that Alison Weir explores and attempts to resolve in this magnificent biography. In the case of such a complex personality as Elizabeth's, no one can expect to find the final answers, but Weir presents the alternative explanations clearly and forcefully.
Scholarly without being pompous, readable without writing down to the reader, informative without losing the human element in a welter of detail, The Life of Elizabeth is a one-of-a-kind biography. The book leaves unexplained why Elizabeth never married, why she surrounded herself with young, handsome male admirers yet very likely never consummated a relationship with any of them, and why this ruler of a small country - with fewer residents than present day Toronto or Miami - became adored by her subjects, admired by a host of foreign rulers, and amazingly successful in both reigning and ruling for forty-five long years.
The unexplained is no fault of Weir's. She shows her competence and talent in this sympathetic description of an amazingly convoluted personality. Elizabeth was a woman of strong personal courage, superior intelligence, and superb diplomatic skills, along with being a consummate actress. Extraordinarily independent of mind, she nevertheless surrounded herself with, and gave ear to, wise counselors.
Even her flaws she used to advantage. Terribly fearful of marriage, for whatever reason, she yet dangled the possibility of matrimony before reigning monarchs and her many slavish courtiers alike - always to England's benefit. Surprisingly tolerant and humane by the standards of her age, Elizabeth could wreak terrible vengeance on those who threatened her throne. She was truly a passionate woman but, as Weir states, "When it came to a decision, she compelled her head to rule her heart."
Elizabeth's long and stormy relationship with Robert Dudley dominates the first part of the book. Her years of rivalry with Mary Queen of Scots fills much of the middle portion. And, finally, the book ends with the meteoric rise and equally rapid downfall of Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex. While the historic events of Elizabeth's long rule - world exploration, the Armada, the literary triumphs of Marlowe, Shakespeare and others - are recognized, the emphasis throughout The Life of Elizabeth is the Queen herself and those with whom she dealt on a day-to-day basis.
Granted that good fortune smiled upon this Queen, that a "Protestant" wind scattered Catholic Spain's Armada, that the powerful nations of Europe were too busy squabbling among themselves to give much attention to half of a small island off the coast of France, and that the worst of the religious turbulence of Henry VIII's rule had finally subsided - Good Queen Bess was still in large measure responsible for the stable, orderly government that characterized her forty-five year reign and that made possible the glory that was England. We owe much to Alison Weir for having so well described this woman who was "more than a man."
John A. Broussard, PhD for The Charlotte Austin Review
If the reader is seeking more general and comprehensive coverage of the Elizabethan Period of English History and the momentous battles and triumphs, both political and military, of the time, then the reader should seek elsewhere.
If one is interested in Elizabeth herself and her relationship to her court, buy this book.
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