Bookmark the site

Return to Homepage


US Shopping
UK Shopping



 










Books : Eleanor of Aquitaine: By the Wrath of God, Queen of England



Search Books - select a category

Buy Eleanor of Aquitaine: By the Wrath of God, Queen of England online at Discounted New and Used prices. Delivered to your door with Off-The-Bookshelf.
See Larger Image

Eleanor of Aquitaine: By the Wrath of God, Queen of England

by: Alison Weir

List Price: £8.99
Price: £4.99
You Save: £4.00 (44%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 942.031092
EAN: 9780712673174
ISBN: 0712673172
Label: Pimlico
Manufacturer: Pimlico
Number Of Pages: 464
Publication Date: September 01, 2005
Publisher: Pimlico
Studio: Pimlico
Sales Rank: 82269




Related Items: Browse for similar items by category:
Related Items:
Isabella: She-Wolf of France, Queen of England The Lancaster and York: Wars of the Roses Innocent Traitor Katherine Swynford The Princes in the Tower see more


Editorial Review:

Amazon.co.uk Review:
Combining the pace and descriptive quality of a novel with the authority of a text book, Alison Weir's study of the revered and reviled Eleanor of Aquitaine should be valuable to anyone with an interest in medieval European history. Wife of Louis VII of France and subsequently of Henry II of England and mother of Richard the Lionheart, Eleanor played a prominent part in the politics of the 12th century. The author of a number of other books on the medieval period, Alison Weir brings all the colour and ever-present dangers of Eleanor's world to life, filling the text with absorbing background detail and revelatory contemporary anecdotes. She is concerned throughout to make critical analysis of the primary sources, the later myths about Eleanor and other modern biographies. This results in a fresh and thoughtful perspective on the energetic 82 years of the life of a determined and ambitious woman living with the sexism, excesses and violence of a society in which the word of a single man could condemn thousands to be put to death. Eleanor of Aquitaine is a vivacious but scholarly book with extensive notes and references appended, giving an objective and rich account of the staunch Eleanor, her feuding family and her complex and unstable world. --Karen Tiley

Amazon.co.uk Review:
Combining the pace and descriptive quality of a novel with the authority of a text book, Alison Weir's study of the revered and reviled Eleanor of Aquitaine should be valuable to anyone with an interest in medieval European history. Wife of Louis VII of France and subsequently of Henry II of England and mother of Richard the Lionheart, Eleanor played a prominent part in the politics of the 12th century. The author of a number of other books on the medieval period, Alison Weir brings all the colour and ever-present dangers of Eleanor's world to life, filling the text with absorbing background detail and revelatory contemporary anecdotes. She is concerned throughout to make critical analysis of the primary sources, the later myths about Eleanor and other modern biographies. This results in a fresh and thoughtful perspective on the energetic 82 years of life of a determined and ambitious woman living with the sexism, excesses and violence of a society in which the word of a single man could condemn thousands to be put to death. Eleanor of Aquitaine is a vivacious but scholarly book with extensive notes and references appended, giving an objective and rich account of the staunch Eleanor, her feuding family and her complex and unstable world. --Karen Tiley



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - By the Wrath of God, Queen of England
Some of the most fascinating characters in history hail from the murkier depths of times lacking much documentary sources. Perhaps their interest comes from this patchwork of conflicting sources, or perhaps the temporal distance lends enchantment. It also presents a problem for the biographer, in that the lack of sources makes it difficult to write authoritatively on the subject. If the subject is a mystery then the book can't be much more than conjectures joined up with speculation.

Eleanor of Aquitaine occupies an odd place in such a time. As a ruler and heiress in her own right, and as queen of France and later England, her life is much more richly documented than most of her contemporaries. Her movements, lodgings, nutrition ... Read More:



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Conversations with Eleanor
This is one of very few books which gets my unreserved recommendation- it is brilliant! Weir fills out the few known facts about Eleanor with side-details from all aspects of twelfth life: political, cultural, social, religious, poetic, courtly, fiscal....and far from a dull list of events the facts bounce off each other to create an astonishingly dynamic and real image, with al the contradictions and idiosyncracies of a real person. Weirs book is more than a borrowing and accumulation of facts- the sum is more than the parts and given the parts are dramatic indeed the end result is an utter triumph of historical vision, clearly yet lyrically told.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - A waste of paper
How anyone can make Eleanor of Acquitaine dull and present her as conventional (by the standard of Eleanor's contemporaries) is beyond my understanding but Alison Weir succeeds. Worse her history is bad, her analysis weak and her prose turgid. I know she is popular but on the strength of this book it is really difficult to see why; I struggled to read it to the end.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Disappointing
I realise that there is very little source information available to biographers, but I was disappointed with this biography of Eleanor of Aquitaine. The information about the social and political background is interesting but there is more information about Eleanor's husbands and sons than there is about her, and a lot of the information that we do get is just itineraries, telling us where Eleanor was on a specific date.
I also think that the style is too subjective, with Alison Weir making assumptions that suit her story, and I also thought that it was unprofessional to mention one other biographer by name just for the sake of trying to discredit a different theory about Eleanor of Aquitaine's life.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - excellent biography
I didn't know very much about Eleanor apart from her being the mother of Richard I & John and so I really enjoyed this book. It's a good read if you're not familiar with this period as Weir takes the time to explain the cultural and political environment in which the story is taking place. I've studied medieval literature but not history and so this was an excellent 'filler' and interesting to see where myth and literature intersect with known or documented history.

Having said that, my gut feel is that the history is probably biased and clearly not objective. But I guess whether that's a problem or not depends on why you're reading the book: if it's for a 'historical' take then this probably isn't for you, or it should at least ... Read More:


 



Off The Bookshelf.co.uk gives you a unique shopping experience, you can find all the Books products you like within a few minutes online, locate the latest charting CD's, DVD's & Games, read Books reviews on the bestselling Books Books and Books products. All Books are available to buy Used (at a greater saving) or New (at a great discounted RRP). Add the Books items you would like to your shopping basket, pay securely online and we send these products to be delivered to your door. We take great pride in being able to offer you the great savings partnering with Amazon, offering you cheaper prices than the high street retailers, we have thousands of discounts on all the the Books's you can buy off the shelf and hope you find the website easy to use.

Thanks for visiting and browsing Off The Bookshelf.co.uk


 

In association with Amazon.co.uk
SME-WS
HolidayHavens - Holiday Rental Accommodation