Book Review: The Six Wives of Henry VIII by Alison Weir

March 11, 2011

About:

“The Six Wives of Henry VIII” by Alison Weir (Website) is a non-fiction book which tries to navigate through the maze which is known as the “Tudor History“. Ms. Weir tells the collective story of the six wives of Henry VIII – and no, he didn’t had them all executed.

  • 656 pages
  • Publisher: Grove Press
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9780802136831

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Thoughts:

“The Six Wives of Henry VIII” by Alison Weir is the fascinating history and chronology of the court of Henry VIII, his love life and court intrigue. No wonder Showtime is doing a show about the Tudors; no fiction writer could make this up. This book helps understand the dilemmas Henry VIII was under, dispel myths about him (and royalty) and creates some new ones.

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Ms. Weir does a fantastic job of bringing historical figures to life, telling us about the engaging women behind the names with intelligence and zest. The author is careful to distinguish between fact and fiction, and even more careful to inform the reader about “educated guesses”. I love the fact that Ms. Weir has included excerpts from letters written by, to, or about the women (they were not all crowned queens as I found out).

The writing style is easy to read and fluid, the facts which Ms. Weir presents are facilitating, colorful and unlocks their complex lives from centuries ago.

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I’ve learned a lot from reading this wonderful book.
The penultimate battle of the War of the Roses was the Battle of Bosworth, in which Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond became king when Richard III died in battle. That also makes him the last English monarch, to date, to get his crown on the battlefield – making him King Henry VII. Henry VII’s crown was disputed, by extension so was the crown of his son, Henry VIII who needed a son to pass on the crown and avoid a possible civil war – hence the wives.

Synopsis:

The book is divided into three parts.

Part I: Katherine of Aragon -A Spanish princes, daughter of Isabella and Ferdinand, was actually wed to Henry’s brother who died before consummating the marriage (that was Henry’s reasoning for divorcing her later on). Katherine and Henry were married for 24 years, while being a loving and devoted wife Katherine failed to give Henry a male heir (they had one daughter Mary I aka “Bloody” Mary). To her dying breath Katherine, a devout woman, maintained that she never had relations with Henry’s brother and requested to be called “Queen” regardless of the many indignities she suffered.

Part II: The ‘great matter’ -This part is devoted to Anne Boleyn who had so many stories told about her over the years it is difficult to figure out which ones are actually true and which ones are not. Henry’s desire to break his marriage to Katherine and marry Anne eventually led to the break with the Catholic Church. Anne was not a discreet person which allow her political enemies to plant traps which eventually led to her execution – not before giving Henry another daughter, Elizabeth I.

Part III: How many wives will he have?Jane Seymour (no, not that one), Henry’s third wife finally gave him a son Edward VI, however she died shortly after child birth. Anne of Cleves, a German princess, was wed to Henry but they were divorced quickly (6 months or so). Appreciative of Anne’s quite compliance Henry provided Anne with money, property and a title. Katherine Howard was a young girl and Henry’s next wife, however she was sexually promiscuous. Henry was shattered and insulted by her cheating and beheaded Katherine before she reached her 17th birthday. Henry’s sixth wife was Katherine Parr who served more as a nurse to the elderly king, whose health was failing.

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Wrap Up

The Six Wives of Henry VIII by Alison Weir

The Six Wives Of Henry VIII By Alison Weir

7 Comments

  • 435f962557b8092e52fe43d50a0d00d9ea1b186fa5d8a16a167a5ccff3a966a3
    AshleyMarch 12, 2011 at 2:15 am

    I read this one a while ago and was very impressed with how accessible the writing was. For such a long book, Weir does an admirable job keeping the attention of the reader and making the history interesting and engaging.

  • Db037850f88b9d2e5eb9085100402a702e00b2f23d64bc311b3092fcb7aa9a35
    SamMarch 12, 2011 at 4:49 pm

    I liked this one when I read it, but I much preferred Antonia Fraser’s one on the same topic.

  • 9bffe34f916dd672df8f4378c7b897ceb7d56e7f9ad76ec145ea02ff8740f32c
    bookmagicMarch 13, 2011 at 7:39 pm

    I love Tudor history. One of my favorite books is Wolf Hall. I will keep this one in mind. Great review!

  • 6c409eb849f6888a6d39b621f04512c22a46d1005305c528e5d430835a773f59
    Julie @ Knitting and SundriesMarch 14, 2011 at 1:08 pm

    I have a love of historical fiction, especially during Tudor times. This looks like one that should be on my shelf in order to give my fiction reading some solid background to rest on. Thanks for the review!

  • Acde932a1969dfe4d446365964b4d376620fdb957eec1b3d9a9c48a959116e98
    PamMarch 16, 2011 at 4:43 pm

    I loved Weir’s history of Elizabeth I. I agree that she has a very easy-to-read writing style that didn’t bog you down in dry history. I ate The Tudors show alive (LOVED IT!), especially after reading through Phillippa Gregory’s entire repertoire. Might have to add this to the list on my nonfiction site!

  • 416f6300e67e393be9e1d22df43b6ce498993fa22ef2b5efe8c49225254fde90
    Notorious SpinksMarch 21, 2011 at 10:27 pm

    I’ll have to check this out. I love historical fiction.

  • 1f91aa6f5f706e3a883a19f3310d719268c2f1a9e3e4ab5b09f479145fdbe39b
    LisaJuly 29, 2013 at 7:36 pm

    Thanks for steering me to this! It does sound interesting and helpful in sorting out who’s who. I’ll definitely be looking to pick it up.

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