Elizabeth I

Abigail Archer

Sarah Nichols (Narrator)

03-21-17

3hrs 41min

Abridgement

Unabridged

Genre

Nonfiction/Biography & Autobiography

As low as $0.00
Play Audio Sample

03-21-17

3hrs 41min

Abridgement

Unabridged

Genre

Nonfiction/Biography & Autobiography

Description

England’s first Queen Elizabeth gave her name to an age.

Inheriting a bankrupt, famished, and powerless country, she healed its religious rifts, replenished its treasury, redefined diplomatic guile, defeated the Spanish Armada, and inspired a new flowering of English culture.

Her father, Henry VIII, beheaded her mother, Anne Boleyn, and Elizabeth was declared a bastard. As Henry kept marrying and discarding wives, she had to be adroit and canny to avoid being snared in the schemes of courtiers plotting to win the crown. And when at last she ascended the throne, her councilors told her she could survive only by marrying.

But she reigned for forty-four years as Glorianna, the “Virgin Queen,” whose wit, evasions, and towering intellect frustrated enemies both within and outside her island kingdom. The more we know about Elizabeth’s endless complexity, the more remains to be learned. Here’s a beginning.

Details
More Information
Language English
Release Day Mar 20, 2017
Release Date March 21, 2017
Release Date Machine 1490054400
Imprint Blackstone Publishing
Provider Blackstone Publishing
Categories Biographies & Memoirs, Politics & Activism, Entertainment & Celebrities, Nonfiction - Adult, Nonfiction - All
Author Bio
Abigail Archer

Abigail Archer is the author of Elizabeth I, Henry VIII, and The Crusades.

Narrator Bio

Overview

England’s first Queen Elizabeth gave her name to an age.

Inheriting a bankrupt, famished, and powerless country, she healed its religious rifts, replenished its treasury, redefined diplomatic guile, defeated the Spanish Armada, and inspired a new flowering of English culture.

Her father, Henry VIII, beheaded her mother, Anne Boleyn, and Elizabeth was declared a bastard. As Henry kept marrying and discarding wives, she had to be adroit and canny to avoid being snared in the schemes of courtiers plotting to win the crown. And when at last she ascended the throne, her councilors told her she could survive only by marrying.

But she reigned for forty-four years as Glorianna, the “Virgin Queen,” whose wit, evasions, and towering intellect frustrated enemies both within and outside her island kingdom. The more we know about Elizabeth’s endless complexity, the more remains to be learned. Here’s a beginning.

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