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      • Trusted Partner
        August 2014

        Alexandra - die letzte Zarin

        by Gunna Wendt

        Sie war eine der mächtigsten Frauen der Welt: Alexandra Fjodorowna, die letzte Zarin. Bereits im Alter von 12 Jahren traf die gebürtige Prinzessin Alix von Hessen den russischen Thronfolger Nikolaus. Trotz großer Widerstände heiratete das Paar zehn Jahre später, und Alix wurde mit 23 Jahren Zarin von Russland. Von den kaiserlichen Verwandten ebenso wie von politischen Gegnern verachtet und verleumdet, wurde aus der schüchternen jungen Frau eine durchsetzungsfähige Herrscherin, die für ihre neue Heimat kämpfte. Doch die drohende Katastrophe konnte sie nicht verhindern … Gunna Wendt schildert das glanzvolle und dramatische Leben der Alexandra Fjdorowna. Sie erzählt von der starken Frau an der Seite des letzten Zaren, vom Kampf der liebevollen Mutter um das Leben ihres Sohnes, von der verhängnisvollen Freundschaft zu dem umstrittenen Wanderprediger und Wunderheiler Rasputin und von ihrem tragischen Ende während der Oktoberrevolution.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2014

        Alexandra – die letzte Zarin

        by Gunna Wendt

        Sie war eine der mächtigsten Frauen der Welt: Alexandra Fjodorowna, die letzte Zarin. Bereits im Alter von 12 Jahren traf die gebürtige Prinzessin Alix von Hessen den russischen Thronfolger Nikolaus. Trotz großer Widerstände heiratete das Paar zehn Jahre später, und Alix wurde mit 23 Jahren Zarin von Russland. Von den kaiserlichen Verwandten ebenso wie von politischen Gegnern verachtet und verleumdet, wurde aus der schüchternen jungen Frau eine durchsetzungsfähige Herrscherin, die für ihre neue Heimat kämpfte. Doch die drohende Katastrophe konnte sie nicht verhindern … Gunna Wendt schildert das glanzvolle und dramatische Leben der Alexandra Fjdorowna. Sie erzählt von der starken Frau an der Seite des letzten Zaren, vom Kampf der liebevollen Mutter um das Leben ihres Sohnes, von der verhängnisvollen Freundschaft zu dem umstrittenen Wanderprediger und Wunderheiler Rasputin und von ihrem tragischen Ende während der Oktoberrevolution.

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2002

        Leicester and the court

        Essays on Elizabethan politics

        by Simon Adams, Peter Lake, Anthony Milton, Jason Peacey, Alexandra Gajda

        Now back in print, this comprehensive collection of essays by Simon Adams brings to life the most enigmatic of Elizabethans--Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. Adams, famous for the unique depth and breadth of his research, has gathered here his most important essays looking at the Elizabethan Court, and the adventures and legacy of the Earl. Together with his edition of Leicester's accounts and his reconstruction of Leicester's papers, Adams has published much upon on Leicester's influence and activities. His work has reshaped our knowledge of Elizabeth and her Court, Parliament, and such subjects of recent debate as the power of the nobility and the noble affinity, the politics of faction and the role of patronage. Sixteen essays are found in this collection, organized into three groups: the Court, Leicester and his affinity, and Leicester and the regions. This volume will be essential reading for academics and students interested in the Elizabethan Court and in early modern British politics more generally. ;

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        September 2008

        Charitable hatred

        Tolerance and intolerance in England, 1500–1700

        by Alexandra Walsham, Peter Lake, Anthony Milton, Jason Peacey, Alexandra Gajda

        Charitable Hatred offers a challenging new perspective on religious tolerance and intolerance in early modern England. Setting aside traditional models charting a linear progress from persecution to toleration, it emphasises instead the complex interplay between these two impulses in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The book examines the intellectual assumptions that underpinned attitudes towards religious minorities and the institutional structures and legal mechanisms by which they were both repressed and accommodated. It also explores the social realities of prejudice and forbearance, hostility and harmony at the level of the neighbourhood and parish. Simultaneously, it surveys the range of ways in which dissenting churches and groups responded and adapted to official and popular intolerance, investigating how the experience of suffering helped to forge sectarian identities. In analysing the consequences of the advancing pluralism of English society in the wake of the Reformation, this study illuminates the cultural processes that shaped and complicated the conditions of coexistence before and after the Act of Toleration of 1689. ;

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        The Arts
        January 2013

        The face of the city

        Civic portraiture and civic identity in early modern England

        by Robert Tittler, Peter Lake, Anthony Milton, Jason Peacey, Alexandra Gajda

        Our conventional understanding of English portraiture from the age of Holbein and Henry VIII on to Reubens, VanDyck and Charles I clings to the mainstream images of royalty and aristocracy and to the succession of known practitioners of 'Renaissance' portraiture. In almost every respect, the 'civic' portraits examined here stand in sharp contrast to these traditional narratives. Depicting mayors and aldermen, livery company masters, school and college heads, they were meant to be read as statements about the civic leaders and civic institutions rather than about the sitters in their own right. Displayed in civic premises rather than country homes, exemplifying civic rather than personal virtues, and usually commissioned by institutions rather than their sitters, they have yet to be considered as a type of their own, or in their appropriate social and political context. This fascinating work will appeal to both art historians and historians of early modern Britain. ;

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2010

        Royalists and Royalism during the Interregnum

        by Jason McElligott, Peter Lake, David L. Smith, Anthony Milton, Jason Peacey, Alexandra Gajda

        What was it like to live under the English Republic and, later, Cromwell's Protectorate, if one supported the defeated Stuarts and yearned for the day when Charles II would once again set foot in England? This book tells the story of the traumatic decade of the 1650s (or, 'the Interregnum', from the Latin meaning 'between the reign of the kings') from the vantage point of those who lost the Civil Wars. It describes how these men and women negotiated the difficult choices they faced: to compromise, collaborate, or resist. It brings together essays by established and emerging historians and literary scholars in Britain, Europe, the United States and Australia. The essays sketch the difficulties, complexities, and nuances of the Royalist experience during the Commonwealth and Protectorate, looking at women, religion, print-culture, literature, the politics of exile, and the nature and extent of royalist networks in England. ;

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        September 2018

        Westminster 1640–60

        A royal city in a time of revolution

        by Peter Lake, J. F. Merritt, Anthony Milton, Jason Peacey, Alexandra Gajda

        This book examines the varied and fascinating ways that Westminster - traditionally home to the royal court, the fashionable West End and parliament - became the seat of the successive, non-monarchical regimes of the 1640s and 1650s. It first explores the town as the venue that helped to shape the breakdown of relations between the king and parliament in 1640-42. Subsequent chapters explore the role Westminster performed as both the ceremonial and administrative heart of shifting regimes, the hitherto unnoticed militarisation of local society through the 1640s and 1650s, and the fluctuating fortunes of the fashionable society of the West End in this revolutionary context. Analyses of religious life and patterns of local political allegiance and government unveil a complex and dynamic picture, in which the area not only witnessed major political and cultural change in these turbulent decades, but also the persistence of conservatism on the very doorstep of government.

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      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        April 2008

        Political passions

        Gender, the family and political argument in England, 1680–1714

        by Rachel Weil, Peter Lake, Anthony Milton, Jason Peacey, Alexandra Gajda

        Ideas about marriage, gender and the family were central to political debate in late Stuart England. Newly available in paperback, this book shows how political argument became an arena in which the proper relations between men and women, parents and children, public and private were defined and contested. Using sources that range from high political theory to scurrilous lampoons, she considers public debates about succession, resistance and divorce. Weil examines the allegedly fraudulent birth of the Prince of Wales in 1688, the uses to which Williamite propagandists put the image of the paradoxically sovereign but obedient Mary II, anxieties about the influence of bedchamber women on Queen Anne, the political self-image of the notorious Duchess of Marlborough, the relationship of feminism and Tory ideology in the polemical writings of Mary Astell and the scandal novels of Delariviere Manley. Solidly grounded in current historical scholarship, but written in an engaging manner accessible to non-specialists, this book will interest students of literature, gender studies, political culture and political theory as well as historians. ;

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