ISBN: PB: 9780300170887

Yale University Press

February 2011

432 pp.

23,2x15,4 cm

16 black&white illus.

PB:
£19.99
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Categories:

Burghley

William Cecil at the Court of Elizabeth I

William Cecil, Lord Burghley (1520-1598) was Elizabeth I's closest adviser and, as this revealing and provocative biography shows, the driving force behind the Queen's reign for four decades. Cecil, the steadfast rock of Elizabeth's government, had a deep and personal impact on the development of the English state. A committed Protestant, he guided the domestic and foreign affairs of the nation with the confidence of his religious conviction. Believing himself to be the divinely-instigated protector of his monarch, he felt able to disobey her direct commands. He was uncompromising, obsessive, supremely self-assured – a cunning politician as well as a consummate servant. This comprehensive biography gives proper weight to Cecil's formative years, his subtle navigation of the reigns of Edward VI and Mary I, his lifelong enmity with Mary Queen of Scots, and his obsession with family dynasty. It also provides a fresh account of Elizabeth I and her reign, uncovering limitations and concerns about invasion, succession and conspiracy. Intimate, authoritative, and enormously readable, this book will redefine our understanding of the Elizabethan period.

About the author

Stephen Alford was educated at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, and is Fellow in History at King's College, Cambridge. He is the author of "Kingship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI" (2002) and "The Early Elizabethan Polity" (1998).

Reviews

"An excellent biography... Alford writes with clarity and pace... and offers a wonderfully rich description of Lord Burghley's material world: the maps and plans decorating his walls, the mutton and quails and calves' feet that streamed out of his kitchens, and the busts of the Emperor Charles V and Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent that watched over the courtyard of Burghley House" – J. P. D. Cooper, Times Literary Supplement

"Alford has the biographer's natural sympathy for his subject and so does the reader of this engaging book" – Robert C. Braddock, Renaissance Quarterly

"Written by a master of the source material who has a feel for the nature of the Tudor Court and writes with balance and sympathy" – Diarmaid MacCulloch, University of Oxford

"Alford succeeds in getting under the skin of the most powerful man in Elizabethan England" – Cambridgeshire Journal

"A detailed and composite portrait" – Jack Carrigan, Catholic Herald