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A carregar... The Courtiers: Splendor and Intrigue in the Georgian Court at Kensington Palace (2010)por Lucy Worsley
A carregar...
Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se irá gostar deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. Fascinating inside look at the lives of 16 courtiers represented in William Kent’s Grand Staircase painting that resides at Kensington Palace. Eighteenth century palace life seems more prison like to me than I ever could have imagined. Lucy Worsley so fantastically leads the reader through all of the escapades and secrets. Accessible and entertaining, albeit disturbing and shocking too. Humans truly are horrible. ( ) I bought Lucy Worlsey's history of the Georgian Court without thinking because discount but really enjoyed learning more about the first two King Georges! Worsley has a chatty descriptive style which really brings history to life, like gossiping about celebs - which is kind of what this is! We learn all about the lives and loves of Kensington Palace, from the Teutonic George I, brought in from Hanover to claim the throne, his eldest son George, who he all but disowned, popular Queen Caroline, and various mistresses and maids of honour, advisers, hangers on and servants (some of whom feature in the paintings by William Kent on the King's Staircase at Kensington, which I gather is what inspired the author). The 'gossip' includes who slept with who, pregnancy and childbirth, medical and personal ailments, food and drink, and the routine of life at court. I was surprised to learn that the royal court in early eighteenth century England was much the same as Versailles, regarding influence, mistresses and political power and intrigue, and that women were also given greater sexual freedom and power until the middle of the century. One quibble I have with Worsley's take on sexual history is her discussion of gay (or 'homosexual', in her rather clinical phrasing) relationships. John Hervey, a courtier of Queen Caroline who married one of her maids of honour, was known to have both male and female lovers, yet Worsley writes: 'People in the eighteenth-century had no notion of a person’s being ‘homosexual’ as we would understand it today. But sexual relationships between people of the same gender nevertheless took place, and there’s no question that John Hervey was sexually attracted to both women and men.' I think the term she might be looking for is 'bisexual'? Even if Hervey had only married to avoid suspicion - which Worsley also states was unnecessary according to the 'private moral code' of the aristocracy - he was known to have taken other female lovers. Also, when discussing court architect William Kent and his 'lifelong patron and friend' Lord Burlington, the author skates around what is patently obvious about the two men - Kent was even buried in the Burlington family vault, next to his lover! The real life 'characters' from history, from the King and his painful piles ('The king’s mood, even his bowel movements, could determine the fate of many, as even now he was called upon to make real decisions about the running of the country') to popular lady's maid Molly Lepel who married Hervey yet hated motherhood (‘I mortally hate children and am uneasy when they are in the room' - that's my girl!) and 'Peter the Wild Boy' (seriously), are like the cast of a modern day soap opera, casting off children and swapping lovers but I love that they were also very relatable in some ways. Perhaps not the most comprehensive study of Georgian life but great fun to read! Loving all things 18th century, I was thinking some footnoted gossip about the fancy people would be fun. Turns out 18th century dish is just as boring as the 21st century version. Also, the Kindle edition was badly scanned - the black and white drawings looked like photocopies of photocopies of photocopies. I've always enjoyed history programmes and documentaries. In particular UK ones. David Starkey ignited my interest in Medieval England, and I think I've watched Alan Ereira's documentary series "Kings and Queens of England" about 6 times. But there is one historian, whose focus is slightly closer to modern times, that has really caught my attention - and that is Dr. Lucy Worsley. The Joint Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces has presented a string of extremely entertaining (and well-researched) documentaries on life in Britain in the 18th and 19th century - as well as on the private lives of those glorified figures you see on the walls of the National Portrait Gallery. So when I spotted this book at my regular Dutch auction booksale haunt, into my basket it went. And what a riveting piece of social and cultural history it turned out to be, exposing the often seedy underbelly of the glamour show that was Georgian England and its court. Dr. Worsley does an excellent job of portraying the characters featured on William Kent's Great Staircase at Kensington Palace in a way that makes them come to life in your mind. Characters like "Peter the Wild Boy", the real-life Wildling found in a Hanoverian forest and brought to the court - first at Herrenhausen, later at London - as an exotic pet. He never learnt to speak "properly" and had a penchant for eating acorns, but his "unspoiled" state made him a prime fashion accessory for the Hanoverians. She does not pull punches - thanks to her access to contemporary medical accounts, you get all the explicit details of ailments and demises - but also the facts behind the folklore in certain cases. The list of references and the endnote section is frankly mind-boggling, and it has been hard to put down once I began reading it. Inspired by a painting on the King's Staircase in Kensington Palace, Lucy Worsley writes about the people who lived at court in the early Georgian era (1714 - 1760), the royal family, their servants, lovers, and friends, with the focus on the personalities rather than the politics. Of course anyone we know anything about, even those low down on the social scale, was comparatively privileged. But nevertheless, it is a fascinating glimpse into other people's lives and there was just as much interpersonal drama as in the more popular Tudor and Regency periods. Very interesting reflections on the change in views of female sexuality just after the end of this time period. The sufferings of poor Queen Caroline at the end of her life were horrendous. I did feel quite melancholy when the book wrapped up with the death of the old king and a quick round up for those who survived him -- not many.
For many, Kensington Palace will be forever regarded as the fashionable, and perhaps rather soulless, last home of Diana, Princess of Wales... But long before the glamorous royal took up residence in one of its elegant apartments, the palace was home to another less chic but equally controversial Princess of Wales. To read the full review - click on the link below Anyone who climbs the King’s Grand Staircase at Kensington Palace finds themselves watched by 45 gossiping servants. Porters and pages, musicians, milliners, mistresses and maids of honour crowd together in the candlelight of the upper gallery, craning their necks over the balustrade, dangling their babies and cuddling their lapdogs. To read the full review - click on the link below Courtiers – those men and women of non-servant rank who attend or divert monarchs – are a maligned lot. In 1770, William Hooper wrote that “the glory of a British monarch consists not in a handful of tinsel courtiers” but in the “freedom, the dignity and the happiness of his people”. Not many have sought to overturn that sentiment since then. To read the full review - click on the link below
In the eighteenth century, the palace's most elegant assembly room was in fact a bloody battlefield. This was a world of skulduggery, politicking, wigs and beauty-spots, where fans whistled open like flick-knives. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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