Mastodon The Writing Desk: Stuarts
Showing posts with label Stuarts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stuarts. Show all posts

24 March 2026

Special Guest Post by Eleanor Swift Hook : The Turncoat’s Revenge (Lord's Learning Book 3)


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Spring 1628: England is at war with France as the rest of Europe consumes itself in increasingly bitter conflict. n Dunkirk, Philip Lord, disgraced adventurer, has a new ship and through it the chance to gain enough from his privateering to follow his guiding star. But when he must risk everything to rescue a fellow Dunkirker at sea, he and the ever-loyal Jorrit are thrown into mortal danger.

1628: A savage year for England—a year that sees the nation embroiled in three wars.

Just across the sea, Europe devours itself in a conflagration that started a decade before and is to burn ferociously for two more decades until it becomes a byword for brutality, devastation and death. The Thirty Years War. In terms of proportionate population loss, it would be more destructive than the two orld Wars of the Twentieth Century.

England was drawn into this maelstrom courtesy of the English princess Elizabeth, heir to the throne of England, and her husband the Elector Palatine, who have been at the heart of the conflagration since it began. English outrage at Elizabeth losing both her Bohemian crown and her status as Electress Palatine, brought donations of money and volunteer canon fodder. But even with English support and Elizabeth’s uncle, the King of Denmark, throwing the might of his army on the scales, it isn’t going well.


Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia

But in 1628 England is also at war with Spain. 

Why?

State policy? 

Or hurt feelings?

The Spanish Court snubbed King Charles and his favourite, the Duke of Buckingham, five years before when they travelled to Madrid in disguise, in a quixotic attempt to woo the Spanish Infanta. A slight Buckingham, at least, has not forgotten, and he is a man to bear grudges.

Whatever the motivation, the Spanish king is kin to the Emperor and the two are united in their desire for a Catholic Habsburg hegemony of all Europe. So yes, statecraft might argue that war against the Emperor made war against Spain a sensible choice, and by and large the English were pleased to support this war.

Spain having been the traditional enemy of England since before the Armada and memories of that Elizabethan success and ancestral pride originally fuelled enthusiasm in the breasts of true-born Englishmen! But such success was not to be repeated in this generation. An attempt to capture Cadiz, in a naval expedition organised by the Duke of Buckingham, failed completely with a third of the fleet being lost.


Francisco de Zurbarán

And the third war?

Well, even though King Charles recently married a French Princess and the French have been active allies in the anti-Habsburg Palatinate cause, England is now at war with France!

Yet only a short time ago they had been bosom pals.

Indeed, they had been such close friends that the English king agreed to provide ships to help the French king put down rebellion by his Protestant Huguenot subjects. This caused outrage amongst the English people and a horrified Parliament had objected to the notion of English forces attacking fellow Protestants. In the end it was the ships alone and not their crews which were provided. 

It didn’t help Anglo/French relations that Buckingham was suspected of trying to seduce the Queen of France under the nose of her husband whilst on a diplomatic visit, and had been refused permission to return to the country as a result.

Amity with France collapsed altogether when it became clear the French had made a secret treaty with Spain, seemed to be abandoning the Protestant cause in the Empire—and were building their own navy.  


George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham (by Peter Paul Rubens)

So was it state policy or more of Buckingham's slighted pride that sent his man Walter Montague to France as a secret agent, to encourage and foment a Huguenot rebellion, with the promise of English support? Though how such support could be forthcoming was unclear.  There was no money for third  war. Least of all one with scant benefit to England’s national interests. 

In the end, the promised support for a Protestant uprising in La Rochelle came in the form of an expeditionary force commanded by Buckingham personally in the summer of 1627. The intent was to seize the fortress town of Saint-Martin-de-Ré which controlled the approach to La Rochelle, thus opening a sea route to the beleaguered city. 

It was another disaster,  a fiasco, foundering as badly as the Cadiz debacle—if not more so. The Isle-de-Ré became ‘the Ill Array’ on English lips. Buckingham, already despised for his monopoly farms and the excessive influence he had over the king, carried the full weight of blame for the extent of its failure in the popular mind, and was hated and derided in equal measure. 


Invasion of Re, 1627

So now here we are.

It is 1628 and England is embroiled in three wars.

Buckingham is licking his wounds and raising a new fleet against the French, to redeem his honour and win back the love of the nation. But it’s not going to plan. England has had enough of war and more than enough of Buckingham himself.  Monopoly farms, military catastrophe and incompetence are not the only charges set against him. Rumours that he poisoned King James have been taken seriously at the highest levels. Twice now, Parliament has tried to impeach Buckingham, and been prevented from doing so by the king dismissing it. This time, though, Parliament is bringing forward a Petition of Right addressing its grievances, and taking aim at the Royal favourite, which it insists must be agreed by the king if he wants to secure ongoing finance for his three wars. And Parliament holds the purse strings.

England in 1628: A stage set for tragedy, onto which our players must stride.

A young mercenary turned privateer, condemned for treason, but driven by an overriding ambition, and a nobleman’s daughter, in the service of the English heir, the exiled Queen of Bohemia, seeking to protect her mistress and herself from the machinations of an overpowerful enemy. Each must play out their part against the blood drenched backdrop of war, politics, intrigue—and murder…

Eleanor Swift Hook

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About the Author

Eleanor Swift-Hook enjoys the mysteries of history and fell in love with the early Stuart era at university when she re-enacted battles and living history events with the English Civil War Society. Since then, she has had an ongoing fascination with the social, military and political events that unfolded during the Thirty Years' War and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. She lives in County Durham and loves writing stories woven into the historical backdrop of those dramatic times. You can find out more about the background of Lord's Legacy on her website www.eleanorswifthook.com and find her on Twitter @emswifthook

See Also:

8 March 2026

Book Review: The Turncoat’s Revenge (Lord's Learning Book 3) by Eleanor Swift Hook


Available for pre-order

Spring 1628: England is at war with France as the rest of Europe consumes itself in increasingly bitter conflict. n Dunkirk, Philip Lord, disgraced adventurer, has a new ship and through it the chance to gain enough from his privateering to follow his guiding star. But when he must risk everything to rescue a fellow Dunkirker at sea, he and the ever-loyal Jorrit are thrown into mortal danger.

The Turncoat’s Revenge continues the ‘Lord's Learning’ prequel to Eleanor Swift Hook’s ‘Lord’s Legacy’ series. exploring the consequences of divided loyalty. From several points of view we examine what it means to navigate duty and desire when the stakes are high and the path forward is anything but clear.

Although this is a work of historical fiction, I was impressed by the skill with which real historical figures and events are seamlessly woven into the tapestry of the story. As well as grounding the narrative with immersive period detail, these reak events provide the characters with a compelling context.

Having read the ‘Lord’s Legacy’ series, I also enjoyed the layers of back story which continue to be revealed. At times brutal and even shocking action reminds readers of the challenges of the era, and make this boo a real ‘page turner.’ Highly recommended.

Tony Riches

# # #
About the Author

Eleanor Swift-Hook enjoys the mysteries of history and fell in love with the early Stuart era at university when she re-enacted battles and living history events with the English Civil War Society. Since then, she has had an ongoing fascination with the social, military and political events that unfolded during the Thirty Years' War and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. She lives in County Durham and loves writing stories woven into the historical backdrop of those dramatic times. You can find out more about the background of Lord's Legacy on her website www.eleanorswifthook.com and find her on Twitter @emswifthook

See Also:



15 February 2026

Book Review: An Orphan Spirit: Amsterdam 1627, by Eleanor Swift-Hook and M.J. Logue


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

1627. Mercenary captain Hollie Babbitt is at winter quarters in Amsterdam. To the patrons of the Blue Cat, he is the landlady’s young husband, but for all his youth he is already a veteran of the Empire’s vicious wars—restless, underemployed, and counting the days until the campaigning season begins again.

More of a short story than a novel, the ninety-six pages are packed with action and intrigue. For those familiar with Eleanor Swift-Hook's excellent ‘Lord’s Legacy’ series, An Orphan Spirit fits within the ‘prequel’ Lord’s Learning series.

Set in an authentic 1620’s Amsterdam, the authors write with a confident sense of place. The canals and crowded streets feel lived-in rather than described, grounding the story in a city poised between prosperity and poverty.

I particularly liked the world of the local tavern, the ‘Blue Cat’ at the heart of the story, and the unlikely hero of this tale, Captain Hollie Babbitt. 

An Orphan Spirit works well as a stand-alone story, and offers more insight into the complex backstory of the heroic Philip Lord. Despite his youth he still has a presence which marks him out as a threat – and a target.

The pace is measured but compelling, rewarding readers with moments of quiet revelation alongside sharper turns of plot. This is an assured and absorbing collaboration that lingers well beyond the final page.

Tony Riches


# # #
About the Author

Eleanor Swift-Hook enjoys the mysteries of history and fell in love with the early Stuart era at university when she re-enacted battles and living history events with the English Civil War Society. Since then, she has had an ongoing fascination with the social, military and political events that unfolded during the Thirty Years' War and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. She lives in County Durham and loves writing stories woven into the historical backdrop of those dramatic times. You can find out more about the background of Lord's Legacy on her website www.eleanorswifthook.com and find her on Twitter @emswifthook

See Also:



11 February 2026

Book Review - The Soldier's Stand (Lord's Learning Book 2) by Eleanor Swift-Hook


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Summer, 1626: Europe is ablaze as the supporters of the exiled Elector Palatine, who was also briefly King of Bohemia, challenge Emperor Ferdinand. The emperor’s new general, Wallenstein, has achieved a crushing victory over the feared mercenary commander Mansfeld at Dessau, but Danish King Christian IV is on the march in Lower Saxony. Amid this turmoil, Captain Matthew Rider must somehow manage both his part of Wallenstein’s war effort and his troublesome young lieutenant, Filippo Schiavono.

It is fascinating to read a ‘prequel’ featuring a cast of characters you know well, as that knowledge adds a layer of complexity to their already complex stories.

Eleanor Swift-Hook’s The Soldier’s Stand builds on The Fugitive’s Sword to deliver an immersive journey into the turbulent world of early-seventeenth-century Europe. Set against the unrelenting backdrop of war and political upheaval, The Soldier’s Stand has meticulous historical research and a compelling narrative.

I particularly like Eleanor Swift-Hook’s well-timed changes of point of view, offering different perspectives. She is also skilled at foreshadowing with a few words to keep readers guessing.

The brutal chaos of war and subtleties of diplomatic intrigue are described with respect for period detail. The result is a narrative that is epic in scope yet sensitive to personal struggles and ambitions. Highly recommended.

Tony Riches

I would like to tha the author for providing a review copy.

# # #
About the Author

Eleanor Swift-Hook enjoys the mysteries of history and fell in love with the early Stuart era at university when she re-enacted battles and living history events with the English Civil War Society. Since then, she has had an ongoing fascination with the social, military and political events that unfolded during the Thirty Years' War and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. She lives in County Durham and loves writing stories woven into the historical backdrop of those dramatic times. You can find out more about the background of Lord's Legacy on her website www.eleanorswifthook.com and find her on Twitter @emswifthook

See Also:

13 December 2025

Book Review: Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts, by Nadine Akkerman


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

The dazzling biography of one of history's most misunderstood queens

Elizabeth Stuart is one the most underestimated - figures of the seventeenth century. Labelled a spendthrift more interested in the theatre and her pet monkeys than politics or her children, and long pitied as 'The Winter Queen', the direct ancestor of Elizabeth II was widely misunderstood. Nadine Akkerman's biography reveals an altogether different woman, painting a vivid picture of a queen forged in the white heat of European conflict.

Nadine Akkerman’s Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts restores to full view a woman who has too often been pigeonholed as a political footnote or a romantic curiosity, and it invites readers to consider how a single life—ambitious, precarious, relentlessly social—illuminates the politics, culture, and material worlds of early-modern Europe. 

Elizabeth Stuart is more than the “Winter Queen” of legend—she emerges as  woman whose emotional intelligence, household management, and diplomatic activity shaped her fragmentary career: daughter of James VI & I, bride of the Protestant elector Frederick V, queen of a short-lived Bohemian experiment, and a long-suffering, politically active exile. 

The narrative moves beyond the headline events (marriage, defeat at White Mountain, exile) to linger on domestic and cultural practices—patronage, letter-writing, household politics, material culture—that made Elizabeth influential even while she lacked a stable throne.

Scholars of early-modern Europe and students of gender and political culture will find a substantive, methodologically rich treatment. General readers attracted to intelligent biography will enjoy Nadine Akkerman’s storytelling. Finally, those who care about the practice of history will appreciate the book’s demonstration of how much can be regained from careful archival work.

Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts recasts the Winter Queen as an energetic networker, a shrewd self-fashioner, and a politically consequential figure whose life offers a window on the entangled realms of affection, image, and power in seventeenth-century Europe. For readers interested in how the small things—letters, inventories, portraits, gifts—make large history, this book is essential reading.

Tony Riches
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About the Author

Professor Nadine Akkerman is an archival detective, biographer, cryptographer, editor and spymistress. An acclaimed literary historian, she is the award-winning author of Invisible Agents. Her latest book is Spycraft: Tricks and Tools of the Dangerous Trade from Elizabeth I to the Restoration, which she co-wrote with Dr Pete Langman.  Nadine is also the author of the authoritative biography of the sometime Queen of Bohemia Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of James VI/I, and editor of The Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart (3 vols) - it has been said that the only person who has read more of Elizabeth’s letters than Nadine is Elizabeth herself. If historians take one thing from these works, it is that Elizabeth Stuart should never be called 'The Winter Queen' again.  A popular public speaker in the UK, Nadine has been a guest on Woman’s Hour, Histories of the Unexpected podcast and on the SkyArts series Treasures of the British Library (with Julia Donaldson) to name but a few. Nadine is Professor in Early Modern Literature and Culture at Leiden University, the Netherlands, where she lives in a seventeenth-century canal house with her partner, novelist Pete Langman (when they’re not in the UK), and hopes to have a cat soon. Follow her on Twitter: @misswalsingham and Bluesky ‪@misswalsingham.bsky.social‬

5 October 2025

Special Guest Post by Claire Hobson, Author of Charles II: From the Cradle to the Crown


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Three days before he hid in an oak tree, he said he wanted to be shot dead. Did this remarkably mature young man really mean it? He was Charles II, the alleged debauchee whom a filthy poem dubs ‘a merry monarch’, and we think of him partying with glee while reigning at Whitehall. The episode in the oak tree, however, is part of his earlier story – the first thirty years of his life. These formative years shine fascinating light on his influences and the development of his unique character, but some of that development took place at dark depths in his mind.

When he was 12 in 1642, the erupting civil war plunged Charles into a private melancholy that triggered fears for his future health. Then during his twenties, he passed various comments of a disturbingly despondent nature. By this time, his mother was railing against him, his financial pleas had been rejected across Europe and the MPs responsible for his father’s beheading were declaring England a republic as they ruled in his place. 

His grandest stab at regaining power was the Battle of Worcester, and the bloodshed of his defeat here surrounded him when he blurted out his wish to be killed by gunfire. He nevertheless had little confidence in his 17-year-old brother, the heir who would lead the entire quest for the monarchy’s restoration if Charles died then, in 1651.

Finally persuaded to flee the battle, Charles was donning a woodcutter’s disguise just hours later as he tried to avoid capture and execution, but the chances were he’d be caught before the day was out, especially with ‘majestie beeing soe naturall unto him’. Despite numerous close shaves, his pursuers never got their hands on him. It’s worth noting that Charles, when a child, was told: ‘I would not have you so seared with majesty as to think you are not of mankind’, and he spent most of his life projecting a blend of regal and human qualities. It was all part of his plan.


(Metropolitan Museum of Art) A c. 1700 snuffbox depicting Charles in the oak tree: An angel presents him with the three Stuart crowns while below ride two Roundheads seeking him out.

To get a sense of Charles deep down, we need to look at his childhood first. His wet nurse Christabella Wyndham was known for her bossy, overbearing personality, yet Charles wanted her beside him everywhere, even years after weaning. Along the way, family life was loving, with Charles, as the senior prince, seeing his brother James look up to him, but also raised like a brother with them was George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham – a later minister who manipulated Charles in government from the 1660s. 

In the 1630s, Buckingham lived as the eldest child in the palaces, finding Charles thus look up to him despite the duke’s lower status, so these boys had reason to envy each other. William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle was meanwhile the servant who wanted majesty restricted in Charles, and the prince adored him, partly because Newcastle discouraged ‘too much book’. Charles’s adulthood aversion to paperwork springs to mind immediately, but so does Charles’s passion for science – Newcastle helped experimental research into optics, mechanics and more, not to mention turning his hand to playwriting with a style similar to Restoration comedy. Then there’s religion. Rumour had it that Newcastle was an atheist, but Charles is utterly enigmatic in this area.

Aged 6, Charles saw religion as a rare cause of rift between his parents when his mother Queen Henrietta Maria exposed him to Catholicism. Before long, he seemed wary of his mother, but he was so comfortable with his generally standoffish father King Charles I that the boy dared confront him in 1640. The matter causing upset just then was colossal. A second war over the king’s stubborn stand for episcopacy was brewing, and Prince Charles, aged 9, foresaw royal ruin – with religion behind this ruin.

In early adolescence, he spent nearly every day around his father, sometimes at gruesome clashes as the king’s Cavaliers fought Parliament’s Roundheads tooth and nail nationwide. Aged 14, however, the prince left the king’s court, to became an army general in the West Country. He was super-diligent here, constantly attending meetings so he could learn and contribute ‘with great ingenuity’.


Pendennis Castle, Cornwall (Wikimedia Commons) This was Charles’s residence in early 1646. He fled upon word of a plot to kidnap him.

After this, he involved himself in more, such as the construction of fortifications, and in 1648 he took command at sea, very nearly adding a fierce naval battle to English Civil War history.

By then though, his exile had begun. The Scillies, Jersey, France, Holland, Scotland, Germany, Flanders and Spain were all home to Charles in the 1640s–50s. The diversity of the cultures he experienced is profound, and he made moves to befriend leaders, aristocrats, commoners and clergymen of opposing views. At the request of Louis XIV, he even dabbled in talks to end French rebellion, with disastrous consequences. Probably most significant was nevertheless Charles’s experience with the Scottish Covenanters led by the Marquis of Argyll for the Kirk Party. To acquire their help in the wake of the 1649 regicide, Charles betrayed his own cause, becoming Presbyterian in name; he decided to sacrifice religious principles.

Charles was 20 when Scotland beckoned. He’d tried reaching Ireland to collude with Catholics instead, but Parliament’s Oliver Cromwell prevailed there, and posed a threat to the Continental nations. The Covenanters therefore had Charles hook, line and sinker, aware nobody else much was coming to his aid. While Westminster MPs called him simply Charles Stuart, the Covenanters addressed him as Majesty but treated him like a naughty schoolboy, telling him off non-stop, such as for smiling on Sundays, so they hardly knew where to start when Charles was caught ‘fondling’ a mistress.

His philandering is famous, but how did it originate? He’s said to have lost his virginity at 14, to Christabella Wyndham. He may have lost it earlier or later, though. Aged 18, he fathered the future Duke of Monmouth by Welsh gentlewoman Lucy Walter, whose promiscuity soon shocked. After two years, Charles despised her, and he was taking other women to bed, often to the dismay of their husbands. Evidence suggests he was also producing more children than thought, with a reported secret birth in the late 1650s. That’s nevertheless also when his (I think possibly three) children by another woman was showing his ability for long-term relationships.


(Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru – The National Library of Wales) Said to be Lucy Walter
Charles may have loved her in his teens, but did his promiscuity begin as revenge for hers?

His plans for marriage nonetheless proved tactical, particularly regarding the scheme to have him wed a daughter of Cromwell in the mid-1650s. But what’s most interesting about this is the question of how Charles intended to proceed. Whatever the terms of a marriage treaty, the way he’d developed gave him high chances of achieving his aims if he dealt with enemies face-to-face. 

In his negotiations with Spain in 1656, Charles had none of his ministers present. He thus proved his people skills and political acumen nicely, securing Spanish alliance. Yet he’s considered merely lucky that Westminster ultimately invited him to the throne. Charles was no unknown quantity, though. Cromwell’s spies ensured that, for a start, one operating right under Charles’s nose for most of 1655. And once the Merry Monarch held the reins of power from 1660, his popularity helped him mould societal change.

When I began work for Charles II: From the Cradle to the Crown, I wanted to make the book more than a biography. Revolution, conspiracy, sex, ceremony and the secrets of royal childhood are all intriguing aspects of his pre-Restoration life. But the impact they had on Charles can perhaps explain some of the surprises we find in Restoration history.

Claire Hobson

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About the author

Claire Hobson established a freelance career in proofreading in 2007 and branched into copywriting over the next few years, often for the Icelandic tourism industry. However, pursuing writing as a hobby in the 2010s, she embarked on historical fiction and quickly developed a big interest in Stuart history. This drew her to research and nonfiction. As a fundraiser for mental health charity Mind, Claire has organised and promoted Restoration-themed events involving leading historians. Through these, she produced regular history content on social media and scripted features for talks, but she now devotes more time to books, delving deeper into the seventeenth century.  Follow Claire on Twitter @RestorationHat and Bluesky @restorationhat.bsky.social‬

29 July 2025

Catherine of Braganza’s Introduction to the Decadent Stuart Restoration Court – A guest post by Susan Abernethy, Author of Charles II’s Portuguese Queen


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Catherine of Braganza has regularly been referred to as ‘the forgotten queen’ and there is much truth in this statement. This new biography places Catherine within the context of the history of Portugal and their seaborne empire, and the strong political and commercial ties between England and Portugal dating to the mid-fourteenth century which played a key role in the culmination of the Marriage Treaty of 1661. Her legacy lives on in her dowry, specifically the port of Bombay which allowed England to become a global empire, introducing many everyday items into European culture.
 

Catherine had a rough time when she arrived in England to marry the Stuart King Charles II. First of all, the Portuguese court was solemn and subject to rigid etiquette, and she had been given a convent education, supervised by her mother. It’s unclear if she lived in the convent, was taken there for instruction or the nuns came to her, but she grew up very religious and dedicated to her Catholic faith. She clearly had not been tutored in politics or governance or how to cultivate supporters. To be thrown into the decadent atmosphere of the Stuart Restoration court had to have been extremely difficult for her.

Catherine had a hard time with the courtiers swarming around her making demands and she didn’t like the food. She did not drink liquor and probably drank water which wasn’t a good thing to do. She became ill and withdrew from court for a while, seeking refuge in her chapel. But the Portuguese ambassador eventually convinced her to join in court festivities.  

One of the first signs of trouble in the marriage occurred when Lady Castlemaine, Charles’ premier mistress at the time, insisted on being given a position in Catherine’s court. We don’t know how Catherine first learned about Castlemaine. Perhaps her astute mother Queen Luisa, or someone in her Portuguese entourage, told the queen about Castlemaine. Or she just observed Charles’ behaviour and figured it out. When Charles first introduced his mistress to Catherine by surprise in a crowded room, Catherine had a nosebleed and fainted, which infuriated and embarrassed Charles. 


Lady Castlemaine, Charles’ premier mistress 
at the time of his marriage to Catherine

The queen refused to allow Castlemaine a position which was perfectly within her rights, and Charles’ lord chancellor, Henry Hyde did his best to convince Catherine to accept this state of affairs. But Catherine had a temper and expected to be treated according to her station in life and adamantly refused, even going so far as to threaten to return to Lisbon. Charles dismissed all of Catherine’s Portuguese servants except for one elderly lady-in-waiting and her Portuguese priests. And people in the court began to shun Catherine.  

Just at this juncture, during an impasse, Catherine’s mother-in-law, Dowager Queen Henrietta Maria arrived from France for a visit. Henrietta Maria, very pleased that Charles had married a Catholic, adored Catherine. The two women shared worshipping together and spent many hours in conversation. It is highly likely Henrietta Maria convinced Catherine to accept her husband’s infidelities and concentrate on having an heir.

Catherine had the wherewithal to make a deliberate decision to accept Lady Castlemaine and gave her the coveted position in her household. With the encouragement of her mother-in-law, as well as her husband, Catherine resolved to learn to dance and began to participate in court functions. She loved her husband, and they got along well together although she did complain about her treatment by the mistresses.

Susan Abernethy 
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About the Author

Susan Abernethy’s passion for history dates back fifty years and led her to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree in history at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She is currently a member of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association, the Society for Renaissance Studies and the Historical Association. Her work has appeared on several historical websites and in magazines and includes guest appearances on historical podcasts. Her blog, The Freelance History Writer, has continuously published over five hundred historical articles since 2012, with an emphasis on European, Tudor, Medieval, Renaissance, Early Modern and women’s history. She is currently working on her third non-fiction book. You can find Susan on Twitter and  Bluesky @susanabernethy2.bsky.social

17 July 2025

Book Launch Spotlight: The Graces: The Extraordinary Untold Lives of Women at the Restoration Court, by Breeze Barrington


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

A spellbinding work of history that uncovers the inner lives and work of Maria of Modena and her 'graces', the extraordinary women who practiced art, poetry and politics within the misogyny 
of the Restoration court.

In 1673, fifteen-year-old Maria d'Este travelled from Italy to marry James, Duke of York, the future King of England and a man twenty-five years her senior. Thrust from a pious life on the path to become a nun, at the debauched court of Charles II she set about recreating the world she'd left behind - a world where women were highly educated, exercised power and celebrated art and artists with concentrated patronage.

The Graces resurrects the life of Maria, later Mary of Modena, and those of the extraordinary young women she surrounded herself with at the Restoration court. From Sarah Jennings, later Sarah Churchill, keen politician and 'favourite' of Queen Anne, to revered poet Anne Finch and founder of legendary literary salon Hortense Mancini, these were women who defied the conventions of their time and the forces of misogyny working against them. 

The era they lived through would be one of the most tumultuous England had seen: one where parliament would invite a foreign power in the form of William of Orange to invade England, depose its king, and risk thrusting the country back into civil war. What is much less well-known is that within this world existed another: a world of female friendship, learning and artistic endeavour. The Graces is that story.

“At last, some of the most fascinating, important, yet overlooked characters from the later Stuart court have found their champion in Breeze Barrington. This superb book weaves history, politics, literature and art together with real originality. ” — Bendor Grosvenor, Author of 'The Invention of British Art'

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About the Author

Dr Breeze Barrington is a cultural historian specialising in the artistic cultures of the 17th century, with particular focus on women’s history and female artists. Her PhD, on the artistic cultures of the early Stuart court, was awarded in 2021, from Queen Mary, University of London. She teaches literature at the University of Cambridge and has previously taught courses in seventeenth century literature and culture at Queen Mary, University of London as well as Biography/Non-Fiction on the prestigious Creative Writing degree at the University of East Anglia. Breeze is an Associate Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Find out more at https://www.breezebarrington.com/

27 June 2025

A Formative Portrait: Review of Claire Hobson's Charles II: From the Cradle to the Crown


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Charles II could be charming and witty, but also renowned for his 'lively' court, numerous mistresses, and a remarkable number of illegitimate children. His triumphant return to the throne in 1660 marked the end of the English Civil War and Commonwealth, ushering in the Restoration era, yet his reign was marked with immense challenges, including the Great Fire of London.

Claire Hobson's Charles II: From the Cradle to the Crown offers a refreshing and distinct contribution to the extensive work surrounding this unconventional king. The book focuses on Charles' formative years, from his birth in 1630 until his 30th birthday and the Restoration in 1660, putting his future reputation in useful context.

This allows for an immersive and detailed examination of his childhood and early adult life. Claire Hobson says her study of Charles II's development was a "great journey", and she found the first thirty years of his life even more interesting than after 1660. This translates into a narrative that delves into nuances often condensed in broader biographies, offering a more intimate portrait of the king.


King Charles I with Henrietta Maria and two of their children, Charles Prince of Wales, and Princess Mary, by Anthony van Dyck, 1633. Image credit: Royal Collection / CC.

I was particularly intrigued by the influence of women in his life, particularly his mother, Henrietta Maria, and the ladies of the royal court. The book also brings to light figures such as the maternal figure of Christabella Wyndham. Lady Christabella's often overlooked role in Charles's early life is given detailed attention, contributing to a more nuanced exploration of his personal development.     

The narrative provides a clear picture of young Charles, exploring his early vulnerabilities and the often harsh, attempts to 'groom' him for life as a future king.  The book delves into the emotional complexities of his development, presenting Charles as a complex young man shaped by his extraordinary circumstances. Highly recommended.

Tony Riches

I would like to thank Pen & Sword books for providing a review copy

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About the author

Claire Hobson established a freelance career in proofreading in 2007 and branched into copywriting over the next few years, often for the Icelandic tourism industry. However, pursuing writing as a hobby in the 2010s, she embarked on historical fiction and quickly developed a big interest in Stuart history. This drew her to research and nonfiction. As a fundraiser for mental health charity Mind, Claire has organised and promoted Restoration-themed events involving leading historians. Through these, she produced regular history content on social media and scripted features for talks, but she now devotes more time to books, delving deeper into the seventeenth century.  Follow Claire on Twitter @RestorationHat and Bluesky @restorationhat.bsky.social‬

24 May 2025

Stuart Spotlight: Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts, by Nadine Akkerman


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

The dazzling biography of one of history's most misunderstood queens

Elizabeth Stuart is one the most misrepresented - and underestimated - figures of the seventeenth century. Labelled a spendthrift more interested in the theatre and her pet monkeys than politics or her children, and long pitied as 'The Winter Queen', the direct ancestor of Elizabeth II was widely misunderstood. Nadine Akkerman's biography reveals an altogether different woman, painting a vivid picture of a queen forged in the white heat of European conflict.

Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of James VI and I, was married to Frederick V, Elector Palatine in 1613. The couple were crowned King and Queen of Bohemia in 1619, only to be deposed and exiled to the Dutch Republic in 1620. Elizabeth then found herself at the epicentre of the Thirty Years' War and the Civil Wars, political and military struggles that defined seventeenth-century Europe. 

Following her husband's death in 1632, Elizabeth fostered a cult of widowhood, dressing herself and her apartments in black, and conducted a long and fierce political campaign to regain her children's birthright - by force, if possible - wielding her pen with the same deft precision with which she once speared boars from horseback. Through deep immersion in the archives and masterful detective work, Akkerman overturns the received view of Elizabeth Stuart, showing her to be a patron of the arts and canny stateswoman with a sharp wit and a long memory.

On returning to England in 1661, Elizabeth Stuart found a country whose people still considered her their 'Queen of Hearts'. Akkerman's biography reveals the impact Elizabeth Stuart had on both England and Europe, demonstrating that she was more than just the grandmother of George I.

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About the Author

Prof. Nadine Akkerman is an archival detective, biographer, cryptographer, editor and spymistress. An acclaimed literary historian, she is the award-winning author of Invisible Agents. Her latest book is Spycraft: Tricks and Tools of the Dangerous Trade from Elizabeth I to the Restoration, which she co-wrote with Dr Pete Langman.  Nadine is also the author of the authoritative biography of the sometime Queen of Bohemia Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of James VI/I, and editor of The Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart (3 vols) - it has been said that the only person who has read more of Elizabeth’s letters than Nadine is Elizabeth herself. If historians take one thing from these works, it is that Elizabeth Stuart should never be called 'The Winter Queen' again.  A popular public speaker in the UK, Nadine has been a guest on Woman’s Hour, Histories of the Unexpected podcast and on the SkyArts series Treasures of the British Library (with Julia Donaldson) to name but a few. Nadine is Professor in Early Modern Literature and Culture at Leiden University, the Netherlands, where she lives in a seventeenth-century canal house with her partner, novelist Pete Langman (when they’re not in the UK), and hopes to have a cat soon. Follow her on Twitter: @misswalsingham and Bluesky ‪@misswalsingham.bsky.social‬

28 April 2025

Book Review: Charles II’s Portuguese Queen: The Legacy of Catherine of Braganza, by Susan Abernethy


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Charles II’s Portuguese Queen: The Legacy of Catherine of Braganza offers a compelling and nuanced portrait of an intriguing woman often relegated to the footnotes of history. I confess to previously knowing little about Catherine's life, but  this new book presents her as a significant figure in her own right, whose influence on English society and culture was more profound than commonly acknowledged.

Susan Abernethy's meticulous research details Catherine’s journey from her sheltered upbringing in Portugal to her arrival in England as the bride of the restored King Charles II. Her marriage was based on the strategic importance of the Portuguese alliance and the significant trading dowry it brought, including Bombay and Tangier. 

Unfortunately for Catherine, her convent education meant she was poorly prepared for the challenges of kife t the English court. As well as the language barrier and anti-Catholic sentiment in England, she had to cope with  the King's notorious infidelities, most notably with Barbara Villiers.

What shines through in Abernethy’s work is her dedication to exploring Catherine’s resilience and intelligence in the face of these difficulties. The book reveals a woman of quiet strength, piety, and dignity who navigated a complex and often hostile court with grace. 

I was surprised by Catherine’s loyalty to her husband despite his personal failings, and how she made the most of the hand she had been dealt. These details paint a richer picture of Catherine’s impact, demonstrating how she subtly shaped the social and cultural landscape of her adopted country.


Portrait of Catherine of Braganza in 1663 by Sir Peter Lely
(Wikimedia Commons)

Susan Abernethy’s writing is engaging and accessible. She seamlessly weaves together historical accounts, letters, and contemporary sources to create a narrative that is both informative and captivating. While acknowledging the limitations imposed on Catherine by her position and the era, the book persuasively argues for a reassessment of her legacy.

I particularly liked the subheadings throughout the book which help readers navigate the timelime and break up chapters into convenient sections.

Charles II’s Portuguese Queen is a fascinating exploration of the Stuart court, the complexities of royal marriage, and the often-overlooked contributions of women in history.  It succeeds in elevating Catherine of Braganza from a footnote to a figure deserving of greater recognition and understanding. Highly recommended.

Tony Riches

(A review copy was kindly provided by the publisher, Pen & Sword Books)

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About the Author

Susan Abernethy’s passion for history dates back fifty years and led her to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree in history at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She is currently a member of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association, the Society for Renaissance Studies and the Historical Association. Her work has appeared on several historical websites and in magazines and includes guest appearances on historical podcasts. Her blog, The Freelance History Writer, has continuously published over five hundred historical articles since 2012, with an emphasis on European, Tudor, Medieval, Renaissance, Early Modern and women’s history. She is currently working on her third non-fiction book. You can find Susan on Twitter and  Bluesky @susanabernethy2.bsky.social

20 October 2024

Stuart Spouses: A Compendium of Consorts from James I of Scotland to Queen Anne of Great Britain, by Heather R Darsie


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Stuart Spouses looks at the oft-overshadowed consorts of the Stuart monarchs, from 1406 to 1714. 

By focusing on these people and detailing their rises to matrimony, the trials and tribulations of their courtships, and the impact their unions and dissolutions had on the kingdoms of Scotland, England, Ireland, and Wales, one learns not only the history of these kingdoms but the true, sometimes soft, power behind the throne.

"Stuart spouses focuses on the often disregarded by history consorts of the Stuart monarchs. I found it to be a well researched and fascinating portrait of people who were so important at one time in history but have been largely overshadowed by their spouses. I will definitely be adding this to my bookshelves and don’t hesitate to recommend it to anyone interested in this period of history." Amazon Review

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About the Author

About the Author

Heather R. Darsie works as an attorney in the US. Along with her Juris Doctorate she has a BA in German, which was of great value in her research. She completed multiple graduate-level courses in Early Modern History, with her primary focus being the Holy Roman Empire under Charles V. She runs the website MaidensAndManuscripts.com, and is a co-host of Tudors Dynasty podcast.  Find out more at maidensandmanuscripts.com  and follow her on Facebook and Twitter @HRDarsieHistory

10 October 2023

Special Guest Post by Elena Maria Vidal, Author of My Queen, My Love: A Novel of Henrietta Maria (The Henrietta of France Trilogy Book 1)


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

The youngest daughter of Henri IV, the first Bourbon King of France, Henriette-Marie always knew she would have to marry a prince. When the Prince of Wales, Charles Stuart, travels through Paris he sees her dancing at the Louvre and within two years a marriage is arranged. However, Henriette is Catholic and Catholicism is banned in England. In preparing to become Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland, Henriette has no idea of the obstacles that must be overcome before 
she can find happiness with Charles.

In the lone tent, waiting for victory,
She stands with eyes marred by the mists of pain,
Like some wan lily overdrenched with rain:
The clamorous clang of arms, the ensanguined sky,
War's ruin, and the wreck of chivalry
To her proud soul no common fear can bring:
Bravely she tarrieth for her Lord the King,
Her soul a-flame with passionate ecstasy.

~from "Henrietta Maria" by Oscar Wilde

Discovering Henrietta Maria

First of all, let me thank Tony Riches for inviting me to compose a guest post about the Henrietta of France Trilogy which I am in the midst of writing, Book 1 being completed. I grew up in Maryland, a state which was once a colony called “Mary's Land”, named in honor of Henrietta Maria, Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland. 

Wife of the ill-fated Charles I, the colony named for her was intended to be a refuge for Roman Catholics, the Catholic religion being forbidden in the Three Kingdoms. In my room as a teenager there was a print of the Van Dyck portrait of Henrietta Maria, the original of which is in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Called “Mary” by her subjects, the second Stuart queen of England peers down from the portrait with her black eyes, which contemporaries described as large, sparkling and beautiful. Her dark curls with auburn highlights contrast against the deep marine blue shimmer of a silk dress, with the salmon-pink bows and elaborate white cuffs and high starched collar. A wide-brimmed plumed black hat was of the type made famous by the cavaliers who later fought for her husband in the English Civil Wars. 


The white plumes are reminiscent of the one made famous by her father Henri IV of France, which he wore into battle so that his men could always find him. Like her father, Henrietta Maria was not afraid to stand out, remaining a devoted Catholic in a land where her faith was banned, becoming the number one lawbreaker, while also striving to be a traditionally obedient wife, as was expected. But the expectations placed upon her made her life a tightrope walk which almost broke her.

The life of Henrietta Maria of France (1609-1669) was turbulent from the beginning. Half-Bourbon and half-Medici, her father, the famous Henri IV, was assassinated when she was an infant. Brought up by her mother, the Queen Regent Marie de’ Medici, to be a devout Catholic, she also mastered ballet, singing, and acting, skills which she would use in masques to entertain the Bourbon Court and later the Stuart Court. At fifteen she was sent to marry Charles Stuart, grandson of Mary Queen of Scots, who had just succeeded his father James I to the throne of the Three Kingdoms. 


While Charles I never converted to Catholicism, as had been hoped by many, his relationship with his wife was profoundly spiritual, enhancing the intense physical passion between them. After the initial clashing of cultures and personalities, theirs became one of the most devoted in the history of royal marriages, and was blessed with nine children. During the troubles which led to the English Civil War, Henrietta Maria became a liability to Charles because of her religion and her meddling, both perceived and actual. But her courage and her devotion fuelled the royalist cause, as she sold her jewels to raise money for arms and led soldiers to aid her husband. 


The challenges the royal couple faced in their early years of marriage are told in Book 1 of the Henrietta of France trilogy, My Queen, My Love. Book 2 will deal with the Civil Wars and Book 3 will be about the Queen’s widowhood as well as the adventures of her surviving children.

My view of historical fiction is that the author attempts to paint a portrait of the past with words. A historical novel is like a portrait come to life, allowing the reader to step into the past. Authenticity is vital, and that comes only from thorough research. While it is not always possible to visit the historical places that play a part in the novel, it helps. 

The internet has been a gift to historical fiction writers, making accessible old documents, manuscripts, pictures and books that one once had to travel far to find. I found the original program of the 1623 masque performed by Anne of Austria and Henrietta of France at the Louvre during Shrovetide. It was at the rehearsal of the masque that Charles Stuart first saw Henrietta during his incognito visit to Paris. Such primary sources, like the Queen’s letters, are indispensable for creating a living portrait.

So much of what people think they know about Henrietta Maria has been filtered secondhand through multiple writers, some of whom view her as a frothy but tiresome fanatic who led her husband into ruin. This is often accompanied by the perception of the Queen as a dangerous seductress, who used her French wiles in the boudoir to subject Charles to her will. 

And others decide that Charles was not enough for her but she had lovers such as Henry Jermyn who actually told her what to do, while fathering her children. Just as her enemies called her the “popish brat of France,” she has been portrayed erroneously either as a sex fiend soaked with crazed religiosity, or as a shy, pious pawn.


 On the other hand, there have in the past decades been some excellent biographies of Henrietta Maria, based upon superb research. I include them, and other sources, in a bibliography at the end of the novel My Queen, My Love, to encourage further exploration. The latest biography of Henrietta Maria to date is that of Leanda de Lisle. De Lisle takes into account the women of Henrietta’s family, all of whom were active rather than passive as consorts, like Henrietta herself. Henrietta’s faith is repeatedly demonstrated as not only sincere and unwavering but as an impetus for charitable and creative endeavors throughout her life. 

And it becomes obvious Henrietta was a most discerning and insightful patroness of the arts, literature and architecture, employing names such as Inigo Jones, Ben Jonson, Van Dyck, Artemisia Gentileschi, while encouraging educators like Mary Ward. She brought to England the music of the continent, particularly magnificent liturgical music for her various chapels. Even in her days of hardship, Henrietta continued to give to others, whether it was giving a beggar woman her last valuable possession, or endowing a Visitation Monastery in France as a harbour for pious women.

Even as a great portrait reveals something about the soul of the subject painted, so does a written portrait. Yet each soul remains an enigma, especially souls who loved deeply, like Henrietta. Art offers a glimpse behind the veil of the senses, but it is done by using the imagination to describe the exteriors, the sounds, the smells, the foods, the music. By understanding a little bit about a world that is gone and the people who are gone, but whose actions have directly or indirectly influenced us, like the founding of Mary’s Land by Charles I and Henrietta Maria, we can better understand the present.

Elena Maria Vidal

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About the Author

Elena Maria Vidal was born in Florence, Oregon in 1962 but grew up in Frederick County, Maryland. She received her BA in Psychology from Hood College and her MA in Modern European History from SUNY Albany. She has been a member of the Secular Order of Mount Carmel since 1986. Elena enjoys cooking, gardening, opera and working with the elderly. She lives on Maryland’s Eastern Shore with her family. She is currently engaged in writing a historical fiction trilogy about Queen Henrietta Maria. Elena’s Tea at Trianon blog deals with social, religious and political issues as well as history. My Queen, My Love: A Novel of Henrietta Maria is her fifth novel and sixth book. Find out more from her blog, Tea at Trianon and find her on Twitter @emvidal