Customer Reviews
Glittering Court - By: History Buff, 26 Feb 2008 
This book gives a very thourough & complete insight into all the workings of the Tudor court. It is quite exceptionalin it's minute detail. This is a must for serious history students. It's one of those books that needs reading many times as there is just so much detail to be absorbed. Fiction it is not! Totally astonishing was the wealth of Henry VIII's court. Read this book & you will learn all the intricate details of court life for both Henry & his Queens as well as their courtiers. Highly recommended.
It has the stuff they dont put in films that makes it special - By: Ian Young, 25 Feb 2008 
A well put together book. It is a little hard to read. You need to concentrate & you will not wish to be disturbed, but the History is outstanding. Page after page with facts that most of us never know about. It has much detail on the personal side to the great king. It does not dwell on his six wifes like the movie industry. If you want the truth & facts this is it.
Hard work to get through - By: Monica, 10 Oct 2007 
This is (almost) excellent for the student of the Tudors, although not for someone with just a general interestin Henry VIII. I saw 'almost' excellent because none of her quotes are clearly referenced. They might say which book, but not which of the forty volumes of that book or the pagein the volume! To find out more would be like looking for a needlein a haystack. Antonia Fraser's work is clearly referenced. For the first 100 pages or so, this reads like the accounts of Henry's spending etc., & is hard work even for someone who wanted to like it & was studying the era.
Crippled by Bias - By: , 06 Mar 2004 
Whilst there's no denying the enormous amount of research Ms. Weir must have undertaken to write this book, & that for those studying the minutiae of Henrician court-life this book is a must. However, Ms. Weir's bias towards the historical characters dealt with is truly breathtaking.
The hagiographic treatment accorded to Katherine of Aragon contrasts sharply with the utter vituperation of Anne Boleyn's. It seems that the more balanced (and more readable) accounts that characterised her "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" have utterly vanished.
Fleshing Out Henry VIII - By: Anonymous, 27 Feb 2003 
Alison Weir has written a compulsively readable account of Henry VIII's court. She begins by describing his massive inheritance of greater & lesser homes, then proceeds to minutely describe the court. The physical details include such things as floors, tapestries, paintings, gardens, kitchens, foodstuffs. No detail, whether of texture or cost (she helpfully multiplies the contemporary values by 300 to give us today's equivalent), is omitted. She also describes the architectural set-up & how the rooms progressed from the Great Watching Chamber, through the Presence Chamber & into the Privy Chamber.
But into this rich heady brew Weir also throws the complete administrative breakdown of Henry's court, giving us a mind- numbing account of Tudor Human Resources, including the hapless, appropriately named Groom of the Stool who dressed the King & saw to his lavatorial needs.
Throughout the book Weir keeps us up to scratch with Henry's mania for accumulating property - the layout & development of his palaces. In addition, she also details the various staff changes, promotions, demotions and, of course, executions.
Weir provides astute, well-researched snapshots of Henry's entire coterie, from his playmates & companions, through to his mistresses & their families, his advisors, chancellors & churchmen. Everyone is placedin context so that their motivations & actions can be fully understood. So you are getting many biographies for the price of one, especially of people like Thomas More, or Henry's two sisters Margaret (who mothered the Stuart dynasty) & Mary (whose second marriage to Charles Brandon produced the unfortunate Lady Jane Grey, her granddaughter).
One interesting character is Henry Fitzroy, Henry VII's illegitimate son by Bessie Blount. This chap was evidence that the King could produce a male child, if not a legitimate heir, & he was created Earl of Richmond. The poet Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, was a childhood friend of Fitzroy.
The book starts as a loose retailing of topical details, but the biographical framework starts to impose itself, with a strictly chronological account of Henry's reign. His celebrated matrimonial career is presented from HIS viewpoint for a change, although that does not lessen his monstrousness. He loved tilting & tournaments - that leg injury was a sporting injury. Most of his best friends seem to have been chosen for their skillin breaking lances...!
So if you want to know more about the Courtenays, the Boleyns, Norfolks & Suffolks, the Seymours, the Parrs, this is your book. In spades! Weir does it well.
Only one reservation - after the comprehensive genealogies of her "Wars of the Roses," the family treesin this book are insufficient for the ground covered. We really need the background for his wives as well as Henry's own genealogy. (Both trees can be foundin the opening pages of the hardback edition of Antonia Fraser's "Six Wives of Henry VIII". They may bein Weir's "Six Wives", too, but are harder to read, beingin italic script.)
Otherwise - excellent.