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Kingmakers but never kings, traitors at the heart of power, innocents married for the sake of family ambition - meet the House of Dudley
Every Tudor monarch made their name with a Dudley by their side - or by crushing one beneath their feet.
The Dudleys thrived at the court of Henry VII, but were sacrificed for the popularity of Henry VIII. Rising to prominence in the reign of Edward VI, the Dudleys lost it all by advancing Jane Grey to the throne over Mary I. Under Elizabeth I, the family were once again at the centre of power. This time, they would do anything to remain there . . .
With three generations of executed favourites, what caused this family to keep rising so high and falling so low?
Kingmakers but never kings, traitors at the heart of power, innocents married for the sake of family ambition - meet the House of Dudley
Every Tudor monarch made their name with a Dudley by their side - or by crushing one beneath their feet.
The Dudleys thrived at the court of Henry VII, but were sacrificed for the popularity of Henry VIII. Rising to prominence in the reign of Edward VI, the Dudleys lost it all by advancing Jane Grey to the throne over Mary I. Under Elizabeth I, the family were once again at the centre of power. This time, they would do anything to remain there . . .
With three generations of executed favourites, what caused this family to keep rising so high and falling so low?
Joanne Paul is Senior Lecturer in Early Modern History at the University of Sussex. A BBC/AHRC New Generation Thinker, her research focuses on the intellectual and cultural history of the Renaissance and Early Modern periods. She has written for the Cambridge University Press 'Ideas in Context' series, and has been widely praised for her work on Thomas More, William Shakespeare, Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes. The House of Dudley is her acclaimed first book.
A tour-de-force of Tudor history, as seen through the eyes of a
family with a front-row view of almost every major political event
in sixteenth-century England. Remarkable
*Dan Jones, Sunday Times bestselling author of Powers and
Thrones*
Exciting and immersive. An immensely entertaining history,
capturing in full Tudor brilliance the cut-throat glamour of the
English throne and the most audacious family to play its game
*Sunday Times*
House of Dudley is a full-blooded affair, as good on the horrors of
war as it is on the soft power of the Dudley women, and written in
a lively, episodic style that presents each Dudley as a foil to the
monarch they served
*Jessie Childs*
Breathes new life into an old and familiar Tudor story. [She]
negotiates the labyrinth of Tudor politics with skill, producing a
book much more comprehensible and illuminating than others I've
read . . . It's delightful, a joy to read
*The Times, BOOK OF THE WEEK*
I am hugely impressed by The House of Dudley and by the depths of
research.
This is a pacy narrative, vividly written, that makes you want to
read on and on.
Joanne Paul is a major new talent in the field and I eagerly await
her next book
*Alison Weir*
This is riveting stuff: death, desire, power and scandal. Paul has
made the most of it, producing a well written and historically
grounded page-turner . . . Game of Thrones looks tame compared with
the real-life machinations of the Dudleys and the Tudors
*Spectator*
A twist on the Tudors . . . Enormously entertaining - a sheer joy
to read
*The Times, '25 BEST HISTORY BOOKS OF 2022'*
A hugely entertaining history of three generations of the Dudley
family, who dominated the Tudor court
*The Times*
A thrilling and deeply researched study of power and conspiracy:
the rise and fall of the other Tudor dynasty. The House of Dudley
illuminates the fascinating men and women who almost became kings
and queens in their own right
*Simon Sebag-Montefiore*
Vivid, innovative and authoritative. I could not recommend The
House of Dudley more highly. It's a real lesson in how to
revitalise the writing of Tudor history
*Sarah Gristwood*
Joanne Paul's account of this family is rich and compelling. She
manages to hit that sweet spot where scholarly history overlaps
with dramatic storytelling; she conjures up the look and feel of
Tudor life, down to the clothes, the medicines and the furniture,
while also being a skilful filler-in of political background . . .
Whether or not you have ever succumbed to Mantelmania, you will
find yourself drawn in, fascinated, and richly informed
*Telegraph*
An enthralling read told by Paul with great verve and an eye for
the telling detail . . . The family's complex history is concisely
and compellingly related
*Literary Review*
Visceral and illuminating. The extraordinary House of Dudley is the
Tudor Game of Thrones. Paul has produced a painstakingly detailed
first book with spirit and verve
*The Wall Street Journal*
Captivating and thought-provoking . . . Sheds immense light onto
this often-overlooked family
*Royal Studies Journal*
The crowning jewel in its genre . . . I can't recommend this book
enough. Unputdownable
*Lindsey Fitzharris*
When reading Joanne Paul's lively history of the house of Dudley,
it is impossible not to be reminded of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
trilogy . . . Paul uses the experiences of the Dudleys to light up
odd corners and backroom spaces of Tudor palace life
*Mail on Sunday*
Joanne Paul chronicles the meteoric rise and deadly fall of the
Dudleys
*BBC History Magazine*
Joanne Paul reveals how the might of the Tudor dynasty was built on
the blood and sweat of three generations of another family - the
Dudleys
*BBC History Magazine*
Hugely entertaining
*The Times, Best Books of Summer 2022*
Fascinating
*History Today*
Brimming with power struggles, ambition and intrigue, this is the
untold story of one of the most notorious families of the Tudor
era. A spectacular achievement
*Nicola Tallis, critically-acclaimed author of 'Uncrowned Queen:
The Fateful Life of Margaret Beaufort, Tudor Matriarch'*
Absorbing, meticulously researched and expertly executed. A tale of
intrigue and manipulation that will lead you through the very dark
corridors of Tudor history
*Lindsey Fitzharris, acclaimed author of 'The Butchering Art'*
Praise for Joanne Paul
*-*
Brilliant and lucid. This is an original and illuminating work that
should be compulsory
*Suzannah Lipscomb*
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