Explores England's strategies for survival, and shows how military action to defend the throne became a sophisticated propoganda tool. This book traces the great battles of Tudor reigns and reveals their public and private impact upon individual monarchs.
David Loades is Professor Emeritus at the University of Wales, and Associate of the Centre for Early Modern History at the University of Oxford and Honorary Research Professor at the University of Sheffield. A leading authority on Tudor England, he is also a well known and popular writer on its key personalities and events. He has a particular interest in the Tudor navy and has written on several of the period's monarchs and statesmen. Recent books include Henry VIII: Court, Church and Conflict and Princes of Wales; Royal heirs in waiting, both for The National Archives, as well as The Life and Career of William Paulet ( 2008) and (with Eamon Duffy) The Church of Mary Tudor (2006).
Although the Tudors ruled England for well over a century
(1485-1603), in The Fighting Tudors Prof. Loades (Oxford) gives us
the first general survey of the English way of war in the period,
one that he argues is characterized by the civilianization of
government functions, with a focus on war, as state institutions
evolved. A short introduction on the nature of kingship is followed
by reign-by-reign look at how military and naval administration,
organization, and equipment evolved in the period, and, of course,
the actual conduct of operations. There are short accounts of
various wars and rebellions, even covert operations, and a look at
the increasing integration of diplomatic and military activities as
England developed into a major power. This is a good look at the
development of the military side of one of the first nation-states
in the modern sense, and a valuable read for those interested in
British history, the Renaissance, and the rise of modern military
institutions.
For those readers that have an interest in English history and
particularly the glorious period of the Tudor reign, David Loades'
book The Fighting Tudors is a very interesting and different
approach to an aspect of the Tudors that possibly defined not only
their reigns but also the future of what became the British Empire.
Loades takes each King and Queen of the Tudor dynasty and focuses
on their approaches to military action and how it was used as a
political tool to survive and to build a kingdom that carries an
image which through the future centuries has fascinated people
around the world. Beginning with Henry VII's victory at the Battle
of Bosworth Field, Loades gives the reader insight into the behind
the scenes evolution of Henry's early approach to the military
defense of England in his wanting to build a Navy. As you move
through the book, you become aware of the importance of these early
steps in the military preparedness of Henry VII as they influence
each of his Tudor successors through Elizabeth I and the relevance
of the English Navy in light of how important this would be to
building an Empire with the beginning of the Age of Discovery in
the new world and the rise of power of Spain with its Armada.
Loades brings out how the approach to military action by the Tudors
began to change the European perception of the English being
somewhat barbarian, as Loades points out about Henry VIII's Field
of Gold encounter with the French king, saying: "Two ancient
enemies had been brought together in peaceful competition rather
than in war, and Henry's image had been greatly enhanced. The
general impression that the English were a collection of barbarians
had been definitively dispelled." The insight into the short reign
of the child king Edward VI is another aspect of this book that is
not found in most history books of this period. All these accounts
lead to the discussion of the reign of Elizabeth I, which takes up
almost half of the book and is showing the cul
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