Picture of author.

David Loades

Author of The Tudor Queens of England

63+ Works 1,267 Members 15 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

David Loades is Honorary Research Professor at the University of Leeds and Director of the British Academy John Foxe Project.

Includes the names: D. M. Loades, David M. Loades

Works by David Loades

The Tudor Queens of England (2009) 114 copies, 2 reviews
Chronicles of the Tudor Kings (1990) 106 copies, 2 reviews
Mary Tudor: A Life (1989) 74 copies
The Tudors For Dummies (2011) 44 copies, 2 reviews
The Tudor Court (1986) 40 copies
Henry VIII and His Queens (1994) 33 copies
The Oxford martyrs (1970) 33 copies
Henry VIII: Court, Church and Conflict (2007) 33 copies, 2 reviews
Jane Seymour (2013) 28 copies, 1 review
The Fighting Tudors (2009) 26 copies
The Six Wives of Henry VIII (2009) 25 copies
Mary Rose (2012) 24 copies
Letters from the Mary Rose (2002) 22 copies
Mary Tudor (2011) 22 copies
HENRY VIII (2011) 20 copies
Two Tudor Conspiracies (1965) 15 copies
Elizabeth I: A Life (2006) 15 copies
Catherine Howard (2012) 11 copies, 1 review
Power in Tudor England (1996) 9 copies
Reader's Guide to British History (2003) — Editor — 6 copies
John Foxe: Essays v. 2 (2001) 1 copy
John Foxe: Essays v. 1 (2001) 1 copy

Associated Works

KINGS & QUEENS (2001) — Editor — 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

15 reviews
A brief but excellent study of Henry VIII's reign. Unlike many biographies of Henry VIII that I have encountered, Loades does not spend much time on the well-known story of Henry's six wives, but instead discusses the monarch's method of governance, laws, religious views, and politics. I feel that this work contributed more to my understanding of Henry VIII's actual rule and what it meant for the English people than the legions of material written about his wives. This is a great work for show more someone interested in learning more about Henry and his reign. show less
This is an excellent biography of Mary Tudor who reigned as Queen from July 1553 until her death in November 1558. During her reign she had over 280 religious dissenters burned at the stake as she attempted to reverse the protestant policies of her half brother Edward VI back to the old catholic religion. She earned the posthumous sobriquet as Bloody Mary, however David Loades gives us a rounded portrait of this troubled queen and woman. He makes no excuses for her religious zeal, but does a show more good job in explaining why she pursued the policies that looked like religious persecution from our standpoint today. He concentrates on the character and issues facing Mary herself who is the star of this book. There are some social commentaries and pen portraits of the people around the queen, certainly enough to make her story understandable and to demonstrate the pressures that she was under from a turbulent Tudor Court.

Loades reminds his readers that Mary was the first female English sovereign - a ruling queen who was not simply the consort of the king and so faced unique difficulties as a woman in a man’s world. She was 37 years old, unmarried and fiercely proud of her virginity when she became queen and had to face the immediate problem of the succession. She chose to marry the Spanish prince Philip: a staunchly catholic man who had no time or much inclination to get to know the issues facing an English monarch and who proved to be very unpopular with the English people. Mary kept it all together to a certain extant, but failure to produce an heir and the prospect of her protestant half sister Elizabeth next in line for the throne were difficulties that she could not overcome. David Loades ends his biography by saying that “It is time that England’s first queen was better appreciated” and if this means understanding the problems facing her and also appreciating a stubborn, dogmatic and at times indecisive character then Loades has done a very good job.

A very readable and easily digestible history book that uses both primary and secondary sources to provide an up to date (2006) summary of current knowledge on this catholic queen’s reign. A four star read.
show less
Exemplary royal biography, fair, well-written,and interestingly argued. Also pleasingly brief, at 220 pages - though no doubt it helps that Mary's reign was only five years long, and she died at the age of 42.

Loades' book is convincingly anchored in recent scholarship, and comes with interesting excerpts from primary source documents, as well as full "scholarly apparatus." Loades can also use Britishisms amusingly. My favorite example is when he is writing about the shrewd evasions of the show more then Princess Elizabeth as she "worked" Count Feria, King Philip's emissary at the Royal Court: "It must have been a difficult interview, because even by his own account she seems to have been playing him like a fish." show less
½
An interesting treatment of the women of one of my favorite historic periods. Instead of examining each queen in chronological biographical order, they are studied in light of the primary role they played during their reign: the Queen as Trophy (Catherine de Valois), the Queen as Lover (Elizabeth Woodville), the Queen as Whore (Catherine Howard), to name a few. There is one chapter for the Queens Who Never Were (Jane Gray and Mary Stuart), and one chapter each for the Married Sovereign (Mary show more I) and the Unmarried Sovereign (Elizabeth I, of course). Every one of Henry VIII's wives is included, as well as so called minor queens like William's Mary and Mary's sister Anne.

I enjoyed this book very much. The premise gave me an interesting slant on rulers I have read about before - but never from this particular angle. Recommended.
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
63
Also by
1
Members
1,267
Popularity
#20,253
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
15
ISBNs
160
Languages
1
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs