Dawn of Empire

Burghley House, built by Elizabeth's chief minister, William Cecil.

The roots of modern Britain Somehow, Elizabethan England has a very different atmosphere to any previous period in British history. Queen Elizabeth I succeeded to the throne on the death of her elder Catholic half-sister ‘Bloody’ Mary in 1558.  She was twenty-five.  Her 45 year rule is popularly seen as heralding a new age for

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The victor of Bosworth

Henry Tudor, Bosworth, Richard III, Henry VII

New dynasty, fresh start? There was by no means unanimous agreement that the new Tudor King, Henry VII, had the best claim to the throne of England in 1485.  In fact, depending on your point of view, his claim could be considered quite flimsy.  Henry was the son of a formidable mother, Margaret Beaufort, and

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When death walked the land

Plague - a cart with the dead - lithograph by Louis Duveau

The only defence was to run away – if you could The ‘Black Death’ or ‘Great Pestilence’ swept through Europe between around 1346–1353, where it eventually killed between 30-60% of the population – maybe 25 million people, though some historians estimate twice that figure.  The disease originated ‘somewhere in the east’ and arrived in southern

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