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God's Own Gentlewoman

The Life of Margaret Paston

«In God's Own Gentlewoman, Watt takes us by the hand and leads us across the flat marshy landscapes of East Anglia into the past. Focusing on apparently tiny details from the Paston letters - dresses, jewellery, favourite poems - she illuminates not just one family's loves and losses, but a society convulsed by plague and war as the Middle Ages die away and a new world struggles to emerge.»

Helena Kelly, author of The Life and Lies of Charles Dickens

The remarkable story of Margaret Paston, whose letters form the most extensive collection of personal writings by a medieval English woman.

Drawing on the largest archive of medieval correspondence relating to a single family in the UK, God's Own Gentlewoman explores what everyday life was like during the turbulent decades at the height of the Wars of the Roses.

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The remarkable story of Margaret Paston, whose letters form the most extensive collection of personal writings by a medieval English woman.

Drawing on the largest archive of medieval correspondence relating to a single family in the UK, God's Own Gentlewoman explores what everyday life was like during the turbulent decades at the height of the Wars of the Roses. Covering topics including political conflicts and familial in-fighting, forbidden love affairs and clandestine marriages, bloody battles and sieges, fear of plague and sudden death, friendships and animosity, and childbirth and child mortality, Margaret's letters provide us with unparalleled insight into all aspects of life in late medieval England.

Diane Watt, a world expert on medieval women's writing, offers insight into Margaret's activities, experiences, emotions and relationships, presenting the life of a medieval woman who was at times absorbed by the mundane and domestic, but who found herself caught up in the most extraordinary situations and events.

Detaljer

Forlag
Icon Books
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
288
ISBN
9781837731640
Utgivelsesår
2024
Format
23 x 15 cm

Om forfatteren

Diane Watt is an award-winning academic and writer. She is the author of Secretaries of God, Medieval Women's Writing, and Women, Writing and Religion. Diane was born and brought up on the west coast of Scotland, and as a child spent her holidays visiting her grandmother in County Durham and aunts and cousins in North Yorkshire. More recently, during the university vacations, she has enjoyed travelling around Norfolk with her wife and their three dogs in search of Margaret Paston.

Anmeldelser

«In God's Own Gentlewoman, Watt takes us by the hand and leads us across the flat marshy landscapes of East Anglia into the past. Focusing on apparently tiny details from the Paston letters - dresses, jewellery, favourite poems - she illuminates not just one family's loves and losses, but a society convulsed by plague and war as the Middle Ages die away and a new world struggles to emerge.»

Helena Kelly, author of The Life and Lies of Charles Dickens

«Immaculately researched with consummate skill, expressed with perfect lucidity ... God's Own Gentlewoman vividly evokes the world of medieval England through the experience of a woman»

Anne O'Brien, author of A Court of Betrayal

«The world of the Pastons was in some ways not so different from our own. Margaret's captivating story reveals a line of impressive women who held their own in a complex world of intrigue and politics, fashion and business, violence and love.»

Marion Turner, author of The Wife of Bath: A Biography

«A riveting study, employing extensive use of archival sources to passionately paint a vivid and sympathetic account of everyday life in medieval England, as shown through one woman's eyes. An evocative triumph.»

Nathen Amin, author of The House of Beaufort

«The greatest danger for this book was always going to be that Watt's abundant scholarly expertise would overwhelm a narrative aimed at a general audience, but happily this is not the case. The reading experience is pleasingly like watching a play: Watt steps forward to explain the context and provide a framing device before retreating to the wings to leave Margaret in the limelight as she speaks in her own vibrant voice. The book is, incidentally, a cracking tourist guide to Norfolk.»

History Today

«Watt presents Margaret as a strong, capable individual, but also highlights the double standards that inhibited medieval women ... An engaging introduction to medieval life, as seen through the eyes of a fascinating woman.»

Times Literary Supplement

«A movingly personal exploration of the life lived by a quietly remarkable woman during turbulent times more than five hundred years ago. With nuance, deep learning and insight, Diane Watt leads us through the landscapes of Norfolk past and present, bringing the medieval world into shimmering view.»

Helen Castor, author of She-Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth

«Watt brings to beautifully-written life the story not only of Margaret Paston and her family - extracted from Margaret's own letters - but an entire richly-textured time and place that, until someone invents a time machine, could not be visited more vividly.»

Nicola Griffith, author of Hild

«A fascinating and deeply moving encounter with medieval life as experienced by an intelligent, resourceful and extraordinarily canny woman. Using the letters that Margaret Paston wrote to her husband and wider family as stepping stones through the fifteenth century, Watt gives a powerful sense of what life was like for a middle-class woman, navigating her way through a time of political and social upheaval. Watt situates Margaret's life in the wider context of England's warring political factions, decimation by the Black Death and recurrent social unrest, and shows us how Margaret skillfully secured and defended her family's good name, material wealth and social status. Watt braids this story with her own pilgrimage to places of importance to Margaret, from churches to prisons, manor houses to shrines, and shows how much we have in common with Margaret, who aspired and struggled, loved and grieved more than five hundred years ago, yet whose story still moves us today.»

Victoria McKenzie, author of For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy On My Little Pain

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