Danger to Elizabeth
English
By (author): Alison Plowden
Elizabeth I is perhaps Englands most famous monarch. Born in 1533, the product of the doomed marriage of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth was heir to her fathers title, then disinherited and finally imprisoned by her half sister Mary. But in 1558, on Marys death, she ascended the throne and reigned for forty-five years. Respected by her subjects and idolised by future generations, Glorianas fierce devotion to her country and its people truly made her Englands fairest queen and icon. In the wake of the Reformation Europe lay deeply divided by religion. This, the second volume of Alison Plowdens acclaimed Elizabethan quartet, charts the dramatic and multi-faceted struggle between Elizabeth and the Catholics of England and the rest of Europe who, denouncing the queen as a heretic, a bastard and a usurper, threatened to overthrow her and re-establish the supremacy of Rome in all Christendom.
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