Issues 7 - 12

Second Year Collection

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Type: Print Edition

In this Second Year Collection, comprising Issues 7 - 12 of Tudor Places magazine, we delve into a wide range of topics from palaces to battlefield sites, astronomical clocks to Cambridge colleges, tombs to wall paintings, and cathedrals to Tudor Christmas.

We explore buildings and places throughout England and Wales, we venture up to reiver country on the Anglo-Scottish border, follow in the footsteps of the Pilgrimage of Grace in the north, go over to the Isle of Man, and across the channel to Brittany, where a young Henry VII spent time in exile.

We have interviews with Dr Heidi Meyer, Dr Michael Carter, Gareth Russell, Tim Clark, Giles Keating, and Julian Bell, whom we speak to about their work as historians, authors, and curators and, in the case of some, their experience of owning, managing and living in Tudor places.

Sarah Morris, the Tudor Travel Guide, shares her itineraries for tours and weekends away exploring Tudor places in Kent, Stratford-upon-Avon, Pembrokeshire, York, Norfolk and the Cotswolds.

Brigitte Webster has a regular column in which she shares her experience of living in Old Hall, her Tudor house in Norfolk, and how the house and garden change with the seasons.

A wonderful gift for people who love history and the places where history happened.

Type: Print Edition

Articles include

Hatfield Old Palace: A Palace Fit for a Future Queen

Henry VIII used Hatfield, the episcopal palace built for Bishop John Morton, as a royal nursery. It is most closely associated with Elizabeth I, who retreated to Hatfield during difficult times in the reigns of her half-siblings, Edward VI and Mary I. Dr Elizabeth Norton explores the remains of this red-brick palace and the momentous events that occurred there.

The Battle of Bosworth: Birthplace of the Tudor Dynasty

The Battle of Bosworth was a defining moment in English history, marking the end of three hundred years of Plantagenet rule and, some argue, the end of the medieval period. Julian Humphrys discusses the battle that saw the death of the last Plantagenet king and the establishment of the Tudor dynasty.

No Time for Sickness: Henry VIII's Astronomical Clock

The astronomical clock at Hampton Court Palace is a marvel of sixteenth-century design and innovation, reflecting the interests of the age in astronomy and astrology. Tracy Borman explains the history and workings of this wonderful timepiece.

Cawood Castle: Principal Palace of the Archbishops of York

Cawood's convenient location and comfortable accommodation attracted several royal visitors over the centuries, although Archbishop Thomas Wolsey only finally made use of the episcopal palace following his fall from favour at the Tudor court. Julian Humphrys visits the remains of Thomas Wolsey's last home.

Peterborough Cathedral: A Phoenix in Stone and Glass

Rebuilt twice before its current twelfth-century incarnation, Peterborough Cathedral is a glorious mix of Norman and Gothic architecture. In the sixteenth century, the cathedral became the burial place of two queens, each of whom the reigning monarch wished to forget. Dr Emma J. Wells looks at its turbulent history and splendid architecture.

These Walls Can Talk: Tudor Wall Paintings

Popular perceptions of what Tudor buildings looked like are strongly shaped by the mainly monochrome colours of what remains today. But the reality - of highly decorated, and often very colourful, interiors - is very different. Dr Emma J. Wells looks at the fascinating world of Tudor wall paintings.

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The taster bundle includes 3 issues of Tudor Places magazine jam-packed with articles on palaces, castles, cathedrals, manor houses, churches, military forts and more!

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