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Reviews for Knights and Warhorses: Military Service and the English Aristocracy under Edward III

 Knights and Warhorses magazine reviews

The average rating for Knights and Warhorses: Military Service and the English Aristocracy under Edward III based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-01-16 00:00:00
1994was given a rating of 5 stars Tiffany Degroat
Any and everybody interested in the Victorian Era should read this book. Actually this time period and all that it stands for should be called the "Albertian Era"! The book explains why. It was so funny. I came to this conclusion and then the author said exactly that. She used the words "Albertian Era"; it is not me that invented the phrase. I feel this is the most important message of the entire book. People who say they love Victorian literature, they simply have to be interested in the couple that created this life style - based on sexual morality, premarital chastity, conjugal fidelity and yes hypocrisy too. What are all the other adjectives associated with this era? How did these descriptions come to be tied to Victoria & Albert and why? Female submission? Double standards? Straight-laced behavior? Strict protocol? Morality or obsession with morality? And why exactly do we associate this all with hypocrisy and double-standards? Isn't morality good? Victoria and Albert must be viewed together. They had nine children! Look at this couple and you begin to see what the Victorian Era really means, but there are no easy answers. How their life exemplifies the era is extremely interesting. Their lives are interesting. To understand them you need to know of their childhood experiences. Then the reader can consider / debate to what extent we follow what our parents teach us and to what extent we rebel from all we are taught! These are the thoughts that went through my head. The book is clear. History is made clear; it is simply presented, although occasionally all the details of who is who in this large families gets a bit too much. The events leading up to the Crimean War are fascinating and well explained. Great lines on Florence Nightingale too. Did you know that Albert was the one behind the first scientific world fair? He was the initiator and the man behind the first one - in 1851 in London, in Hyde Park. The book ended too soon; I wish it had continued to tell more of what Victoria did after Albert's early death, but look at the title. It says clearly what is covered. The title aptly speaks of their relationship - rulers, partner and rivals! I can also recommend George, Nicholas and Wilhelm: Three Royal Cousins and the Road to World War I. Queen Victoria was the grandmother of all three. Rosalyn Landor's narration of the audioboook is excellent.
Review # 2 was written on 2019-11-08 00:00:00
1994was given a rating of 5 stars Mark Lehmann
We Two has one of those tantalizing subtitles that nonfiction loves to plaster on covers: "Victoria and Albert: Rulers, Partners, Rivals." If Victoria and Albert had consciously considered themselves rivals, this concept for the book would have made for an extremely interesting study of two competing partners ruling the most powerful nation of the nineteenth century. Unfortunately for author Gillian Gill, Albert and Victoria seem to have left nothing in the way of their own writing or in others' anecdotes to indicate that either of them saw their relationship as a competition, and that is a fundamental problem in the book's organization. Instead, Victoria erected lavish memorials to the Prince Consort, published hagiographic biographies of him, and wrote diary entries and letters that indicate she was bereft without him. Where, you might well ask, can this possibly leave a revisionist author, determined to showcase their marital battles? Logically, it leaves the corpus of letters that can be summarized to their most damning themes, as well as all the destroyed documents that obviously contained all the critical information the author can't provide in the historical record. The method of arguing from silence works in general because nobody can prove its conclusions wrong through evidence. Thus, Gill is irrefutably able to answer several key questions in Albert-Victoria biography debates. Why was Albert able to satisfy Victoria on their wedding night if he was as pure as he claims? Gill answers ex silentio: because Albert had had a lot of gay sex experiences at university. Next: did Victoria sleep with John Brown, her Highland Servant, after Albert's death? "[T]he lack of hard evidence is in itself a proof of intimacy," writes Gill. (The relevance of Victoria's relationship with someone after Albert's death in a book dedicated to the marriage of the two is, however, never made clear.) Gill's writing is so graceful at times that it masks her weaknesses as a biographer. The chief weakness is neither the peculiar absence of quotes from most of her chapters, nor her occasionally unclear timeline of narration, but rather her own confusion about her argument. I can't tell if she approached her sources with the view that Victoria and Albert were prototypes of modern power couples, and then failed to find much evidence for that in the documents they left, or if she approached her sources with the idea that Albert was a foolish and oppressive husband, but Gill definitely approached the texts with some sort of hypothesis that fell apart the more she examined it. The result is that she vacillates between Albert-as-superman and Albert-as-weakling characterizations depending on the chapter. Such characterization is unfair to both the Prince Consort and Queen Victoria, who certainly deserves more credit for her own choices than she receives from Gill's attacks on and defenses of the Prince.


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