The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn

  Author:    Eric Ives
  ISBN:    1405134631
  Sales Rank:    17604
  Published:    2005-07-01
  Publisher:    Blackwell Publishing, Incorporated
  # Pages:    480
  Binding:    Paperback
  Avg. Rating:    5.0 based on 26 reviews
  Used Offers:    15 from $13.65
  Amazon Price:    $14.93
  (Data above last updated:  2010-03-01 20:08:42 EST)
  
  
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The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn
  
Anne Boleyn is the most notorious of Englands queens, but more famous for her death as an adulterer than for her life. Henrys second wife and mother of Elizabeth I, Anne was the first English queen to be publicly executed. Yet what do we know of the achievements and legacy of her short reign?In The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn Eric Ives provides the most detailed and convincing portrait we have of the queen. He reveals a person of intellect with a passion for the new culture of the Renaissance, a woman who made her way in a mans world by force of education and personality. She played a powerful and independent role in the faction-ridden court of Henry VIII and the unceasing struggle for royal favour that was Tudor politics. The consequences can still be detected today. Indeed, Ives shows that it was precisely because Anne was a powerful figure in her own right that it needed a coup to bring her down. She had to be stopped even by a lie.
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02-09-10 3 0\1
(Hide Review...)  The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn
Reviewer Permalink
Plenty of facts it reads like a history text book. I was disappointed and then finally bored. If you want just the facts this is the book for you.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2010-02-16 02:46:13 EST)
04-24-09 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Best Study on Anne Boleyn
Reviewer Permalink
Eric Ives new edition is the most valuable study on Anne Boleyn. It also is an entertaining and easy read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2010-02-16 02:46:13 EST)
04-20-09 5 0\1
(Hide Review...)  great bio
Reviewer Permalink
The author offered well researched information about Anne Boleyn's life. I really enjoyed reading each point that he made and the reasoning behind his conclusions.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2009-04-24 19:48:28 EST)
04-03-09 4 0\2
(Hide Review...)  review
Reviewer Permalink
Good film, good actors but sometimes a little confusing what is going on. It was a brutal time in European history when all the relgious wars were raging.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2009-04-24 19:48:28 EST)
02-05-09 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  An excellent and thorough biography.
Reviewer Permalink
The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn is a biography of one of the most controversial women in history. The book concentrates not only on Anne Boleyn the mistress and later queen consort, but also on the woman herself. The book begins with a brief history of the Boleyn family and Thomas Boleyn's early years at court. The book also focuses a great deal on Margaret of Austria and the french court's influence on Anne's education, taste in art, books, and more importantly her success as a courtier.

This will book will be extremely satisfying to Anne Boleyn sympathizers. Eric Ives cleverly isolates various myths and allegations against Anne Boleyn and rips them to shreds with a plethora of contradicting evidence. Allow me to give you an example. I cannot tell you how much I hate to hear about the infamous sixth finger. Even some of my favorite Boleyn books makes references to it. Ives traces the beginnings of what he calls "the monster legend" to Nicolas Sander who was born in 1527 and most certainly was not a contemporary to be making such "accurate" descriptions of Anne. Mr Ives believes Anne probably had some minor nail deformation, but most certainly not a sixth finger or a monstrous goiter on the neck. This is just one example of the many unkind myths surrounding the tragic second wife of Henry VIII that Ives blows apart. There are far more serious ones, especially concerning the allegations of Anne's adultery, who Ives traces back to Thomas Cromwell.

The book also contains many gorgeous illustrations, which include several illuminated manuscripts that once belonged to Anne. Dr Ives is certain Anne had a certain interest in art and antiques, although he states it would be inaccurate to see her as "Renaissance patron of the arts". He certainly makes a convincing argument for linking Hans Holbein the younger's portrait, Ambassadors', Jean de Dinteville and George de Selve, to Anne Boleyn's forthcoming coronation.

No matter how many biographies you have read or haven't read, read The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn. The book is extremely readable and will certainly be a page turner for anyone fascinated with Anne Boleyn!




(Review Data Last Updated: 2009-04-04 19:03:20 EST)
01-12-09 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  The best biography of Anne out there
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I have read nearly every bit of research on Anne Boleyn that there is, having been fascinated by her story for years. Ives's biography is truly amazing--he presents little bias in his account and presents Anne as she truly deserves to be shown: a remarkable woman. For anyone who is interested in Anne, this is THE biography to read. Highly recommended.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2009-02-21 18:05:17 EST)
10-25-08 5 2\2
(Hide Review...)  Detailed and enlightening about Anne Boleyn!
Reviewer Permalink
If one is looking for mere entertainment, this is not the book to buy. I thoroughly enjoyed "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" written by Antonia Fraser, which contained only the most necessary historical facts in order to present the six Queens properly.

When I have given Eric Ives' book five stars, it's because this is probably the most detailed and enlightening book ever written about Anne Boleyn. But the book is not an easy read, not if one is searching for pure entertainment. For me it is more a book of facts about Anne which I can go back to whenever I'm searching for more information about her. That does not mean the book lacks for numerous enjoyable anecdotes from Anne's life and vivid descriptions of her as a person.

The book tells about Anne's family and background, which was far more important than one is often led to believe. Originally, the family made its fortune in trade, but later on its relations with the Tudors became significant and Anne was by no means an unsuitable match for King Henry.

What I found most interesting was the picture of Anne as a very cultured and highly educated young woman. The time she spent at the Continent and how this influenced her in her role as Queen of England. It thoroughly explains why she became as powerful and politically important as she did. And not the least, the circumstances leading to her death.

For a complete picture of Anne Boleyn, look no further. This book gives all the answers.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2009-01-18 14:21:29 EST)
04-14-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  The political thriller that was the story of Anne Boleyn's death
Reviewer Permalink
Eric Ives's book about Anne Boleyn is absolutely the best study of her life and death I have ever read -- and I've read quite a few. Finally, Henry VIII's rejection of his "entirely beloved wife" makes sense, given the whole story of Anne's involvement with the religious reformers; the factions at court; and the loss of power that Thomas Cromwell faced because of her. Ives's depiction of Cromwell's engineering of Anne's arrest reads like a thriller. It was not as simple as Henry's wandering eye and Anne's "miscarriage of her savior". A very complex and moving book.

Caitlin Scott-Turner
(author, The Queen's Fencer)The Queen's Fencer
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-29 07:45:10 EST)
04-08-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  The Life and Death of Anne Boelyn
Reviewer Permalink
I think that this book was very infomative. I didn't need to do anymore research to find the answers I was looking for. This book had it all.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-14 12:19:13 EST)
03-27-08 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Exhaustive, fascinating, lets you draw your own conclusions
Reviewer Permalink
It has been very tempting for many Boleyn biographers to paint Anne as a feminist icon and victim of male power. It has been equally tempting in other generations to paint her as a conniving, power hungry witch who brought about her own donwfall and whose only value was sex-object and mother of one of England's greatest rulers. The truth one might rightly suspect lies somewhere in the middle. Ives gives us enough information-- at times, too much-- to find that middle ground, exploring not just Anne's family and social roots but the development of her tastes, values and beliefs. There can be no doubt Anne did plenty of scheming and had a thirst for prestige and power, and did not hesitate to wield it once she had it. But she was also a highly educated, engaging and interesting Renaissance woman, bringing the sophistications of the Continental Renaissance to the English court, a court which was in many ways, still Medieval in a world that had long passed into the era of "New Learning" and scientific exploration. There are rather extensive lists of her belongings, friends, writings, but that is what one would expect in a thorough study such as this (the most thorough yet done in all likelihood). Some of these listings might be better suited to an appendix rather than contained in the text but that was for editors to decide and one assumes they made their choices for informed reasons. And throught this dense documentation Anne emerges not as a stock Renaissance Comedia character, colored of one mood or dimension, but as a complex human being with the same appetites as any of us. And like any of us she is by turns infuriating, admirable, pitiable, likeable and annoying. In the end she proves tragic, but brave: after being offered a way out of her death sentence by the king himself, she goes to the scaffold and the swordsman rather than disinherit her blood and admit to any wrongdoing. If you've an interest in this period, and in this Court in particular, this is a biography worth owning.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-09 20:17:16 EST)
10-17-06 2 11\22
(Hide Review...)  Extremely biased account
Reviewer Permalink
It is impossible for me to ignore the impressive amount of scholarship, reasearch, time, thought, and effort that went into this book. Mr. Ives has no doubt done a service to Anne Boleyn Scholars. HOwever, the book is nearly impossible to read. Mr Ive's introduces many ancedotes into his narratives, which he then proceeds to argue are apocryphal, and then sometimes states they could be true after all. This makes it hard to understand his point, especially when he repeateadly uses words like might, perhaps, and maybe. But the worse thing about this book is that ignores, or dismisses other respectable scholarship on his subject matter as, "nonsene." He sometimes presents things as history, which are as a point of fact a matter of scholarly debate, and the footnotes demonstrate that his arguments are not always as sound as he would make them appear.
Most specifically he dismisses the work of Harvard scholar Reetha M. Warnicke, who wrote a fascinating biography of the same subject called, "The Life and Death of ANne Boleyn." He needs to tell us when historical ideas are in dispute. His language can also be pretentious at times. (E.g. the repeated use of the word of rusticated.)
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-29 01:52:25 EST)
08-27-06 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Not Just Court Gossip Rehashed
Reviewer Permalink
Eric Ives' book is probably the best book I've read that addresses Anne Boleyn's history. I must agree with another reviewer that towards the end of the book, when the author discusses Anne's involvement in religion, arts, etc, that it can seem choppy. The author makes up for this in his excellent assesment of events surrounding Anne's life. This is one of the few books I've read that doesn't simply state court chronicles as fact, since they were often written with preconceived ideas and prejudices. It definitely gives a more balanced view of Anne beyond the normal opinion of her as a power hungry temptress, and events themselves are put into more appropriate historical context, not simply how today's author interprets something. This book can be read by someone beginning to read Tudor history, however I would recommend one reads other books to see the many different points of view that authors, and history, can take, and then form an opinion regarding Anne Boleyn.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-25 15:48:24 EST)
06-23-06 4 2\2
(Hide Review...)  Not What I Expected
Reviewer Permalink
This study of Anne Boleyn was not quite what I expected it to be. I did not find it a straightforward biography of this fascinating woman. Rather, the author chose to concentrate on Anne's tastes in, and patronage of, religious reform, art, politics etc. Intense detail was given to these subjects, but there was actually no consistency to the writing, and thus the book seemed "choppy". At times, I felt that I was reading an inventory of her estate after her death, rather then a true biographical book.

I might add that it gave me an insight and viewpoint of Anne Boleyn that no previous books have done, and I have come away with a new and more enlightened view of just how intricate and intelligent this woman was.

However, my disappointment lies in the fact that far too much was given over to details of her world, rather then to Anne herself. I certainly would not recommend this book to anyone not familiar with the storyline of Anne's life, as I feel the beginning student would find him/herself very confused. Although it seems the author takes a much too simplistic approach to her downfall (especially regarding Cromwell's role), only in discussing the people and forces that led to her destruction, as well as the description of her execution, did this book shine as a biography. If only the author had chosen to approach the writing of Anne's life as he did in the last one-quarter of the book, this would have qualified as the best biography ever written of Henry VIII's second wife. As it stands, it unfortunately falls short of the mark.

My recommendation is to look at other works on Anne Boleyn, learn the major details of her life (and death), and then read this volume. Otherwise one will learn much about Anne's likes and dislikes, but really too little regarding the timeline of the major and minor events in Anne's life.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-25 15:48:24 EST)
03-07-06 5 6\7
(Hide Review...)  Worthy Reassessment of a Controversial Woman
Reviewer Permalink
One reviewer here called this the best biography of Anne Boleyn ever. I'm not prepared to go that far, mainly because I haven't read them all yet. If you're a Tudorphile like me and you've been reading about Anne Boleyn since you were 10 years old, this book will be pure ambrosia. Ives has managed to combined genuine scholarship with an engaging narrative. While I can't say that Anne comes alive, she is rescued from myth and tales of depravity. In my opinion, he sets the record straight on several fronts from Anne's role in Wolsey's downfall to her own fall from grace.

Ives has his share of controversial theories, but he presents each with a persuasive amount of direct fact and circumstantial evidence. The disagreement between Ives and fellow Anne Boleyn biographer Retha Warnicke doesn't look like it's going to be resolved soon. That's good news for Tudorphiles.

All said, this may not be the best introduction to Anne Boleyn - Weir's and Fraser's bios off all six wives of Henry VIII may be better suited to the novice - but those with a deep interest in this fascinating woman will want to make this a permanent part of their library.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-25 15:48:24 EST)
12-01-05 5 11\13
(Hide Review...)  The best Anne Boleyn biography!
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I have been reading about Anne Boleyn since 5th grade and I couldn't put this biography down. Her life and times come alive. Dr. Ives has a gift for detail and drawing one in that has only gotten better with each book. I couldn't wait for this book to be released and I wasn't disappointed. He was very balanced, letting the readers draw their own conclusions. His writing style is lively and highly readable, not always the case with historians. If you have any interest in these people or this era, this is the book to read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-25 15:48:24 EST)
11-13-04 5 61\62
(Hide Review...)  A Landmark Study
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As a historian specializing in this period, I was delighted in this updated version of Dr. Ives' 1986 classic: from scholarship to presentation, it by far superior to any previous biography of this tragic queen (and I include Friedmann, Sargeant, Warnicke, etc.).

Here we see how Anne Boleyn moved within her milieu, the influences upon her and her consequent effect on the Henrician court: the power she wielded; her cultural accomplishments--and ultimately, why Henry, a refined man, chose her as consort. Unromantic in tenor, Ives presents the queen as relentlessly calculating her ascent, sure of her child bearing potential. A political animal, a forward thinking religious reformer, a woman convinced of the divine right of kings (anticipating her daughter's ostentatious presentation), an intellectual with a keen eye for aesthetics: no vulgar coquette, nagging shrew, homewrecker, or Sander's incestuous six fingered whore/witch here. Ives also avoids painting Anne Boleyn as tragic victim: the passive heroine, reluctantly raised from "lowly" station to queenship, sacrificed on love's altar.

Ives has the wisdom not to presuppose Anne Boleyn's character and motivations (as Joanna Denny's flighty and error ridden biography unfortunately does): we must draw our own conclusions. We shall never understand her inner life, her feelings towards the earl of Northumberland, the husband who hunted and slaughtered her, her opinions about power and queenship, or her attitude towards the new faith (genuine or pragmatic?). However, he points out, we can gain insights from observing how she acted and reacted to situations. Particularly welcome is Ives' attention to arts (she was undoubtedly gifted), culture and patronage, a throwback to her Margaret of Austria and French court days. As well, here we have the best analysis of her fall, much more precipitous than previously assumed--more a fight-to-the-death political struggle between her faction and Cromwell's (over Church revenues on the eve of the Dissolution), and less a matter of the simplistic, conventional view of Henry's disaffection. Apparently Anne Boleyn insisted upon church revenues being distributed en masse to the poor, rather than squirreled into the depleted royal coffers; her motives, of course, must remain mysterious: altruism, or ego? In any event, she was effective, giving more to the poor than Katherine of Aragon. That gesture did not appease the hostility, but her blood did: her trial and execution garned more than a modicum of sympathy on the part of Londoners.

Dr. Ives must be praised for his command of both primary and secondary source documents: he sifts and sorts, assesses and appraises the quality of information until a portrait of the woman, and the age, appear. He addresses the question of her appearance, which has long eluded historians: there are no extant contemporary portraits of the queen, and contemporary descriptions were mostly hostile. Ives does find an amenable middle ground. However, his greatest strength is assessing her role in history by virtue of her profound effect on Henry VIII, the break with Rome, and the English Renaissance. No more Pollard's supposition Anne Boleyn appealed only to the less refined aspects of Henry's nature; the traditional view. It all makes sense: she attended the brilliant court of the formidable Margaret of Austria, and the licentious, overwrought court of Francis I, in whose presence Leonardo da Vinci passed his final years. Undoubtedly she took notes from observing the kindly, but beleaguered and oft pregnant Queen Claude. More profound influences included Francis' sister and mother, strong willed, imperious women in their own right. Long before her ascension, Anne Boleyn planned her court: chivalry, study, music, arts and aesthetics, intellectual debate. An early salon. I would have, however, liked to see more attention paid to her musical inclinations: apparently she composed and performed. On the Continent, did she meet Josquin, de Sermisy, Mouton? Did she perform their music? Dr. Ives only mentions the contentious music book in passing.

Ives also holds suspect Dr. Warnicke's suppositions of a deformed foetus, the birth order of the Boleyn children, and George Boleyn's alleged homosexuality (promiscuity, yes, absolutely). Very convincing arguments. Also, he suggests many recorded incidents of Anne Boleyn's life were apocryphal, and explains precisely why.

This can be termed a true landmark study, just as much as Friedman's, but without the latter's Victorian moral sensibilities. Beautifully written and superbly researched.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-25 15:48:24 EST)
10-05-04 5 28\32
(Hide Review...)  Boleyniac!
Reviewer Permalink
I have read nearly every non fiction book on Anne Boleyn. I have Eric Ives first book also. This one is far better and has more color. I highly recommend this book to history readers. I am always mining any new biography for new nuggets of information about this most elusive of women. David Starkey's books Six Wives is also wonderful as were Antonia Fraser's and Alison Weir's biography. The more I read about Anne Boleyn, the more I want to know. A great read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 14:56:11 EST)
09-24-04 5 37\40
(Hide Review...)  The power behind the throne...
Reviewer Permalink
Eric Ives' book `The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn' is a must read for people interested in British history, the British Royal Family history, the history of the Tudor period, and particularly for those interested in one of the key figures around that most colourful of English kings, Henry VIII. Anne Boleyn's influence in court, which dominated state and church affairs at a critical moment in European affairs, is shown here, in addition to the personal strife that Anne Boleyn both caused for others (her rival for Henry's affections, Katherine, is but the least of these) as well as the strife she herself endured.

Ives contrasts Anne Boleyn with Katherine of Aragon in terms of overall worldviews that they represented - Anne being far more a child of the Renaissance, intellectually curious and passionate, independent and full of ideas; Katherine of Aragon was representative more of the `old order', which included a staunch piety and adherence to Roman Catholicism in principle and political loyalty. This contrast is in part why Ives can state with reasonable certainty that Anne Boleyn was the most controversial woman ever to have been a queen of England (which, given that she's up against the likes of Eleanor of Aquitaine, among others, is saying something). Part of this controversy stems from the sources historians have for details about her life; being a pivotal person in the Catholic/Protestant split during the Tudor and post-Tudor world, she was constantly reinterpreted, and rarely for the better. Even the glorious reign of her daughter, Elizabeth, did little resurrect her image in popular or short-term historical opinion.

Ives' writing is lively and full of passion, as befits his subject. Ives also introduces new interpretations and contexts to the events of the time. For example, he describes the fall of Anne Boleyn as a coup, normally a term reserved for the removal of a reigning monarch or primary executive; it is a testament to the power of Anne Boleyn's influence over King Henry VIII that his advisors, such as Thomas Cromwell, saw need to remove her, for their own safety, as well as (possibly) the safety of the king. Ives concludes with Wyatt's elegy and a brief epilogue of the Tudor aftermath, not drawing too many conclusions, but rather, as a responsible historian, asking a few questions and leaving the reader to ponder the outcomes.

There is a good middle section of photographic plates, 64 in all, which includes many paintings, engravings and pictures of artifacts of Anne Boleyn. He also includes handy lists of titles and offices, genealogy charts of the European royal families, the Tudor court, and the Boleyn/Howard families (Henry VIII's last wife, Katherine Howard, was a cousin of Anne Boleyn). Scholars will appreciate the extensive endnotes, bibliographic/historical references, and index, together which comprise nearly 100 pages. However, this is a book for general readers as well as scholars, accessible and well-paced.


(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 14:56:11 EST)
  
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