The Constant Princess
Books | Fiction / Historical / General
4.1
(1.1K)
Philippa Gregory
From #1 New York Times bestselling author and “queen of royal fiction” (USA TODAY) Philippa Gregory comes the remarkable story of Katherine of Aragon, Princess of Spain, daughter of two great monarchs, and eventual Queen of England when she marries the infamous King Henry VIII.Daughter of Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain, Katherine has been fated her whole life to marry Prince Arthur of England. When they meet and are married, the match becomes as passionate as it is politically expedient. The young lovers revel in each other’s company and plan the England they will make together. But tragically, aged only fifteen, Arthur falls ill and extracts from his sixteen-year-old bride a deathbed promise to marry his brother, Henry; become Queen; and fulfill their dreams and her destiny. Widowed and alone in the avaricious world of the Tudor court, Katherine has to sidestep her father-in-law’s desire for her and convince him, and an incredulous Europe, that her marriage to Arthur was never consummated, that there is no obstacle to marriage with Henry. For seven years, she endures the treachery of spies, the humiliation of poverty, and intense loneliness and despair while she waits for the inevitable moment when she will step into the role she has prepared for all her life. Then, like her warrior mother, Katherine must take to the battlefield and save England when its old enemies the Scots come over the border and there is no one to stand against them but the new Queen.
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More Details:
Author
Philippa Gregory
Pages
416
Publisher
Simon and Schuster
Published Date
2006-09-06
ISBN
0743272498 9780743272490
Ratings
Google: 4.5
Community ReviewsSee all
"Philippa Gregory upends the usual explanation for Catherine of Aragon's claim of virginity despite several months of marriage to Henry VIII's older brother Arthur. In Gregory's retelling, Catherine and Arthur are ardent and devoted teen lovers, but when Arthur realizes he is dying he persuades Catherine to claim their marriage was never consummated, so she can wed Henry and rule England as foreordained. Much is made of Catherine's creepy sense of manifest destiny, and the seeds of her religious fanaticism were clearly sown early. I don't quite buy Gregory's theory, but it's cool to see Catherine as a passionate young woman on a mission as opposed to the aging, spurned wife we see in most Tudor fiction. And her conversations with her spoiled, pre-teen brother-in-law Henry are hilarious."