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  2. House of Tudor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Tudor

    Tudor Place; Tudor History; The Tudors at the Royal Family website; Tudor History "The Tudor delusion": an article in The Times Literary Supplement by Clifford S. L. Davies, arguing that we are wrong even to talk about "the Tudors", 11 June 2008. The Family Tree of the Tudors and the Stuarts in Pictures

  3. What the Tudors Did for Us - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_the_Tudors_Did_for_Us

    The Tudors believed that heaven, where God lived, was perfect and unchanging, and the appearance of this bright new star completely undermined their whole system of belief. But there was worse, that observation wasn't just quietly recorded it rapidly became common knowledge thanks to a really dangerous piece of high technology, the printing press.

  4. Lucy Worsley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_Worsley

    Courtiers: The Secret History of the Georgian Court (2011) is her most recent work on history. In 2014, BBC Books published her book, A Very British Murder, which was based on the series. [26] In April 2016, Worsley published her debut children's novel, Eliza Rose, about a young noble girl in a Tudor Court.

  5. Cultural depictions of Henry VIII - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of...

    Crafting the Royal Image: Censorship and Portrayals of the Tudor Dynasty under Henry VIII (MA thesis, Concordia University, 2016) online; bibliography pp 65–72. Lipscomb, Suzannah. "A King Caught on Camera." History Today (April 2016), Vol. 66 Issue 4, pp 48+ Monk, Claire, and Amy Sargeant, ed. British Historical Cinema (Routledge, 2015).

  6. Tudor period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudor_period

    The Tudor myth is a particular tradition in English history, historiography, and literature that presents the period of the 15th century, including the Wars of the Roses, as a dark age of anarchy and bloodshed, and sees the Tudor period of the 16th century as a golden age of peace, law, order, and prosperity.

  7. Tudor Monastery Farm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudor_Monastery_Farm

    Tudor Monastery Farm is a British factual television series, first broadcast on BBC Two on 13 November 2013. The series, the fifth in the historic farm series , following the original, Tales from the Green Valley , stars archaeologists Peter Ginn and Tom Pinfold, and historian Ruth Goodman .

  8. Artists of the Tudor court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artists_of_the_Tudor_court

    Lucas Cornelisz. de Cock [f] (1495–1552) Dutch portrait and history painter, probably in England c. 1527–1532, before leaving for Italy; William or Guillim Scrots, employed by Henry VIII from at least 1545 and retained by Edward VI until the king died in 1553; Antonis Mor or Antonio Moro, the Habsburg portraitist, visited with Philip II of ...

  9. Barrington Court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrington_Court

    Barrington Court is a Tudor manor house begun around 1538 and completed in the late 1550s, with a vernacular stable court (1675), situated in Barrington, near Ilminster, Somerset, England. The house was owned by several families by 1745 after which it fell into disrepair and was used as a tenant farm .