Biographies & Memoirs

Eleanor of Aquitaine: The Mother Queen of the Middle Ages

Eleanor of Aquitaine: The Mother Queen of the Middle Ages

A monstrous injurer of heaven and earth, as Shakespeare referred to this powerful medieval matriarch, Eleanor of Aquitaine s reign as England s stormiest and most ambitious queen has never been matched.

As the greatest heiress in Europe, she was in turn Queen of France and Queen of England; among her sons were Richard the Lionheart and King John. A magnificent independent ruler in her own right, she lost her power when she married Louis VII of France. She received neither influence nor fame by her second marriage to King Henry II, who jailed her for fifteen years for conspiring and supporting their son s claim to the throne. Her husband was succeeded by their son, King Richard the Lionheart, who immediately released his mother from prison. Eleanor then acted as Regent while Richard launched the Third Crusade.

Her loveliness and glamour, her throwing-off of the constraints that shackled women of the twelve century, and her very real gifts as a politician and ruler make Eleanor s story one of the most colorful of the High Middle Ages."

Foreword

Chapter 1: Aquitaine and the Troubadours

Chapter 2: Queen of France

Chapter 3: The Crusader

Chapter 4: The Divorce

Chapter 5: Duchess of Normandy

Chapter 6: Queen of England

Chapter 7: The Angevin Empress

Chapter 8: The Court at Poitiers

Chapter 9: Eleanor’s Sons

Chapter 10: Eleanor’s Revolt

Chapter 11: The Lost Years

Chapter 12: Queen Mother

Chapter 13: The Regent

Chapter 14: Richard’s Return

Chapter 15: Fontevrault

Chapter 16: The Death of Richard

Chapter 17: King John

Chapter 18: The Grandmother of Europe

Chapter 19: The Murder of Arthur

Chapter 20: The End of the Angevin Empire

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