The duke's two loves

At the end of this post, I am adding a link to an article about free TV shows and films and even audio books to keep cabin fever at bay during the quarantine. And here is a Today in History post.

Yesterday, March 24, 1603 was the date of death for the woman I always call (with a smile) “the only good Tudor,” Elizabeth I. She was sixty-nine and her death does not seem to have been a peaceful one. She is fortunate in that she has had two brilliant novels about her, which is more than many historical figures can say. Legacy by Susan Kay, covers Elizabeth’s entire life, and Margaret George deals with her last years in Elizabeth I, which I can’t resist thinking of as The Lioness in Winter. I highly recommend both novels.

March 25th in 1306 saw the coronation of Robert the Bruce as King of Scotland.
March 25th was also the birthdate of Blanche of Lancaster; 1345 is traditionally given as the year of her birth, but I’ve also seen it as 1346. She was a great heiress, and in 1359, she wed her third cousin, John of Gaunt. They had seven children, so she was usually pregnant during her nine year marriage, which is believed to have been a happy one. Only three of her children survived, but one would become the first Lancastrian king, Henry IV. She died in 1368, of what may have been the bubonic plague, at only twenty-one or twenty-two, and her husband grieved greatly for her. I tend to envision her as soft-spoken and fair, a lovely ghost who would haunt her husband’s memory with a rustle of silken skirts and a swirl of silvery blonde hair, an ethereal creature of moonlight, ivory, and lace, forever young. She inspired the major character in Geoffrey Chaucer’s Book of the Duchess, and was sympathetically portrayed in Anya Seton’s classic novel, Katherine. Katherine is, of course, Katherine Swynford, one-half of one of the more famous love affairs of the Middle Ages; she was governess to Blanche and John’s children and, after Blanche’s death, his mistress, and eventually his third wife, a marriage that scandalized his world and delighted all of us who are secret romantics at heart. Yet he requested to be buried next to Blanche.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/entert...
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Published on March 25, 2020 12:03
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message 1: by Leila (new)

Leila I loved Anya Seton's 'Katherine' Sharon and have read it quite a few times over the years. Living alone I can have no visitors so I thank God for my books and movies. Tonight is booked for the movie Robert the Bruce.


message 2: by Gary (new)

Gary I live alone as well and during times like these it might be a blessing! If the family here is not already aware, BBC Radio offers a wonderful range of of dramatized novels and stories to stream as another stay-at-home entertainment option.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds


message 3: by Dody (new)

Dody Oh, I wish you would write a Blanche, John of Gaunt and Katherine novel! It would be amazing, I am sure!


message 4: by April (new)

April I listen to the "Your Dead to Me" podcast and the latest one is entitled Eleanor of Aquitaine. I'm saving it for a quiet evening :) https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07m...


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