Juana the Mad - Book Review


© Wendy J. Dunn

Juana the Mad: Sovereignty and Dynasty in Renaissance Europe

Author: Bethany Aram

The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science

$35.00 hardcover; 2005; 280 pp.

Juana of Castilla - mad queen or a woman betrayed by her family? In a work described with great accuracy as part biography and part study of the concept of medieval royal authority, Bethany Aram explores this question to its very disturbing conclusion.

History generally remembers Juana as the grief crazed queen who set off across her kingdom, refusing to give up the body of her husband, Philip the Fair, a man in life very undeserving of the name. In this work, Aram builds up a picture of the medieval mindset and believable political reasons why Juana took her husband's body through Castilla. She wanted him to rest with her mother in the family tomb at Granada because in a sense that confirmed his status as King, strengthening the rights of their children to the throne through an unbroken line of descent.

As Aram stresses in her work, Juana is a queen and woman very little understood - in her own times and in ours. There are obvious reasons for the lack of empathy in her own times - all of them rooted very much in the desire of others, and sometimes herself, to keep true ruling power from her hands.

Born November 6, 1479 the third child and the second daughter of Queen Isabel I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon, Juana was the older sister of Katherine of Aragon. Not expected to inherit the throne from her mother, Isabel the Catholic, and the only one of the queen's four daughters to marry not a King or heir to a throne, death struck her family four times (her brother Juan, the stillbirth of his child, her elder sister Isabel, followed two years later by the death of her infant son) before Juana became Princess of Asturias and the heir to her mother's throne. Not so for the lesser Kingdom of her father, Aragon only allowed male rule.

From this work emerges an interesting question about Juana's younger years. With early death so much a part of this society, it is intriguing that Juana's parents (especially her mother) did little to aid Juana, while she was still a part of their court, to build up the necessary powerbase and connections she needed to back her if she ever inherited her mother's crown. Putting aside the wisdom of not encouraging the creation of another rival queen bee, perhaps it is simply because she was the queen and king's third child and second daughter that the focus of the court remained centred upon her brother and elder sister.

       

Go To Page: 1 2


The copyright of the article Juana the Mad - Book Review in Tudor England is owned by . Permission to republish Juana the Mad - Book Review in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo