Articles related to "John Of Gaunt"A review of Alison Weir's excellent biography of the remarkable Katherine Swynford and her rise to power and wealth.
The birth of Henry VII was steeped in drama. Born on January 28th 1457, at the home of his uncle Jasper in Wales, this young boy was destined to become King of England .
In June 1381 a hated poll tax became the catalyst in a conflict in which the Tower of London was breached for the first and last time during the Peasants' Revolt.
Edward III ruled England for fifty years, and started the Hundred Years War in order to gain the French throne as well.
One of England's finest northern medieval castles, on the route of the Great North Road.
Three medieval castles with turbulent histories.
With The Fears of Henry IV Ian Mortimer has produced a detailed biography and, in doing so, has succeeded in rehabilitating the character of an important English king.
The Savoy Hotel in London stands between the river and the Strand. Hotels don't come any better. Closed for refurbishments since December 2007, it will reopen in 2010.
Rich in historical detail and beautifully written, Elizabeth the Queen is Alison Weir's stunning biography of Elizabeth I.
One of the top 50 British beaches, the Bedruthan Steps and its huge slate outcrops are steeped in legend.
Geoffrey Chaucer is best known as the author of The Canterbury Tales, one of the most famous poems of medieval times and one which is still acclaimed in the 21st century.
In a county noted for its castles, Dunstanburgh occupies a site so impressive that it was painted several times by Turner.
The rise to power of a Welshman who had only a weak claim to the throne, but ended the Wars of the Roses and started one of the most famous dynasties in history.
Begun as a challenge to Church property and prosperity, John Wycliffe's movement rejected views of the Eucharist as well as producing a vernacular scripture in England.
A look at how the great lords of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries displayed their wealth and power, and controlled the people they ruled.
On 6 July 1415 Jan Hus was burned at the stake as a heretic. Using John Wyclif as a comparison, it becomes clear that Hus could have survived his trial.
The latest furore over expenses has projected the British Parliament into a unique new members' club.
When Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, tried one last time to win the hand of his queen, Elizabeth I, he created a living love letter to her - a garden for the ages.
A rebellion of working class people following social changes brought about by the Black Death.
Exploring the questions of life and love, reason and passion in two of Chaucer's poems, The Book of the Duchess and The Parliament of the Fowls.
Rarely seen by the average tourist to the Tower of London, every night there takes place an age-old custom of locking the Tower's gates known as the Ceremony of the Keys.
The Black Knight journeys from isolation through emotion to a confrontation of the truth, represented by his rational, factual declaration of White's death.
The character of the Narrator/Dreamer journeys from numb reason to awareness and empathy.
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