Falkus, Christopher
The life and times of Charles II Christopher Falkus; Introduction by Antonia Fraser - Garden City, New York Doubleday & Company 1972 - 223 p.
Includes Index
A lost inheritance 1630-49 --
The wanderer 1649-60 --
The promised land 1660-4 --
Fire and sword 1664-7 --
High noon 1667-72 --
Confusion confounded 1672-8 --
Damnable plots 1678-85 --
Death and beyond 1685.
The 'Merry Monarch' was the most popular of kings in his lifetime and has remained so to posterity. This biography seeks to show why and indicates that the secret lay not so much in the positive achievements of his reign as in the essentially human qualities which set him apart from other sovereigns. But Charles, of course, was more than a witty, tolerant, urbane man; he was a ruler of three kingdoms--England, Scotland and Ireland--who reigned at a time of crisis in the affairs of his war-torn lands. In youth, he knew the bitterness of defeat and exile. In manhood, he had to maintain ceaseless opposition to contending factions. The result was a lifetime crowded with struggle and conflict in which, against all odds, he triumphed to preside over a society whose creative achievements in all fields--science, literature, music, and art--are almost unparalleled in English history.
41247
Charles II, King of England 1630-1685
Kings and rulers --Great Britain
942.0660924 Fal 15
The life and times of Charles II Christopher Falkus; Introduction by Antonia Fraser - Garden City, New York Doubleday & Company 1972 - 223 p.
Includes Index
A lost inheritance 1630-49 --
The wanderer 1649-60 --
The promised land 1660-4 --
Fire and sword 1664-7 --
High noon 1667-72 --
Confusion confounded 1672-8 --
Damnable plots 1678-85 --
Death and beyond 1685.
The 'Merry Monarch' was the most popular of kings in his lifetime and has remained so to posterity. This biography seeks to show why and indicates that the secret lay not so much in the positive achievements of his reign as in the essentially human qualities which set him apart from other sovereigns. But Charles, of course, was more than a witty, tolerant, urbane man; he was a ruler of three kingdoms--England, Scotland and Ireland--who reigned at a time of crisis in the affairs of his war-torn lands. In youth, he knew the bitterness of defeat and exile. In manhood, he had to maintain ceaseless opposition to contending factions. The result was a lifetime crowded with struggle and conflict in which, against all odds, he triumphed to preside over a society whose creative achievements in all fields--science, literature, music, and art--are almost unparalleled in English history.
41247
Charles II, King of England 1630-1685
Kings and rulers --Great Britain
942.0660924 Fal 15