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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Matthew Lewis, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

16+ oeuvres 260 utilisateurs 6 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Matthew Lewis trained in law and is now a full time author of historical fiction and non-fiction. He also blogs on his website, Matt's History Blog, and can be found on Twitter as @mattlewisauthor. His main interest is medieval history and he has a number of books on that topic, including The afficher plus Survival of the Princes in the Tower, The Wars of the Roses: The Key Players in the Struggle for Supremacy and Richard, Duke of York: King by Right. afficher moins

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Œuvres de Matthew Lewis

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Grant Me the Carving of My Name (2018) — Contributeur, quelques éditions6 exemplaires

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Nom légal
Lewis, Michael G.
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA

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Many books have been written on the murder of the princes in the tower so it was refreshing to read a book with a different approach.
The author discusses all the current theories as to who killed the two princes, and then he devotes the rest of the book to various theories on their survival. A lot of information is given on Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck. Then he discusses a new theory (at least to me) that the two boys were alive and well throughout the reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII. They lived their lives under new names, married, had children, all with the knowledge of the Tudor kings. I found it fascinating.
If you are interested in English history, or the Tudors, or most of all Richard III, I highly recommend this book. As a lifelong Ricardian, I am very glad that Matthew Lewis wrote this book and gave us something new.
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Signalé
Nefersw | 2 autres critiques | Jan 14, 2022 |
Interesting and will be a nice reference. All the pertinent details one would need to know when trying to sort out the War of the Roses.
 
Signalé
Nefersw | Jan 14, 2022 |
At least one person believes it.

This book is a sort of alternate history: Suppose that the children of Edward III (who died in 1483) had not been murdered by Richard III, and then not been murdered by Henry VII (yeah, right -- I might believe the first, but the second?), and then had turned up as Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbek.

There have been a lot of people who have tried to scrape up evidence that Richard III did not kill his nephews, and I'll admit to being tempted by some of it -- e.g. by the hypothesis that the Duke of Buckingham killed the boys to embarrass Richard, or that Edward V died of an infection caused by a damaged jaw and that Richard had to cover it up because everyone would think he was guilty anyway. But this book isn't just a list of alternatives to "Richard Did It!" It takes as its operating assumption that Richard Didn't Do It, Because It Didn't Happen -- and proceeds to run from there. Seeking out the faintest of faint hints, author Lewis tries to reconstruct this other history in which the boys survived.

The level of thought and research involved is astonishing. There is data here that other historians have completely overlooked, and which is worth considering. Unfortunately, it still runs up against a very big rock: There is no evidence that the boys were alive after 1483, and there was eventually reason for Richard to produce them, and he didn't -- and if by some chance they were still alive in 1485 when Henry Tudor took charge, they would have been dead the moment he reached London. No question about that. They had to be dead, for Henry, since (although he would never admit it) he had no right to the throne, and his only claim was by right of his wife, the sister of the Princes in the Tower. If Lewis wants us to believe that the Princes lived, he really needs to come up with some piece of actual direct evidence -- and he has none.

At the start, there are a few sentences that admit that, and say that the book is a "what-if." But that all disappears faster than you can say "Frame story in The Hunting of the Shrew." It seems pretty clear that author Lewis believes the story he is reconstructing.

I wish I could. But I can't. And the fact that Lewis spends most of the book not acknowledging the problems with his initial hypothesis made it very hard for me to continue the book. (The fact that he's a rather dense writer probably made matters worse.) If you are an extreme pro-Ricardian (which I am not; I don't believe for a moment that he was the monster Henry Tudor and Shakespeare made him -- in fact, I think he was a mostly good man who tried to be a good king -- but I try to face the actual facts), you may enjoy this book. But keep in mind that, if it has any value at all, it is to kick up suggestions for the person who can study this question a little more objectively.
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Signalé
waltzmn | 2 autres critiques | Jul 7, 2019 |
The Survival of the Princes in the Tower is an intriguing book that posits a different view of the question: who murdered the Princes in the Tower? Rather than listing the various reasons Richard III, Henry VII, Margaret Beaufort, Buckingham, or others might be guilty, Mr. Lewis contends that either one or probably both survived the reign of Richard III. He lists the possibilities of what might have happened to them, relying on what he calls the 'black hole effect'. The absence of real information creates a black hole, but the actions of the people around them make a 'gravitational pull' of data showing their possible presence still in those people's lives.
Edward V may have survived (and he shows how this might be) to either die at Stokes Field or maybe survive to live under an assumed name. Richard of York might have initiated his rebellion to be captured and then executed as Perkin Warbeck or he might have also survived under an assumed identity.
There's an interesting theory espoused by Leslau who takes some of Holbein's portraits and deconstructs the clues hidden within to show how both princes survived well into the reign of Henry VIII.
This is a well-written and logical supposition that explains what has always been my biggest stumbling block with the murder of the princes: why would Elizabeth Woodville allow her daughters back to court if Richard III murdered her sons? There's no real proof here, but I found it a very interesting read.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
N.W.Moors | 2 autres critiques | Jan 12, 2018 |

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ISBN
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