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Hugh Ross Williamson (1901–1978)

Auteur de Who was the man in the iron mask? : and other historical mysteries

63+ oeuvres 509 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Hugh Ross Williamson

The Young People's Book of Saints (1734) 77 exemplaires
The Gunpowder Plot (1952) 36 exemplaires
Lorenzo the Magnificent (1974) 29 exemplaires
Catherine de Médicis (1973) 27 exemplaires
The Great Prayer (1955) 18 exemplaires
The Flowering Hawthorn (1962) 16 exemplaires
The conspirators and the Crown (1959) 15 exemplaires
Enigmas of History (1974) 15 exemplaires
A Children's Book of Saints (1985) 15 exemplaires
A Wicked Pack of Cards (1961) 13 exemplaires
Historical Whodunits (1956) 10 exemplaires
The day they killed the King (1957) 9 exemplaires
The Cardinal in exile (1969) 6 exemplaires
The Seven Christian Virtues (1949) 5 exemplaires
The Florentine woman (1970) 5 exemplaires
The last of the Valois (1971) 5 exemplaires
Paris is worth a mass (1971) 5 exemplaires
James, by the Grace of God (2007) 4 exemplaires
Sir Walter Raleigh (1951) 4 exemplaires
The butt of Malmsey (1973) 4 exemplaires
Four Stuart Portraits. (1949) 3 exemplaires
Jeremy Taylor (1952) 3 exemplaires
A matter of martyrdom (1969) 3 exemplaires
Guy Fawkes 3 exemplaires
The Great Betrayal (2021) 3 exemplaires
Canterbury Cathedral 3 exemplaires
The Story Without an End (1964) 3 exemplaires
John Hampden, a life 2 exemplaires
Charles and Cromwell (1947) 2 exemplaires
The marriage made in blood (1968) 2 exemplaires
King James I; Great Lives (1935) 2 exemplaires
Who is for liberty? 1 exemplaire
The Day Shakespeare Died (1962) 1 exemplaire
The Sisters 1 exemplaire
Sisters 1 exemplaire
Letter to Julia (1974) 1 exemplaire
Rose and Glove 1 exemplaire
The Cardinal in England (1970) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Horizon Magazine Volume 17 Number 01 1975 Winter (1968) — Contributeur — 25 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1901
Date de décès
1978-01-13
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Professions
clergyman
historian
dramatist

Membres

Critiques

2788 The Day They Killed the King, by Hugh Ross Williamson (read 7 Oct 1995) The 'day' referred to is 30 Jan 1649, the day Charles II's head was chopped off. The book is quite well-done, even though it is without a bibliography and the preface indicates that the author makes up his mind as to what happened when the evidence is conflicting. The last chapter tells of the trial and horrible execution of one of the regicides on Oct 13, 1660: Thomas Harrison. It is said one of his sons emigrated to Virginia and from him is descended the two Presidents of the United States named Harrison. This was a good book. (I later found out that all of Thomas Harrison's children died in infancy--so this 'fact' apparently was made up by the author based on incorrect 'evidence'.)… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Schmerguls | Feb 25, 2008 |
2796 Enigmas of History, by Hugh Ross Williamson (read 29 Oct 1995) This tells of interesting things in history, though one can hardly say the author proves what he asserts. There are seven stories. One deals with George IV and suggests that while Caroline was married to him Caroline had a son by a German prince and said son did not die till 1849 and should have--by reason of the irrebuttable presumption of George IV's paternity--have succeeded George IV as king. The next account suggests that Henry VIII was not Queen Elizabeth's father. The third account asserts James I was homosexual and was poisoned. The fourth tries to determine who Charles II's executioner was. The last two accounts deal with the Man in the Iron Mask (he theorizes said man was the real father of Louis XIV) and the Diamond Necklace. I am not sure how valuable reading this book was but the author interests me. He is dead, but even our local public library has a couple of his novels still on its shelves.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Schmerguls | Feb 25, 2008 |
3602. The Walled Garden an autobiography by Hugh Ross Williamson (read 14 July 2002) This is a 1957 book, most of which was about the author's journey from being a high Anglican priest to becoming a Catholic. But I was simply appalled by a few paragraphs in the book in which he explained why he would not fight a war against the super-evil Hitler, though he would have been willing to fight a war against the Soviet Union. I had no trouble being very interested in the entire book.
 
Signalé
Schmerguls | Nov 18, 2007 |
 
Signalé
holyfamily | Mar 19, 2009 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
63
Aussi par
1
Membres
509
Popularité
#48,721
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
5
ISBN
36
Langues
2

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