Queen Emma and the Vikings : A History of Power, Love and Greed in eleventh-century England

Author(s): Harriet O'Brien

Biography/Memoir

This is a stunning history of power, love and greed in eleventh-century England - the remarkable story of Queen Emma and the Vikings Emma was one of England's most remarkable queens: a determined, manipulative and forceful woman who made her mark on a Europe beset by Vikings. Her story is one of power, politics, love, greed and scandal a thousand years ago. By birth a Norman, she married and outlived two kings of England. One was an incompetent monarch some 20 years her senior; the other was a Viking warrior 10 years her junior. When she died at the age of nearly 70 she had also witnessed the coronations of two of her sons: Harthcnut the Viking and Edward the Confessor. From child-bride and international pawn, she became an unscrupulous political player and was diversely regarded as a generous Christian patron, the admired co-regent of the nation, and a Machiavellian mother. She was, above all, a survivor: her life was punctuated by dramatic falls, all of which she overcame. In tracing Emma's story the England that became her home emerges: far from being benighted, it was a rich nation with strong Christian and cultural traditions that are the root of Englishness, the Anglo-Saxon stock. Yet Emma herself was the formidable catalyst for the country's immutable change into a Norman state. In 1066, fourteen years after she died, her Norman family invaded England. Emma's story also tells us why this happened. Harriet O'Brien gives us a vivid picture of England after the dark ages - from its food, clothes and herbal remedies for infertility to Viking boat building and laws against over-eating. Richly detailed and beautifully written, Queen Emma is history at its most compelling. First published August 2005.

59.99 NZD

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Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9780747574897
  • : Bloomsbury
  • : bloomsbury
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Harriet O'Brien
  • : Hardback