Lisa Hilton is the author of the new biography Elizabeth: Renaissance Prince. Her other books include Athenais and Queens Consort. Her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The Spectator and The Times. She lives in London.
Q: You write, "Nearly every biography of the queen
[Elizabeth I] begins from the premise that her role was in some way anomalous, by virtue of
her gender." What do you think of that premise?
A: Elizabeth’s gender has been assumed to define every
aspect of her rule, and has been a particular preoccupation of many recent
writers. Yet in her own time, one old lady, observing her on progress, remarked
in astonishment “What? The Queen is a woman?”
I believe that it was her royalty, not her femininity, which
set Elizabeth apart, and that we cannot assume the 16th century shared our own
conceptions of gender politics.
Elizabeth was indeed an exceptional woman, but she was more
importantly an exceptional ruler, and it was this which I set out to reassess.
Q: Why did you decide to write about Elizabeth I, and what
are some of the more common perceptions and misperceptions about her?
A: I really didn’t think the world needed yet another book
about Elizabeth I, but when my publisher suggested the project, I began to
think about how I could deal with her more originally.
As I researched, it became clear that too little is
discussed in popular history about Elizabeth as an international politician,
and far too much about her presumed romantic life, or lack of it.
The marriage question was much less of a personal
preoccupation to Elizabeth than for her ministers; equally her power brokering
in places as diverse as Turkey, Russia, and Transylvania are little discussed
by many popular historians.
Q: How did you decide on the book's title, and what does it
signify for you?
A: “Prince” was a title Elizabeth used about herself, as did
Mary Queen of Scots. The use of the masculine noun is typical of the more
subtle gender qualifications of her time, and also suggestive of Elizabeth’s
self-conception as a ruler.
“We are a prince from a line of princes,” she told the
Venetian ambassador. I used the title because, to me, it reflected more closely
the period’s own ideas about gender and monarchy, rather than our own.
Q: You write that "Elizabeth had never sought to become
the champion of the Protestant cause in Europe." Did she end up playing
that role?
A: Elizabeth became the champion of European Protestantism
almost by default, a position which was cemented throughout the course of her
reign.
She was deeply involved internationally in the back-room
dealings of the Reformation, and it is a testament to her brilliance and that
of her ministers that England was able to endure as a Protestant nation without
being exposed to the massacres and civil wars which threatened the stability of
both France and the Netherlands.
The disadvantage to Elizabeth was that it forced her into
taking a much harder line with English Catholics than her original religious
settlement had made provision for.
I try to explain the compromises and hypocrisies she was
compelled to, and to look at both sides of the question. Anglo historians make
much of the glories of Elizabeth’s reign, but in the eyes of Europe she was the
tyrannical dictator of a rogue state.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I have the first of a trilogy of novels coming out next
year, something quite different than anything I have previously attempted, but
after that I hope to return to the 17th century, where I have two projects
lined up, one on Vanbrugh and one on Bernini.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Just that I’m very grateful for your interest in the
book, and hope that readers will find it as exciting to read as I did to write!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
It's quite true that popular history of Elizabeth I focuses on her romantic relationships, or the lack of them. That's all I think about when I think about her. I'd welcome a biography that deals with other aspects of her life, and this might be it!
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