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From: Intelligence Squared
To: j [email protected]>
Subject: Battle of the Queens: Elizabeth I vs Victoria
Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2016 14:47:49 +0000
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TD' ueen Elizabeth I vs Queen Victoria
Monday 30th Jan, 7pm. Emmanuel Centre Speaker Advocating Queen Elizabeth I
They are the eternal queens, the monarchs who transcend history, Philippa Gregory
forever reinvented on page and screen. One of the most popular novelists writing today.
She is best known for her portrayals of women
Elizabeth I was known as 'Gloriana'. and not for nothing. Her 45- in the Tudor period, and her novel The Other
year reign set England on an even keel after a century of civil war, Boleyn Girl was made into a TV drama and a
regicides and desperate, national anxiety. The defeat of the major film. She also wrote the No 1 bestseller
Spanish Armada in 1588 raised her into the pantheon of military The Queen's Fool, a novel about the rivalry
monarchs. She secured the future of the English Protestant between the young Elizabeth and her half-sister
Church after the brief, fevered reign of her Catholic sister. Bloody Queen Mary.
Mary.
With Elizabeth's patronage. Sir Francis Drake ensured England
Speaker Advocating Queen Victoria
ruled the waves. Under Elizabeth. Sir Walter Raleigh founded
Virginia - named after his Virgin Queen - and laid the foundations Daisy Goodwin
of a British America. No age is as closely associated with its Screenwriter and novelist. She created and
monarch as the Elizabethan period, a time of astounding cultural wrote the recent hit ITV series Victoria
revolution, of Shakespeare, Marlowe and Jonson. and is currently working on its second season.
She has also published the novel Victoria: A
All this happened under a woman, in a time when women were Novel of a Young Queen. She has written two
marginalised in every other sphere. Elizabeth held near-absolute other novels, My Last Duchess and The Fortune
power, with no Prime Minister to delegate to - while the threat of Hunter, both set in the 19th century. which were
murder, or losing her throne, was everywhere. Her mother, Anne New York Times bestsellers. As a television
Boleyn, and her predecessor but one, Lady Jane Grey, were producer, she created a number of programmes
beheaded. With that sort of background - not to mention four including Grand Designs. which is now in its
stepmothers - it's no wonder she never married or had children. 18th year on Channel 4.
England was her husband; England her child. Just before the
Armada was annihilated, she proclaimed, 'I have the body of a Chair and actors to be announced.
weak, feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king,
and of a king of England too.' She was the best of England's
queens — and monarchs.
Except for one. To fans of Queen Victoria, her glory was all the
greater. Succeeding to the throne aged only 18, she could have
buckled under the strain and deferred to her advisers. Instead,
she took a politics masterclass from her first, adored Prime
Minister. Lord Melbourne. Her later Prime Ministers — Gladstone
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and Disraeli, in particular -were made greater by her guidance.
Under her 63-year rule - only recently surpassed by Elizabeth II -
the British Empire stretched to the four corners of the earth. In
architecture, engineering and industry, Britain hit a global pre-
eminence never matched before or since. Under the guiding
genius of Brunel. the railway network spread across the country,
opening up a new world of commerce and leisure and allowing
fresh food and newspapers to be transported across Britain in a
day. And it was during Victoria's reign that the great social reform
movement began, with figures such as William Wilberforce
leading the campaign to abolish slavery, Lord Shaftesbury
bringing in laws to reduce child labour and Elizabeth Fry working
to improve prisons.
While Victoria presided over this great age of innovation in the
country, in her personal life she could be radical too. She was the
first modern female ruler to balance the duties of marriage and
children with the obligations of state. When she married, she was
careful to excise the word 'obey from her vows. Her pioneering
use of chloroform in childbirth paved the way to painless labour for
women everywhere. And at a time when women were generally
sexually repressed, in her unabashed passion for Prince Albert
she lived a full life that was denied Elizabeth I.
In this battle of the queens, Daisy Goodwin, writer of the hit ITV
series Victoria, and the accompanying novel of the same name.
will argue the case for her heroine. In the Elizabethan corner will
stand Philippa Gregory. queen of British historical fiction, author
of the Tudor Court series of novels. On stage. a cast of star actors
will bring to life the diaries, letters and speeches of the two
queens. Who will win the day? Join us on January 30th, hear the
arguments, and make up your own mind.
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