House of Tudor (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "House of Tudor" in English language version.

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aber.ac.uk

cadair.aber.ac.uk

academia.edu

archive.org

bbc.co.uk

biography.wales

books.google.com

britannica.com

doi.org

  • Davies, C. S. L. (25 January 2012). "Tudor: What's in a Name?". History. 97 (325): 24–42. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.2011.00540.x. The 'Tudor' name for the royal family was hardly known in the sixteenth century. The almost obsessive use of the term by historians is therefore profoundly misleading about how English people of the time thought of themselves and of their world, the more so given the overtones of glamour associated with it. The royal surname was never used in official publications, and hardly in 'histories' of various sorts before 1584. Monarchs were not anxious to publicize their descent in the paternal line from a Welsh adventurer, stressing instead continuity with the historic English and French royal families. Their subjects did not think of them as 'Tudors', or of themselves as 'Tudor people'. Modern concepts such as 'Tudor monarchy' are misleading in suggesting a false unity over the century. Subjects did not identify with their rulers in the way 'Tudor people' suggests. Nor did they situate themselves in a distinct 'Tudor' period of history, differentiated from a hypothetical 'middle ages'. While 'Tudor' is useful historian's shorthand we should use the word sparingly and above all make clear to readers that it was not a contemporary concept.

english-heritage.org.uk

historyextra.com

historytoday.com

  • Lipscomb, Suzannah (2009). "Who was Henry?". History Today. 59 (4): 14–20. Archived from the original on 26 December 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2020. Popular perceptions of Henry VIII, according to focus groups consulted by the market research agency BDRC for Historic Royal palaces, are that he was a fat guy who had six, or maybe eight wives, and that he killed a lot of them.

leicester.gov.uk

lordsandladies.org

luminarium.org

openlibrary.org

poemhunter.com

poetryfoundation.org

projectbritain.com

royal.gov.uk

spartacus-educational.com

timeref.com

tudorhistory.org

  • "Henry VII". Tudorhistory.org. 5 February 2012. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2013.

web.archive.org