Anne Somerset, Queen of the Colorful British Historians
Poor old Queen Anne. Fat, lame, with an obstetric history that would break the hardest of hearts: seventeen pregnancies in seventeen years, sixteen of them resulting in miscarriages, still births or infant deaths. William, Duke of Gloucester, was the only child to survive its first birthday; the apple of his mother’s eye, hailed as the saviour of Protestant England, he was hydrocephalic and died of smallpox when he was just eleven. Anne knew tragedy in her life. And she had piles. How could you not feel sorry for her?
Quite easily, as Anne Somerset’s new biography demonstrates.
(Queen Anne: The Passion of Politics is due out in January 2012; Anne Somerset’s other books are always available here.)