
The Life and Times of Henry Howard,
Earl of Surrey
(Jonathan Cape, October
2006)
Winner of the Elizabeth
Longford Prize for Historical Biography 2007
Synopsis
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey
was one of the most flamboyant and controversial characters
of Henry VIII’s reign.
A pioneering poet, whose verse had a profound impact
on Shakespeare and the English Renaissance, Surrey was
nevertheless branded by one contemporary as ‘the
most foolish proud boy that is in England’. He
was the heir of England’s premier nobleman, first
cousin to two of Henry VIII’s wives – Anne
Boleyn and Catherine Howard – and best friend
and brother-in-law to the King’s illegitimate
son, Henry Fitzroy.
Celebrated for his chivalrous deeds both on and off
the battlefield, Surrey became, at only twenty-eight,
the King’s Lieutenant General in France. He had
his portrait painted more often than any other Tudor
courtier, but his confident exterior masked insecurity
and loneliness. A man of intriguing contradictions,
Surrey was both law enforcer and law breaker, political
conservative and religious reformer. The self-styled
guardian of the traditional nobility, he was recklessly
outspoken against the ‘new erected men’ of
the court. Cromwell was a ‘foul churl’,
Paget a ‘mean creature’ and the problems
that beset Henry VIII’s realm were, Surrey hinted, ‘the
bitter fruit of false concupiscence’.
He witnessed and was inextricably caught up in all
the major events of the reign: the Break with Rome,
the Pilgrimage of Grace, the Reformation, the executions
of his two cousins, Henry’s French wars and the
brutal power struggle at the end of the reign to which
he fell victim. His life, replete with drunken escapades,
battlefield heroics, conspiracy and courtroom drama,
sheds new light on the opulence and artifice of a dazzling,
but deadly, age.
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