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Encounters with Victoria
Encounters with Victoria
Oct 3, 2024 5:35 PM

Author:Lucy Worsley,Lucy Worsley,Full Cast

Encounters with Victoria

Lucy Worsley presents a ten-part BBC radio exploration of Queen Victoria’s reign via notable encounters

In this revealing series, acclaimed historian and Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, Lucy Worsley, explores the reign of Queen Victoria through pivotal figures in her life. We meet ten key individuals – some well known, others less so – and find out how they influenced the Queen, what she thought of them: and what they thought of her.

Beginning with Victoria’s Prime Minister and closest advisor, Lord Melbourne, Worsley goes on to introduce us to the Queen’s lady-in-waiting, Lady Flora Hastings; the Mayor of Newport, Thomas Phillips, governess Louise Lehzen and two popular American entertainers, Tom Thumb and Buffalo Bill – as well as dresser Frieda Arnold; celebrity nurse Florence Nightingale; royal ‘favourite’ Abdul Karim and Bishop Randall Davidson.

There are also encounters of a different kind, as Lucy Worsley chronicles Victoria’s grief at the death of her husband, Prince Albert, and records Victoria’s own final days and the crowd of people who gathered as Britain’s longest-reigning monarch breathed her last.

Travelling from Kensington Palace to a luxury hotel on the Côte d’Azur, Worsley talks to eminent writers and historians and draws on letters and diaries including the Queen’s own journal to provide fascinating insight into Victoria’s world and those who helped shape it.

1 Accession Day and Kinky Lord M – 1837

With historian Philip Ziegler

2 Poor Lady Flora – 1839

With historian Kathryn Hughes

3 A Wounded Welshman – 9 December 1839

With historians Les James, Rhian E. Jones and curator Oliver Blackmore

4 The Governess – 3 September 1842

With Historic Royal Palaces curator Claudia Williams

5 American Idols – 1844 and 1887

With historian Helen Davies and V&A curator and writer Nicholas Rankin

6 The Dresser – Frieda Arnold, 1854

With Beatrice Behlen, Senior Curator at the Museum of London and Joanna Marschner, Senior Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, Kensington Palace

7 A Nightingale at Balmoral – Florence Nightingale – September 1856

With historian Mark Bostridge

8 An Encounter with Death – 13 December 1861

With historian Helen Rappaport

9 Mutiny Against an Indian – 1897

With historians Priya Atwal and Shrabani Basu

10 The Sinking of a Great Ship – Bishop Randall Davidson – 25th January 1901

With writer and historian A.N. Wilson

Extracts from Queen Victoria’s Journals by Gracious Permission of Her Majesty The Queen

Reviews

There are of course memoirs that do astonish and exceed our expectations of mere self-accounting: in recent years, Helen Macdonald's H Is for Hawk; Patti Smith's various autobiographical writings; Lorna Sage's Bad Blood; and Gillian Rose's Love's Work. Alison Light's A Radical Romance now joins this select bunch of books about the self that are not simply self-regarding but truly self-exploratory

—— Guardian

Extremely interesting, moving, brilliantly written, as one would expect from Alison Light

—— Claire Tomalin

A memoir of cauterising honesty. This is a book that deserves to be widely read

—— Spectator

An inspiring account of the deep love between Alison Light and her late husband Raphael Samuel

—— TLS

Beautifully crafted...It casts a light on the lightness of love and the profound depression of loss. A truly gifted writer

—— Hugh MacDonald, The Herald

She writes with precision and tenderness about loss. A Radical Romance is an admirable tribute to a man, a period of rapid change in London, and an unusual marriage

—— Guardian

Compulsively readable. Light is a shrewd narrator . . . she reflects with careful psychological and philosophical insight on the reality of loneliness and profound loss following ten years of marriage. Light is also a poet and it shows in certain suppositions or propositions, those observations she posits in high-wire mental leaps.

—— RTE

Part detective story, part Dickensian saga, part labour history. A thrilling and unnerving read

—— Observer, on Common People

Mesmeric and deeply moving

—— Daily Telegraph, on Common People

Remarkable, haunting, full of wisdom

—— The Times, on Common People

The most powerful family history I have ever read

—— Penelope Lively, New York Times, on Common People

Judith Herrin's Ravenna is an erudite but wonderfully readable over-view of the life of a city that is often ignored, forgotten or misplaced.

—— Peter Frankopan , Spectator Books of the Year

Herrin is a superb historian who tells us that she's tethered to the tangible evidence of primary sources. Praise the Lord, I thought. Someone's still doing history the right way.

—— Brian T. Allen , National Review

A sweeping and engrossing history ... an accessible narrative that brings to life the men and women who created the city during this period and who fashioned its hybrid Christian culture of Latin, Greek and Gothic elements. The narrative is periodically elevated by discussions of the city's most famous attractions and its glorious churches, brilliantly illustrated in the book's 62 color plates. It is also enlivened by recurring digressions on daily life in the city at each phase in its history.

—— Anthony Kaldellis , Wall Street Journal

a fascinating dive into Late Roman/Byzantine history, rich with improbable but true stories

—— Theodore Brun , Aspects of History Books of the Year 2021

Judith Herrin, a Professor at King's College London, is already Britain's best-known living Byzantinologist. Learned and witty, her books and articles have brought her subject out of shadow into a daylight where the dealings of emperors, exarchs and bishops become comprehensible, often lively, often concerned with issues acute in our own times ... She is original in wider ways, too: not only in her painstaking reconstruction of social and economic life in Ravenna from often fragmentary documents, but in her broad take on the whole period from about the fourth to the ninth century ... the gorgeous, plentiful illustrations help the reader to grasp the sheer scale of Herrin's triumphant history. This book is a master-work of scholarship and sharp intelligence.

—— Neal Ascherson , Red Pepper

a sumptuously produced and beautifully written account of how the city on the Po was the beleaguered last capital of the Roman Empire but managed to grow into the centre of Byzantine power in Italy and the key pivot between East and West at the dawn of the early modern period. This is a fascinating read and a fabulous book, from the gold sheen of its cover to the vibrant colours of the magnificent illustrations.

—— Charlie Connolly , New European Books of the Year

Andrew Roberts superb revisionist biography George III ... Incapable of writing a dull sentence, Roberts deploys deep scholarship and impeccable analysis to exonerate the 'Farmer' King of both stupidity and tyranny.

—— Saul David , Aspects of History Books of the Year

Andrew Roberts's George III is a wonderful revisionist portrayal of the monarch who presided over the high point of architecture and the loss of America. Obviously meticulously, majestically done - but also a total joy to read.

—— Catherine Ostler , Aspects of History Books of the Year

Judith Herrin's Ravenna: Capital of Empire, Crucible of Europe crowns the long career of a deeply learned historian ... a wonderful book, beautifully written and beautifully illustrated.

—— Lucky Beckett , The Tablet, Books of the Year

the city was "the melting pot of Europe" ... the hinge between the old Roman empire, the refounded Rome of Byzantium and the second new Rome of Charlemagne, who plundered its monuments for his capital at Aachen. Herrin's book ... is a welcome addition to a golden era of scholarship devoted to late antiquity and the early Middle Ages in Europe

—— Martin Ivens , Times Literary Supplement

Judith Herrin's Ravenna aims to set the mosaics, the buildings they ennoble and the urban landscape they inhabit back within a meaningful historical context. It's a worthy project that surprisingly has not really been attempted before ... it takes a scholar of Herrin's brilliance to bring events to life within a meaningful evocation of a time and a place. That skill, and a wonderfully pellucid prose style, ensures that even readers frustrated by the archaic narrative will find a great deal to admire and indeed learn from.

—— Michael Kulikowski , Times Literary Supplement

An ambitious, rewarding and detailed history of the city of Ravenna, spanning the period from its designation as imperial capital in the early fifth century to its Carolingian spoliations in the ninth. ... This book is a comprehensive, detailed and glittering history of the city within its Mediterranean context. It will attract the casual reader while also carrying sophisticated new arguments that will appeal to specialists.

—— Giulia Bellato , English Historical Review

Judith Herrin tells its fascinating history and presents a parade of forceful and creative characters with great insight and a wonderfully light touch, in a book as beautifully produced as it is profoundly researched.

—— R.I. Moore, author of , The War on Heresy

Reviews for Byzantium: The Surprising Life of a Medieval Empire

—— -

Others in recent years have made worthy efforts to interest us in the Byzantine achievement, but none has made it live in quite the way that Herrin does ... Free from portentousness and pretentiousness, she doesn't insist on her subject's importance or relevance: the freshness and enthusiasm of her book is its real point. Not just an important work of scholarship but a delight to read, this study works a minor miracle in raising Byzantium, Lazarus-like, from its dusty grave.

—— Michael Kerrigan , Scotsman

She presents Byzantium as a vibrant, dynamic, cosmopolitan reality which somehow escaped the constraints of its official ideology

—— Economist

A collection of fascinating, well-researched and vividly told biographies of women who made tangible contributions to the lives we live now… Lewis’ book is challenging, punchily written and refreshing in equal measure, and a joy to read.

—— Clare Jarmy , Times Educational Supplement Scotland

A lesson modern progressives would be remiss to ignore.

—— Phil Wang , Guardian

Any one of these women could fill a book on her own, but Lewis deftly threads their lives together into an irresistibly rumbustious account of this movement; sometimes affecting, sometimes very funny (the footnotes are a sass-filled joy) and sometimes shocking.

—— Sarah Ditum , In the Moment

[Difficult Women] is meticulously researched and intelligently argued whilst also being extremely readable. Unusually for a non-fiction book, it is a page-turner. Lewis' style is playful and engaging, and after each chapter you find yourself turning the page asking eagerly "but what happened next?”… Interspersed with personal anecdotes and often funny footnote asides, she deals with the serious alongside the light-hearted in a way which demonstrates her talent as a writer, researcher and journalist

—— Emily Menger-Davies , Glasgow Guardian

This history of feminism eschews feelgood, empowering clichés and goes in search of the 'difficult women' who shaped the fight for gender equality.

—— The Times, *This year's best reads so far*

Engaging and witty, this history of feminist fights will keep you gripped to the last page.

—— Independent

This often hilariously funny book taught me about the women who fought for my freedoms. Unlike in so many accounts, these women are not canonised but written as they are, imperfect.

—— Jess Phillips , Week

Helen Lewis is one of the very few journalists whose every word I will read.

—— Adam Rutherford , Week
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