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- Title
Jemma Field, Anna of Denmark: The Material and Visual Culture of the Stuart Courts, 1589–1619.
- Authors
Bath, Michael
- Abstract
Raised a strict Lutheran and accompanied to Scotland, and then England, by her German Lutheran chaplain, Johan Sering (1589-1619), two reports claim that Anna converted to Catholicism around 1592 or, perhaps, around 1600. Despite Anna's geographical and cultural mobility, she is remarkably and consistently referred to as queen consort of England, and her time at the Stuart court in England is almost the sole focus of research. As a princess of the Danish house of Oldenburg, queen of Scots and, in 1603, of the newly united kingdom(s) of Great Britain, mother of future heirs to both thrones, patron of the arts, and mistress of palaces ranging from Dunfermline in Scotland to Greenwich, Somerset House and Oatlands Manor in England, the figure of Queen Anna of Denmark has not surprisingly attracted considerable scholarly attention.
- Subjects
VISUAL culture; MATERIAL culture; MARRIAGES of royalty &; nobility; COURTS; RELIGIOUS adherents; PATRONAGE; QUEEN honeybees
- Publication
Innes Review, 2021, Vol 72, Issue 1, p74
- ISSN
0020-157X
- Publication type
Book Review
- DOI
10.3366/inr.2021.0290