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Henry IV

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Member Reviews

A magisterial (pun fully intended) and much-needed addition to the Yale Monarchs series. There were few biographies of Henry IV before this book: and even fewer as thorough and scholarly as this one. Don’t be put off by the “S” word though, as this book is also very readable and has several useful additions such as maps and even an itinerary for Henry.
It is a large book that will take up a fair bit of room on any bookshelf, but that space is well-deserved.

Grateful thanks to Yale University Press for approving me when I requested this book on Netgalley back in 2015. It has taken me more than 7 years to get around to reviewing it, but better late than never!

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An extremely in-depth look at the life and reign of Henry Bolingbroke of Lancaster.

The author's goal is to explore Henry IV so as to better understand his time, context, and circumstance in light of how he is viewed in Shakespeare and in historiography ever since.

The reader is introduced to Henry Bolingbroke, son of John the Gaunt, and the inheritor of all the diligent work John the Gaunt had done to restore and revive the fortunes of the Lancastrians. One sees how Henry attempts to be a good subject of a capricious Richard II, yet ultimately proves too powerful and influential a subject. We can see Henry either return to England, leading to Richard's desposition and becoming king, or he would stay in exile and endanger the Lancastrian holdings.

He returns. Richard II is an unpopular king, but becoming the usurper means that whenever things don't seem like they're going well, Henry IV will have challenges Richard never would deal with. The reign of Henry IV is covered in great detail, with a lot of emphasis on the difficulties of finances of the realm and attempting to keep control over Ireland, Wales, Calais, and Guyenne, and to solve the intractable problems of Scotland, and defeating the Percys when they rebelled.

When peace was established, and finances a bit more stable, Henry IV became weaker in illness. It would fall to his son Henry V to reap the benefits of the foundation his father established.

So what of Henry IV? The author's analysis that he was not a great king, but could have been under different circumstances, seems appropriate. Did his deposition of Richard mean the Wars of the Roses was inevitable? No; one can imagine a very different circumstance had Henry V lived longer; if he was able to accomplish the Plantagenet fantasy of being full king of England and France, the deposition would have been forgotten. It would seem that the majority of the blame for the Wars of the Roses falls on Henry VI and his weakness and insanity. Was Henry IV a forerunner of the constitutional monarchy of the late 17th century and following? Not as much as the 19th century would have imagined.

This is a good work to provide context and depth to the situation of England at the turn of the 15th century.

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Well researched tome into the little documented life of a rather questionable King, Henry IV of England.

Henry's life is covered in four main parts: 1267 - 1399 (early life, Richard II's trouble reign, Henry's crusading, first marriage); 1399 - 1405 (his reign, the rebellions of Percy & Glyndwr); 1405 - 1410 (rise of the Lollards, study of his kingship); 1409 - 1413 (rise of Henry V and death of Henry IV).

This is well researched and footnoted throughout. I particularly liked the inclusion at the end of Henry IV's itinerary during his reign. Recommended reading for this elusive monarch on whom I had not read a great deal except as a footnote to the history and lives of others. In this Henry is in the forefront, until eclipsed by his son, Henry V.

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