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‘England’s darling’

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In the nineteenth century, Alfred the Great was a figure who rivalled King Arthur in the popular imagination. This book asks why Alfred was so important in Victorian Britain, examines the ways in ...
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  • 31 May 2014
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For much of the nineteenth century, King Alfred was as important as King Arthur in the British popular imagination. A pervasive cult of the King developed which included the erection of at least four public statues, the completion of more than twenty-five paintings, and the publication of over a hundred texts, by authors ranging from Wordsworth to minor women writers. By 1852, J.A. Froude could describe Alfred’s life as ‘the favourite story in English nurseries’; in 1901, a national holiday marked the thousandth anniversary of his death, organised by a committee including Edward Burne Jones, Arthur Conan Doyle and Thomas Hughes.

The book examines the ways in which Alfred was rewritten by nineteenth-century authors and artists, and asks how beliefs about the Saxon king’s reign and achievements related to nineteenth-century ideals about leadership, law, religion, commerce, education and the Empire. The book concludes by addressing the most interesting enigma in Alfred’s reception history: why is the king no longer ‘England’s darling’?

A fascinating study that will be enjoyed by scholars of history, cultural history, literature and art history.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 264
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 31 May 2014
ISBN: 9780719073571
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, European history, PSYCHOLOGY / Creative Ability, Cognition and cognitive psychology

REVIEWS Icon

1. The day of a thousand years: Alfred and the Victorian mania for commemoration
2. Medievalism, Anglo-Saxonism, and the nineteenth century
3. Turning a king into a hero: nine hundred years of pre-Victorian reinvention
4. The hero as king: Alfred and nineteenth-century politics
5. ‘The root and spring of everything we love in church and state’: Alfred and Victorian progress
6. ‘The most perfect character in history’: Alfred and Victorian morality
7. ‘Never to be confused with King Arthur’: Alfred after Victoria
Index