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The Verneys (ISBN 1594489483)

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A 17th Century Family Brought to Life:
Last year I read Blood and Roses: One Family's Struggle and Triumph During the Tumultuous Wars of the Roses. In it, the author used a collection of family letters to bring to life a 15th century British family, the Pastons, who struggle to keep their estate and their recently achieved social prominence. This book, The Verneys, interprets a similarly in tact collection of family letters to draw a portrait of a family from the landed class 200 years later. Through these families, we learn about the daily life of the gentry of their respective times. In the 15th century, the Paston's number one son loses his birthright in a dubious deathbed testament. This change in fortune wreaks havoc on him and his nuclear family. For the Varneys of the 17th century, the system of primogeniture plays out to the unhappiness of its presumed beneficiary. Sir Ralph inherits the responsibity of preserving the estate, paying debts and managing a never-ending parade of requests for assistance from most of the other disinherited relatives. In both books, property is a major issue. (Could it be because there are supporting legal documents that survive, or because this is the major preoccupation of the families?) In both times, ownership is vulnerable to the whims of the crown; however, by the 17th century, the rule of law has evolved such that there seems to be a more defined process for claims and no pitched battles of gentry v. gentry to try take land by force. The Verney sons who do not inherit have some options, whereas if John Paston has any, he does not recognize them. Second sons of the 17th century can seek fortune in colonizing Barbados or in trading in the Ottoman Empire and/or seek wealthy brides on their own. The women in either century have no legal options. Considerable time and resources are spent treating them as commodities. As noted at the end, many of Verney women, who seem to support the system, defy it. The issue of the imagery of women, and their actual behavior is certainly worth a wider study. Tinniswood gives more interpretation than Castor and does not quote the original letters to the extent that Castor did to tell or confirm the story. This makes The Verneys a smoother and more pleasurable read for the pleasure reader. Both books will be important for future researchers.


Well written, but a book only a scholar would love.:
I expected this book to be of great interest to me, since I read everything I can find about the history of England. But I guess I am not the scholar I thought I was. This book was written in such a way that by the third page I was beginning to feel bogged down. I was taken by the fact that my family name was mentioned on the first page, and I thought "This is going to be a good read." But I couldn't get thru it. I would advise anyone who wants to get this book, try to find a copy and flip thru it first. If I had done that, I would have passed it by.


Great look at non-aristocrats in 17th Century England:
I received this as a Christmas present from my wish list and it was a great read. Most times we only get to read about the higher eschelons of society so it was interesting to here how the gentry lived. I enjoyed the details of family and home life and believe it or not, the little items remembered in wills. I was surprised by the discussion of how mental disease was viewed and how an insane person was treated by family. This is a different view of 17th Century England and the strains the Civil War placed on families.


Compelling history!:
This is history at its best - it's readable, compelling and thoroughly enjoyable. Tinniswood's book achieves many goals in one - a fascinating social history, meticulous biography, powerful family saga, and not least it is a really good and engaging read. The tale begins with Sir Francis Verney who ran away from his teenage wife in 1608, sold off much of the Verney property, converted to Islam and became one of the most feared pirates on the Barbary Coast. Carry on to read about Bess, who ran off with a clergyman; Cary, a heavy gambler, and Henry who was obsessed with horse racing; not to mention those involved in the English Civil War; Mall, who became pregnant out of marriage, or one of the later relatives who was hanged at Tyburn. A really good and compelling portrait of seventeenth-century England, and especially the Verney family. The history is based predominantly on the extensive records of the Verneys, particularly hundreds of letters kept by Sir Ralph Verney (1613-96) who presided over Claydon House in Buckinghamshire for over 50 years


A good Solid Look at a 17th Century Puritan Gentry Family:
I first got a glimpse at the Verneys when I watched the DVD "A History of Britain" by Simon Schama. Who showed the Family Busts when he covered the English Civil Wars of the 17th Century. This well written book, which is based upon the huge collection of the Verneys papers. (I understand that they were huge pack rats and could not throw away any written note) Which covers the high points of a upper class family that is trying to make its way thru a very troubled world. The Author altogether has written a very compelling book that makes you very interested in a group of some very real characters of the local gentry.(Especially Tom who was a real cad in the full meaning of the word)Not wanting to give too much away, this book is well worth the coin and time for those who are interested in the time and place.


Author:Adrian Tinniswood
Binding:Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number:929.20942
EAN:9781594489488
ISBN:1594489483
Number Of Pages:592
Publication Date:2007-05-10



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