ISBN-13: 9783565249077 / Angielski / Miękka / 260 str.
Behind the ceremonial grandeur of European monarchies lay a world of political maneuvering, contested legitimacy, and ruthless competition for power. This meticulously researched account examines how succession disputes, royal marriages, court factions, and personal conflicts shaped dynastic politics across five centuries-from Medici Florence to Habsburg Vienna, from Tudor England to Romanov Russia.Drawing on diplomatic correspondence, court records, and contemporary chronicles, this book reveals how scandals exposed deeper structural tensions within monarchical systems. It explores how illegitimacy questions threatened dynasties, how royal favorites disrupted established hierarchies, how financial corruption undermined state authority, and how personal relationships between monarchs influenced European politics. Each case study demonstrates how individual actions intersected with institutional constraints and international rivalries.The narrative examines the mechanisms of court politics, the role of advisors and mistresses, the legal frameworks governing succession, and how scandals were managed or exploited by rival factions. It analyzes how information spread through diplomatic networks, how propaganda shaped public perception, and how dynasties survived or fell based on their ability to maintain legitimacy. Without sensationalism, this work provides serious analysis of how personal conduct and political power intertwined in monarchical Europe.
When Catherine de' Medici navigated three sons through French kingship while managing religious civil war, scandal became statecraft. Her methods ensured Valois survival for decades.