Anne Boleyn's De Amore, Or The Art Of Love

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While Woodville did not escape gossip, Anne Boleyn secures the title as England’s most controversial queen. She offers to history a narrative of a woman holding uncanny similarity and threat to Henry VIII’s royal image despite her age and gender. This likeness to the king compounded with her international image as a French demoiselle d’honneur to secure her demise. Anne’s familial issues with lineage, her personal actions in Brussels, France, and England, as well as, her behavior as Queen and wife offer a complex narrative of a woman who would be King. By contrasting Henry rather than complementing him, her life could find salvation in a convent, or completely by losing her head as due to a proper rival. While marrying a woman with foreign manners did not prove new at this time, Henry’s desperation for respect on Continent, made the “Frenchwoman born” appropriate, yet, her passion suited a mistress. Mistresses existed as disposable, but Anne’s elevation and persistence with reform, art, and social issues, …show more content…

This work prove more useful to understand Anne, and on many levels, Henry, as the common text paired with his name, The Courtier, had not published in their early careers. De Amore, then, logically fits into the formation of her personal image, and her thoughts on ruling relationships. Following that, the period easily finds similarity in Thomas Mallory’s Le Morte D’Arthur for its strikingly similar narrative on Lancelot and Guinevere. Finally, Juan Luis Vives combined the virtues to create his rigid regimen for the behavior, duty, and protocol of all women, in which the Queen’s virtue proved paramount. Love and women seemed to be en vogue, and that held its own dangerous consequences for the

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