Emilia Clarke still being irritated about the death of Daenerys Targaryen in the year 2026 is so relatable
Bonus +
Honestly, go off, Khaleesi.
hello vonnie
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Stranger Things
will byers stan first human second
Cosimo Galluzzi

titsay
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art
Misplaced Lens Cap

oozey mess
RMH

blake kathryn

JVL


Janaina Medeiros

Origami Around

★
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany

seen from New Zealand

seen from Australia
seen from Brazil
seen from Germany
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from New Zealand

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
@maximumphilosopheranchor
Emilia Clarke still being irritated about the death of Daenerys Targaryen in the year 2026 is so relatable
Bonus +
Honestly, go off, Khaleesi.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
JUNIA REES as Lady Elizabeth Tudor (Elizabeth I) Firebrand (2024) | dir. Karim Aïnouz
Emilea Zingas/Vadym Kolesnik (USA)
2024 Four Continents Championship Free Dance (117.31, SB)
Shakespeare made the Wars of the Roses the basis of seven of his plays, delineating the ‘purple testament of bleeding war’, and summing up the significance of 1399, when it all began, as destined to shower the landscape ‘with faithful English blood’. This emphasis on the human cost of civil war should help underline one essential feature of Tudor England. Kings might be appointed by God (in both their own and their subjects’ minds) and they might possess authority and wealth; yet their power was contingent on the good opinion of their subjects no less than a modern democracy. If they lost that good opinion, they ran the risk of losing their crown – not swiftly, by decorous electoral process, but slowly and painfully, through resistance, rebellion, civil strife, and often culminating in violent death.
Lucy Wooding, Tudor England: A History
Has anyone heard any news about Simon Adams's biography of Elizabeth I? Is there any progress with its publication date?

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Youve probably been asked this; but do you have any favorite books, movies, media, etc. on the tudor period or Elizabeth 1?
Also I love your account!!!
You have unlocked an unskippable cutscene
Books:
Fiction:
Elizabeth:
Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain
Legacy (Susan Kay)
The Tudors:
The Man on a Donkey (kind of. It DOES live in my brain rent free.)
The Concubine (Christopher Rae)
On ao3 Hollow Bones and Draw Your Swords
Non-fiction:
How To Be A Tudor
How To Behave Badly In Renaissance Britain both by Ruth Goodman
Tudor England
Henry VIII both by Lucy Wooding
Tudor Children by Nicholas Orme
New Worlds Lost Worlds by Susan Brigden
Black Tudors by Miranda Kaufmann
All Things Made New by Diarmaid Macculloch (make that anything by Macculloch)
The Age of Reformation by Alec Ryrie
The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England by Ian Mortimer- good, but read this one in conjunction with other historians like Kaufmann.
Thomas More by Joanne Paul. This one's more academic than the others. But it's very good for looking at Tudor politics and philosophy.
Movies:
Elizabeth (1998). Not accurate but more rewatchable than most Tudor dramas.
Lady Jane (1986). Inaccurate but moving.
Anonymous (2011). It's an AU. Not realistic in the slightest. But it moves me, and Elizabeth is such a force of nature that I end up loving her. She's closer to a Greek goddess than the real Elizabeth. Part Athena, part Aphrodite. She's tempestuous, impulsive, but never pathetic. She does whatever she damn well pleases and I find that compelling.
Bill (2015). It's fun.
Luther (1974). Not about the Tudors but one of their most important contemporaries.
TV:
Blackadder II. Not as good as the later series but still fun.
Elizabeth R. Essential viewing.
The Six Wives of Henry VIII. The most accurate Henry VIII. And refreshing in its interpretation of Jane Seymour and Anne of Cleves.
The Shadow of the Tower. I haven't seen all of it. But episode 5 is pretty stand-alone and probably my favourite single piece of Tudor media. You can watch it here. Episode 7 is also a good standalone episode if u want an hour of wacky Tudor hijinks here
Episode 8 if you want early tudor explorers here
Not strictly Tudor, but Jane Howell's Shakespeare tetralogy (Henry VI 1-3, Richard III) is one of my favourite pieces of media... ever.
I'm also fond of the documentaries Hidden Killers of the Tudor Home and A Tudor Feast.
Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain by Margaret Irwin
“Philip saw no difference between his own interests and those of God. With stunning presumption, in 1573 he reassured an ailing minister, “I hope that God will give you good health and a long life, since they are engaged in God’s service and in mine, which is the same thing”; while three years later, on hearing that another of his officials had fallen ill, he wrote “I trust that God will give him strength and health [to deal with] all the great troubles that afflict His service and mine”. Two decades later he still deployed the same rhetoric, calling on the council of the Inquisition to continue doing “what is best for the service of God and myself, and the authority of the Holy Office, because one cannot separate one from the others”.”
Imprudent King: A New Life of Philip II by Geoffrey Parker
“Blown petals of wild cherry fell into their laps. She asked him about the plain of Cordova, which she had heard was a vast cloud of white almond-blossom every spring.
‘There is a reason for that which might please you, if you would care for a love story.’
‘What woman would not! Tell it me.’
‘It happened four or five hundred years ago when the Moors ruled the land, if locusts can be said to rule. There was a female mule-driver called Romaiquia – yes, women still drive mules in the South. She was of the lowest birth, a brazen hussy, but a beauty and of great wit – she could cap verses impromptu better than anyone in Seville. That is a game you can still hear played in Seville, the drivers of mules and goats making up verses and calling them to each other as they pass down the narrow streets. It was so that she caught the ear of the Sultan, and then his eye; she became his Sultana, and he her slave. He would have made the world anew for her. One winter it was so cold that for the first time in memory there was snow on the Cordova plain. Romaiquia was so pleased with the sight that she demanded it should be provided for her every year. The Sultan could not command the heavens to fall, but he could command trees to rise. He had white almond-trees planted all over the plain, so that every year in early spring Romaiquia should see the Andalusian plain as white as snow.’
He had flushed at the unwonted length of his speech, and also because, as he had made it, they had both felt it come near to themselves. Of low birth and brazen, a beauty and great wit – she knew he had been thinking of her as he said the words.
‘Now there was a female conquistador!’ she exclaimed. ‘I wish I had been a mule-driver to cap verses in the Seville streets.’
‘And capture a Sultan?’
‘Yes, if for me he would spread almond-blossom like snow in Andalusia.”
Margaret Irwin, Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain
… she must forget her almost unbearable relief that for the moment anyway she was safe with him. The moment was going on, going past her (’tick, tock, said her mother’s clock’), and soon, very soon, it would change into something else.
Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain by Margaret Irwin
Just look what I found in my country's bookshop. It's a very rare thing to find such Tudor books here. Needless to say that I bought it.
Two years have passed and finally I'm starting to read it.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
What do you think happened to Amy Dudley/Robsart regarding her death?
She fell down the stairs - accident
She fell down the stairs - suicide
She fell down the stairs - accident/cancer
Elizabeth ordered it independently
Cecil ordered it independently
Robert ordered it independently
Elizabeth and Cecil ordered it together
Elizabeth and Robert ordered it together
Something else
Discover how Japan's three-time Olympic medallist, two-time world champion will return to competition in the 2026-27 season with Honda Marin
21 May 1527 - The Birth of Philip II of Spain
“As is often the case with a first child, the empress was in labour for many hours. She asked for a veil to be placed over her face, so that no one would see her agony; and when a midwife urged her to give full vent to her feelings the empress replied sternly: ‘I would rather die. Don’t talk to me like that: I may die, but I will not cry out.’ Philip entered the world around 4 p.m. on 21 May 1527. Many Spaniards had expected the prince to receive one of the traditional names of the peninsular dynasties, such as Fernando or Juan, but Charles insisted on calling his firstborn after his own father, and so at the baptism ceremony two weeks later the royal heralds shouted three times: ‘Philip, by the grace of God prince of Spain!’”
Geoffrey Parker, Imprudent King: A New Life of Philip II
El Rey.
Amados y fieles nuestros: A Nuestro Señor ha placido alumbrar a la serenísima Emperatriz, nuestra muy cara y amada muger, con un hijo, que parió a los XXI del presente. La qual, aunque ha pasado harto trabajo, queda ya, loores a Dios, muy buena. Plegará a la divina bondad que deste fructo que ha sido servido de darnos, succederá mucho servicio suyo, establecimiento de beneficio público y reposo de nuestros Reinos y señoríos.
Avisámosvos dello por vuestro contentanmiento y para que deis gracias a Dios por tanto beneficio.
Data en Valladolid a XXIII de Mayo de MDXXVII.
Yo, el Rey.
Philip’s birth announcement by Charles V, 23 May 1527. In Felipe II y su tiempo by Manuel Fernández Álvarez
A look back at Zelenskyy's inauguration
Great article about Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his inauguration day.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s Inaugural Address (2019)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
If you have BBC iPlayer, Tenant of Wildfell Hall is on there and it's excellent.
Historical events contrived to limit Elizabeth's ability fully to exploit her position as head of a princely household. No sooner had she left her teens—turning twenty in September 1553—by now beyond doubt mature enough to rule her household and stabilize her estates, than she found herself deprived of her household. Queen Mary suspected her sister's complicity in the Wyatt rebellion of January-February 1554, and imprisoned the princess throughout 1554, firstly in the Tower and later under strict house arrest. Thereafter, Elizabeth was kept under less strict conditions, but was not officially in command of her household until the end of Mary's reign in November 1558. Although Elizabeth's freedom of movement was more constricted than Mary's had been when she was Edward VI's heir, I argue that she was still able to exploit the same household assets—display, corporate identity, and affinity—that Mary employed so successfully in the summer of 1553.
Elizabeth's Shadow Court: July 1553–November 1558