Daughters of Britannia: The Lives and Times of Diplomatic Wives
by Katie Hickman
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An authoritative and entertaining account by one of our most talented writers of the courageous and unusual women who have been the backbone of the British Empire and foreign service. 'English ambassadresses are usually on the dotty side and leaving their embassies drives them completely off their rockers' - Nancy Mitford From the first exploratory expeditions into foreign lands, through the heyday of the British Empire and still today, the foreign service has been shaped and run behind the show more scenes by the wives of ambassadors and minor civil servants. Accompanying their spouses in the most extraordinary, tough, sometimes terrifying circumstances, they have struggled to bring their civilization with them. Their stories - from ambassadresses downwards - never before told, are a feast of eccentricity, genuine hardship and genuine heroism, and make for a hilarious, compelling and fascinating book. show lessTags
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Although this book goes right up to the late 20th century, the author's father being a diplomat in Ireland at the time of the murder of the British Ambassador by the IRA, my favourite sections came earlier.
Ann Fanshaw, the wife of Charles II's ambassador to Spain, led a very exciting life including forging documents to get herself and her children out of England during the Commonwealth, and narrowly avoiding both shipwreck and an attack by Turkish pirates, while Lady Mary Wortley-Montague's descriptions of the formality of life at the Viennese and Turkishs courts in the early 18th century were fascinating (it's her picture on the book's front cover). I also enjoyed Miss Tully's description of all the precautions the consular staff and show more their families took, when they shut themselves up in the consulate during an outbreak of the plague in Tripoli in 1785. show less
Ann Fanshaw, the wife of Charles II's ambassador to Spain, led a very exciting life including forging documents to get herself and her children out of England during the Commonwealth, and narrowly avoiding both shipwreck and an attack by Turkish pirates, while Lady Mary Wortley-Montague's descriptions of the formality of life at the Viennese and Turkishs courts in the early 18th century were fascinating (it's her picture on the book's front cover). I also enjoyed Miss Tully's description of all the precautions the consular staff and show more their families took, when they shut themselves up in the consulate during an outbreak of the plague in Tripoli in 1785. show less
An absolute gem of a book, telling the true stories of the women who supported their husbands (or vice versa!) throughout the trials and tribulations of representing Britain abroad. Broad historical coverage from early 1600's to almost present day with some fascinating windows into worlds I never knew existed. Yes some of them were a snobby lot but what comes across most strongly is a genuine love of adventure.
The book does not attempt to be a scholarly tour-de-force - however it is thought-provoking if you care to think a little about what you are reading. Highly entertaining and very British!
The book does not attempt to be a scholarly tour-de-force - however it is thought-provoking if you care to think a little about what you are reading. Highly entertaining and very British!
http://nhw.livejournal.com/1127018.html
I'm probably being rather unfair to this book, but I'm giving up on it not quite half-way through. Hickman, herself a diplomat's daughter, has pulled together an engaging collection of correspondence from the wives (and occasionally other female relatives) of British diplomats posted abroad throughout the last four centuries. The material is amusing and sometimes moving. But I felt that the book lacked a substantial intellectual framework, such as any serious interrogation of the concepts of Britishness, diplomacy, or wives. And I think Hickman did intend it to be that kind of book, but it isn't.
I must say also that having lived abroad in three countries in the last twelve years, and having myself show more set up from scratch two local offices (and overseen the setting up of a third) for my various employers, I did find myself rather unsympathetic to some of the accounts of hardship reported by people whose government-funded bureaucracies weren't always able to guarantee them a perfect quality of life. In the non-profit sector things are a bit different.
In fairness, some of the hardships are very real. Hickman's father was deputy head of the British embassy in Dublin in 1976 when the ambassador, Christopher Ewart-Biggs, was killed by the IRA: perhaps the most moving section in the book (and one of the longest single extracts) is her mother's description of the aftermath for the Ewart-Biggs family. show less
I'm probably being rather unfair to this book, but I'm giving up on it not quite half-way through. Hickman, herself a diplomat's daughter, has pulled together an engaging collection of correspondence from the wives (and occasionally other female relatives) of British diplomats posted abroad throughout the last four centuries. The material is amusing and sometimes moving. But I felt that the book lacked a substantial intellectual framework, such as any serious interrogation of the concepts of Britishness, diplomacy, or wives. And I think Hickman did intend it to be that kind of book, but it isn't.
I must say also that having lived abroad in three countries in the last twelve years, and having myself show more set up from scratch two local offices (and overseen the setting up of a third) for my various employers, I did find myself rather unsympathetic to some of the accounts of hardship reported by people whose government-funded bureaucracies weren't always able to guarantee them a perfect quality of life. In the non-profit sector things are a bit different.
In fairness, some of the hardships are very real. Hickman's father was deputy head of the British embassy in Dublin in 1976 when the ambassador, Christopher Ewart-Biggs, was killed by the IRA: perhaps the most moving section in the book (and one of the longest single extracts) is her mother's description of the aftermath for the Ewart-Biggs family. show less
Daughters of Britannia is an interesting look at the wives and families of British diplomats from the seventeenth century to the present day—women who often endured hardship and upheaval in order to follow their husbands and brothers and fathers many thousands of miles from home. Hickman writes engagingly, but I thought her work was perhaps a little insular, and too brief for the scope of what she was attempting. There is, however, a useful bibliography which points to further reading.
I really wanted to like this book, but it suffers from a great lack of structure. Keeping track of the women, where they resided(particularly when some of them served in mulitple locations) and in which era became a burden I could not maintain. It became increasingly difficult to determine whether comparisons were being made between two ladies who served in the same location at the same time versus two ladies who served at the same time at two different locations. Top that with comparisons between ladies of different times and different locations and you understand why a cheat sheet became necessary. Even the listing in the front of the book fell short of assistance because it was sorted by timeline, not alphabetically, so to use it as show more reference required searching the entire list for names.
With that said, there was some skilled writing on evidence here, and some of the details of diplomatic life provided were exceptionally interesting. I feel that maybe a better editor could have improved this from a mediocre book to a powerful read.
NOTE: I am writing this review as a US citizen - it's possible that a British subject, maybe more familiar with their own diplomatic missions and history would have less difficulty following this book. show less
With that said, there was some skilled writing on evidence here, and some of the details of diplomatic life provided were exceptionally interesting. I feel that maybe a better editor could have improved this from a mediocre book to a powerful read.
NOTE: I am writing this review as a US citizen - it's possible that a British subject, maybe more familiar with their own diplomatic missions and history would have less difficulty following this book. show less
A survey of the live and times of diplomatic wives within the British Foreign Office over the past few centuries. THe last chapters include some of that rare breed, the husband of a diplomat but it's interesting to see how some women coped and didn't. From famous to infamous; from solid rock of support to rebel this is a facinating account from the daughter of a diplomat who was in Ireland when the British ambassador was murdered by the IRA
I didn't like this one nearly as much as i liked her next book courtesans which i read before i read this one.
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- Canonical title
- Daughters of Britannia: The Lives and Times of Diplomatic Wives
- Alternate titles
- Daughters of Britannia
- Original publication date
- 1999
- People/Characters
- Catherine, Lady Macartney; Lady Mary Wortley Montagu; Vita Sackville-West; Lady Diana Cooper; Ann, Lady Fanshawe; Emma, Lady Hamilton (show all 8); Isabel Burton; Mary Nisbet, Countess of Elgin
- Important places
- Brussels, Belgium; Constantinople; St. Petersburg, Russia; Turkey
- Dedication
- For Beatrice Hollond, a diamond amongst friends
- First words
- Sometime at the beginning of April 1915 a lonely Kirghiz herdsman wandering with his flocks in the bleak mountain hinterland between Russian and Chinese Turkistan would have beheld a bizarre sight: a purposeful-looking Englis... (show all)hwoman in a solar topi, a parasol clasped firmly in one hand, striding towards the very top of the 12,000-foot Terek Dawan pass.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Don't you?
- Original language
- English
Classifications
- Genres
- History, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, Travel
- DDC/MDS
- 133 — Philosophy & psychology Parapsychology & occultism Specific topics in parapsychology and occultism
- LCC
- DA28.7 .H43 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Great Britain History of Great Britain England History General
- BISAC
Statistics
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- 493
- Popularity
- 61,120
- Reviews
- 10
- Rating
- (3.86)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 13
- ASINs
- 6





























































