Try GOLD - Free
Unravelling the enigma
BBC History UK
|January 2025
JOSEPH ELLIS is impressed by a detailed, colourful and insightful biography of George Villiers, a Stuart royal favourite who made powerful enemies
-
In just over a decade, George Villiers, later the Duke of Buckingham, was transformed from a court nobody into the most powerful courtier in the realm. His looks and charisma were famously unmatched. He was the incontestable favourite of not one king but two. He wielded an unprecedented level of political influence.
Recently, Buckingham (1592–1628) found stardom once again when the Sky Atlantic television series Mary & George thrust him back into public consciousness. The upcoming 400th anniversary of the death of James VI & I, and the accession of Charles I, will no doubt spark further interest in their shared favourite.
But where did “the handsomest-bodied man in all of England” come from? And who was the man behind the “face of an angel”? Scapegoat reveals the complex and flawed character lurking beyond the superstar image.
Lucy Hughes-Hallett dedicates more than 600 pages to a career that was meteoric, bright and brief. Such a sizeable tome promises to offer remarkable insights into one of history’s most fascinating characters – and it delivers. Buckingham leaps off the page. An expert at self-promotion, he converted the influence of a favourite into the power of a chief minister. His modesty and charm enabled him to stay one step ahead of his opponents. He worked like a dog on behalf of his royal masters; being a favourite was not just a privilege, it was a full-time occupation.
This story is from the January 2025 edition of BBC History UK.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM BBC History UK
History Extra
A treaty transformed North American history
California became American territory just days after gold had been discovered in the Sierra Nevada foothills – and Mexico lost out
3 mins
April 2026
History Extra
England's mistress
Nell Gwyn became famous for her love affair with Charles II, and for her love of drinking, gambling and carousing. Yet, writes Sophie Shorland, this upwardly mobile celebrity was also a canny political operator who wielded substantial power in court
10 mins
April 2026
History Extra
Across history, intellectual life repeatedly becomes suspect when societies fracture
A mistrust of ‘experts’ and ‘intellectuals’ has recently crystallised into US government interventions targeting academic institutions. EMILY KNOX and JOAN SCOTT share their thoughts with Danny Bird about the troubling history of anti-intellectualism
9 mins
April 2026
History Extra
BLOOD AND PLUNDER
It's a tale of slavery, racism and naked imperial power. Barnaby Phillips traces the fate of the exquisite golden treasures looted by British forces from the kingdom of Asante 150 years ago
10 mins
April 2026
History Extra
THE FACE FIXATION
From a Stone Age Venus and an Egyptian death mask to an unflinchingly challenging 21st-century sculpture, Fay Bound-Alberti introduces seven depictions of the face that track humanity's ever-evolving relationship with creativity, hierarchy and self-image
9 mins
April 2026
History Extra
ROME'S PEOPLE POWER
From Romulus's open-city policy to Claudius's reforms, citizenship was used by Rome as both a reward and a weapon. And, as Shushma Malik explains, it enabled the burgeoning empire to build power and define identity
10 mins
April 2026
History Extra
Sex in the city
A study of the understanding and treatment of sexually transmitted disease fascinates
2 mins
April 2026
History Extra
How medieval mothers took back control
In the Middle Ages, the bearing and raising of children defined women's lives. But as Elinor Cleghorn explains, there were women who had other ideas and boldly challenged attitudes towards motherhood
10 mins
April 2026
History Extra
Ancient Egyptian omelette
ELEANOR BARNETT whips up an eggah - a tasty dish that continues to be enjoyed in Egypt to this day
2 mins
April 2026
History Extra
Seventy years ago, Nikita Khrushchev stood before a packed hall in central Moscow and delivered a four-hour denunciation of Josef Stalin, one that exposed mass terror and attempted to reclaim the legacy of Leninism. So what drove this extraordinarily radical move? And did the Soviet people buy Khrushchev's message?
When I was an undergraduate, a perennial exam question was ‘Did Stalin betray the revolution?’.
11 mins
April 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

