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The Mirror of Great Britain

A Life of James VI & I

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The Mirror of Great Britain

By: Clare Jackson
Narrated by: Emma Gregory
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Brought to you by Penguin.

A major reassessment of one of Britain’s most strange and fascinating kings, James I of England and VI of Scotland

James VI & I, who died 400 years ago, was one of Britain’s most consequential and interesting monarchs, not least in creating the British monarchy itself by joining the English and Scottish thrones. A major intellectual, James's preoccupations ranged from witchcraft and theological controversy to hunting, diplomacy, poetry and sartorial fashion. The 'Mirror of Great Britain' was a spectacular jewel that gave symbolic endorsement to James's vision of British union, but mirrors themselves - with their limitless capacity to magnify, illuminate and distort - supplied James with one of his favourite literary metaphors.
Ruler of Scotland for nearly four decades before his accession to the English throne in 1603, James was a ‘cradle king’ whose long reigns encompassed extraordinary dramas, including his abduction in the ‘Ruthven Raid’ in 1582 and his attempted assassination in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. In his lifetime, James often confounded contemporaries’ expectations while his posthumous reputation has been distorted by crude stereotypes.
Closely attentive to James’s own words – in numerous publications, manuscript musings, topical verse and private correspondence – Clare Jackson's wonderful new book tells the story of this highly unusual monarch with great flair and insight.

© Clare Jackson 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

16th Century Europe Great Britain Historical Modern Politics & Activism Royalty England

Critic Reviews

A wide-ranging and insightful new biography... Jackson is an assured guide, offering both an astute psychological portrait of the king and a shrewd political history of his reigns... This judicious, perceptive and empathetic study lays down a robust challenge to biographers of rival candidates (Peter Marshall)
James VI and I is arguably the most intriguingly complex of British monarchs: an accomplished poet, a passionate Protestant with a profound interest in witches and demons, a lover of young men and the patron of both Shakespeare and the great version of the Bible that still bears his name. He managed to rule Scotland for nearly six decades and England and Ireland for 22 years—which alone would make him a momentous figure. But he also did more than anyone else to forge the idea of Great Britain as a political entity and to give substance to its dreams of empire, not least in America. Clare Jackson's dazzling portrait of James plunges us not only into his extraordinary political career but into his mental universe, a ferment of ambitions, obsessions and desires from which much of the English-speaking world emerged. Splendidly erudite and wonderfully vivid in its detail and insights, The Mirror of Great Britain enriches our understanding both of James's times and of our own (Fintan O'Toole, New York Times bestselling author of We Don’t Know Ourselves)
In Clare Jackson’s luminous biography of James VI and I, this much misunderstood king speaks to us as the man he was rather than as the puppet of fortune. Beautifully written and supported by a treasure trove of new material, The Mirror of Great Britain is a profound meditation on the meaning of identity and the fragility of kingship (Amanda Foreman, New York Times bestselling author of The Duchess, Georgiana, and A World on Fire)
A fine, humanizing portrait of Great Britain's most misunderstood and maligned monarch. In this erudite and beautifully written biography, Clare Jackson brings the man who was both James VI of Scotland and James I of England to life for a new generation of readers (Ruth Scurr, author of Napoleon: A Life Told in Gardens and Shadows)
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