About Fit to rule

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About Fit to rule


In a three-part series for BBC2, Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, gives a new explanation for the enduring power of the British monarchy.
Fit to Rule - Lucy Worsley

Introduction


From Henry VIII to the abdication of Edward VIII in 1936, successive monarchs gradually lost political power.  And yet the British monarchy still survives: unlike its equivalents, which have collapsed all over Europe.

The series re-introduces our kings and queens, not just as powerful potentates but as human beings, each with their own very personal problems of biology and psychology. These intimate, individual problems have affected the course of the history of the nation.

Over the course of the series Lucy will examine royal clothes, medical records, personal letters and diaries to gain a unique insight into the intimate mental and physical worlds of the real men and women who lie behind the regal portraits.

Assessing them against the regal job description, Lucy argues that kings and queens have had to deal with infertility, religious extremism, depression, bisexuality and culture shock through being born abroad.  She reaches the surprising conclusion that monarchy isn’t about the survival of the fittest.  Against all the odds, a weak or inadequate king or queen can help the monarchy, by forcing it to adapt – and survive.

Further information


During May, Historic Royal Palaces and Guerilla Science are offering a range of free* events for all ages to accompany the TV series.

Join us at Hampton Court Palace, Kensington Palace and Kew Palace for interactive experiences. Meet the characters, unearth the medical evidence and find out about shocking and pioneering treatments – some of which are still in use today.

Come and explore the palaces where the kings and queens actually lived and died, fell ill and got better.

*
Included in palace admission ticket

If you want to find out more about the television series, Fit to Rule: How Royal Illness Changed History, please visit the BBC website >

Guerilla Science brings live events to unconventional venues for science, such as galleries, theatres and festivals: we set science free by taking researchers out of the lab and into the traditional domains of the arts. By producing events that mix science with art, music and play, we create unique opportunities for audiences to experience science in unorthodox ways, such as interactive events, games, live experiments, demonstrations and performances by academics, artists, musicians, actors, and professional science communicators. 



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