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Join Lucy Worsley for an exploration of how Elizabeth I’s image as a warrior queen, created by a series of myths and secrets about her victory over the Spanish Armada, shaped British national ...
The value of the Armada painting, soon to go on show in Greenwich, lies in its masterful storytelling.
The exhibit takes on a surrealist feeling as the animatronic head sits suspended in a mirrored recess, facing the Armada Portrait, one of the most famous paintings of Queen Elizabeth I.
A portrait of Elizabeth I becomes public property for the first time, thanks to the success of an appeal to raise £10.3m to purchase it.
The Armada portrait of Queen Elizabeth I is being sold by descendants of Sir Francis Drake, who is thought to have commissioned it in 1590, and it will go on display in Greenwich in October.
One of the three Armada portraits of Queen Elizabeth I Woburn Abbey Collection After weeks of bitter conflict in summer 1588, England vanquished a tremendous fleet of 130 Spanish ships known as ...
The Armada Portrait of Elizabeth I has been saved for the nation after thousands of members of the public helped to raise £10 million to prevent it being sold abroad.
Elizabeth I's navy from around the time of the Armada was evolving into a far more powerful force than previously realised.
Few images are as well known as the Armada painting, which shows Queen Elizabeth I basking in the aftermath of the greatest military success of her long reign, the defeat of a Spanish Armada.
The value of the Armada painting, soon to go on show in Greenwich, lies in its masterful storytelling.
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