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- Philip_Lindsay abstract "Philip Lindsay (1906–1958) was an Australian writer, who mostly wrote historical novels. He was the son of Norman Lindsay, an Australian artist and a younger brother of writer Jack Lindsay. He was educated at the Anglican Church Grammar School in Brisbane, and emigrated to England in the 1930s. Most of his novels were written whilst he lived in England. His daughter Cressida also became a novelist.His novels often treated his subject matter in a dark fashion, with his central characters depicted as brooding, depressed, or disturbed characters. They include:The Devil and King John, influenced by Margaret Murray's The Divine King in England, claims that lying behind John's clashes with the Church was that he had leanings towards the \"Old Religion\" of witchcraft (see witch-cult hypothesis). His first wife Hadwisa was an actual witch, who urged him to copy William Rufus and be sacrificed at the tree. However its treatment of the better-established facts of John's reign, although ambiguous, was more sympathetic to John than most accounts e.g. it considers that there were two sides to the argument over Magna Carta. John's nephew Arthur is killed by John in a fit of temper, but he is shown as a rebellious adolescent who did provoke John to some extent rather than the innocent child in some versions. Archbishop Stephen Langton is an important character who is treated relatively sympathetically. In his introduction Lindsay acknowledged that he had no evidence that Hadwisa was a witch or that this is what happened to Arthur, but for the purposes of his plot he needed to provide a link between John and witchcraft, and this was a good a guess as any about Arthur's fate.One Dagger for Two, about Christopher Marlowe. In this account Marlowe is an atheist, but heterosexual. He was stabbed in a tavern quarrel, but there was a dispute over a woman behind it, it was not just a petty dispute over the bill. (The woman involved was the subject of Marlowe's poem The Passionate Shepherd to His Love.)They Have Their Dreams, about Perkin Warbeck. It covers only the last period of his life, starting on the eve of his landing in Cornwall, and including his time seeking sanctuary in Beaulieu Abbey. Near the end Warbeck is told that he is really the illegitimate son of Margaret of York and a clergyman.The Little Wench, about Sir Lancelot and Queen Guinevere and their affair.Here Comes the King, about Catherine Howard, Henry VIII's fifth wife.The Merry Mistress, about Jane Shore, mistress of Edward IV.He also wrote highly sympathetic biographies of Richard III of England (The Tragic King) and of Henry V of England.In addition, he did some work for the film industry. He was one of a team of writers on Song of Freedom and Under the Red Robe, and was a technical advisor on The Private Life of Henry VIII.".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageExternalLink search.cfm?qwork=2877028&wauth=Lindsay%2C%20Philip&matches=15&qsort=r&cm_re=works*listing*title.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageExternalLink philip_lindsay.html.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageExternalLink nm0512292.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageID "5300007".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageLength "4069".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageOutDegree "37".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageRevisionID "707791406".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Anglican_Church_Grammar_School.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_I,_Duke_of_Brittany.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Beaulieu_Abbey.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Brisbane.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:1906_births.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:1958_deaths.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_English_novelists.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:Australian_historical_novelists.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_historical_novelists.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:Lindsay_family.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_educated_at_Anglican_Church_Grammar_School.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Catherine_Howard.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Christopher_Marlowe.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Guinevere.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Henry_V_of_England.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Historical_fiction.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Internet_Movie_Database.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Isabella,_Countess_of_Gloucester.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Jack_Lindsay.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Jane_Shore.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink John,_King_of_England.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Lancelot.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Magna_Carta.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Margaret_Murray.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Margaret_of_York.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Norman_Lindsay.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Perkin_Warbeck.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Richard_III_of_England.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Song_of_Freedom.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_Langton.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink The_Passionate_Shepherd_to_His_Love.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink The_Private_Life_of_Henry_VIII.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Under_the_Red_Robe_(1937_film).
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink William_II_of_England.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLink Witch-cult_hypothesis.
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Philip Lindsay".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Philip".
- Philip_Lindsay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:1906_births.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:1958_deaths.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:20th-century_English_novelists.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:Australian_historical_novelists.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:English_historical_novelists.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:Lindsay_family.
- Philip_Lindsay subject Category:People_educated_at_Anglican_Church_Grammar_School.
- Philip_Lindsay hypernym Writer.
- Philip_Lindsay type Person.
- Philip_Lindsay type Thing.
- Philip_Lindsay comment "Philip Lindsay (1906–1958) was an Australian writer, who mostly wrote historical novels. He was the son of Norman Lindsay, an Australian artist and a younger brother of writer Jack Lindsay. He was educated at the Anglican Church Grammar School in Brisbane, and emigrated to England in the 1930s. Most of his novels were written whilst he lived in England.".
- Philip_Lindsay label "Philip Lindsay".
- Philip_Lindsay sameAs Q7183979.
- Philip_Lindsay sameAs m.0ddbkp.
- Philip_Lindsay sameAs Q7183979.
- Philip_Lindsay wasDerivedFrom Philip_Lindsay?oldid=707791406.
- Philip_Lindsay isPrimaryTopicOf Philip_Lindsay.