Winston Churchill was born in a palace and was given a funeral worthy
of a king. His family had enjoyed an intimate association with the
British monarchy stretching back centuries. As King Edward VIII said of
him, 'I have never met anyone of royal blood who exemplified in such
high degree the ideal of the 'good king.'
Churchill and the Crown (Oxford University Press, 2026) tells the story of Churchill's relationship with the various kings and
queens he served during his long political career, from young journalist
under Edward VII, through his dramatic fall from grace in the First
World War under George V, the frustrations of appeasement during the
interwar period and his relationship with Edward VIII during the
abdication crisis of 1936, culminating in his Finest Hour in the Second
World War under George VI and the coda of Churchill's public service to
his final monarch: Queen Elizabeth II.
Ted Powell analyses
Churchill's writings on monarchy and his role in preserving and
establishing monarchies outside Britain. At the core of the book is a
series of studies of Churchill's relationships with the monarchs he
served. These studies offer a two-way perspective, examining both
Churchill's view of individual monarchs and their attitudes towards him.
They shed light not only on Churchill's career but also on the changing
role of the monarchy in 20th century Britain.
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