Tom Licence is Professor of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia.
In putting flesh back on Edward's bones Licence has brought a new succession story to popular attention. -Leanda de Lisle, The Times This fine biography of Edward the Confessor is both entertaining and elegiac. -Nicholas Vincent, The Tablet Makes a good argument -Tom Shippey, London Review of Books Tom Licence's brilliant new biography of the Englishman who regained the kingdom from the Danes is an exceptional history - a more than worthy successor to Frank Barlow's great Life of Edward the Confessor some fifty years ago. Its huge success is to disentangle the sources and rebuild Edward's story from first principles. -Alex Burghart, Times Literary Supplement An utterly splendid account of the life of Edward the Confessor...Licence breaks new ground through his close reading of the sources, he better situates Edward in the complex geopolitical world of the eleventh century, and offers a more positive assessment of Edward as a ruler. -Paul Foster, Expository Review Edward the Confessor is a triumph of scholarship that combines erudition with readability. ... Tom Licence reveals Edward as an intelligent, conscientious and compassionate man who consistently favoured his great-nephew Edgar the aetheling as his successor but in the end was dramatically betrayed by his brother-in-law Harold. This new analysis of a familiar story is told with clarity and verve: a magisterial achievement. -Elisabeth van Houts, author of Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300 This may be one of the most important, certainly one of the most original books on eleventh-century England ... The great virtue of this study is the author's determination to tell the story of Edward's life from a contemporary perspective, setting events in the context in which they unfolded, with full consideration of what moved the actors in their immediate present. The result throws a new light on Edward's motives and actions, and promotes a complete re-thinking of the significance of his reign. -Ann Williams, author of The English and the Norman Conquest A worthy successor to Frank Barlow's Edward the Confessor, Tom Licence's book authoritatively probes and reassesses supposedly well-known sources and presents us with a remarkable reappraisal of the king and an important historical period. Overall a magnificent achievement. -David Bates, author of William the Conqueror