John Cooper is an author and historian of the Tudor period. He studied at Merton College Oxford for his BA and doctorate, and is now Professor of History at the University of York. The author of Propaganda and the Tudor State and The Queen's Agent, John has worked as a historical consultant for the BBC and Starz, and is a popular public lecturer on the history, art and architecture of Tudor England. Most recently, he has led a series of projects investigating the Palace of Westminster, the lost chapel of St Stephen and the House of Commons. John is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and Director of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
John Cooper’s engrossing and delightful study recovers for us an extraordinary building hidden in plain sight within the footprint of the Houses of Parliament: medieval England’s answer to Paris’s spectacular Sainte Chapelle, transformed by the Tudors into the arena in which our modern Parliamentary state gradually took shape. Cooper brings to life its lost splendours, and guides us through what remains from its fiery destruction, with scholarship and wit. * Professor Diarmaid MacCulloch, University of Oxford * PRAISE FOR THE QUEEN'S AGENT: 'A superb new account... Brilliantly recreates Elizabethan England in all its cloak-and-dagger intrigue and glory' Sunday Telegraph. Fascinating... John Cooper neither vilifies nor lionises his subject, preferring to set his actions in context' Literary Review. 'Walsingham emerges as a severe, complex and haunted character in this compelling biography' Sunday Telegraph. 'A book for the library of any Tudor enthusiast' Philippa Gregory. 'As thrilling and suspenseful as any modern spy novel' * Publishers Weekly *