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This is a full-length biography of Reginald Pole (1500-1558), one of the most important international figures of the sixteenth century, and it gives equal attention to all phases of his career. It is based on painstaking and extensive archival research, above all in Italy and among the archives of the Inquisition. Pole spent much of his life writing, especially about himself, and tales have dominated both work on him and also the historiography, of the English Reformation.
This book attempts to expose the tension between the "life as lived" and the "life as written" order to see Pole whole rather than as a plaster saint - or devil. Pole's career is followed as protégé and then harshest critic of his cousin Henry VIII, as cardinal and papal diplomat, legate of Viterbo, a nearly successful candidate for pope, and finally as legate to England, archbishop of Canterbury, architect of the English Counter-Reformation, and victim of both Pope Paul IV and of himself.