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Abigail Masham did not command armies, lead a ministry, or sit in Parliament. Yet for a crucial period in Queen Anne's reign, she stood closer to power than many of the men who claimed to govern Britain.
Born into dependence and advanced through the patronage of Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough, Abigail seemed at first an unlikely figure of consequence. She was a poor relation, a quiet attendant, and a woman whose influence appeared domestic rather than political. But in the court of Queen Anne, private confidence could alter public power.
As Sarah Churchill's fierce friendship with the Queen hardened into pressure, Abigail offered Anne something different: calm, deference, religious sympathy, and relief from the overwhelming force of the Marlborough interest. Her rise helped change the emotional structure of the court. Through her, Robert Harley found a warmer path back to royal confidence. Through her presence, Sarah's authority weakened, Marlborough's dominance became vulnerable, and Tory arguments for peace became easier for the Queen to hear.
This book tells the story of Abigail Masham not as a minor court curiosity, but as one of the quiet political figures of Queen Anne's final years. Her influence helped shape the fall of Sarah Churchill, the rise of Harley, the weakening of Marlborough, the Tory ascendancy, the controversial peace that ended Britain's role in the War of the Spanish Succession, and the tense succession crisis that brought the Hanoverians to the throne.
Abigail Masham never wore a crown, but she stood close enough to one to change the fate of those who did.
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