Power does not only rule from thrones. It walks.
For nearly a thousand years, Windsor Castle has been more than a royal residence. It has been a place where monarchy withdraws in order to endure-where kings and queens pace corridors, terraces, and cloisters not to be seen, but to think. Peripatetics of the Crown is a reflective history of Windsor told through movement: the private walks through which rulers carried grief, doubt, and responsibility away from ceremony and into solitude. Rather than offering a conventional chronology, this book explores how architecture shapes authority and how walking becomes a quiet language of power. Windsor emerges not as a backdrop to history but as an active participant, designed to slow thought, manage presence, and contain the inner life of rule.
Blending architectural insight, philosophical reflection, and historical portraiture, Peripatetics of the Crown examines monarchy in motion-revealing how power survives not only through command and spectacle, but through silence, repetition, and the discipline of walking alone.