Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Book Review - 'The Lady in the Tower: the Fall of Anne Boleyn', by Alison Weir

The Lady in the Tower: the Fall of Anne Boleyn, by Alison Weir

Firstly, I finished this book about three weeks ago now, so I apologise if this review errs on the more 'general' side and doesn't give quotes or page references.

I was attracted to this book because it was not simply another re-telling of the story of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, but a specifically focussed study of the causes and events surrounding Anne's sudden fall from grace in May 1536. To her credit, Weir sticks firmly to this brief and, while there is some necessary 'filling in' of people's backgrounds etc, this is done only so it might further illuminate what happened during Anne's fall.

Although the title of the volume refers to Anne, I was particularly pleased to come across the section about those men who were executed with her (including her brother). The analysis of possible motives for why it was deemed politic to dispose of them (e.g. Brereton's involvement in Cheshire and Wales) and of the likelihood of some homosexuality on the part of George Boleyn, was extremely interesting and included many new ideas and research.

Weir consistently examines the events of Anne's fall using a variety of sources, such as ambassadorial reports and the accounts - both sympathetic and not - written many years after. These sources are questioned to get as close as one can to what actually happened during Anne's last days. The book does not end with Anne's death, but goes on to discuss ways in which Elizabeth I, her daughter, may have coped with her mother's memory, and how Anne herself has become embedded into popular folklore.

In conclusion, this is an excellently written and researched book and one which I found immensely informative, even though I have read a great deal about Anne already. My only regret is that it was not available earlier this year when I was writing an essay on Anne Boleyn, as it would have been a great help.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Katherine of Aragon and Her Supporters 1527-1536: Chapter Two

CHAPTER TWO - MARY

Katherine and Henry’s daughter, Mary, was only eleven years old when her parents’ divorce proceedings began in 1527. She was twenty when her mother, and the woman who had supplanted her, both died in 1536. The divorce years, therefore, took place during a critical stage of her life, when she was coming to maturity and forming the traits and opinions which would shape her character in adulthood. Like any child with quarrelling parents, Mary suffered greatly from being caught up in the eye of the storm, and, perhaps naturally, she took a side. That side was Katherine’s.

It is somewhat unusual, then, that Mary is entirely absent from the records of the divorce prior to 1533. There is no evidence of her thoughts or actions during this time. Historians have always assumed, like Carolly Erickson, that ‘one thing is very clear…from the start Mary watched and wept over her mother’s trials, and took her part.’ It would be fitting, given her later attitude, if this were true. However, due to the lack of evidence about Mary from 1527-1533, is it right to automatically conclude she took Katherine’s side from the beginning? Or was it the case that she knew something bad was going on between her parents but did not find out the definitive facts until later? Mary had her own separate household under the supervision of the Countess of Salisbury, her governess, and Lord Hussey, her chamberlain. The Countess, Hussey, and Hussey’s wife were all friends and supporters of Katherine and her daughter. In fact, Lady Hussey was later imprisoned for insisting on calling Mary ‘princess’ when that title belonged to Elizabeth. Consequently, it is likely that Mary formed her first views of the divorce from hearing her mother’s partisans talking of it. Yet it could also be plausible that Mary was shielded from the gritty details until she was older. Unfortunately, this is a historical issue which lack of evidence consigns to the realms of ‘ifs’ and ‘maybes’. Historians would be wise to take this into account before making grand statements like Erickson’s.

Why then did Mary ultimately so forcibly side with her mother over the divorce? As shown in the previous chapter, Katherine was passionately concerned with maintaining her daughter’s rights, but had to do so in a way which would not compromise what she saw as her moral stand against Henry. Yet part of her motives for firmly resisting the divorce was that she would not accept Mary’s bastardisation. To have her mother stand up for her hereditary rights, when she was a child and unable to do so herself, would have endeared Mary to Katherine’s cause. James Froude argued that, although Mary’s conduct ‘may and does deserve the highest moral admiration…the fidelity of the child to the mother was the assertion of a right to be next in succession to the crown’ , implying that Mary took Katherine’s side out of merely selfish considerations. Although it would be foolish to think that Mary did not have a deep-rooted desire to preserve her right to the throne, especially as she got older, it is also wrong to assume that her emotional ties to Katherine did not figure somewhere in her reasons for opposing the divorce. Katherine and her daughter were very close. The Queen had supervised Mary’s education when she was young and, when Mary had been moved to her own household, continued to take a great interest in her development. Henry, of course, also held affection for his daughter, but Mary and her mother shared many beliefs and personality traits which would bind them together during the divorce years; piety, pride, and what Henry and his supporters called ‘obstinacy.’ It is also worth noting that any declaration by Mary of her own legitimacy implied recognition of her mother’s claim that her marriage was valid. Judith M. Richards states ‘it is likely that defending her mother’s virtue and reputation was her primary concern.’ Even if it was not her primary concern, Mary’s strong feelings for her mother cannot be discounted as a reason for her resistance to her father.

Mary decisively steps into the accounts of the divorce years in 1533. H.F.M Prescott held the view that ‘when her time came to take a hand, her role was passive.’ This is certainly mistaken. Passive Mary was most definitely not. Perhaps Prescott took her opinion from the first reported instance of Mary’s views on the divorce where, when told of Cranmer’s verdict against her mother and Henry’s marriage to Anne Boleyn, ‘she was a little sad, and then, like a wise woman as she is, she dissembled the matter, showing herself glad.’ Certainly there is no display of anger, no protest, no opposition at all. But Mary was caught off guard. The Pope was still determining the case at Rome; Cranmer’s court and Henry’s second marriage had been conducted in secret. In front of Henry’s messengers, she had to make the best showing she could under the circumstances. It is the last part of the report that is perhaps the most revealing; that Mary appeared ‘glad.’ In her heart, maybe, Mary believed that, with all the duplicity shown by her father’s side, there was now no doubting the righteousness of her mother’s cause. In any case, this would be the first and the last time that Mary did not take the opportunity to object to the divorce and the events that followed.

The real change for Mary came with the birth of Elizabeth in September 1533. After all the years of waiting, Henry still had no son. He now had two daughters, and it was necessary that he make it perfectly clear which one was the rightful heir from his new, lawful marriage, and which one was the bastard from his sinful marriage to Katherine. Up until this point, Mary’s status as heir had not actually been disputed. The case in canon law was that, even if Henry and Katherine did divorce, Mary had been born in ‘bona fide parentum’ (with the good faith of the parents), because they did not know their marriage was invalid at the time. Cranmer, when pronouncing on the divorce, did not declare Mary a bastard for this reason. But for Henry, to even keep silent on Mary’s place in the succession was to acknowledge the validity of the first marriage. Shortly after the birth of Elizabeth, Mary’s servants were required to take off her symbol from their livery and replace it with the King’s , and at the beginning of October Mary received a supposedly routine letter from William Paulet, controller of the King’s household, which addressed her as ‘the lady Mary, the King’s daughter’ and not princess. This is when Mary’s opposition to Henry came to the fore, and in the letter she wrote to her father can be discerned the principles of her argument. The reply is deferential to begin with, stating that the King could not possibly have been ‘privy’ to the first letter, which must have been a mistake. Then the tone changes, and Mary writes that she does not doubt ‘you take me for your lawful daughter, born in true matrimony. If I agreed to the contrary I should offend God.’ 

Mary’s resistance to Henry was organised around one central point; her parent’s marriage was valid. Thus it was very similar to Katherine’s opposition, which also revolved around this issue. From her belief in the marriage, Mary took her other two principles; she was the only true princess, and her mother was the only true queen. This implied a total rejection of Henry’s marriage to Anne, Anne’s claim to queenship, and Elizabeth’s legitimacy. Through the years 1533 to 1536, Mary never deviated from these points and, in a sense, she never expanded upon them either. Again the comparisons with Katherine’s own opposition can be drawn. Both mother and daughter took clear, principled lines over the divorce which cut through the mass of legal and theological debate about the issue. This has given rise, in the case of Mary’s opposition, to two very different schools of thought. Sympathetic writings such as those by Prescott and Erickson, concerned with ‘rehabilitating’ Mary’s image, portray a young girl persecuted by her father and wicked step-mother. On the other hand, David Loades’ Mary Tudor: A Life epitomises the approach of blaming Mary herself for much of what happened. Perhaps some historians find it more difficult to become detached from the emotion of Mary’s experiences. Others share Henry’s frustration that Katherine and Mary did not chose the easier option of submitting to Henry. Neither of these approaches is totally right, yet neither are they wrong. In reality, as will be shown below, Mary’s opposition over the years was variable. Sometimes she really was the frightened girl ruled by emotion, and sometimes this was just an image.

In October of 1533, the Imperial ambassador, Chapuys, was worried that Henry would make Mary enter a nunnery or ‘marry her against her will.’ Actually, ‘Henry was neither so vindictive nor so foolish as Chapuys feared’ ; he was much more clever, opting to use the same method with Mary that he had used with her mother. Like Katherine, Mary would be isolated from her friends and from court, but there was an added measure; Mary, as Chapuys put it, ‘should come and live as lady’s maid with the new bastard.’ For Henry this was a symbolic gesture as much as anything else. In his eyes, the illegitimate child should serve the rightful heir, even though Elizabeth was only a few months old. The Duke of Norfolk was chosen for the admittedly difficult task of informing Mary of this. During the discussion, he called Elizabeth ‘princess’, to which Mary replied ‘that title belonged to herself, and to no other.’ When Norfolk had managed to remove Mary to Elizabeth’s household, he ‘asked her whether she would not go and pay her respects to the princess. She answered that she knew no other princess in England except herself, and that the daughter of Madame de Penebrok had no such title.’ Mary would, however, call Elizabeth ‘sister’, just as she called Henry’s illegitimate son, the Duke of Richmond, ‘brother’. This was a very explicit rejection of the major points of Henry’s case; that Anne was Queen and Elizabeth was legitimate. The pointed barb of using Anne’s old title of Marquess of Pembroke and the reference to the illegitimate Richmond would not have been lost on Norfolk or those to whom he reported the incident. Indeed, Mary could not have failed to realise that her response would reach her father and Anne Boleyn, and so her tactic at this time was to make a forceful public declaration of her opposition.

From the moment she set foot in the household of Elizabeth, Mary’s strategy was simple; she would not show any deference to Elizabeth as princess. This made arrangements at the household, where she was under the eye of Lady Shelton, Anne Boleyn’s aunt, very complicated. For example, Mary refused to eat in the dining hall so she would not be seated at a lower place at the table, so she had to be given meals in her room. There was also an incident where, expected to follow Elizabeth to another residence, Mary refused and was literally thrown into a waiting litter by some gentlemen. There were many more protests such as these, but they all had the same tone. Historians differ in their interpretation of Mary’s actions during this time, and this is where the two schools of thought mentioned earlier come into play. The question to be considered as regards Mary’s resistance is whether it was the right course of action to take or whether it provoked Henry unnecessarily, causing him to treat Mary worse. Prescott wrote that Mary, ‘by her father’s doing, became all her mother’s child and the Spanish Tudor’ , but it is an oversimplification to solely blame Henry for Mary’s situation. It is obvious that Mary’s troubles at Elizabeth’s household were partly her own fault. Loades recognises this, but makes a crude generalisation when he states that ‘Mary was an affliction to herself, and to everyone with whom she had to deal.’ This ignores the fact that Mary’s life during this time was unpleasant; she was often ill and sometimes denied medical treatment, and she was surrounded by people under orders to treat her harshly. On balance, Mary sometimes pushed her opposition beyond a boundary where it could have been effective, but she was equally capable of using her image as a pitiful young woman to good affect. Once, when Henry was visiting Elizabeth, Mary appeared on the terrace when the King was about to leave, ‘on her knees with her hands joined’ in a clear message of supplication, causing Henry to bow to her and ‘put his hand to his hat.’ Henry never lost affection for his daughter, but his own situation meant he could not be seen to give in to her. It is also easy to see the hand of Anne Boleyn behind Mary’s treatment, but she had her own daughter to protect, and regarded Mary as more and more of a threat each time she failed to give the King a son. These different factors all came into Mary’s opposition, but she herself could not see that she was toughening Henry’s attitude to her each time she resisted. For Mary as much as for her mother, opposition was a matter of conscience and faith not open to worldly considerations.

Was Katherine the force behind Mary’s resistance? Mary and Katherine never saw each other after late 1531, and it is difficult to know what passed between them before then as it is not recorded. After their separation, they were initially permitted to write letters to each other, and one that Katherine wrote several days after the birth of Elizabeth in September 1533 deserves close attention. The tone of the letter is exceptionally pious, saying that ‘the time is come that almighty God will prove you.’ Katherine advises Mary to ‘shrive yourself; first make you clean; take heed of His commandments…for then you are sure armed’ and to obey her ‘in everything, save only that you will not offend God and lose your own soul.’ Here are the echoes of Katherine’s own pronouncements that she would obey the King unless it went against her conscience, but interestingly she does not tell Mary to obey her father, rather Mary should look to her. The purpose of the letter was partly to comfort, and partly to exhort. Katherine is clearly telling Mary not to waver in her opposition and to be confident that God is on their side. She was also steeling Mary for the possibility of martyrdom. Mary M. Luke suspects that this letter, filled with motherly advice and a deep piety, became Mary’s ‘creed.’ However, from the time she was moved to Elizabeth’s household, Mary was cut off from Katherine’s influence, as letters to and from her mother were forbidden. She was now under the supervision of the Imperial ambassador, Chapuys, who visited her and wrote to her when he could. Chapuys was certainly active on Mary’s behalf, interceding with Henry and Cromwell on several occasions to demand better medical treatment, although the assessment by Richard Marius that the ambassador was ‘responsible for the preservation of her very life’ is an exaggeration, as it is doubtful whether Henry ever seriously intended to martyr his daughter. Chapuys sent Mary advice, such as the ‘many fair and gracious remonstrances’ that she could use. After the ‘litter incident’, Chapuys even wrote ‘I should not have advised the princess to have gone to this extreme.’ Consequently, as Loades argues, Chapuys ‘must bear a share of the responsibility’ for the problems that arose from Mary’s opposition. 

Chapuys also thought up a plan for smuggling Mary abroad. This was approved by Charles V because, as James V reminded him, ‘she is not in his power, and could not be obtained without great difficulty.’ If Charles managed to obtain Mary, he could use her to cement an alliance against Henry. Yet was there ever a competent plot to smuggle Mary out? Charles told Chapuys to ‘consider if there be any means of getting away the said princess’ but promised nothing in the way of support. Escape largely depended on which residence Mary was at, but some of the plans Chapuys suggested were genuinely foolhardy. He wrote that ‘it would not be difficult if she dwelt at the Tower’ , forgetting that the Tower was mainly a prison, heavily guarded and, in London, too near royal authority and power. What seems most cruel is the way Mary’s hopes were raised when Chapuys talked to her of ‘rescue’ , only to be dashed for lack of the right conditions, or for the ambassador’s worries about needing the proper authorisation. Consequently, Mary was largely left to oppose Henry on her own, and remained in England. 

What the interest of Chapuys and his master in Mary does show is that she had become a separate focus for the opposition party away from her mother. Rumours of Mary’s marriage had begun as far back as 1530, when an Imperial agent reported possible negotiations between England and Milan, even though the Duke of Milan had ‘neither feet nor hands’ , and this sort of speculation continued through the divorce years, with Mary insisting in 1535 that the Dauphin was her husband, even though all hope in that alliance (from the 1520s) was long dead. Loades argues that these rumours ‘indicate that Mary was becoming more important than her mother’ , with both sides of the divorce recognising her value in the marriage market, whereas Katherine, taking her stand as Henry’s true wife, could never be used in this way. 

How much support did Mary’s opposition have? Richards writes that ‘as her popular mother’s daughter, she had considerable public sympathy, but little interest – let alone support – from courtiers or diplomats.’ Apart from the aforementioned sympathies of her former staff, there are no records of court interest in Mary. Yet this does not strictly mean there wasn’t any, as visits to and favourable opinions of Mary were prohibited. In terms of popular support, there is one incident which illustrates public feeling about Mary. In September 1530, articles were brought against Mary Baynton, accused of impersonating the princess in Boston, Lincolnshire. Baynton (as Mary) had told people, that her aunt, the Duchess of Suffolk, had read her fortune as a child and told her ‘ye must go a-begging once in your life’, so ‘I take it upon me now in my youth’, and that ‘I intend to go beyond the sea to mine uncle the emperor.’ Although this all seems rather unbelievable and harmless, the sight of a homeless Mary had the potential for raising considerable public feeling. Popular thought from this period is almost impossible to measure, but it is likely the public loved Mary in the same way they would love any sad and lonely princess. As Erickson points out, to the rural population who knew of her only through second-hand stories, ‘Mary’s life was that of a fairytale heroine, full of romance and peril yet veiled in unreality.’ The Pilgrimage of Grace, a rising which could be said to have been in Mary’s favour, occurred after both her mother and Anne Boleyn were dead and the divorce was no longer the issue of the day. Support she may have, but of effective support there was none.

In conclusion, the divorce years were a time of incredible emotional strain for Mary. This is reflected in her style of opposition. ‘She came to maturity in an atmosphere of extraordinary stress, and her character emerged as a response to crises.’ Whilst not judging her too harshly, historians need to remember how capable Mary was of presenting herself as a frightened young girl, when in reality she could be strong and manipulative. This was partly from the influence of her mother, and partly from the advice of Chapuys. In the end, however, Mary’s opposition only postponed the inevitable. In 1536, with Henry married to his third wife, Mary was forced to sign a humiliating submission, affirming her parents’ marriage to have been unlawful. Her father had won.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Book Review - 'Henry: Virtuous Prince', by David Starkey

Henry: Virtuous Prince by David Starkey

David Starkey is the most well known of historians working on Henry's reign, due to his numerous appearances on television. Virtuous Prince is his first attempt to deal exclusively with Henry himself, and focuses on his childhood and the early years of his reign.

I found the range of the book disappointing, since it ends abruptly in about 1512 without, as I was expecting, discussing the rise of Wolsey and the war and diplomacy before 1520. The chapters on Henry's childhood take up most of the book, which leaves the reader still yearning for a more detailed look at Henry's early reign, a historical period which is often brushed over. Indeed, there is so much written about Henry's father (Henry VII) in Virtuous Prince, that the book almost becomes a biography of this King instead.

The few chapters about the start of the reign focus on Henry's love of jousting, but in a way which seemed to leave so much more to be said. The print in the hardback version of the book is huge, and the book could have been condensed to half its length were it not for this. Starkey's style is that he writes in the same way as he presents on television. The paragraphs are short and sharp, with as much impact as possible drawn from very few words. Unfortunately, this can lead to the presentation of theories as facts, and to some rather odd statements, such as that a recording herald 'says nothing about what either party thought of the other' (p142). In fact, it was not the job of herlads to do this. The tone that comes from the book, then, is one of a sanctimonius 'I know best', where Starkey perhaps feels that so many television programmes on Henry's reign have made him the authority on this subject, and forgets that the real foundation of a good historical work is back-breaking yet thorough research.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Book Review - 'Henry VIII: Reformer and Tyrant', by Derek Wilson

Henry VIII: Reformer and Tyrant by Derek Wilson

I met the author, Derek Wilson, as we walked across an extremely wet courtyard in Hampton Court on the third day of the conference held there this July to commermerate the 500th anniversary of Henry VIII ascending the throne. Once the day had finished, I was in the gift shop, hiding from the rain, and came across his book. I read it a few weeks ago after finishing my MA.

Firstly, the book was written with a popular audience in mind and thus, from a scholarly perspective, was always going to be slightly lacking in the sheer amount of detail needed to cover such a topic. On the other hand, it is clear that Wilson has done his research and knows the history well, and he manages to pack a lot in to a comparatively small volume. The first several chapters were, for me, especially interesting, as they examined the early part of Henry's reign, which is the subject of my forthcoming PhD.

Whilst I enjoyed the book, the main issue I have with it, is with its title. The use of the word tyrant in reference to Henry VIII has become almost omnipresent. We cannot seem to dicuss him as a ruler or a man without waxing on about how brutal he was. What is lacking in these discussions is a sense of perspective. Henry lived in a brutal age, where Kings and states were easily unravelled and thus there was a constant need for them to stamp out their authority. Let us not also forget that many of the issues central to his reign - the succession, his wives, religion - affected Henry very personally and so, with ultimate power in the hands of the King, these issues were always going to be led by his emotions.

Near the end of his book, Wilson asks 'how justified are we in applying the word tyrant to Henry VIII' (p.348), and then concludes that Henry was no more tyrannical than his contemporaries, and certainly shouldn't merit a word which is also used for figures such as Stalin or Nero. With this in mind, one wonders what the book was meant to accomplish, and we seem to be left with yet another work which portrays Henry as a poorly skilled King who relied heavily on others and who was incapable of taking his country in a coherent direction. However, it is a good starting point for a general overview of the reign if the reader remembers that other interpretations are available.

Footnotes :/

After posting the second instalment of my dissertation a few minutes ago, I noticed that, despite simply copy-pasting it from the original word document, footnotes were not being included. This is odd, as I followed the same process as with my first post on this subject, and on that occasion footnotes appeared to work. This seems to mean that no further dissertation chapters will contain footnotes, which is something of a problem as it looks like I just made up all the quotations in the essay. If you read any of the posts and wish to find out which source a particular quote comes from, please leave a comment and I will get back to you with the reference.

Katherine of Aragon and Her Supporters 1527-1536: Chapter One

CHAPTER ONE – KATHERINE

On 17th May 1527, Cardinal Wolsey opened a secret court to inquire into the validity of Henry and Katherine’s marriage. Even though Henry had already made up his mind about wanting a divorce, he had to pay lip service to the formalities and listen as Richard Wolman, the promoter of the case, accused him of living in sin with his brother’s wife. Wolman’s argument was ‘that it was notorious prince Arthur had married Katherine, cohabited with her, and carnally known her.’ Henry’s proctor, Dr. John Bell, defended the marriage. But no one was under any illusions as to what was really going on; at the court’s first meeting, Henry sat at Wolsey’s right hand. Judgment in favour of a divorce should have been merely a formality. However, after a few sessions, Wolsey broke up the secret court, being unable to deal with the legal complications of the case. Katherine did not attend the secret court. In fact, she hadn’t even been told about it.

George Bernard, in The King’s Reformation, asks a rather odd question; ‘was Katherine of Aragon the first to oppose Henry VIII?’ Bernard then goes on to ask more questions and never actually answers this first one, but it seems curious, given what historians know about the divorce, that this question needs to be asked at all. Of course, though, Katherine did have a choice when she was finally told about Henry’s plans. She could oppose them or acquiesce. Given how much of the historiography of the divorce focuses on Henry, it is somewhat pointed that it was this choice of Katherine’s that determined so much. As Antonia Fraser notes, the relationship of the divorce to the Henrician Reformation has ‘tended to mask the fact that such a divorce might well have gone through comparatively painlessly if certain circumstances had been different.’ One of these circumstances must be Katherine’s decision to oppose Henry’s wishes. If she had agreed with him, or simply just accepted he would win, a compliant Pope would have been likely to grant the separation. Kings, after all, had sought and been given divorces on other occasions throughout history. Even allowing for the legal and theological difficulties of Henry’s case, then, it was Katherine’s opposition which made his divorce different from all those that had gone before. It was her resistance that turned the issue from a process to a battle. 

Why then is there no systematic study of her case similar to Geoffrey de Parmiter’s The King’s Great Matter or Henry Kelly’s The Matrimonial Trials of Henry VIII? The closest there is to a survey of Katherine’s side is John Paul’s Catherine of Aragon and her Friends, which takes in all ‘friends’ from Katherine’s arrival in England onwards, but whose depth is limited. Nowhere, in fact, is Katherine’s defence given the attention it truly deserves. What exists in the historiography is a muddle of occasional paragraphs in books about Henry, chapters in ‘six wives’ accounts, and what are best termed as ‘sympathy books’, usually biographies of Katherine or her daughter which, although evocative, lack rigid historical enquiry. 

When Katherine was eventually told about Henry’s plans for divorce, she began to lay out her main points of argument. One of these was, as Wolsey said to Henry, ‘that your brother did never know her carnally.’ Katherine’s strategy was that if she could prove she was a virgin when she had married Henry, there would be no problem with their marriage, for she understood that the verse in Leviticus only applied if the first union had been consummated. This was a clear, principled stand from which Katherine would never waver until her death in 1536, and which ignored the technicalities about dispensations and papal power which Henry’s team came to rely on. Historians have been critical of Katherine concentrating on the non-consummation argument. Francesca Claremount argued that Katherine’s ‘inability to see complexities came into play here. She could only see that she had not been Arthur’s wife and therefore she was Henry’s, and what was the use of talking about it?’ Mary M. Luke also took this line, writing that Katherine ‘continually oversimplified a complicated and emotionally involved situation, one she never truly comprehended.’ 

Was Katherine right to use non-consummation as her primary line of defence? She came to have a legal team in Rome who battled against Henry’s over the finer details, so perhaps she felt that side of things was best left to them. Or maybe she thought it unseemly for a woman to be involved in such legal process, especially one who presented herself throughout the divorce years as Henry’s ‘true’ wife. If she was his true wife, how could she wade into arguments about the potential validity of their marriage? What appears most likely, however, is that Katherine never doubted her marriage to Henry was lawful and, if questions had been raised because of Leviticus, the best course was to prove Leviticus did not apply to this case. To suggest Katherine did not grasp the complexity of such an emotional situation is to misunderstand her. To insist upon her virginity and the validity of her marriage was to defend her own honour, for if she had not been Henry’s wife all these years, then she had been his mistress, ‘with all that degradation meant to a woman of Katherine’s birth, character and type.’ This was just as much an emotional response as any of Henry’s, only Katherine had a different way of showing it.

Katherine’s insistence on her virginity has lead to speculation amongst historians as to whether she was telling the truth, particularly since she made a declaration of her virginity to Cardinal Campeggio, who had come to sit in judgement at the Legatine trial. She went to Campeggio for confession and asserted that the marriage with Arthur was never consummated, and also saw Campeggio again closer to the trial. Campeggio reported of this second visit that Katherine regarded ‘as the great solace of her mind and the firm foundation of her righteousness, that from the embraces of her first husband she entered this marriage as a virgin and an immaculate woman.’ Katherine gave Campeggio permission to tell others what she had said in confession, so it is clear she had always intended her declaration to become public. Katherine’s tactic seems to have been not only to please her conscience, but also to try and force Henry into making his own statement about the issue at the trial or sooner. At the time, Henry was arguing that he wanted the marriage investigated to put his mind at rest, and that Katherine was an ideal wife. If he denied her virginity, he was accusing his ideal wife of lying in confession. If he admitted her virginity, he destroyed most of his objections to the original papal dispensation. That Katherine’s declaration backed Henry into a corner is shown by the simple fact that he said nothing at all. Yet this was in itself a tacit admission that she was right, something not noted at the time. Katherine, then, did not harm her defence by making her statement to Campeggio, but the issue of virginity did lead to rather unseemly scenes in the Legatine trial where, unwilling to talk about it himself, Henry lined up several middle aged nobles to say how they had been capable of consummating their marriages at the same age as Arthur. It had become Katherine’s word against the King’s, and there were noticeably few who went against the King.

During the divorce years, Katherine was concerned not only with remaining Henry’s wife, but also with maintaining the status of her daughter, Mary, as rightful heir to the throne. David Loades argues that ‘Katherine’s defence of her marriage was a personal statement of her own integrity and faith’ and, as such, it was ‘innocent of political content’, leading Loades to conclude that it was not concern for Mary’s rights which motivated Katherine to oppose Henry. According to Loades’ interpretation, a defence of Mary’s rights would have involved some sort of conspiracy by Katherine to depose Henry and put Mary on the throne. However, Katherine never disputed Henry’s title, and what she really wanted to protect was Mary’s right to inherit the throne after Henry died, whenever that would be. The two issues of Katherine’s marriage and Mary’s legitimacy were implicitly connected for, as Lucy Wooding states, ‘to admit Henry’s case was to declare her own beloved daughter, groomed for the throne, a bastard.’ Katherine had tried to give Mary the rounded education needed for eventual queenship, so she could follow the example of Katherine’s mother Isabella, who had ruled Castile. This, and the simple fact that she loved her daughter, meant Katherine continuously sought recognition of Mary’s place as heir alongside the restitution of her own case. For example, in February 1533, Katherine was insisting her case be resolved ‘for the discharge of her conscience and the assurance of the princess’ succession.’ 

Unfortunately for Katherine, Henry was perfectly aware of her feelings about Mary, and was prepared to use them as a weapon against her. Frequently this was in the form of threats in order to break Katherine’s resistance. In November 1528, Katherine was told that, if she persisted in defending her case, Henry ‘will not suffer the princess to come into her company’ , and this type of threat was still being used in July 1533, when Katherine was warned that non-compliance would mean Henry withdrawing ‘affection from his daughter.’ This certainly must have distressed Katherine, but at no time did she give up her opposition because of these warnings. More subtly, Henry also tried to use Katherine’s affection for Mary to trick her. In May 1531, Mary was ill and Katherine suggested to Henry that they visit her. Henry said she could go, and then stay there. Katherine saw through this ploy; if she went to Mary, Henry could accuse her of abandoning him. Her own strategy at this time was clear; ‘she would not leave him for her daughter nor anyone else.’ Not only was Katherine trying to protect her daughter, she had to do so in a way which would not compromise her own argument that she was Henry’s true, loyal wife. That she managed to do so is remarkable.

When she first learned of the divorce, part of Katherine’s plan was to inform her nephew, Emperor Charles V, as soon as possible so he could provide her with assistance. She did this by sending her servant Francesco Felipez, using an elaborate double-cross with Henry in which she refused to allow Felipez leave to go. Henry suspected ‘that the Queen is the only cause of the man’s going into Spain’ and wanted Felipez detained in France, but Felipez managed to get through and deliver his message to Charles V. This action of Katherine’s had possibly the greatest impact on Henry’s side of any of her decisions during the divorce case, because it ‘turned the “great matter” from an English question into an international one.’ Scarisbrick goes so far as to call Felipez’ mission a ‘turning-point in the story of the divorce’ which meant Henry’s chance of a quick decision in Rome was ‘snared.’ This is not completely true; the case also depended on factors neither side could control, such as the character of the Pope, Clement VII, a man who vacillated so much he became ‘the shuttlecock of European politics.’ Yet Katherine’s action did mean Henry’s team had to change tactics. No longer could they hurry the case along in secret courts before anyone found out; they now had to answer to European opinion, most of which was controlled by Katherine’s nephew. Katherine gained a legal team in Rome that was made up of Imperial agents, and she now had the opportunity to lobby Charles to put pressure on the Pope to have Henry’s case dismissed or decided in her favour. Katherine did write often to Charles, and her letters always implored him to ‘demand a sentence and decision’ from the Pope, but she never explicitly mentions how Charles is to do this. There is also no discussion of strategy in terms of opposition to the divorce, or mention of others whom Charles could contact (Bishop Fisher, for example). Over time, Katherine’s letters to Charles took on a more anxious tone, and she began to compare her affairs to Charles’ fight against the Turk. Bernard argues that Katherine’s letters to Charles read ‘as if she felt that he had in his hands a magic wand that could, if only he would wave it, solve her problems’ , and Claremount states that Katherine was unable to ‘grasp’ that Charles had other things to deal with. Consequently, it seems as if this correspondence to Charles was a missed opportunity, but it is difficult to see what else Katherine could have said, since she believed in a Roman settlement for her case, particularly as time wore on and she became more isolated. 

Another action of Katherine’s which threw Henry’s team off balance was her declaration in 1528 that she had ‘two bulls in Spain, removing all impediments to the marriage.’ One of these was what is known as the ‘Spanish brief’, which was phrased differently from the original papal dispensation, and which nullified most of Henry’s objections to that dispensation. It is not expedient to go into detail here about the legal consequences of the brief, but it occupied Henry and Wolsey for some months. They first tried to obtain the brief by sending a deputation of counsellors to Katherine to persuade her to write for it. Katherine did write for the brief a few months later, but then sent an additional messenger to tell Charles she had been ‘compelled under oath to write in that matter.’ This messenger was one of her chaplains, Thomas Abell, whose support of Katherine would later extend to publishing a book against the divorce. The series of events over the Spanish brief show that Katherine was quite able to keep up with the machinations of Henry’s side, and also to force them to go on the defensive once in a while. Henry never got the original brief, and he and Wolsey were left to claim it was false without ever having seen it. As Bernard argues, Katherine ‘was being legally awkward in defence of her position.’ 

The Legatine trial, presided over by Cardinals Wolsey and Campeggio, sat in the summer of 1529. This would be where Katherine made her one spectacular showpiece of the whole divorce saga. The trial was recorded by George Cavendish, one of Wolsey’s gentlemen ushers, and his account is worth quoting in full to appreciate what Katherine said. 

Sir, quoth she, I beseech you for all the love that hath been between us, and for the love of God, let me have justice and right, take of me some pity and compassion, for I am a poor woman and a stranger born out of your dominion, I have no assured friend, and much less indifferent counsel…This twenty years I have been your true wife or more, and by me ye have had divers children, although it hath pleased God to call them out of this world, which hath been no fault in me. And when ye had me at the first, I take God to be my judge, I was a true maid without touch of man, and whether it be true or no, I put it to your conscience. 

Katherine was using this public and highly symbolic occasion to make several points. Firstly, she appealed to Henry and to the audience on compassionate grounds, citing her love for him and their shared loss of children. Although she did have counsel to advise her, including the venerable Bishop Fisher, she took care to present herself as a lone woman caught up in events she didn’t understand. Finally, she reiterated the main points of her opposition; that she was Henry’s true wife, and that she had been a virgin when they married. Having finished, Katherine made her opposition to the legal process clear by walking out of the court, never to return. In total, it was a worthy performance which, as Wooding states, showed Katherine was Henry’s equal ‘when it came to the moral drama that was so central to majesty.’ Katherine knew that tales of her words would soon be running through London, bolstering the support of many ordinary people who had already cheered her on the way into court. Her audience had also been those within the court; the courtiers and nobles so inclined to the King’s side who had never heard her version of events. ‘After her simple assertion of human dignity and human worth, the proceedings of the court seemed suddenly sordid and shameful’ , and the spectators were left to form new opinions. To present Katherine, as so many historians have done, as unable to form a coherent strategy in the face of Henry’s plans, is to ignore the significance of events such as this, which show how capable she was of using her strengths and her image to maximum advantage.

In the summer of 1531, Henry went on progress with Anne, leaving Katherine behind. She never saw him again. Soon afterwards, she was told to move to a separate household at The More and, during the years that followed, she was moved further and further away from Henry and the court. Antonia Fraser writes that ‘Katherine’s seclusion, at the orders of her husband…rendered her politically null: she could no longer be the symbol round which malcontents at home and abroad could rally.’ Bernard, who argues against the existence of an ‘Aragonese faction’, goes further by pointing out that contact between Katherine and potentially dissatisfied noblemen, whilst ‘theoretically possible’, did not occur. There are no recorded incidents of such people visiting Katherine in her isolation; they went to Imperial ambassador Chapuys instead.

After Henry married Anne in 1533, Katherine changed her line of opposition. It was no longer enough to insist on her virginity; instead she insisted she was Henry’s true wife, and not the ‘princess dowager’. To each commissioner sent by Henry to secure her compliance, she stated that she was queen ‘and would rather be hewn in pieces than depart from this assertation’ , even striking out the words ‘princess dowager’ on one of their documents. These arguments, whilst obviously important to Katherine, lacked the sophistication of her previous efforts, and perhaps point to her realisation that there was little she could now do to remedy her situation. When historians write of this stage in Katherine’s life, they speak of ‘isolation’ and ‘solitude’, as she turned inwards. Katherine began to use the language of martyrdom in her letters, writing that she expected ‘to be martyred at the next Parliament’ or that she ‘expects death.’ Katherine becomes harder to understand as her piety takes over; gone is the articulate, tactical woman of the Legatine trial, replaced by one who seems to desire martyrdom as the only way of making her point. In the last years of her isolation, Katherine did not really conduct an opposition to the divorce; rather she went on the defensive, lashing out at any who questioned her right to be queen, and waiting for the release of death. 

Carolly Erickson argued that ‘Katherine had come to an agonising crossroads in her own character. She was being pulled three ways. She was attempting to fulfil her duty as a wife, to honour her conscience, and to retain her dignity as queen.’ Katherine herself admitted this in a letter to Charles V in November 1531, saying she had shown obedience to Henry ‘sometimes more so in this affair than my conscience approved of.’ Wifely duty required her to obey Henry in all things, but how could she obey him in a situation which was repugnant to her conscience and which would destroy her marriage? Katherine’s way of dealing with this dilemma was to take a line of opposition in which she would obey Henry in all things which did not contravene her conscience. This meant she would resist him in the divorce but not in other things, but since the divorce was the only policy Henry pursued during these years, it meant Katherine resisted him constantly. Her daughter, Mary, learned from Katherine’s example and took the same style of opposition. However, throughout the divorce years until her death in 1536, one constant theme of Katherine’s opposition was that she was incapable of criticising Henry or blaming him for what was happening. Only a month after the letter about her crisis of conscience, Katherine was admonishing the King’s advisors, who ‘continually treat him like a bull in the circus, by giving him empty hopes’, writing that ‘it is a great pity that such a good and virtuous person should be so deceived and treated every day.’ In a sense, it did not matter if Katherine blamed the King or the King’s advisors, but it did matter that she couldn’t see Henry had lost his affection for her. Katherine might insist on her virginity when she had married Henry, she might insist she was his true wife and Mary was legitimate, but to Henry none of this mattered. Henry had decided their marriage was invalid and had moved on, and Katherine was just driving him ‘mad with irritation.’ This is especially true after Henry married Anne Boleyn and, in his mind, finished the legal process of divorce from Katherine. Up to then, her opposition had been somewhat tolerated because, with the Pope still deciding the case in Rome, Henry had to keep up the appearance of allowing Katherine her say. After Henry married Anne, Katherine had the option of submitting and retiring to her estates, to spend the remainder of her life in a comfortable and respected state, but she continued to resist, causing Henry to repeatedly cut the size of her household and allowance. The inability to compromise and accept Henry’s part in the divorce was harming Katherine’s opposition at this point, because she could not see the reality of her position. ‘One has the strong impression that Katherine truly loved Henry’ , but there is also the impression that Katherine could not ‘let go’ and adapt flexibly to changed circumstances. Whilst Katherine had to balance her duties of conscience and obedience, sticking to her principles may have won her admiration, but in the long term it caused her problems which she could have avoided. 

Illustrative of the dilemma Katherine faced during her opposition is her attitude to possible Imperial invasion on her behalf. In November 1533, Katherine told Chapuys she would ‘rather die’ than be the cause of war , yet in May 1534, Chapuys reported that Katherine had decided, since the King was not persuaded by the Pope’s decision on the case, that it was ‘necessary to proceed by other remedies’, which she didn’t want to name in case she contradicted ‘what she has already written.’ Was this evidence of Katherine changing her mind about possible invasion? H.F.M Prescott argued that ‘only after the terrible summer of 1535 was she driven to believe that the Emperor’s sword was needed.’ This was the summer in which More and Fisher were executed and Henry’s retribution against those who dared oppose the act of succession seemed unstoppable. Undoubtedly the fate of these men distressed Katherine, and in December 1535 she again asked Charles ‘for a remedy to her situation.’ However, in both this instance and in the letter of 1534, Katherine did not say what the ‘remedy’ should be. It is possible she still wanted Charles to put pressure on Henry through other means but, given that the Pope had already decided the case, and given her ‘often expressed opposition to violence’ , it is unclear what Charles was supposed to do. Again Katherine was caught between duty to her husband and duty to her conscience (a conscience which was appalled by religious developments). To any historiography which sees Katherine as the centre of a coherent opposition party, the answer must be made that she never called for or sanctioned political or military action against Henry. It can be speculated what she would have done had such action been instigated without her knowledge, but the only clear evidence available about her feelings are extracts where she speaks against invasion. A.G Dickens wrote that ‘to the last Katherine remained a true queen of England and a true wife: she would be no party to what she regarded as the sin of rebellion, or seek to profit from her husband’s overthrow and death.’ Given the evidence of Katherine’s character and her way of presenting herself throughout the divorce years, Dickens makes the best assessment of this issue. 

To conclude this chapter, Katherine’s opposition can be divided into two time periods. Firstly, from 1527 until 1533, when she was very active in resisting the divorce and used tactics such as the Felipez mission and revealing the Spanish brief. During the Legatine trial, Katherine used her memorable speech to outline her argument and appeal to the audience for support. Katherine’s main strategy at this time was to prove she had been a virgin when she married Henry so that the Levitical doubts did not apply. From Henry’s marriage to Anne in 1533 onwards, Katherine’s opposition lost its tactical side and became concerned with insisting she was Henry’s true wife. Throughout the divorce years, however, Katherine was under strain to balance her duty as a wife and her duty to her conscience, and this shows in certain aspects of her opposition such as refusing to blame Henry and her attitudes to invasion.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Katherine of Aragon and Her Supporters 1527-1536: Introduction

Since I handed in my MA dissertation a while ago, I thought I'd post the chapters of it on here in case anyone wanted to read it. I do appreciate that this is going to come out 'backwards', ie the introduction, posted first, will actually be last on a list of posts about this topic. 

INTRODUCTION – ‘THE KING’S GREAT MATTER’
‘He who marries his brother’s wife hath done an unclean thing. He hath uncovered his brother’s nakedness. They shall be childless.’ (Leviticus 20:21)

In an age of secular societies it is hard to imagine the power such a verse from the Bible could have over the minds of men, but for Henry VIII and those around him, for almost nine years, upon these words hinged everything. For, or at least according to the story Henry liked to put about, the reading of this Bible verse had inspired him to repudiate his first wife, Katherine of Aragon[1], who had indeed been married previously to his brother Arthur, and marry again in the hope of siring male heirs. The momentous and sometimes incredibly complex events that followed over the torturous course of years from 1527 until 1536 has always been known, both by contemporaries and by historians, as ‘the King’s Great Matter’. This is despite the fact that it irrevocably altered the lives of three women; Anne Boleyn, Katherine of Aragon, and Katherine’s daughter Mary. This rather masculine centred outlook could be justified at the time when the King was still alive and even perhaps the recipient of people’s correspondence. However, the consistent historiographical focus on Henry’s motives, Henry’s actions, and the consequences to church and state of Henry’s desire for remarriage ignores the far too obvious fact that a divorce – any divorce – never involves just one person.
        Although this paper is concerned with Katherine and her supporters, context is important for any historical issue, and so a brief analysis of Henry’s motives for divorce – which became the arguments Katherine’s party attacked or defended against – will provide a useful backdrop. Henry and Katherine had married soon after his ascension in 1509. To this day, the reasons for Henry doing so remain unclear. Perhaps it was from chivalric notions, where Henry saw himself as rescuing Katherine from the limbo of being a foreign princess in England without a husband. Perhaps Henry was honestly fond of her. Or perhaps simply, as Mortimer Levine argues, ‘the King rushed into this union because Katherine was on hand and of an age at which she might be expected to produce an heir quickly.’[2] Over the years between the marriage and the beginning of the divorce, Henry lost what romantic affection he had possibly possessed for Katherine whilst, and all sources agree on this, Katherine retained her love for him. He pursued affairs, though by the standards of the time he was not a particularly bad offender. But the most obvious legacy of the marriage was that, by 1527, Henry and Katherine had only one living child, their daughter Mary. And, for Henry, this was as good as being childless.
        As late as 1532, Henry was still expounding his worries about the succession as a motive for wanting a divorce. The introduction of a book said to be by him, A Glasse of the Truthe, is devoted to explaining the problem as he saw it. ‘If the female heyre, shall chaunce to rule, she can nat continue longe without an husbande, whiche by goddess lawe, muste than be her gouernour and heed, and so finally shall directe this realme...Wherefore we thinke the establyshement of titles is not so surely rooted nor yet so entirely mainteyned by the female as by male.’[3] England had no successful example of a queen regnant. The only time the crown had been passed to a female heir – to Matilda in the twelfth century – the result had been civil war with her cousin, Stephen. Consequently, many historians of the divorce accept that ‘Henry’s passionate desire for a male heir was natural and justified’[4], even if his means of obtaining this heir had profound effects. Katherine, however, had the example of her mother ruling Castile on her own, and saw no reason why her daughter could not do the same with England, and thus began her struggle to preserve Mary’s rights.
        As mentioned above, Henry often cited the verse from Leviticus as the reason for his lack of heirs. For historians, this brings up the issue of Henry’s conscience, because of Henry’s love for Anne Boleyn. Those historians who have written about Katherine’s supporters usually take a strongly negative view of Henry’s conscience, as shown by the comment in E.E Reynolds’ book about Bishop Fisher; Henry ‘made his conscience the servant of his appetites.’[5]  In fact, the levitical argument, although becoming the primary argument of Henry and his advocates, was not the only reason for divorce put forward at the beginning of proceedings. Henry was also said to have been moved to reconsider his marriage by a comment from the French envoy, the Bishop of Tarbes, concerning Mary’s legitimacy.[6] This particular motive was soon dropped. The problem for historians is whether to allow Henry the same considerations of conscience and moral integrity usually given to Katherine and her supporters. Lucy Wooding argues that ‘it would be wrong to cast the queen as the pious and wronged victim of Henry’s calculating self-interest. Henry too had a moral case, which hinged on scripture, in which the future security of the kingdom was at stake.’[7] Can Henry then be blamed outright for Katherine’s predicament during the divorce if, in one sense, his actions could be classed as justifiable? Or did Katherine complicate matters by simply being unable to understand Henry’s need for a male heir? There is no easy answer to this, but it is important to remember that Henry, just as much as Katherine, passionately believed in his course of action, and neither of them were prepared to deviate from their chosen path once they had set their minds to it. This is the context in which Katherine and her supporters will be discussed.
        In the expansive historiography of the divorce, and indeed in the historiography of Henry’s wives in general, Katherine is usually treated as someone who got in the way of the far more ‘interesting’ story of Henry and Anne. Even in David Starkey’s Six Wives, which for a book aimed at a popular audience is remarkably weighty and well-researched, the section about Katherine ends in 1527, a full six years before her successor actually married Henry. The recent desire by historians to move understanding of Anne Boleyn away from the stereotypical ‘scheming temptress’ of early chronicles means that we now have a far better picture of her actions during the divorce era, and it is clear she was no mere passive beneficiary of Henry’s plans.[8] This work on Anne is commendable and necessary, yet it seems that no one wants to do the same with Katherine. Perhaps this is because historians see her personality as essentially one-dimensional; hers was the life of a patient, saintly queen which, though admirable, was historically boring. If this is the case, then why were contemporaries so taken aback by Katherine’s resistance to Henry’s desire for a divorce? Why then did it take Henry six years to secure a second marriage? It is useful in studying Katherine’s character to begin not with the divorce saga but with her arrival in England in 1501. She had already become acquainted with hardship in the years between the death of Prince Arthur in 1502 and her marriage to Henry in 1509; this was the time when Henry VII kept her in financial austerity in order to persuade her father, Ferdinand of Aragon, to pay the rest of her dowry. Also, let it not be forgotten that Katherine suffered the pain of losing several children to miscarriage, still-birth, or infant mortality. However, in the years preceding the divorce she had settled into the role of a devoted, yet politically powerless wife, and loving mother to her daughter Mary. With this in mind, one can almost sense the frustration of some historians of the divorce that Katherine did not simply continue in this submissive state. Yet this is precisely what makes Katherine’s opposition to Henry so interesting and so needful of historical study.
        Sources appertaining to Katherine and her supporters are not lacking. Letters and Papers, for example, is full of writings from either side of the divorce battle, and some of Katherine’s advocates, such as Bishop Fisher, also wrote and published their arguments. However, extra care must be taken when reading all these sources to peel away the layers of self-interest and argumentative rhetoric in order to try and find what the writers were really thinking about the issues at hand. Even Katherine herself, as will be explored further later on, developed distinct patterns of language in her letters as the divorce saga wore on. This is not to say that these sources cannot be immensely useful; the reports of ambassador Chapuys, for example, reveal much about the opposition to the divorce.
        The last biography of Katherine, written by Garret Mattingly, was published in 1942, and since then there has been no attempt, for scholarly or public readership, to discuss Katherine separately from the ‘six wives’ formula. The result is that Mattingly is over-quoted to the point of exhaustion in these books. Mattingly’s work, whilst an excellent read, is written almost in the tone of a story book rather than a serious scholarly piece. Take, for example, his opening remark that ‘this is the story of a life which shaped history by not moving with its flow.’[9] It is an eloquent, somewhat beautiful, phrase, but it suffers from the same drawback as any work that is sympathetic to Katherine; it immediately casts her in the role of a martyr. As will be explained later in this paper, Katherine did use the language of martyrdom on some occasions, and two of her supporters – Bishop Fisher and Sir Thomas More – were martyred. But these people were as human and as fallible as anyone else. A balance must be achieved between brushing Katherine’s actions aside completely and concentrating too hard on making her decisions above moral reproach.
        The primary aim of this paper is to begin to redress the historiographical neglect of Katherine’s side of the divorce by focussing on her and her supporters from 1527 until her death in January 1536. Whilst Henry and his own advocates will appear within this discussion, theirs’ will be a background part. Although it is easy and perhaps understandable, upon undertaking a thorough examination of the sources about Katherine during these years, to pity and to sympathise with her dilemma, this paper will ask a question not often considered; whether the actions taken by Katherine and her supporters were the right ones, not in terms of being morally righteous, but in terms of whether this opposition actually helped their cause or simply made things worse. Katherine and those who supported her will be discussed in individual chapters, but within a framework that will assess how the supporters interacted with each other, in order to determine whether there really was, as G.R Elton calls it, an ‘Aragonese faction.’[10] Naturally, Katherine herself will be considered first, followed by her daughter Mary and then her other supporters, such as Bishop Fisher, Thomas More, and the Imperial ambassador Chapuys. The opposition of these individuals will be analysed in terms of its main principles and how effective it was at getting Henry’s side to change tactics, in order to reach a conclusion as to the historical significance of Katherine and those who supported her.




[1] Katherine’s name can, and has been, spelt with either a ‘C’ or a ‘K’. I have chosen to use ‘K’ as this form was encountered the most frequently during my research, and all references to Katherine in works quoted in this paper will now begin with ‘K’. However, titles in the bibliography and footnotes will remain in their original form.
[2] Mortimer Levine, Tudor Dynastic Problems 1460-1571, (London 1973), p.46.
[3] Henry VIII, A Glasse of the Truthe, (1532), p.3-4, [viewed at http://www.eebo.chadwyck.com on 15.5.09]. Note: many of the books on ‘eebo’ do not have page numbers, so I have numbered then conventionally from the first page of text. Title pages are not included.
[4] R.W Chambers, Thomas More, (Brighton 1982), p.224.
[5] E.E Reynolds, St. John Fisher, (Wheathampstead, Herts, 1955, this edition 1972), p.134.
[6] Document 3231, in J.S Brewer (ed.), Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII, vol.4 (1524-1530), (1875), [viewed at http://www.british-history.ac.uk between 27. 4.09 and 30.4.09]. Hereafter referred to as L&P.
[7] Lucy Wooding, Henry VIII, (Abingdon 2008), p.149.
[8] For an excellent biography of Anne see Eric W. Ives, Anne Boleyn, (Oxford 1986).
[9] Garret Mattingly, Catherine of Aragon, (London 1942), p.13.
[10] G.R Elton, Reform and Reformation: England 1509-1558, (London 1977), p.122.