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*Another one.*

While I definitely agree that Mary I suffered mistreatment as a teenager, I do not agree that this either justified or necessitated the later violence in her reign.Ā 

There’s a lot of this rhetoric in comment sections on YouTube documentariesā€“Ā ā€œis it any wonder that happenedā€, even going as far as saying that if those years at Hatfield had never happened (even going as far as blaming Anne Boleyn, in a roundabout way, for them– that her specific mistreatment of Mary guaranteed Mary doing this later), the violence wouldn’t have either, or at least not to the extent it did.Ā Ā 

I’m sure it affected her psyche in some way, and it’s awful to have to to balance between two parents that want you to do different things. Surely she felt humilitation at being made a servant after a life of pomp and importance (de facto Princess of Wales), surely she was made to feel uncomfortable for not signing the Oaths she was asked to, and pain at being ignored/not acknowledged by Henry for doing so (besides to call her, later, hisĀ ā€œworst enemy in the worldā€). While her mother’s treatment of her certainly didn’t match Henry’s callousness, and she always insisted she was legitimate, nor can I say it was entirely selfless, and much as Mary loved her, it was probably hard to know she wouldn’t do anything for her. COA begged to be allowed to visit Mary when she was ill, but wasn’t willing to take the actions that would have allowed her to do so. She was certainly capable of being manipulative, implying that she risked hell if Mary did anything to make her living situation more comfortable and reconcile with Henry (that is, to sign the Oaths) in a letter:

Answer with few words, obeying the King, your father, in everything, save only that you will not offend God and lose your own soul.Ā Ā 

Even that to put up with any discomfort made her more holy:

ā€œā€¦we never come to the Kingdom of Heaven but by troubles.ā€

I’m not implying their treatment of Mary was equitable in any way– Henry’s, obviously, was much worse– but she did receive a significant amount of pressure both parents, and that has an effect.Ā 

Nevertheless, I wouldn’t go as far as saying this mistreatment guaranteed the later violence. Maybe if her parents had continued to live together, maybe if COA had agreed to an annulment and Mary stayed legitimate in good faith it wouldn’t have happened, maybe if Henry and Anne married but Mary was allowed to keep her own household in the comfort and luxury in which she was accustomed to, and allowed visits with her mother, it wouldn’t have happened.Ā 

But I think the only potential scenario in which we can say it was guaranteed that Mary wouldn’t have had hundreds burnt at the stake is if, quite simply, she never had the power to do so.Ā 

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Henry VIII wasn’t as widely-hated in England as pop. history genre claims.Ā 

The Reformation, of course, wasn’t universally popular by any means. He was certainly hated and there were definitely dissenters, but to claim he himself wasĀ ā€œwidely-hatedā€ by the English people during his reign is erroneous, and it probably actually slides farther on the other side of the spectrum.

Actually, considering the religious upheaval, and considering the excommunication of the Pope (which allowed any Englishmen to rebel and depose him, said it was not treason to do so, and that those that did so would still go to Heaven) it’s incredible that there weren’t more rebellions than there were.Ā 

His reign was nearly 40 decades, and all in all there were only four rebellions. For roughly the first 16 years, there were none. None of the rebellions were aimed at deposing Henry.Ā 

The first was in 1525, against a high tax. The ringleaders of this one were pardoned after Wolsey interceded for them. There was also the Kildare Rebellion, the Pilgrimage of Grace, and Bigod’s rebellion.Ā 

In contrast, Henry VII had six rebellions during his reign, some calling for his deposition, within the span of 11 years. Edward VI had three rebellions within the same year. Mary I had one rebellion with the aim of her deposition within her reign of five years. Elizabeth I had seven rebellions, some with the aim of her deposition, within the 45 years of her reign.Ā 

So, doing the ratio of years vs. rebellions/uprisings, Henry VIII actually had the least among the Tudors, and none for his deposition.Ā 

That is rather remarkable, and the question of why exactly this was (despite the costly wars, despite how the Reformation hit those in poverty the hardest, despite the alleged extremely high number of executions– 72000 seems very unlikely) is a matter that deserves further examination and attention.Ā 

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Preface it by saying this isn’t me knocking casual interest/ reading for fun (I myself have only shallow knowledge on several topics, and probably not much depth of knowledge for any except like…Tudor but not even all Tudor? Henrician but a pretty shallow understanding of Marian and Elizabethan eras)…

But if your end goal is the understanding of a particular figure at Henry VIII’s court, like Thomas Cromwell or Anne Boleyn, you will eventually need to do some reading on Henry VIII as well. A few articles, and probably at least one biography focused on him at some point.Ā 

Personal dislike/hatred aside, you’re not going to have an adequate understanding of the workings of an intricate court if you totally sidestep/ignore…the figure at its center. This is true for whoever your favorite figure at his court is; but it’s especially true if that figure had a significant relationship with Henry.Ā 

Nor will you have one if you only do reading on the most notorious of his deeds.Ā 

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In regards toĀ ā€œthe Tudors are overrated, I don’t want to see more projects about themā€:

Is kind of a moot point, because (especially in regards to Henry VIII) they’re so deeply embedded in the pop culture nexus at this point that they’re just, quite simply, not going anywhere.Ā 

Henry VIII especially because he’s really, in essence, a reflection of everything we hate about ourselves (magnified to extremes): capriciousness, vanity, the desire for fame, grandiosity, the inability to forgive, ruled by emotions/highly emotional, hypocrisy, the desire to be loved, self-indulgence, and the desire to be remembered.Ā 

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Hm idk if I have a contentious opinion on Cromwell, all mine have probably been said before?

I think he was very adept at adjusting to shifts in power, and even pushing them himself at times.Ā 

Don’t agree with the take that he was Henry’s puppet, don’t think HenryĀ ā€˜forced’ him intoĀ ā€˜finding a way to get rid of Anne’ early as April.Ā 

Cromwell was aligning himself with Chapuys and apologizing to him directlyĀ ā€œfor having promoted the King’s marriage to Anneā€ in April:

True, it was (he said), that seeing the King so much bent upon it, and so determined, he (Cromwell) had paved the way towards it. Although the King, his master, was still inclined to pay his court to ladles, yet it was generally believed that in future he would lead a more moral life than hitherto—a chaste and marital one with his present Queen. This Cromwell said to me in such a cold indifferent manner that I had a strong suspicion that he meant just the contrary. Indeed, I observed whilst he said so…he leant against the window close to which we were both standing, and put his hand to his mouth to prevent the smile on his lips, or to conceal it altogether from me should it come on;

ā€œPut his hand on his mouth to prevent a smile on his lipsā€ …. doesn’t really strike me as him being pressured by Henry to do something he doesn’t want to do….or like the prospect of Anne being ousted is something he’s really torn up about.Ā 

Ā He was aligning himself with the Seymours, and with Mary.Ā 

He benefited from the events of May 1536 as well (at least, in the short term):

ā€œThe cui bono evidence is also interesting: Cromwell replaced Anne’s father as Lord Privy Seal and obtained a valuable stewardship as a result of George Boleyn’s execution; his servant Sadler received William Brereton’s freehold estate near Greenwich.ā€Ā 

hi yes i will happily enable you : šŸ‘‘

So all theā€¦ā€X was an usurperā€ (this isn’t shading for any figure in particular, this is me regarding all the figures of this era)…rhetoric…and I just say…

Who care? WHO care? Who c a r e s ???

I mean as far as analyzing which prominent people of the time viewed X as an usurper, sure, it’s important but as far as likeā€¦ā€¦ā€I myself think they never should have ruled because they were an usurperā€, uh:

a) It was such a mutable definition, it depended on who you asked at the time, and who was around when you asked them, and who won in a battle, and who had more people on their side, and like a myriad of different factors but basically…it was down to who you asked (’is X the rightful ___ or nah?’, that is)Ā 

b)Ā ā€˜Divine right’ is uh…..like…….they made it up?? Like they very much believed in it but also it was not…real.Ā 

I’m hoping we know by 2018 that no one deserves to rule a country just for being born to two specific people.

And you know that Facebook Group that’s likeĀ ā€œif a witch eats the president, the witch should become that presidentā€ ?

ā€œIf a contender for the throne kills the king, that man should become king.ā€

Me, a 24-year-old peasant about to die: ā€œThat sounds wrong, but I don’t know enough about the Bible to dispute itā€¦ā€

c) Starkey has said R3 was an usurper. He’s also said H7 was basically an usurper.Ā 

R3 may have taken the throne, but it was technically by legal methods (excluding the executions of Anthony Woodville etc. and I’m def not saying legality equates morality but there is that).

H7 won it in battle.Ā 

So by that definition, if we want to trace back, would Edward IV also not technically be an usurper? He wasn’t born king, that was Henry VI.Ā 

I literally don’t have much of a POV re: preference between these three (actually…Edward IV but also see above what I just said…also all three of them had some sort of blood claim to the throne as well), I’m just using this is an illustrative point in that the word is basically kind of … meaningless.

In that you can apply it to anyone/ anything you want, if you delve into technicalities/precedent deep enough.Ā 

I’ll also see it with COA vs. Anne Boleyn discourse so like….far reaching enough to even apply the term of ā€˜usurper’ to Queen Consorts (usually applied to Anne), which is very odd. It’s one thing to sayĀ ā€œCOA believed it was her divine right to be Queenā€ (true!) another thing to sayĀ ā€œit WAS her divine right.ā€

Like…it wasn’t. See above: they made it…..up.

It wasn’t any more Anne’s, either, although she seemed to believe this as well– she said to a Venetian diplomat that God had inspired Henry to marry her.

Tl;dr, we should all find it very convenient that anyone that sat on a throne essentially said they were thereĀ ā€œbecause God said so.ā€

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In some nonfiction works (usually where the author or the historian is especially sympathetic to COA), I’ve read the take that Henry’ VIII’s acknowledgement and ennoblement of his son wasĀ unconscionable and/or unconscionably cruel.Ā 

Now…I don’t think this was particularly a considerate thing for him to do concerning his wife, obviously (although the adultery itself is…more so, I would think? the pregnancy and child was simply the result/proof of it).

And I’m wondering what, conversely, these writers think he should have done instead? Because usually it seems less like they’re implyingĀ ā€œwell, he just shouldn’t have committed adultery in the first placeā€ (which tends to be…an argument not made often, because what isĀ ā€˜shouldn’t’ to a king, esp. when it’s kind of de rigueur) and more like ā€œit’s fine to commit adultery, but he should at least have to decency to conceal it/lie about itā€ and I don’t really think that makes it, like……better….

So, yeah, conversely he was supposed to…what? Be likeĀ ā€œgood luck with all thatā€ to Bessie Blount? Pull an #IDon’tKnowHer ?

Because the ennoblement and acknowledgement certainly wasn’t, like I said, considerate to COA. But I don’t think it wasĀ ā€œunconscionableā€ā€“ what would’ve been more so would be, actually, to do the opposite of what he had done: not acknowledge him, not title him, not extend lands/incomes, not arrange a noble marriage for his former mistress, not grant her property, etc.Ā 

I’ve also read that if she’d had a daughter, he never would have acknowledged her, and that he only acknowledged Henry Fiztroy toĀ ā€œrub salt in [COA’s] wounds for not having had a living son yetā€.

While I’m sure they read his secret diary and thusly know all his motivations behind every decision, I don’t have this diary and so…don’t know.

But also? We don’t really know that, because that isn’t what happened. He may well have acknowledged an illegitimate daughter (although people say one of Mary Boleyn’s was his, and a few other women’s daughters were his, there’s no definitive proof), although I don’t think he would’ve titled a potential bastard daughter by Blount asĀ ā€œDuchess of Richmondā€ā€“ hereditary titles/peerages weren’t typically given to even women of legitimate birth (besides the Countess of Salisbury in 1512, and later the Marquess of Pembroke for Anne), much less illegitimate ones. He was probably far too much of a traditionalist for that [which, you know, he was…….save for the whole Thousand Year Break With Anglican Tradition to Marry ā€˜The One’ (of Six) thing].Ā 

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While I think Arthur Tudor is interesting, and understand that he’ll always beĀ  compelling in the way figures we know very little about (who were unable to meet the future they were trained for due to tragedy), the idealization of him as a king strikes me as a bit…disengenuous.

I’m not knocking AU’s, of course, or anyone’s edits or gifsets– that’s not really what I’m talking about here. Or dissing anyone’s interests, because personally I really dislike when that’s done to mine.Ā 

It’s more that when I go on history discussion forums online, there is legitĀ ā€œLet us WEEP for the Arthurian England that never was…the world would’ve been so much better for it, COA would’ve been so much better for it, every subject at court would’ve been so much better for itā€ etc. rhetoric.Ā 

And like…could he have been a better ruler than Henry VIII? Of course he could have.Ā 

But also…could he have been a worse one? Yeah, that’s definitely possible too.

Same with the world at large being better off/ worse off.Ā 

It’s just that we literally don’t know if it would’ve, because it didn’t…like…happen.Ā 

So the certainty I find a bit baffling, but when I yield the second (that his reign could also have been worse than his younger brother’s was, overall), it’s met with a long string of question marks, andĀ ā€œhow could ANYONE have been a WORSE king than Henry the [insert fatphobic term here]???ā€

And…I guess that’s just where my opinion tends to diverge the common one…namely, that I don’t think Henry VIII was the worst king in history. Frankly, I don’t think he was even he worst king England ever had– certainly not as far as governmental policy and national security went. Nor was he the best, but that range is a pretty long one…

As for the worst husband in England? Certainly he’s somewhere on the top of that list…and I think that maybe that is what gets conflated with actual overall policy during his reign, and tends overshadow any accomplishments. [ x ] [ x ] [ xĀ ]