goodqueenejess:

alicehoffmans:

autrenecherche:

royal-confessions:

“It disappoints me that so many people admire Anne Boleyn. She had a good side but also an intolerant and vengeful side which I think is glossed over. She relished keeping Katherine and Mary apart while Katharine was fatally ill. She encouraged her husband to execute those who opposed her marriage such as Sir Thomas More and Cardinal John Fisher. This and much more. Anne didn’t deserve to be executed especially on those bogus charges. She was framed, but this doesn’t make her innocent.” – Submitted by Anonymous

All reports of Anne allegedly “encouraging” Henry VIII to have More and Fisher executed come from sources that are clearly biased against her, some of whom lack credibility due to their flagrantly obvious lies in regards to other topics:

“William Roper, the chancellor’s son in-law, claimed that it was Anne’s personal vendetta against More which encouraged Henry to demand that he conform.”

“It was More’s nephew, William Rastell, religious exile and (briefly) judge of the court of Queen’s Bench, who gave currency… to the lie that Henry VIII was Anne Boleyn’s father. He also alleged – with obvious echoes of Herodias, Salome and Herod – that Anne put on a great banquet for Henry at Hanworth, where she ‘allured there the king with her dalliance and pastime to grant unto her this request, to put the bishop [Fisher] and Sir Thomas More to death’.

In his edition of More’s English works, Rastell even edited out remarks by Sir Thomas which were favourable to the queen. What More had written in a letter to Thomas Cromwell in March 1534 was: 

So am I he that among other his Grace’s faithful subjects, his Highness being in possession of his marriage and this noble woman really anointed queen, neither murmur at it nor dispute upon it, nor never did nor will, but without any other manner meddling of the matter among his other faithful subjects, faithfully pray to God for his Grace and hers both long to live and well, and their noble issue too, in such wise as may be to the pleasure of God, honour and surety to themselves, rest, peace, wealth and profit unto this noble realm.”

[ x ]    

As for Bishop John Fisher, Anne Boleyn attended his Requiem Mass– this would be an odd thing to do if she’d encouraged his execution. 

As for “relishing” keeping Katherine and Mary apart…what evidence proves that was something she solicited, much less enjoyed? Reports from Chapuys would suggest this, but no others do. It was Henry that insisted they be kept apart (although I don’t know if this is something he “relished”); and he was the only person with the power to guarantee they remained so– not Anne. 

Also, as for the last, which took me a bit to process:

“She was framed, but this doesn’t make her innocent.”

Well…she was innocent of the crimes she was accused of. In the court of law, and in the court of opinion (especially considering her guilty verdict resulted in her execution); that’s all that matters in determining “innocence”.

Certainly Anne wasn’t innocent in every facet and aspect of her life, if by ‘innocent’ you mean free of fault or sin. She was guilty of anger, of pride, of envy. It would be quite a challenge to find a significant figure in the 16th century that wasn’t. 

Unlike many, however, this was something she knew and admitted to:

“I do not say that I have always borne towards the King the humility which I owed him, considering his kindness and the great honour he showed me and the great respect he always paid me; I admit too, that often I have taken it into my head to be jealous of himBut may God be my witness if I have done him any other wrong.”

It is a shame that harsh words Anne spoke about two women she clashed with have overshadowed the ways in which she was a protector of women otherwise. The ways in which she did protect women, among other acts of bravery and kindness, are the reasons I admire her. I don’t find the ways in which she spoke about Katherine of Aragon and Mary admirable, but they don’t eclipse that which is [admirable] about Anne and her life. 

Oooooohhhhh @alicehoffmans I was waiting for your response to this!!!

@goodqueenejess  #aaaand as always you dont disapoint

omg……………….thank you…….

All this discussion of dumb things people say about Anne’s downfall has actually reminded me, do you think Anne’s birthdate was 1501 or 1507?

alicehoffmans:

alicehoffmans:

I think 1507 or possibly actually somewhere in between those two dates. 

It’s too weird to me that no one made the criticism (but made every single other one) that she was possibly too old for childbearing during the Queen-Consort-in-Waiting period (1527-33). I could totally be wrong tho! ❤

@marriageandthecrown basically! 😂

@bessboleyn I agree! It’s actually funny to me how Ives said it’s the 1501 date but he also admits the French in that letter is ‘clumsily written’ . Like…hm…

👑

alicehoffmans:

alicehoffmans:

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

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 was “widely-hated” 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 they’re weren’t more rebellions than there were. 

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. 

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. 

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. 

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

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. 

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@maximumphilosopheranchor

Right….I still believe Ireland should be counted. It’s very convenient to ignore Irish rebellions during Elizabeth’s reign (considering that most of the rebellions were Irish ones), but they were her subjects and their complaints and grievances were just as legitimate as those of her English subjects. 

Hypothetically, if I were to discount Ireland, that means I’d have to discount the Kildare rebellion during Henry VIII’s reign as well (which I did include above), as that was an Irish one. Bigod’s is considered by some scholars to be an extension of the Pilgrimage of Grace, but I still included it as its own. 

I’m also specifically focusing on the difference of rebellions that call for the deposition of their monarch vs. those that do not, and are just looking for reforms to laws, taxes, fines and fees, treatment of subjects etc. In regards to rebellions that called for the deposition of the monarch, Henry VIII had none while Elizabeth I did–  and so my point still stands in comparison, even if we do disregard Ireland (which I still don’t think is fair to do). 

*I do realize that I made the point above as being “as widely hated in England”, which is somewhat misleading. I should have reworded to “as widely-hated by his subjects”, as his English subjects were certaintly not his only ones. 

alicehoffmans:

alicehoffmans:

apparently and actual, honest-to-god take is that henry viii writing “thys booke is myne” on the 1st page of his book as a child was like… an early sign of sociopathy?

y’all

that was common. george boleyn did the same, in 1526

hardly a red flag/harbinger. 

@quillington @alliluyevas it truly is.

another great take of this genre is that him throwing off his jacket while dancing at his brother’s wedding (he was…10 or 11 i think?) was clearly a sign of a flagrant disregard for authority.

apparently we’ve been knew.

@quillington I mean it may have been hot, he may have just wanted that dramatic flourish, but either way it’s not like….your weird foreshadowing.

I don’t really get the insistence that he was destined be a baddie, and the reaches people will take to justify the idea that he was even as a child are?? Baffling. Because they also took this point and were like ‘obviously the only reason h7 ended up being strict with his upbringing is because he was oUT OF CONTROL and he knew it’.

Pretty sure that had more to do with him being the sole heir to a newbie dynasty than like… writing “this book is mine” in big cursive and doing (one) showy dance at his brother’s wedding but…go off, I guess?

alicehoffmans:

apparently and actual, honest-to-god take is that henry viii writing “thys booke is myne” on the 1st page of his book as a child was like… an early sign of sociopathy?

y’all

that was common. george boleyn did the same, in 1526

hardly a red flag/harbinger. 

@quillington @alliluyevas it truly is.

another great take of this genre is that him throwing off his jacket while dancing at his brother’s wedding (he was…10 or 11 i think?) was clearly a sign of a flagrant disregard for authority.

apparently we’ve been knew.

What do you think Anne Boleyn’s accent was likely to be?

alicehoffmans:

Not something I’ve done much reading on, so I’m going to quote my friend here:

“The 16th century French accent was very close to current Canadian French. It’s reinforced by the way Mantel has her saying “Cromwell” with a French accent. “Cremuel” is Cromwell with a French Canadian accent.” – @towyns

There’s also a thread on this at AB Files. 

Her potential birthdate could influence how strong her French accent was, also. If she was around 12 when she left to serve Margaret of Austria, her English accent was probably very strong and firmly-set (meaning, even if she learned and became fluent in French, she would still speak English as she had, without a French accent). If she was born in 1507, her French accent would be strong because she spent earlier formative years there, and had only been fluent in her own native tongue for a few years. 

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@maharanis She most likely didn’t! At that point in her life she had lived in England far longer than she’d ever lived in Spain.

There was an account of her speaking in a thick Spanish accent during Blackfriars. Imo this was calculated to lend credence to her claim of being “a poor woman and a stranger born out of your dominion” during her famously remembered speech.

Especially because there are no other accounts of her speaking with this thick accent during this time…ambassadorial accounts usually mentioned details like that.

SO I recently read ‘The Private Lives of the Tudors’ by Tracy Borman and 1. would recommend as a read bc it goes from Henry VII right the way to Elizabeth I. But 2. it talks about potentially there being a genetic problem with Henry VIII that may have contributed to the miscarriages of KOA and Anne Boleyn, and apparently new research has shown there can be a link between a male issue and female miscarriages, what do you think? Would love to hear ur opinion it too!!

take-me-not-my-otp:

Tbh I’m only really getting into like non-fiction Tudor books having loved Philippa Gregory’s books when I was a bit younger so any recommendations for ones you like I’d be super down for, that just was the only decent looking one in my bookshop!! How come you’re not a fan though? I’m curious!

That’s very true, I suppose it’s unfair to look at modern day pregnancies where normally it isn’t choices the couple have made that led to the miscarriage (potentially a gross generalisation, I’m really a newbie into this research stuff forgive me!) and brush aside the impact that the diet would’ve had on their pregnancies! I knew that Anne was normally described as petite or slim, but again hadn’t considered that as a factor.

I feel like historians seem very quick to try and find a scientific explanation for stuff like apparently some people think Elizabeth had AIS to explain her more masculine energetic traits, small breasts rather than them just people a result of her parents being who they were :’)

I guess it just always seemed odd to me that though child (and mother) mortality were a lot higher than nowadays so many of Henry and his wives’ pregnancies ended in a miscarriage or a very poorly baby, although again that could just a lack of knowledge my end

Issues with Borman: here, here, and here

Well, if we look at the ratio of stillbirths/miscarriages vs. pregnancies to full term, we actually have five (the New Year’s Prince of COA and Henry lived nearly two months): Prince Henry, Mary I, Henry Fitzroy, Elizabeth I, and Edward VI. We know COA had (nearly) five miscarriages/stillbirths (her last daughter in 1518 lived a few hours). So two of COA’s were actually results of infant mortality rather than…lack of fertility/issues with pregnancies? I’m not sure why the last lived a few hours and wasn’t strong enough to survive, a low birth weight would be my best guess. 

So five versus (nearly) seven miscarriage/stillbirths, if we are taking into account Anne Boleyn’s two miscarriages. And while Henry is the common factor, it’s important to remember that we’re talking about four women, that each pregnancy is unique, that each woman had a different health, weight, diet, age at the time of each pregnancy, as well as their own genetics as well. 

I’d say that’s not an average ratio, but not abysmally so…or, not as much as it’s made out to be, in such a way that it requires the explanation of a genetic abnormality on Henry’s part, although it is certainly possible. 

Comparatively, Elizabeth of York had three consecutive, healthy births that (nearly, in the case of Arthur) survived adulthood. Her fourth, Elizabeth, died at the age of three. Mary, her fifth, survived to adulthood as well. Edmund Tudor was a victim of infant mortality, dying at sixteen months of age…as was her last child, who died within a week of birth. Elizabeth Woodville did not suffer any miscarriages or stillbirths that I know of, but her daughter Margaret of York was a victim of infant mortality. Her son George died at the age of two. 

So– if we take away the children that died of infant mortality by COA, of which there are two, it’s actually five births versus five miscarriages and stillbirths (not by the same woman, but by Henry). That’s a 50% mortality rate, which wasn’t average but certainly wasn’t uncommon, either– Anne’s mother, Elizabeth Boleyn’s, was 3:5, as another example:

According to the writings of Thomas Boleyn, Elizabeth was pregnant many times in the first few years of their marriage. It is believed that she had 5 pregnancies, of which 3 of her children (Mary, George, and Anne) survived to adulthood.

Rates of infant mortality were more prevalent among the majority of England, as most women did not have the same access to healthcare and a nutritious and plentiful diet as noblewomen, nor the same opportunity to rest, but should still be considered when we look at the pregnancies of Henry’s wives and mistress:

alicehoffmans:

I’m not really a fan of Tracy Borman, honestly? But I’ve never read that book so I can’t judge it. 

Have talked more about this theory here.  I remain pretty skeptical of it. If we look at the pregnancy-to-full-term and miscarriage patterns of Bessie Blount, Anne Boleyn, and Jane Seymour alone (as in…their first children by Henry were to term) the theory makes sense. When we look at COA’s, however, it doesn’t:

[Mary] wasn’t Katherine of Aragon’s first child; Katherine’s previous four children all died in the womb or soon after birth. If Henry did carry the big K antigen, he likely passed it on to one of Katherine’s first four babies, and Katherine would have developed antibodies to it, devastating her later pregnancies. Mary never would have been born…. “Katherine of Aragon’s initial
miscarriages and perinatal deaths, followed by a
successful fifth pregnancy are not typical of Kell antigen
sensitivity.”

We also don’t know, in the case of Blount and Seymour, if they would’ve had pregnancies by Henry that ended in healthy births because their first children by Henry were also their last. 

I think the theory became popular because it doesn’t make sense if we look at fertility (or not really even fertility, as there were technically several pregnancies by him in his lifetime but…births to full-term, rather) as a genetic…sort of inheritance? Elizabeth of York and Henry VII had several children, so why would Henry VIII not? Elizabeth Woodville and Edward IV did the same. Ferdinand and Isabella also did, Elizabeth and Thomas Boleyn had three children that survived to adulthood, etc. So, Henry VIII must have simply been unlucky enough to have the Kell positive blood type. 

The Kell theory also links into McLeod’s to explain his behavior and mental state later in life, but proves inconsistent in signs of McLeod’s:

However, although Henry displayed significant behavioural
change, he was not reported to have a neurological
movement disorder such as epilepsy, and his chronic leg
ulcer caused considerable pain, arguing against a sensory
neuropathy. 

I think the theory disregards other factors that could have led to miscarriages and stillbirths. The Tudor diet was not the best (although the diet of Queen Consorts was far more nurtitious and plentiful than the majority of England at the time); and as the water was not safe to drink alone, women drank watered-down ale or wine throughout the duration of their pregnancies. 

Given contemporary description, it is also possible that Anne Boleyn was underweight. Underweight women are generally at a greater risk of miscarriage. 

Average life expectancy in the early sixteenth century was barely thirty, a figure determined largely by heart-breaking levels of infant mortality: 25% of children died before their first birthday, and 50% before their tenth.

To sum up, I don’t really find the amount of healthy children by Henry to be as abnormal as most do when put into context…although they certainly would be if we’re comparing them to the standards and statistics of the U.K. today. 

alicehoffmans:

I really cannot overstate …. how much I hate like…when a blogger and/or Tudor fiction author will say smth along the lines of ‘you should trust me because I’m not a historian’.

Implication being, I suppose, that historians go out of their way to lie to their readers or audience or w/e and I don’t really feel like that’s the case?

It’s more like they’re communicating their interpretation of events. And of course, you can take or leave that, and there’s nothing wrong with a healthy dose of skepticism and I think you should always check the primary source they reference to see quotes in context when you can ….

At the same time; being so blasély dismissive of experts (and the sort of…my interpretation is the only valid one; I’m the only person devoid of bias and sentiment, tone that tends to go along with that) kind of feels like the history-circle version of extreme conspiracy theorists’ ‘Fake News’ and tbh?? I don’t care for it.

@maharanis tbh, it’s…especially frustrating when author in question has a tumblr, is like Here Is My Controversial Take With 0 Evidence, and 0 Historians that Endorse It and the response is like. 72k notes shshhs

alicehoffmans:

tbqh? lmao @ that astrologer that said henry viii would get all his bad traits from his father; and all his good ones from his mother like…was he trying to score or…?

@feuillesmortes tbh and that it wasn’t even limited to personality traits either, he was literally just like:

‘he’s going to get headaches…and he’s going to get them from you….’