Anne Boleyn - The Obsession of Henry VIII Documentary

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It is the 19th of May 1536, at  the Tower of London, England,  a raven-haired woman, accused of high  treason, approaches the scaffold,  after ascending the steps, she turns to face  the gathered crowd, and recites an immaculately   prepared speech, in which she praises King  Henry and bids the people to pray for her soul,  she then knees on the straw scattered on  the floor and prays herself, until silently,  the French executioner approaches  from behind and with a single swing   of his sword, decapitates the noble lady, her name….. one time Queen of England,  Anne Boleyn. The woman known to history as, Anne Boleyn  was born in or around 1501, at Blickling Hall   in Norfolk although sometime in her  early childhood the family would   move to what would become their principle  residence which was Hever* Castle in Kent.  Her father was Sir Thomas Boleyn, intelligent,  well-educated and fluent in French,   he was also very ambitious, promoted by  Henry VII to deputy-warden for customs   at Calais, he was an influential courtier.  Anne’s great grandfather was the Lord Mayor   of London in1457, Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, a  successful merchant who bought the family   seats of both Blickling Hall and Hever Castle*. Anne’s mother was Elizabeth Howard, daughter of   the Earl of Surrey who would latterly become  the second Duke of Norfolk. Elizabeth Howard   was a noble woman who served as Lady in Waiting to  Catherine of Aragon during the early part of the   reign of Henry VIII. The Howard’s could rightfully  claim to move in Royal circles not least because   Anne’s uncle, the third Duke of Norfolk, had  married the daughter of Edward IV Anne of York.  Anne was educated to a high standard along  with her siblings by members of her household   and it was Anne and her brother George who  were the better students, the two also sharing   a particular closeness as brother and sister.  Anne would have learned the traditional lessons   of the time such as reading and writing, as well  as languages and music but she would also have   been taught the traditionally feminine  lessons of needlework, dancing, and singing.  Only two of Anne’s siblings survived  into adulthood, they were George and   Mary however their ages and even the order  of their birth is a point of contention,   although the probable order was that Mary was  the oldest, as per Lord Hunsdon’s account,   and that Anne was the middle child, born before  George who was born in either 1504 or 1505, making   Anne’s probable birth date sometime around 1501. Anne was considered the less attractive of the   two sisters and rumours abound that she was born  with physical marks of a large mole on her neck   and an extra finger on one hand, attributes that  would have arose suspicion that she carried quote:   marks of the devil, Anne took care to hide these  marks and they did not appear in her portraiture,   she also had black hair and dark eyes, not the  conventional picture of beauty at the time.  Despite her unusual marks on her body and the  fact that she was not the oldest Boleyn girl,   her intelligence meant that her ambitious father  Thomas Boleyn chose Anne to send into service as   a Lady in Waiting at the court of Margaret of  Austria, Regent of the Netherlands, and so she   left England for the first time in 1513, entering  the household of Margaret of Austria in Brussels.  She would have set out for Brussels with a  contingent of her father’s servants, beginning   the journey with anticipation and excitement  at taking up such a sought-after position,   as well as with her father’s words in mind,  to make sure she made the best of herself,   as the representative of the family abroad,  at one of the most cultured courts in Europe.  She quickly made a good impression at the Dutch  Court and Margaret of Austria wrote to Thomas   Boleyn, stating how pleased she was to receive  his daughter. Anne made good progress in learning   the French language and wrote a long letter in  French to her father which is the first example   of Anne’s own voice in original sources. After the King of France, Louis XII’s wife   died in 1514, he requested of Henry VIII, the  hand in marriage of his sister Mary Tudor, who   travelled to France to become Queen, by this time,  Anne’s fluency in French had become well known,   and her Father was asked to send her from Brussels  to France to serve under Mary Tudor, this would   have been a difficult request for Thomas Boleyn  to ask of Margaret of Austria as, there were   rumours that Margaret herself, may have been  the likely candidate for marriage to King Louis.  Anne’s sister Mary Boleyn, travelled with Mary  Tudor to France, as she was by now part of   Mary’s household, Anne travelled directly from  Brussels to France and joined the French court,   and was also reunited with her sister  there, and when after their marriage,   King Louis sent many of Mary Tudor’s attendants  home to England, Anne and her sister Mary were   two who were spared, and so they would have  been quite close confidants* to the new Queen. However, when King Louis died only  three months after their marriage,   most of Mary Tudor’s attendants returned  to England with her in May 1515,   but Anne and Mary Boleyn decided to stay at the  French Court in the new Queen Claude’s household,   Anne had most likely acted as an interpreter  between Mary Tudor and her stepdaughter   Claude when Louis was still alive,  and so the relationship they formed,   must have been a good one, since Anne stayed in  Queen Claude’s service for the next seven years.  Whilst Queen Claude’s court was quiet and  demure, that of her husband Francis I was   much more debauched and frivolous, and both Mary  and Anne would on occasion visit the King’s Court   in the course of their duties. During this time  Mary Boleyn gained quite a reputation for being   generous with her sexual favours even earning  the nickname the ‘English mare’ and becoming   the mistress of both Francis I and several  other French courtiers when he discarded her,   and when word reached Mary’s family in  England of her behaviour, she was sent for,   to return home, ending what must have been an  embarrassing time for Anne at the French Court.  Whilst Anne was at the Court of Queen Claude,  she would have spent much of her time doing   needlework and playing music but also during  this time she met with the sister of Francis I,   Marguerite of Angouleme, who may have  influenced Anne, with her reformist views.   Anne would also have had the opportunity of seeing  her father during her time at the French Court,   as Thomas Boleyn took part in several Court visits  from England, one of which was for the Christening   of Francis I and Queen Claude’s son, Henry Duke  of Orleans in 1519, she would also probably have   met him at the famous Field of Cloth of Gold  meeting between Francis I and Henry VIII in 1518.  Although not recorded as such, Anne would almost  certainly have been present at the famous meeting   between the Kings as one of the ladies in  waiting to the French Queen and this would also   probably have been the first time that she set  eyes on her future husband, King Henry VIII,   who was 30 at the time and in his prime, as  well as the first time that she would have seen   Catherine of Aragon, the King’s older wife. Anne would return to England after nearly 9   years abroad in 1522, after her father  requested her presence in late 1521,   and by February or March 1522, she had become a  member of the household of Catherine of Aragon   in Greenwich. Anne’s presence at Court caused a  stir, she was seen as somewhat of a fashion icon,   as well as being possessed of considerable poise,  grace and charm, even her detractors at the time,   wrote of the magnetism of her demeanour. In March 1522, Anne was chosen to take part   in a play or masque* at Court in which  8 ‘princesses’ dressed in white satin,   would portray various virtues. Mary Tudor  would portray ‘beauty’ whilst Anne’s sister   Mary would portray ‘kindness’ and Anne  was chosen to portray ‘perseverance’. By the time Anne returned to Court in England  her sister Mary was mistress to King Henry VIII,   an involvement that would last for several years,  despite Mary’s marriage to William Carey* in 1521   which was thought a ‘cover’ to protect her  reputation, should she fall pregnant by the   King. Mary’s relationship with Henry could also  be the reason for Thomas Boleyn’s progression   as he was made Controller of the Household in  1520 and Treasurer of the Household in 1522,   as well as being made Viscount Rochford* in 1525. However, Mary received little from her   relationship with Henry after she was discarded  in 1525, this treatment may well have warned   Anne to hold out for what she wanted when  looking for marriage and love, and this,   she would make sure she did. What Anne hadn’t realised when she left France,   was that she was being summoned home in order that  she should be married. Thomas Boleyn and Cardinal   Wolsey in talks with King Henry, had arranged  for Anne to be married to the eldest son of Sir   Piers Butler, James, to avoid a succession  disagreement over the rightful ownership of   the title of the Earlship of Ormond, over which  Thomas Boleyn had a claim as did the Butlers.  It seems that Anne was not keen on the  match between herself and James Butler,   her delaying tactics eventually proved successful  and the marriage idea dwindled and never in fact   happened, despite having the approval of the King. Anne wanted an advantageous marriage for herself   and was also known as a willful character, she  defied the conventions of the time and arranged a   marriage for herself, her chosen partner was Henry  Percy, heir to the Earldom of Northumberland,   it was a very good match for Anne, and Henry  Percy immediately fell deeply in love with her.  It has been speculated that following their  engagement, they may have actually consummated   their relationship, as Anne would have been  eager to ensure her path to becoming Countess   of Northumberland, this fact could also have been  known by Lady Wingfield, who Anne wrote to quite   humbly before her later marriage to Henry,  probably hoping to keep the matter a secret.  The marriage never in fact happened,  as the King heard of their plans   and instructed Wolsey to put a stop  to it, he summoned Percy to him,   forbidding the marriage on the grounds that  Anne was beneath him in terms of rank, Anne   was furious at this decision and held a grudge  against Cardinal Wolsey for the decision, Henry   Percy pined for Anne and was almost continually  ill, until his death in his early thirties.  Following her failed engagement, Anne returned  to Hever Castle* and became reacquainted with her   next love interest, her neighbour Thomas Wyatt*,  whose family was well known by Thomas Boleyn, as   Wyatt’s father Sir Henry Wyatt* had been created  a knight of the bath along with Thomas Boleyn   at Henry VIII’s coronation and they shared the  office of Constable of Norwich Castle from 1511.  Thomas was a handsome, athletic figure, as well as  a poet who was well respected at court, the only   down side was that Wyatt was already married,  and so their relationship remained merely a   flirtation, which continued when Anne was called  back to Catherine of Aragon’s court in 1525,   however Wyatt’s writing made it clear  that he was highly attracted to Anne,   and did in fact love her, with some  sources suggesting that their relationship   may have actually been more than platonic,  however Anne’s feelings for, and extent of   relationship with Wyatt, is ultimately uncertain. Several sources claim, that Anne was not at all   chaste* and virtuous, and that Thomas Wyatt was  allowed into her bed, and that she may have even   entertained other lovers as well, with one writer  claiming that the first was her father’s butler,   when she was a girl of only fifteen, another  more salacious*, anti-Boleyn rumour stated   that Henry VIII, who had found Anne’s mother  Elizabeth Howard attractive, had fathered Anne,   however this is highly unlikely, as Henry  would have been only 16 at the time, and still   under the protection of his father Henry VII. The accounts of her carrying on an affair with   Wyatt also seem unlikely, as there were several  other likely candidates she could have chosen,   who were not married, and as well as this, she  would hold back from sleeping with the King   until they were eventually married, both arguments  point to the inaccuracy of the Wyatt affair   being anything more than simple flirtation. By the mid 1520’s Queen Catherine of Aragon’s   failure to produce a son and heir, would have made  King Henry more and more impatient, and because   Catherine was, more or less, constantly pregnant  for the first decade of her marriage, Henry was   used to taking mistresses, even fathering  an illegitimate son, whom Henry acknowledged   as his own child, the boy was named Henry  FitzRoy*, literally meaning: “son of the king”,   he was born in June of 1519, his mother, Elizabeth  Blount*, one of the queen’s ladies-in-waiting.  Henry had proven, that he could father a son,  and while Henry never openly blamed Catherine,   for her failure to produce a boy, it is likely  that the continued absence of a legitimate heir,   some ten years into his marriage, stoked  resentment, as well as anxiety in him, especially   as Henry was now 27 years old, and Catherine was  33, and so the time left for her to conceive,   was growing short and within a decade, Henry’s  attempts to address the absence of an heir,   would change the face of England forever. Culturally, Henry was a devout Catholic,   and evidence suggests that he essentially remained  so throughout his life, however, his commitment   to the Pope’s right to govern the Church, would  present him with perhaps his greatest dilemma,   when his views conflicted with both his desire  to remarry, and his increasingly desperate need,   for a son and heir, the one thing  that seemed to be out of his reach. By the mid-1520s, the situation became more  strained, Henry was no longer the popular   teenage king, but was still a fairly young man, in  his early thirties, and never having abandoned his   athletic lifestyle and pursuits, he had kept his  trim handsomeness and vigor, Catherine, however,   was nearing forty, and had gained a great deal  of weight in the years since her marriage,   as well as this, six pregnancies in nine  years, had wreaked havoc on her body,   and Catherine, now past childbearing age, was  losing both the love and interest of her husband.  When Anne Boleyn* came to the Tudor court in  1525 as a lady-in-waiting to Queen Catherine,   having recently returned from the French  court of Queen Claude, she must have been a   breath of fresh air to the King, she was much  admired for her cosmopolitan air, her style,   wit, and charm, and still in her mid-twenties,  she was fashionable and attractive,   with dark hair and eyes, Anne commanded attention  at court, and Henry, longing for a younger,   more vivacious wife who might give him  a son, fell deeply in love with her.  The affair of Anne’s sister with the King ended  before 1526, and so on her return to court Anne   was seemingly available and King Henry was  on the lookout for another mistress. Anne   continued her flirtatious behaviour with Thomas  Wyatt* at court, Thomas at one point taking a   jewel from Anne which he kept on his person,  presumably as a reminder of her. During this time   both Henry and Wyatt vied* for the attention  of Anne, before Wyatt realized just how   serious the King was about winning her hand. Henry also took a ring from Anne and began   wearing it on his little finger at this time, the  first indication perhaps, that his feelings for   her were deepening, and in 1528 King Henry made  Wyatt, Marshall of Calais, perhaps to make sure   Wyatt was absent from Court, to clear the way  for Henry to secure his relationship with Anne.  Initially, for the first few months of their  courtship, there seemed to be no question of Henry   casting off his wife, he frequently begged Anne  to become his mistress, which she refused to do,   as although she was flattered to receive the  attention of the King, she insisted that she would   give her virginity only to her husband, Henry’s  letters to Anne from 1526 and 1527, some of which   survive, are full of passionate declarations of  his love and desire for her, Henry continually   commissioned new jewels and trinkets for her,  and publicly showed her favour and affection.  In historical terms, Anne Boleyn  has been given the reputation of   “the other woman,” at worst, a grasping  political climber and conspirator,   who usurped the place of a legitimate wife  and queen, much loved by the English people,   however, there is no evidence that she  encouraged Henry’s interest in her initially. Indeed, she reportedly made an abrupt departure  from court in the spring of 1527, returning   to her family’s home at Hever* Castle, and the  letter that Henry wrote to Anne, soon after her   departure, conveys the impression that she might  have left simply to avoid Henry’s ardour*, and   avoid turning down a king, who held power over,  the livelihood and lives of the entire court. The letter from Henry reads quote: “In turning  over in my mind the contents of your last letters,   I have put myself into great agony, not knowing  how to interpret them, whether to my disadvantage,   as you show in some places, or to my advantage, as  I understand them in some others, beseeching you   earnestly to let me know expressly your whole mind  as to the love between us two. It is absolutely   necessary for me to obtain this answer, having  been for above a whole year stricken with the dart   of love, and not yet sure whether I shall fail  of finding a place in your heart and affection.” While some might accuse her of playing a skillful  game of manipulation, it seems unlikely that a   young woman like Anne, from a respectable  but not a powerful family, would imagine   that she could be anything more than Henry’s  temporary mistress, it is difficult to believe,   that Anne might be presumptuous enough to think,  that she could take Henry from his legitimate   wife, or that she might emerge victorious  from a battle with the Queen of England.  At the time, Anne was still set on arranging a  high-ranking marriage for herself and may have   seen the status that the King’s attention gave  her, as a distinct advantage in the marriage   market, making her seem all the more worthy  to would-be suitors, the alternative account,   that she set out to take the King from his wife,  is unlikely, but her mixed messages confused and   frustrated the King until he became besotted  by this alluring, seemingly unobtainable woman.  However, it is true that a mere liaison with  the King would have no doubt placed her marriage   prospects and future prosperity at great risk,  and so, it is likely that she came to love Henry,   as he loved her. After her abrupt departure from  court, Henry continued writing to Anne in his   own hand and sending her gifts, and in time,  Anne began to respond to Henry, with feelings   and gifts of her own, and the two began carrying  on their relationship quite publicly at court.  There is, of course, no way to know, whether Anne  and Henry maintained their abstinence, as Anne had   insisted she must, however, the fact that Anne  did not become pregnant, throughout the nearly   seven years of their courtship suggests she stayed  chaste*, methods of contraception were available   at the time, but were extremely unreliable, so  while Henry and Anne were likely intimate with   one another, there is no evidence which suggests,  that they slept together, prior to late 1532,   at the earliest. Their intimacy is attested  to in their letters to one another, in one   of which Henry mentions that he misses Anne’s  ‘duckies’, an informal term for her breasts.  By 1527, a year after Anne’s arrival at court,  Henry had proposed marriage to Anne and she had,   after much thought, accepted. Henry decided to  seek a divorce from Catherine so he could marry   Anne, Henry’s rationale for the divorce,  has been argued by some to illustrate the   fundamental flaws in his personality, a tendency  towards cold abandonment and indifference,   towards those he had no more use for, as well as  a willingness to interpret facts to suit himself.  When Henry had first married Catherine, he  had done so against objections from all sides,   because he loved her, the Pope issued a special  dispensation, to allow Henry to marry Catherine,   since she had been wed first to Henry’s brother,  Arthur, and Henry and Catherine’s marriage,   according to Catholic doctrine, could  otherwise have been considered incest,   based on a provision in Leviticus 20:21, quote;  “If any man should take his brother’s wife,   it is an unclean thing...they will be childless”. And so, when the teenage Henry had wanted to marry   Catherine of Aragon, he readily accepted both  the Pope’s dispensation and Catherine’s claim,   that her six-month marriage to his brother  Arthur, had never actually been consummated,   due to Arthur’s continual ill health, and  it was not until years later, when Henry had   fallen in love with Anne, and the possibility  of having a son had become realistic again,   that Henry decided that Catherine and Arthur’s  marriage may not have been consummated.  He reasoned that the Pope had overreached  his own authority, and that the very   reason he had no son, was because his  current marriage was a sin against God,   for which divorce was the only remedy, Henry’s  ambition for love and an heir changed everything.  The King would spend the next few years pursuing  the “Great Matter” of his divorce, he began with   a direct appeal to Pope Clement VII*, hoping  that his noted devotion to the Catholic Church,   would secure him an annulment, a prospect which,  at the time, was not as outrageous a request as it   seems today, as for literally centuries, various  successive Popes had dissolved literally dozens of   royal marriages, even marriages of relatively long  duration, which had already produced children,   most of which were annulled for political  reasons, although official annulments always   cited some biblical or doctrinal explanation,  for the dissolution of these marriages.  However, Henry was about to find his dreams of  a quick and easy divorce dashed, when in 1527,   Emperor Charles V sacked Rome, and took the Pope  as his prisoner, in addition to being arguably the   most powerful man in Europe, Charles was also  Queen Catherine’s nephew, and by this point,   even if the Pope had wished to grant Henry  his divorce, he would have been unable to. Henry then turned to Cardinal Wolsey*, who had  never failed him, and who owed literally all he   had to the King, Thomas Wolsey was not born to  the nobility, like most clergymen of the day who   became Archbishops, Cardinals, and Papal Legates*,  Wolsey was the son of a butcher from Ipswich,   originally an obscure chaplain, until, under  Henry’s patronage, he was made Bishop, Archbishop,   and Cardinal in fairly quick succession. Wolsey had not only been Henry’s Lord Chancellor,   he had also been his mentor, as a young  king still finding his way, but whatever   the reason for Wolsey’s failure to procure  the divorce, whether inability or reluctance,   it would lead to his ruin, the Cardinal, working  with Cardinal Campeggio*, a special legate*   appointed by the Pope, set up a Legatine*  Court to determine Henry’s “Great Matter”,   but the court was unable to reach a decision,  with regard to the merit of Henry’s claims for   an annulment, and ruled that the matter should  be decided by the College of Cardinals in Rome.  It is unclear whether Wolsey truly wanted to give  Henry his desire, or if, like his ecclesiastical   counterparts, he saw the danger of allowing the  King to divorce his famously pious Catholic wife   and marry Anne, who was reliably rumoured to be a  Lutheran* reformer, but whatever his intentions,   the failure of the Legatine* Court, was Wolsey’s  downfall, as Henry commanded his arrest and   imprisonment, citing the treasonous tone of  letters Wolsey* had written to Vatican officials,   however, the Cardinal in fact died of  natural causes, on his way to London,   before Henry could behead him. Henry did not sit idly by, waiting for the College   of Cardinals or the Pope, to decide the fate  of his marriage, instead he began to canvas the   opinion of theologians at Europe’s universities,  asking them to study, deliberate*, and pronounce   a verdict, on the merits of his case for divorce,  however, Henry would be disappointed twice more,   as the majority of university theologians,  and later, the College of Cardinals, would   decide in favor of Queen Catherine, declaring  the King’s first marriage valid after all.  It is unclear when, Henry first began to consider  repudiating the Pope’s authority in England,   thus removing the obstacle to his divorce, Anne  Boleyn’s influence as a Lutheran* sympathizer   and reformer, is entirely plausible, as is the  influence of Thomas Cromwell*, another reformer,   who was first Henry’s private secretary, and  later rose to become Lord Privy Seal, in fact,   there were quite a few reformers in  the English Parliament, and at court,   at the time, and anti-clericalism* was rife  among them, but perhaps it was his introduction,   to the little-known clergyman and  theology professor from Cambridge,   Thomas Cranmer* which truly  planted the seed in his mind.  According to Cranmer*, who was a passionate  reformer, Kings, anointed by God, answered only   to God, and therefore Henry should not have had  to pursue his divorce through legal means, this   atmosphere and these ideas, may have emboldened  Henry, to formally break with the Roman Catholic   Church and pursue one of the most radical bids for  power, ever made by a European monarch, the claim   to the absolute powers of both King and Pope. It would take nearly two years, for Henry to   establish the fulfillment of his will, over  both Parliament and the English clergy,   but by 1532, Henry had what he wanted, he was  the Supreme Head of the Church in England,   and Parliament had legislated a full break with  the Pope, stopping virtually all payments to Rome,   and because he wanted his “Great Matter” decided  by the English Church, which was much better,   from a public relations standpoint, than declaring  it himself, he made Thomas Cranmer*, Archbishop   of Canterbury, empowering him to lead the clergy  to the “right” decision, in other words, to vote   in Henry’s favour, with regard to his divorce. In April of 1533, Archbishop Cranmer* declared   Henry’s marriage to Catherine invalid, but by  that time, Henry had already been remarried for   three months, having wed Anne Boleyn*, in a secret  ceremony on the 25th of January 1533, as well as   this, Anne had already made her first appearance  at Court as Queen and had taken up residence in   what had been Catherine of Aragon’s apartments,  also taking up the motto “The Most Happy”.  However controversially, some historians  suggest, that when she came to the altar,   Anne was already pregnant, as on the 7th  of September 1533, just over 7 months after   their marriage, Anne gave birth to Princess  Elizabeth, the future Elizabeth I of England.  The King once married, had wanted Anne to be  crowned Queen speedily, due to her burgeoning   pregnancy, as he wanted his expected child to  be born to a consecrated mother and so plans   went ahead for Anne’s coronation. As part of  her procession Anne would take a barge and she   made sure that it was Catherine of Aragon’s barge  that was commandeered* for the Royal procession,   reportedly she had Catherine’s Coat of Arms not  only removed from the barge but also destroyed.  The festivities began on the 29th May 1533  and lasted for 5 days, the King wanted Anne’s   ceremony to reflect that she was every inch the  magnificent Queen he wanted her to be seen as,   and so on the 31st May, Anne’s procession left  the Tower, consisting of Foreign ambassadors and   nobles bedecked in purple robes, ermine and other  finery, followed by Anne, carried in a litter,   accompanied by her ladies in waiting, also  finely attired in resplendent fashion,   all to a salute of guns from the  Tower, and pageants at the roadside,   the sight must have been astonishing  for the spectators lining the route.  However, when Anne noticed that some of the crowd  were not dothing their caps and calling God Save   the Queen, Anne had one of her attendants  approach the Lord Mayor to complain of it, he   replied that quote: “He could not command people’s  hearts and that even the King could not do so”.   Despite the blatant signs of her unpopularity  Anne was resolute, she would be crowned Queen   and she was, on the very next morning, in  Westminster Abbey by Archbishop Cranmer*. Anne was never a popular Queen, as  papers from the time attest to subjects   being taken to task over comments on the  marriage and rudeness to her personally,   and in 1533 a priest was recorded as being subject  to investigation over calling Anne a harlot and a   whore, and quoting a prophecy that a  Queen would be burned at Smithfield,   this and similar incidents led to the King issuing  a proclamation, that anyone who came forward   with information against those who spoke out  against his marriage would be offered a reward.  Despite the apparent loyalty and favour the  King showed to Anne, this did not translate   to the marriage bed, as although the King had  been faithful to Anne during their courtship,   the same was not true of their marriage, and by  1533 Henry already had a mistress and Anne Boleyn   knew of her. This must have struck Anne like a  thunderbolt, as until she gave Henry his son,   her position was reliant only on his  passion for her, which was perhaps waning.  When Anne reacted angrily to the news  of the affair the King rebuked her   with righteous indignation, not speaking to her  again for 2 or 3 days. Her detractors at court   must have reacted gleefully at this first hint of  a rift in the royal marriage and Anne decided not   to raise the matter until she had given birth to  her child who she fully expected was to be a son.  On the 7th September 1533, Anne gave birth  to a daughter, to both hers and Henry’s   ‘great regret’. The expected son had not arrived  and the planned tournament to greet his birth was   cancelled but once their initial disappointment  waned, the couple accepted the new baby happily,   she was his heir after all until a son appeared,   and she was happy and healthy and looked like  the King, they named their daughter Elizabeth the   name of not only Henry’s mother but Anne’s also. Baby Elizabeth was christened and Thomas Cranmer*   was named as her Godfather and the Duchess  of Norfolk and the Marchioness* of Dorset   were named as her Godmothers and after her  christening the baby was proclaimed Princess   of England as well as heiress, supplanting*  her half-sister Mary in the line of succession.  As Queen, Anne divided opinion both at home  and abroad, some loved her, but many hated her,   some due to her lowly origins and some because  Catherine had always been such a popular Queen,   but they hated her also because of  Anne’s reformist religious views   which were alien to a great proportion  of the largely Catholic population.  One person who spoke out against Anne, and was a  thorn in both hers and Henry’s side was a young   woman called Elizabeth Barton, who claimed to  have been cured of an illness miraculously by God,   she became a nun and claimed  to prophesise* the future,   telling Henry that she had seen  a place for him prepared in hell,   and that he would stop being a King a month  after his marriage to Anne. In November 1533,   Henry had Barton arrested and she confessed after  questioning that all her claims had been a sham,   she was executed along with 5 of her  associates on the 20th of April 1534.  As a reformist Queen, Anne set an example in  her Court by reading the Bible and entreating   her courtiers to be both Godly and pious, although  she would have had music and dancing at Court, she   demonstrated a degree of reformist fervour, and  would read her Bible in French as well as English,   she also did charitable works distributing alms to  the poor and also supporting a Cambridge scholar.  In her brief time as Queen, Anne also secured  several bishoprics for reformist clergymen   including Thomas Cranmer* and Hugh  Latimer who became Bishop of Worcester,   she also offered sanctuary at Court to foreign  reformers who needed it, as well as this,   she had a great love for her daughter as did  Henry, and it must have been a wrench for Anne,   when the Princess was given her own household  in December 1533, as was usual for the time.  Henry well understood the enormity of what  he had done by removing the power of Rome   in order to marry Anne, and he moved  swiftly to consolidate his new powers,   and impose his will implacably upon the  English people, Catherine of Aragon was   still widely popular, and her replacement Queen  Anne, was widely resented, but more importantly,   the majority of the English people, still  identified closely with Roman Catholicism.  Henry knew he would have to establish control  quickly, before the foreign influence and support   of Catholic Europe, emboldened uneasy Catholic  Englishmen to act, and his answer was the Act   of Supremacy, which he proposed following  his marriage to Anne, and which Parliament   passed in 1534, the Act required all the King’s  subjects to swear an oath, recognizing Henry as   Supreme Head of the Church, and affirming the  legality of the King’s marriage to Anne Boleyn,   refusal to swear the oath was considered  treason, the punishment for which was death.  For devoted Catholics, the Oath of Supremacy was  seen as a referendum on morality, most chose to   swear the oath, and escape with their lives, no  matter how painful the cost to their beliefs,   others, like Henry’s old friend and  mentor, Sir Thomas More, would not.  More had largely retired from court and public  life in general, following the death of Thomas   Wolsey*, Henry had named More, Lord Chancellor, a  post which he resigned from, only two years later   in 1532, alienated and demoralized, by the erosion  of papal authority he had witnessed at court,   he had never spoken publicly against the King,  or against his marriage to Anne, but as of 1535,   he remained one of only a few of Henry’s  subjects, who still had not taken the oath. More’s refusal to do so, resulted in him being  imprisoned in the Tower, and at his trial,   when it was clear that he would be found guilty,  he loudly affirmed the authority of the Pope,   over all matters religious, and denied the  ability of Parliament, to declare the King,   head of the Church, More was immediately sentenced  to death for treason, a crime which carried the   penalty of hanging, drawing, and quartering. Henry had already demonstrated that he was not   averse to removing his subjects, when they  failed to deliver, challenged his power,   or acted contrary to his will, but perhaps it  is a small testament, to his remembrance of   More’s friendship and service to him, that  Henry commuted his sentence to beheading.  On the 6th of July 1535, Thomas More went  bravely to the scaffold, he jokingly asked   the executioner to hold a moment, while he  shifted his beard from the edge of the block,   saying that after all, it was he, not it, that  had committed treason, and in a loud clear voice,   he declared, that he died quote: “the  King’s good servant, and God’s first.”  As well as More, Queen Catherine and Mary also  refused to sign the oath which Henry and Anne   saw as a direct act of defiance. That Anne  and Catherine hated each other was no secret   and it could have been under pressure from Anne,  that Henry demoted Queen Catherine to the rank of   Princess Dowager and had her move to a house  further from London. The Royal couple were   probably not best pleased to hear, that the crowds  had cheered the old Queen on her journey there.  In December 1533, Henry and Anne decided  that Catherine should move house once again,   this time to Somersham, a house  surrounded by a moat and marshes   and by reputation ‘a most unhealthy place’.  Catherine protested at her forced move and   locked herself in her rooms refusing the  Duke of Suffolk’s attempt to remove her.  Catherine had not been allowed to see her  daughter Mary since the summer of 1531   when Henry had left Catherine, but  she wrote to her daughter in September   1533 preparing her for possible troubles ahead  and warning her not to incur the King’s anger.  By this time, Henry had already replaced Mary’s  livery on her household coaches with that of his   own, in effect, declaring her illegitimacy,  a delegation was also sent to her requesting   that she relinquish her title Princess of  England and although it may have been Anne who   inspired this action against his daughter, it was  ultimately the King who ordered it carried out.  In November 1533 Henry ordered that Mary’s  household should be dismantled and that she   should be sent instead to serve as a Lady in  waiting to her sister Elizabeth at her court.   Mary went to Elizabeth’s household but was  defiant, stating that she would not call her   Princess of England but’ sister’ instead,  just as she called Henry Fitzroy, brother. Anne appointed her aunt Lady Shelton as Mary’s  governess, so she would have a direct line of   information about what was going on at the court,  and in particular of how Mary was behaving. Anne   was also terrified that the King would meet with  his daughter Mary, and so when Henry visited   Elizabeth’s household, Mary would be confined  to her rooms, but when on one occasion Henry saw   Mary at her window whilst leaving, he waved at his  daughter, but was berated* by Anne for doing so.  As Anne’s attempts to make Mary behave  as she wished her to, were not working,   Anne tried instead to befriend  her step-daughter. In March 1534,   whilst visiting Elizabeth, Anne asked for  Mary to be brought to her. She offered her   reconciliation with her father, in exchange  for her admitting that she was illegitimate and   that her parents had never been married, however  Mary defiantly refused angering Anne yet again.  Certain sources have stated that Anne had  told Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland   that she was planning to murder her  rival Mary, by administering her poison,   and that she called Catherine and Mary ‘Rebels  and Traitoresses* deserving death’, but the truth   is this was probably more wishful thinking and  words spoken in anger, rather than any real plot.  Indeed, there is evidence from Anne’s letters  to Mary to suggest that Anne did try to befriend   her step-daughter. In one letter, in which she  refers to herself as Queen, she thanks Mary for   curtseying to her after a Mass at Eltham*, and  says that she would have done the same back if   she had seen her at the time, however Mary’s reply  was as defiant as ever, stating that the Queen,   meaning her mother Catherine, was not  present at the time, and that she was   actually curtseying to the altar, and  so, Anne’s attempts to be kind to Mary,   seem to have gone unheeded, and this  response from Mary angered Anne greatly.  Another incident in 1534, involving her  own family, also prompted anger from Anne,   when her sister Mary appeared at Anne’s court, and  announced that she had married one of her servants   William Stafford, this so angered Anne that  she banished her sister Mary from Court,   also cutting her off from any financial support,  and whilst it was known that the two sisters were   not close, Anne’s reaction could be seen  as quite harsh under the circumstances.  Apart from the defiance from Mary, by 1534 Henry  and Anne had finally dealt with or removed,   all who seemed openly opposed to the new order,  and the death of Catherine of Aragon, from natural   causes, on the 7th of January 1536, appeared to  remove the last barrier to the legitimacy of their   marriage, however a black cloud hovered. Anne had become pregnant twice,   following the birth of Elizabeth, but both  pregnancies had resulted in miscarriages,   additionally, some historians have speculated,  that Henry and Anne’s relationship,   was growing increasingly strained, due to Anne’s  failure to adjust to her new role of wife. As Henry’s mistress, she might have been allowed  a certain amount of license, to speak and act   as she pleased, her prolonged refusal to sleep  with Henry, likely put her in a rather dominant   position, however, as Henry’s wife, she  would be expected to be far more submissive,   but of course, her lack of submissiveness would  likely have been overlooked, had she not committed   the terrible sin, of failing to produce a son. Following the miscarriage Anne suffered in the   Summer of 1534, King Henry had taken another  mistress, when Anne complained to the King   about this situation, his reaction was very harsh,  he stated that quote “she had good reason to be   content with what he had done for her, which he  would not do now if the thing were to begin and   that she should consider from what she had come’,  the King was clearly losing patience with Anne   as well as perhaps regretting marrying her at all. Anne realized that without a son, she was in a   very insecure and vulnerable position, exactly  the position that Catherine had been in,   ironically, and she felt she must act.  She took Lady Rochford, her sister-in-law,   into her confidence and conspired to have  Henry’s latest mistress removed from court,   however their plan failed and only resulted in  Lady Rochford being banished from the court.  By early 1535, Anne was becoming even more  isolated at court, her confidante was now   gone and she had alientated many others through  her outbursts of anger, and even her husband   preferred the company of his mistress, it was  during this time that his daughter Mary started   to come back into favour with Henry also, Anne  must have felt alone and isolated as time went on.  However, in the Summer of 1535, a ray of hope  appeared for Anne, when the couple were briefly   reconciled. Anne became more accepting of the  idea of Henry’s mistresses if not completely   silent about them, and Henry made a public display  of loyalty to Anne, when in July 1535 he sent Sir   Thomas More to the scaffold, for refusing to  swear the oath of supremacy and after all,   if Henry wanted a legitimate son, as things  stood, it was only Anne who could provide one.  They began the court’s Summer  progress of 1535 with a united front,   they visited Salisbury and Portchester first also  visiting Wolf Hall in Wiltshire during this time,   the family home of one of Anne’s lady’s, Jane  Seymour, reaching Windsor by November and when   they arrived back in London in late 1535,  Anne was pregnant again, for the third time.  On hearing the news of Catherine of Aragon’s  death in July 1535, Anne could not have been   happier. Her rival was now gone, and she was  carrying another heir for Henry. There were   rumours of course that Anne had arranged for  Catherine to be poisoned, especially when,   on post mortem Catherine’s heart was found  to be blackened, however, this is unlikely,   as if she had wanted rid of Catherine, enough to  kill her, she would surely have done so earlier. After her mother’s death, Anne made one last  attempt to befriend Mary, writing to her to say,   that if she would put aside her obstinacy and obey  the King, that Anne would be the best friend to   her, and she need not hold the train of Anne’s  gown on her return to court, Mary again refused   and this would be the last time that Anne would  attempt a reconciliation with her step-daughter.  Then on the same day as Catherine’s funeral, Anne  went into labour prematurely and after only a 3   and half month gestation, she miscarried a little  boy. Anne’s grief and frustration must have been   plain for all to see, as she wept following this  tragedy for her and for Henry. However, the King’s   grief soon turned to anger at Anne, and the King  confronted Anne in her rooms stating that quote:   ‘he would have no more boys by her’, this was  a direct threat to Anne and she was devasted,   and even more so when she heard the rumours  that the King felt that Anne had been quote:   ‘seduced by witchcraft’ to induce the  miscarriage, and that he ought to find a new wife.  Anne remonstrated with Henry and blamed  the loss of the child first on the news   she was given by the Duke of Norfolk,  that the King had fallen from his horse,   claiming the consequences of his possible  death had shocked her to such an extent,   that it had resulted in the miscarriage, when  Henry dismissed her reasoning, Anne then claimed   that her finding the King with Jane Seymour  sitting on his knee, had made her lose her child,   as it had been such a shock to her, to see for  herself that the King had feelings for others.  King Henry took little heed of Anne’s reasoning,  although he did leave Jane Seymour at her home   during the next court’s progress, but  with Anne isolated at court after falling   out with her ally Cromwell, and with the King  becoming further infatuated with Jane Seymour,   who cleverly portrayed herself as the mirror image  of Anne in all things, Anne was at her wit’s end.  The King’s patience had also finally  run out and on the 24th of April 1536,   a commission led by Thomas Cromwell was  set up to investigate Anne, and by May,   accusations of adultery were leveled at her,  and Henry chose to believe them, the private   interrogations of the Queen’s household, elicited  fantastic claims of her degeneracy, accusing her   of incest and witchcraft, as well as adultery. Mark Smeaton, a musician in Anne’s household   was held in the tower and tortured until he  confessed that he was having an affair with Anne,   the King himself questioned Henry Norris over a  possible affair with Anne, after she dropped her   handkerchief to him, as one of the jousters  at a tournament that she and Henry attended,   and then lastly, Anne Boleyn herself was  arrested on the 2nd of May by her uncle,   the Duke of Norfolk and was questioned over her  behaviour and installed in the Tower of London. Evidence was sought from her ladies in waiting  Lady Rochford and Lady Worcester* and from a   deathbed note belonging to Lady Wingfield,  whom Anne had previously tried to silence,   concerning her pre-marital behaviour with  Henry Percy, which suggested that Anne was   morally lacking. Cromwell was rumoured  to have used all means at his disposal,   including torture and bribes to bring  a devastating case against Anne.  As well as this, Anne’s sister-in-law  Lady Rochford was said to have admitted   that her husband George Boleyn and  Anne would openly mock the King,   questioning whether he was impotent and whether  Elizabeth actually belonged to another father.  As she was arrested Anne pleaded her innocence  and asked for the King, but she was denied,   she was said to have lost her famous composure and  collapsed to her knees, she asked if she would be   kept in a dungeon but was informed that she would  be kept in the Royal apartments, to await her   trial, she reportedly alternated between laughing  and crying and spoke openly about what had brought   her to such a position, and her mention of  Francis Weston in her rantings meant that he   too would be arrested and brought to the Tower  where her brother George had also been taken.  The fact that she spoke of Weston, her brother  George, Smeaton and Norris was used as evidence   that the crimes she was accused of were true.  In addition to the men that Anne spoke of,   William Brereton*, a member of the King’s  Privy council, was also taken to the Tower,   along with Thomas Wyatt and Sir Richard  Page, all accused of being Anne’s lovers.  On hearing of Anne’s arrest, her bishop Thomas  Cranmer* sought to distance himself from Anne,   which he did in a letter to the King, whilst  privately he may have had sympathy for Anne,   no one was brave enough to show it  and chance the wrath of the King,   yet despite this it was only ever Smeaton who  confessed to the charges brought against the men,   who had allegedly consorted with Anne. It is unlikely that Anne would have had the time   or the inclination to have slept with so many men  including her own brother, and the accusations   were likely conjured up by Cromwell and Henry  to secure Henry’s freedom to marry Jane Seymour.  Anne went over everything in her mind and  prepared her defense although she would have   known in reality, that the outcome of the trial  would be a foregone conclusion. On the 12th of May   the accused men were taken to court at Westminster  Hall, Smeaton confessed to the charges whilst the   other men plead* not guilty as accused, all four  were found guilty and were sentenced to be hung,   drawn, quartered as well as beheaded. As members of the nobility Anne and her   brother George were tried in the Tower and having  known of the outcome at Westminster Hall, Anne   would have fully understood the ramifications for  her own trial which took place on the 15th May.  No Queen of England had ever been placed on trial  before and so a large scaffold was erected in the   Tower to house all the people expected to attend  the trial, Henry Percy as well as Thomas Boleyn   and Anne’s uncle the Duke of Norfolk were all  expected to attend, as members of the nobility,   although Henry Percy had to leave George Boleyn’s  trial part way through due to his ill health.  Anne for her part, had no counsel, and called  no witnesses but prepared her own defense for   the charges brought against her, which laid  out specific dates and times that Anne and   the accused men had enjoyed carnal knowledge of  each other, she was also accused of conspiring   to kill the King, so that she would be  free to marry one of her accused lovers.  Anne stood and defended herself of all charges  eloquently, however she was found guilty by each   of the nobles, who in turn stood to deliver  their verdict, each having no choice but to   go along with the King’s wishes, the final  verdict was read out by her uncle the Duke   of Norfolk but in a final twist he stated that the  Queen should be ‘either burned or beheaded at the   King’s pleasure’, whereas the usual punishment  for treason was to be burned at the stake.  At a church court in Lambeth on the 17th May,  Thomas Cranmer* annulled the marriage of Anne and   the King based on the evidence of a pre-contract  that existed between Anne and Henry Percy,   so that quote: ‘she was never lawful Queen of  England’, on the same day five of the men accused   were put to death by beheading, which was a  sentence commuted by Henry from the usual hanging,   drawing and quartering, which was the fate of  Smeaton alone as a commoner. George Boleyn,   Weston, Brereton*and Norris did not  confess to any crime on the scaffold,   which Anne would have been pleased to hear and  Smeaton’s only comment was that he deserved death.  Anne continued to protest her innocence, but  prepared herself for her certain demise with   composure, she even joked with her captor  Kingston, that she had but a small neck,   laughing at the irony that she would make  the executioner’s job all the more easy,   she spent her final evening, laughing and joking  that, she may well be known to history as quote:   ‘Queen Anne lack-head’, this was perhaps  the last act of defiance open to her.  On the 19th of May 1536, Anne Boleyn was taken  to the scaffold, in front of the gathered nobles   and dignitaries, she held her composure  and walked with dignity to face the crowd   and make the last speech of her life, she spoke  briefly and movingly of her love for the king,   her sins of pride, and her desire,  that the people pray for her: ‘Good Christian people, I am come hither to die,  for according to the law and by the law I am   judged to die, and therefore I will speak nothing  against it. I am come hither to accuse no man,   nor to speak anything of that wherof I am accused  and condemned to die, but I pray God save the King   and send him long to reign over you, for a gentler  nor a more mercyfull prince was there never: and   to me he was ever a good, a gentle, and sovereign  lord. And if any person will meddle of my cause,   I require them to judge the best. And thus,  I take my leave of the world and of you all,   and I heartily desire you all to pray for me. O  lord have mercy on me, to God I commend my soul.’  The King had sent for an expert swordsman  from Calais to come to the Tower to carry   out the execution of the Queen, she knelt on  the scaffold as there was no need for a block   and with one swift blow of his sword, her head  was removed from her body and the first Queen   of England to ever be executed was dead, and  within 24 hours of his second wife’s execution,   Henry was already betrothed, to Anne’s  lady-in-waiting, and the woman who would   become his third wife, Lady Jane Seymour. In the aftermath of Anne’s death in 1536,   abbeys, shrines and monasteries, throughout  England were purged of religious relics such as   true fragments of the cross and vials supposedly  containing the blood of Christ, this state-wide,   systematic, clampdown, was not only undertaken  for theological reasons, but also largely because   the seizure of Church property brought in a  colossal amount of revenue to the Royal coffers.  Following disturbances and a march against  the dissolution of the monasteries,   Henry unleashed a brutal repression, and hundreds  of rebel leaders were arrested and executed, after   which Henry proclaimed that quote “Our pleasure is  that dreadful execution be done on a good number   of the inhabitants of every town, village and  Hamlet, that have offended in this rebellion”,   indeed even his own family were not spared  Henry’s wrath, as when Jane Seymour begged   him on her knees, to restore the Abbeys,  he exploded, with quote “Get up, do not   presume to meddle in my affairs, remember Ann.” Anne is well remembered, not only as the second   wife of Henry VIII and a leading figure in the  reformation but also as the mother of Elizabeth,   one of the most important monarchs to  grace the throne of England. She died on   the scaffold with the grace and dignity which  had first drawn her to King Henry’s attention.  But more than this even, Anne was unique,  she was a determined, driven woman with a   strong personality, who inspired love in a King  that bordered on obsession, a truly exceptional   woman of her time, who no doubt passed  on her strong character to her daughter.  What do you think of Anne Boleyn? Was she a  saintly figure who inspired love and suffered   because of it or was she an ambitious sinner  who manipulated her way into the King’s life   for her own ends. Please let us  know in the comments section,   and in the meantime, thank  you very much for watching!
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Channel: The People Profiles
Views: 149,842
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Keywords: Biography, History, Historical, Educational, The People Profiles, Biography channel, the biography channel, Tudor, the tudors, tudor, Anne Boleyn
Id: I99wQkhnvvc
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Length: 54min 6sec (3246 seconds)
Published: Wed Apr 28 2021
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