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Showing posts from March, 2023

The six wives of Henry VIII: Catherine Howard

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We all know the story of Henry VIII and his six wives, but I still like to talk about them from time to time.           Catherine   Howard, whored her way through life? Or innocent and used all her life? Catherine Howard was the youngest of Henry's wives and the second to be beheaded. She has had quite the slandering throughout history and it is much undeserved. Catherine was born to Lord Edmund Howard and Joyce Culpeper. Edmund was the third son of his father, and he was not well off. Catherine was possibly her tenth mother's child, Joyce had five children from her previous marriage. They had very little to survive on in the marriage and often had to beg for help. Catherine was born between 1524 and 1528, but we really do not know when Catherine was born.  She was between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one when she was executed. Catherine's mother died in 1528, leaving the family destitute. Catherine, along with her siblings to the care of her father's stepmother Agne

The six wives of Henry VIII : Jane Seymour

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We all know the story of Henry VIII and his six wives, but I still like to talk about them occasionally.           The meek and docile third wife? Or a woman who had a heart of steel?  Jane earns the reputation as the quiet mouse, but was she just the quiet mouse? Or did she actually have quite a steely exterior and fought for her beliefs? Jane Seymour was born between 1504 and 1509, like most of Henry's wives it is hard to pinpoint her birth date, it is most likely to have been 1508. Her parents were John Seymour and Margery Wentworth, and she was one of many children. Jane had a good childhood growing up, she was taught the skills a housewife needed, sewing and being head of the household, Jane is said to not be as well educated as her predecessors but she could still read and write, even if it was at a basic level. Her needlework received high praise and she seems to have genuinely enjoyed it. We don't know much about Jane's early life, much of it was either lost or jus

An interview with Dr James Taffe

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                 An interview with Dr James Taffe                                                                On his new book, Courting Scandal  Dr James Taffe has recently written his first book, on Lady Jane Rochford, she was a servant of five of Henry VIII's Queens and was executed for treason. As James's book title suggests, Jane was often surrounded by a bit of scandal. So, let's speak to the man himself! He has very kindly accepted to do an interview with me on his new book. James, tell us a bit about yourself and why you wanted to become a Tudor historian? "My name is James, I live in Newcastle, UK, having moved from Birmingham to the northeast around four years ago to study at Durham University. I chose to study history initially because I wanted to be a journalist, but researching and writing about the Tudors in particular for essays as an undergrad I became a little obsessed with it and wanted to pursue that further. After graduating, very fortunately, I w

March Book Reccomendation: Courting Scandal by Dr James Taffe

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                Courting Scandal by Dr James Taffe   Hello, my fellow history nerds, I hope you are doing well! Spring is upon us! So this month I recommend this fabulous book by Dr James Taffe, Courting Scandal, The rise and fall of Jane Boleyn, Lady Rochford. This book focuses on one lady in waiting, Jane Boleyn, James goes into depth on the lives of people in court, and how they lived, serving their master/mistress on a daily basis.  We start with Jane's early years at possibly Hallingbury Place, Great Hallingbury, Essex. The thing about Jane Boleyn is we actually have few surviving documents on Jane's life, and James wonderfully highlights that. He fills the gaps in Jane's life very well, Jane marries Anne Boleyn's brother George, and considering how high the family rose, little survives in their marriage, so we don't know if it was successful, happy or if it was toxic. Jane served five of Henry's Queens, starting with Catherine of Aragon and finishing with

The six wives of Henry VIII : Anne Boleyn

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We all know the story of Henry VIII and his six wives, but I still like to talk about them from time to time. Anne Boleyn, witch, seducer, or just not that bad? Anne Boleyn is quite the infamous lady, whether it's good or bad, she's the most famous of Henry's wives. Anne Boleyn was born between 1501 and 1507, I believe she was born in 1501. She wasn't royal like her predecessor, Catherine of Aragon, but she was the daughter of a noble family, the Boleyns and the Howards. The Boleyns were very much social climbers, they had to climb their way into prominence. Thomas Boleyn, Anne's father, put the family into the limelight. However, Thomas was not the master manipulator everybody likes to believe, he didn't push Mary or Anne into the king's arms, there is actually documentation to show that Thomas tried to dissuade Anne from marrying the king  in 1531.  It is safe to say Anne Boleyn became the King's obsession. I think it is hard to say Henry VIII and Anne