Life
in the time of Catherine Parr
By
Trisha Hughes
When
you look at the six marriages of Henry VIII, Catherine Parr, or Kateryn as she
preferred to be called, sounds dull and uninteresting.
Her story lacks the intense passion of both Anne Boleyn and her cousin
Catherine Howard, the quiet, heroic strength of Catherine of Aragon, the
romance of Jane Seymour and the political intrigue of Anne of Cleves. What wife
number six of Henry is most famous for however is simply surviving. This
blue-blooded, twice-widowed, patient woman nursed the sick, aged, irritable
king through the final, painful years of his life when he was swollen to the point of
bursting. The handsome man who in his youth had led armies, excelled in jousts
and hunts, had become so bloated he could barely move and out of his large face
with double chins glowed small piggish eyes. But
as boring as her marriage may appear, Kateryn’s story is much more complicated
than it sounds.
At the time of Kateryn’s
marriage to Henry, the hostility between England and Scotland still smouldered
along the border. When James V’s mother (Henry’s sister Margaret) died, the
smouldering flickered once more into flame. The Scots made an alliance with
France and defeated the English at Halidon Hill only to lose nearly 10,000 men
under the Duke of Norfolk’s attack. Then when news came that at the second
battle, James V was killed leaving the kingdom to an infant of one week, Mary
Queen of Scots, Henry was so jubilant.
Kateryn
arrived on the scene one year after Catherine Howard’s two years of wedded
bliss to Henry came to an abrupt halt. Marriage number five
to Catherine suggests a kind of challenge for Henry. He had felt rejuvenated by
nights spent with the teenager but on 13th February, after being charged with treason and adultery and waiting a year in
limbo, Catherine
climbed the scaffold, looking pale and terrified, and made a speech describing
her punishment as “worthy and just”.
Her final words were “I die a Queen, but
I would rather have died the wife of Culpeper.”
Henry did not attend the
execution. Instead, he locked himself away in Hampton Court for days on end
mixing remedies from his royal herb garden to try and heal his festering leg. By
this time in his reign, Henry had begun eating so much that his bed had to be
enlarged to a width of seven feet. Henry had developed a binge-eating habit
consisting of a diet of fatty red meats and very few vegetables. His weight had
ballooned even more and he was covered in pus-filled boils and suffered from
gout. No wonder he had mood swings and a lousy temperament.
Through all of this, it’s
understandable that a depression hung over him. But Henry still longed for
female companionship and one year after Catherine Howard’s execution, he stood
confidently before Kateryn Parr and proposed marriage to the serious little 32-year-old
widow. And he fully expected her to swoon with delight.
It was a definite
improvement in Kateryn’s current status as lady-in-waiting to Henry’s daughter
Mary but her own credentials weren’t too bad either. Through her father, Kateryn
was a descendant of Richard Neville who was himself the grandson of John of
Gaunt, Edward III’s son. She had fine clothes, beautiful jewels and a clever wit.
She was in many ways an excellent choice to be England’s first lady, or so
Henry thought, and he regarded himself very experienced in such matters.
Kateryn
asked Henry for time to consider his proposal but really, it wasn’t like she could
turn him down. He was after all Henry Tudor, King of England, notorious for his
quick temper and sly mood swings and anyone who dared deny him what he wanted
would see the inside of the Tower before losing their head pretty soon
afterwards.
Kateryn would have
looked up at the huge man standing before her, as round as he was tall, and
seen a sallow 51-year-old man with thinning hair who still thought of himself
as a handsome virile young man, a golden-haired God almost, riding and jousting
with the best of them, with not a woman in all of England who could resist him.
She would have seen swollen lips smiling wetly down at her, not quite hiding
his yellow decaying teeth and foul breath, sharp little eyes almost hidden
under his fat eyelids and she would have known the reason why he leant heavily
on one leg. His other leg was bandaged not quite hiding the yellow pus that
bubbled into the dressing and not quite disguising the horrible odour the wound
emitted. She would have dreaded the moment he would bend down to kiss her and
she would have wondered how she could ever escape. She was, after all, still in
mourning after the death of her second husband but more importantly, she was desperately
in love with Thomas Seymour, Jane’s brother, and she fully expected to marry
him after the suitable mourning period had elapsed. So, what Henry saw as
happiness at his marriage proposal was actually the radiance of a woman in love…for
Thomas Seymour.
She showed little
enthusiasm at Henry’s offer of marriage, (she had after all watched the number
of heads falling), but in the end, she had no other choice than to accept him. Perhaps
she would have felt like shuddering as she smiled modestly back at Henry and
she perhaps she would have known that she was gambling with her life. Instead,
she kept her silence. Henry on the other hand was so jubilant that all the
heaviness of his past wives left him.
From the beginning of
the marriage, Kateryn made an attempt to be a good wife. Her face was always
wisely masked with concern for Henry and she kept her eyes filled with
affection for her husband. She was experienced in nursing cranky old men as she
had already nursed two previous husbands on their deathbeds so she knew what
was expected of her. The brilliant young, handsome king had grown old and wrathful
in his advancing years. The constant pain in his leg made him bad-tempered with
anyone who crossed him and at all times, people weighed up replies to his
questions, never sure if he would change his opinion at a moment’s notice. It
was much safer to simply agree with him on everything.
So she nursed Henry’s
stinking ulcerated leg that grew steadily worse and rubbed balms on them to
relieve the pain for the four years of their marriage until his death. In her relations with Henry, Kateryn was young enough to
interest him sexually and mature enough to perceive and cater to his other
needs. Dressing his suppurating sores can’t have been pleasant and diverting
his attention from his pain with stimulating conversation must have been
mentally taxing.
But she
went further than that. She reconnected Henry with his children, whom he rarely
saw. In 1544, living in various royal manors, were Mary aged 28, Elizabeth aged
11 and Edward aged 7. The girls had both been bastardised and were excluded
from the court, while Edward, as the sole heir, was kept far away from the
plague-ridden capital of London for safety. Kateryn set out to be the means of
drawing the royal family together and within a few months she had arranged for
Henry’s children to pay visits to their father and thus provide him with some
semblance of the home life he had never had before. Letters written between
1544 and 1547 bear witness to a very warm relationship between the royal
children and their stepmother. Whether sending a court musician to perform for
Mary or correcting the Latin exercises of Edward and Elizabeth, Kateryn took a
keen interest in their wellbeing.
There was
a time in the summer of 1546 however when Kateryn came within a whisper of
being executed for her faith. She had been brought up as a Catholic but had
become secretly sympathetic to, and interested in, the “New Faith”. But Bishop
Gardiner of Winchester had his ear pressed firmly against the walls and he was aware
of everything going on at court, no matter how covert. And he was growing
increasingly anxious as the end of Henry’s reign drew nigh.
By then, Henry
was a semi-invalid in constant pain from the festering sores on his legs and
was only able to move with the aid of servants and Kateryn. Everyone knew what
no one dared to say – the king’s days were numbered – and Bishop Gardiner, plus
leading councillors, were discreetly making plans for the accession of Prince
Edward, still a minor. If the prince’s uncle, Edward Seymour, grabbed the reins
of power, England would be carried further along the road of religious reform
and that, Gardiner believed, he needed
to prevent from happening at all costs.
Everyone
was fully aware of Kateryn’s past romance with Thomas Seymour and hadn’t she
already placed herself in favour with Edward? Thus a campaign was launched
against Kateryn using a formula that had been well tried in the past. They
brought to trial a notoriously outspoken heretic by the name of Anne Askew and
subjected her to fierce and unprecedented torture, breaking bones and
dislocating limbs, and promised that her suffering would end if she would but
name members of the royal court (including the queen) who shared her heretical
beliefs.
Had they succeeded, Henry would probably have sanctioned a thorough
search of Kateryn’s quarters, which might have revealed copies of William
Tyndale’s English New Testament and other banned books. But Anne Askew did not
break under pressure and Kateryn was warned of the plot by her physician,
Robert Huick, who ‘found’ a paper revealing the scheme.
Perhaps, the discovery was engineered by Henry himself who had never
lost his sense of theatre. Either way, Kateryn was smart enough to hasten to
Henry’s chamber and throw herself on his mercy, thus enabling him to make a
great show of support and affection for his wife.
For the traditionalists, this was the last throw of the dice. Their
failure left the advocates of reform in power when Henry eventually breathed
his last. Kateryn Parr, therefore, holds an important place in the history of
the English Reformation.
We may hope that Kateryn was aware of this fact and took satisfaction
from it, especially after her years of silent service to Henry and particularly
because the brief remainder of her life was decidedly tragic. She was, at last,
able to marry her true love, Thomas Seymour, but it did not bring her
happiness. The wedding was a clandestine ceremony performed six months after
Henry’s death and it was one that caused a small scandal.
The Seymour clan proceeded to tear itself apart in rivalries and
competing ambitions and Thomas, having not been granted a place on the Regency
Council as he had hoped by his brother, Edward Seymour now Lord Protector and
Duke of Somerset, tried to ingratiate himself with the young king and to
undermine the influence of his elder brother. Edward Seymour’s wife, Anne, also
had a gripe with Kateryn. Anne argued that Kateryn should no longer be entitled
to wear the jewels belonging to the wife of the king. Instead, as wife of the
Protector, she should be the one to
wear them. Eventually Anne won the argument, leaving the relationship between
the two brothers in an even worse state and the family feud escalated rapidly. In
one letter to her husband Kateryn confided about a meeting with her
brother-in-law, Protector Somerset: “It
was fortunate we were so much distant, for I suppose else I should have bitten
him”.
But Kateryn’s anger was soon turned against Thomas himself. She had
brought the 14-year-old Princess Elizabeth to live with her but Thomas soon
began indulging in intimate horseplay with the teenager and the behaviour
became more outrageous after Kateryn, at the age of 35, became pregnant at the
end of 1547. Thomas would visit Elizabeth, clad only in his nightshirt, and
tumble with her on her bed. For a while Kateryn was tolerant, even at times
joining in the horseplay, but when she came upon her husband and her royal ward
embracing, the good humour abruptly stopped and she had Elizabeth sent away.
On
30 August 1548 Kateryn gave birth to a daughter, Mary, but immediately
succumbed to puerperal fever, much the same as Jane Seymour, and eight days
later she died. Seven months later, Thomas would be beheaded for treason and
young Mary would be taken to live with the Dowager Duchess of Suffolk where the
last known record of her is on her second birthday.
For
me, Kateryn’s good sense, compassion and strong sense of loyalty has earned her
my eternal respect and sympathy.
Vikings to
Virgin:
The Hazards of
Being King
In Vikings to Virgin - The Hazards
of Being King Trisha Hughes provides the reader with a pacey introduction to
the many pitfalls faced by the ambitious as they climbed the dangerous ladders
of royalty. It is easy to think that monarchs are all powerful, but throughout
the Dark and Middle Ages it was surprisingly easy to unseat one and assume the
crown yourself. But if it was easy to gain ... it was just as easy to lose.From
the dawn of the Vikings through to Elizabeth I, Trisha Hughes follows the
violent struggles for power and the many brutal methods employed to wrest it
and keep hold of it. Murder, deceit, treachery, lust and betrayal were just a few
of the methods used to try and win the crown. Vikings to Virgin - The Hazards
of Being King spans fifteen hundred years and is a highly accessible and
enjoyable ride through the dark side of early British monarchy.
Virgin to Victoria
Virgin to Victoria is a powerful retelling of the history of the British monarchy, beginning with Henry VIII's daughter, Elizabeth I, as she comes to the throne. Charting Elizabeth's incredible journey, Virgin to Victoria travels in time through the confusion of the Stuart dynasty, the devastation of a Civil War led by Oliver Cromwell, horrific battles for the throne and the turbulent Hanover dynasty with its intricate family squabbles. Despite her amazing legacy, Elizabeth failed England in one vital area. She never married, nor did she leave an heir to the Tudor family. In making this one fateful decision, the Virgin Queen left the path open for a take-over and life would never be the same. Victoria did not ask to be Queen. It was thrust upon her by a series of events that removed all others who stood in line for the throne. She assumed it reluctantly and, at first, incompetently. Parliament was sure that the 18-year-old could be relied upon to leave the job of running the country to the professionals. Couldn't she?
Trisha Hughes
I was born in a little outback town called Blackall in Central Queensland, Australia. From there my parents moved to the Brisbane suburb of Fortitude Valley where I grew up to be a tiny, self-reliant little girl.
My first book, ‘Daughters of Nazareth’ is my story, written eighteen years ago, fuelled on by the discovery of a family I never knew I had. It’s full of family secrets, tremendous heartache but proves the human spirit’s amazing ability to triumph over adversity. Nineteen years ago, after just one phone call, my life changed abruptly. With that change came a passion for writing and I have been writing ever since.
I love writing crime novels but my passion is with the history of the British Monarchy. The first in my‘V2V’ trilogy is ‘Vikings to Virgin – The Hazards of being King’ published in 2017. The second in the series is due for release on 28th April this year and is called ‘Virgin to Victoria – The Queen is Dead. Long live the Queen.’ The final book, ‘Victoria to Vikings – The Circle of Blood’ will be released early 2019.
I really enjoyed this article about Catherine Parr, Trisha. I've always thought life dealt her an unfair hand, dying so soon after managing to survive marriage with Henry VIII.
ReplyDeleteI found this post very interesting, Trisha. I always felt sorry for Catherine Parr, she must have been terrified having to marry Henry, knowing what had happened to his other wives.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know that about Thomas Seymour, I was always under the impression that he and Kathryn lived happily ever after. How awful. And then to die because of childbirth complications. The poor, poor woman.
ReplyDelete