Life
in the Time of Mary Tudor
By
Judith Arnopp
I’ve written about many prominent Tudor
women and the obstacles they faced. Margaret Beaufort lived a long and
challenging life, battling her way through, and ultimately winning, the war of
the roses to become the most powerful woman in the realm. Elizabeth of York
showed great resilience in the face of adversity; Catherine of Aragon possessed
enormous courage, Anne Boleyn bore herself with intelligence and wit, Katheryn
Parr was dutiful, educated and wise. They were all admirable and history has at
last come to recognise the part they played. The only woman I have written of
so far who is not yet afforded this respect is Mary Tudor, and Mary is the one
for whom I feel the most pity.
In her infancy, Mary was the ‘pearl’ of
her father’s world but once he sought a divorce and Catherine and Mary refused
to play the king’s game, she fell from favour. Labelled a bastard, forced to
serve her infant half-sister, Elizabeth, Mary’s story deteriorates into a dark
fairy tale. But Mary had no fairy godmother. She had to fight single handed for
everything she held dear: her title, her mother’s reputation, her position, her
religion – and ultimately her kingdom. Fighting can make a person defensive and
edgy and desperate for love and Mary was no exception.
She longed for her father’s approval but
although she was eventually welcomed back to court via the intervention of her
stepmothers, Jane Seymour and later Katherine Parr, she never again reached the
‘adored’ status of her infancy. The friendliness of the courtiers ebbed and
flowed around Mary governed by the tide of the king’s favour. She lived a life
of uncertainty on a knife edge of fear.
Reading between the lines of history, I
feel Mary never forgave herself for agreeing, under unbearable pressure, that
her parent’s marriage was illegal, branding herself illegitimate. The break-up
between Henry and Catherine was the scandal of Europe, the gossip of the
taverns. Wherever she went she would have heard, or at least imagined, whispers
against her. Notoriety is difficult in any circumstances but Mary’s private
life was bandied about the world. Steeped in unhappiness, her later paranoia
becomes more understandable.
Even after Henry’s death, Mary was
afforded little peace. She may have imagined she’d be allowed to retire to the
vast properties left to her by her father but instead she was continuously
pressured into adhering to Edward VI’s strictly Protestant laws. Mass was
forbidden, the carrying of rosaries was prohibited yet Mary was defiant and
refused to listen. She risk arrest and imprisonment by brazenly flouting the
law and her brother’s authority.
Edward was a young man and Mary had no
reason to believe his rule would not be long; in all likelihood he would marry
and have many heirs. She had no hope or expectation of ever becoming queen. Her
future in Protestant England must have seemed bleak yet she fought on with no
support for what she saw as right.
On his death, with the crown waiting to
fall into her hands, Mary’s future at last seemed rosy; she must have imagined
a grand coronation, the people of England finally able to turn back to the true
church but Mary reckoned without the dishonest schemes of John Dudley.
Several months earlier, Dudley, Duke of
Northumberland, had arranged a marriage between his eldest son and Mary’s
cousin, Lady Jane Grey and then persuaded King Edward to name Jane heir in Mary’s
stead. Just when Mary thought her trials were over, she was faced with the greatest
battle of all – the fight for her throne.
Mary’s reign is now regarded as a failure.
She married against the will of the people. She failed to understand the desire
of the people to worship in the manner in which they chose. She failed to
provide an heir, suffering phantom pregnancies and dying before her innovative
plans for England came to fruition. Yet some of those plans were promising. She began many policies that have since
been laid at Elizabeth’s door; reforms to the economy, naval expansion, and
colonial exploration and had her reign been longer, she may have been
remembered very differently. As with her father, Mary is remembered for her
worst very acts yet there was much more to her than religious persecution and
brutality.
Overall, Mary was a kind woman, generous,
effusive and motherly to those closest to her. It was only the question of
religion that brought out her intractable side. For Mary, matters of faith were
black and white. As far as she was concerned, to argue against Catholic tradition
was to argue against God. There was just one true church; one way of doing
things. Her father’s break with Rome was as emotionally damaging to Mary as his
break from her mother. She feared for
his soul and she feared for the souls of the English subjects who followed his
lead. Her fight against heresy was not a matter of cruelty or vindictiveness.
She did not grudge Protestants in the way that you grudge someone from an
opposing football team. Once she was queen, the Protestants of England were as
much her subjects as the Catholics and she feared for their immortal souls. She
saw it as her duty to lead them away from sin. The burning of heretics was
standard punishment and to Mary, doomed as heretics were to burn in hellfire,
it served as a deterrent.
From childhood, Mary was isolated and
usually out of royal favour. Her nebulous status made her unmarriageable so her
fertile years were over by the time she made the disastrous marriage with
Philip of Spain. She had no equals, and
apart from her most loyal servants, no real friends. She died knowing she had
failed. In the company of her favoured servants her last days were spent in
great pain, almost completely blind, and tortured by the necessity of leaving
her beloved subjects in the hands of her Protestant sister, Elizabeth.
The Heretic Wind:
The Life of Mary Tudor, Queen of England
By Judith Arnopp
Adored by her parents and pampered by the court, the infant Princess Mary’s life changes suddenly and drastically when her father’s eye is taken by the enigmatic Anne Boleyn.
Mary stands firm against her father’s determination to destroy both her mother’s reputation, and the Catholic church. It is a battle that will last throughout both her father’s and her brother’s reign, until, she is almost broken by persecution. When King Edward falls ill and dies Mary expects to be crowned queen.
But she has reckoned without John Dudley, the Duke of Northumberland, who before Mary can act, usurps her crown and places it on the head of her Protestant cousin, Lady Jane Grey.
Furious and determined not to be beaten, Mary musters a vast army at Framlingham Castle; a force so strong that Jane Grey’s supporters crumble in the face of it, and Mary is at last crowned Queen of England.
But her troubles are only just beginning. Rebellion and heresy take their toll both on Mary’s health, and on the English people. Suspecting she is fatally ill, and desperate to save her people from heresy, Mary steps up her campaign to compel her subjects to turn back to the Catholic faith.
All who resist will face punishment for heresy in the flames of the Smithfield fires.
Mary stands firm against her father’s determination to destroy both her mother’s reputation, and the Catholic church. It is a battle that will last throughout both her father’s and her brother’s reign, until, she is almost broken by persecution. When King Edward falls ill and dies Mary expects to be crowned queen.
But she has reckoned without John Dudley, the Duke of Northumberland, who before Mary can act, usurps her crown and places it on the head of her Protestant cousin, Lady Jane Grey.
Furious and determined not to be beaten, Mary musters a vast army at Framlingham Castle; a force so strong that Jane Grey’s supporters crumble in the face of it, and Mary is at last crowned Queen of England.
But her troubles are only just beginning. Rebellion and heresy take their toll both on Mary’s health, and on the English people. Suspecting she is fatally ill, and desperate to save her people from heresy, Mary steps up her campaign to compel her subjects to turn back to the Catholic faith.
All who resist will face punishment for heresy in the flames of the Smithfield fires.
The Heretic Wind: the life of Mary Tudor,
Queen of England will be released on January 27th 2020. The Kindle
version is available for pre-order now and paperback and audiobook will follow.
Pre-order your copy TODAY!
Released 27th January
Judith Arnopp
Judith Arnopp writes historical fiction set mainly in the late medieval and Tudor period. Her work includes:
Judith Arnopp writes historical fiction set mainly in the late medieval and Tudor period. Her work includes:
The Heretic Wind: the story of Mary Tudor, Queen of England
What an interesting post. I am only just delving into the Tudors, it all very fascinating.
ReplyDelete