There had been persistent rumours throughout the summer of 1532 that
Anne and Henry would marry during the interview at Calais. At first,
Anne had gone out of her way to encourage the gossip. ‘Not later than a
week ago’, Chapuys reported in late August, ‘she wrote a letter to her
principal friend and favourite here, whom she holds as sister and
companion, bidding her to get ready against this journey and interview,
where, she says, that which she has been so long wishing for will be
accomplished’.
But,
just before leaving England, she changed her tune. She ‘assured a great
personage’, Chapuys discovered, ‘that even if the King wished to marry
her now she would never consent to it, for she wants the ceremony to
take place here, in England, at the usual place appointed for the
marriage and coronation of Queens’!
Why the alteration?
|
Anne Boleyn, Marquess of Pembroke (c. 1501 – 19 May 1536)
|
The
explanation, almost certainly, is that Anne had been doing her
research. She had already, as we have seen, informed herself widely on
the debate about the Divorce. Noe she wanted to make sure that her own
title as Queen would be unimpeachable. This means that everything would
have to be done in the proper form set out in the bible of ceremony
known as
The Royal Book.
The Royal Book devotes one of its longest and most detailed chapters to ‘The Receiving of a Queen and her Coronation’:
Item
[it provides] when a Queen shall be received out of a strange realm,
the King must purvey certain lords and ladies of estate to meet with her
at the seaside, and convey her to the palace where the King will be
wedded… Also it must be understood whether the King will be wedded
privily or openly… And that done, she must be conveyed unto her
coronation to the city of London…
It
was these stipulations, at least as much as the pressure of
contemporary events, which governed Anne’s and Henry’s actions over the
next few months.
|
Anne and Henry VIII |
The Royal Book took for granted, as indeed
had usually been the case in the Middle Ages, that the queen-to-be
would be a foreign princess. Anne, on the other hand, was neither
foreign nor royal. But she seems to have imagined that she was both. Her
coats-of-arms, both as Marquess of Pembroke and later as Queen,
proclaim her fictive royalty; and, clearly, her own self-identity was
French rather than English.
The circumstances of the Calais
interview reinforced all this. She had re-entered the world of the
French Court; she had danced with the French King and talked privately
with him. Now she was sailing to English soil where she soon she would
be crowned. It was just as The Royal Book prescribed. What more natural
therefore than to marry Henry as soon as they landed? And ‘privily’ – as
The Royal Book permitted and the fact that Henry was still married to Catherine required?
And this, according to one generally well-informed source, is what actually happened. Anne and Henry landed at Dover on 14
th
November. This was St Erconwald’s Day. And on this day. the chronicler
Hall writes, ‘the King after his return married privily the Lady Anne
Boleyn… which marriage was kept so secret that very few knew it’.
|
Henry's letter to Anne |
The
moment was psychologically right. Anne had lived with Henry in Calais
openly as his consort. She had behaved and been treated as his Queen.
And she had been given Francis’s blessing. To have gone back to England
and chastity must have seemed intolerable – both to her and to Henry.
But equally Anne was not the woman to surrender without a marriage. Not
even the promise of marriage would have done. Instead, there must have
been the thing itself, with a priest, a ring and the exchange of vows.
Quite what such a secret marriage was worth, in view of Henry’s now
bigamous state, was another matter.
But,
for the moment, neither Anne nor Henry cared. On their slow return
journey through Kent, Henry was unusually generous with rewards and
charitable gifts; and he threw money away on card-games. His partners
were Anne herself, her cousin
Francis Bryan, and
Francis Weston, the handsome young page who was a favourite of both Henry and Anne. It was, in short, a winter honeymoon.
|
Anne and Henry VIII hunting |
As
soon as they returned to Greenwich at the end of November, it seems,
the couple had a single thought: to inspect the works at the Tower which
had been begun in June 1532. The works were preceded by a full
structural survey and were on a scale large enough to attract the
attention of foreign ambassadors. But none seem to have grasped their
real purpose. For the Venetian ambassador, who was the first to notice
that something was going on, it was simply the question of strengthening
the defences: Henry ‘has commenced inspecting the artillery and
ammunition in the Tower, which he purposes fortifying’, he reported.
Chapuys, with his excellent sources of information, described the
programme of works much more accurately: ‘considerable repairs’, he
noted in September, ‘have been made in the Tower of London, both inside
and outside, refitting the apartments which were out of order’. Where
his sources went wrong, however, was over the intended use of the
refurbished rooms. ‘Some people believe’, he reported, ‘that it is the
King’s intention to send the Queen thither.’ Chapuys himself dismissed
the story as ‘highly improbable’. He was right to be dubious. For the
apartments were destined, not for Queen Catherine, but for Queen Anne.
Here once again we can see the results of Anne’s reading of
The Royal Book.
It was the rule, the Book lays down, that the new Queen should go to
the Tower two days before her coronation. She was to spent the night
there, ‘at her own leasure’, before processing the following day in
state through the City and along the Strand to Westminster. But by 1532
the Tower was in no state to receive anybody, much less the woman for
whom Henry had defied the world.
|
Anne and Henry VIII romantic scene |
The reason lay in a radical change in the royal itinerary. Up to the reign of Henry’s father,
Henry VII, the Tower had been in frequent use as a royal residence. Henry had taken refuge there with his mother,
Elizabeth of York,
from the Cornish rebels in 1497 and Elizabeth had died there six years
later in 1503. The newly-wedded Henry and Catherine had continued this
pattern for the first two years or their reign. But after 1510 the King
had visited the Tower only, on 20
th January 1520. And the building, unvisited by the King, had fallen into serious neglect.
The state of disrepair is documented by the survey of 1532. It emerges even more vividly from the letters which
John Whalley,
the paymaster of the works, wrote during the absence of the Court at
the Calais interview in October. The letters were addressed to
Cromwell,
who, as Lord High Everything Else, had been given charge of the Tower
works as well. ‘The house is wondrous foul’, Whalley reported. ‘There is
a thousand loads of rubbish to be taken out of the cellars and
kitchen.’ He had ‘this day 400 persons at work, and all little enough.’
Once the site was cleared, large numbers of masons and other craftsmen
were impressed to rush through the actual work of rebuilding.
|
Thomas Cromwell |
By December, things were well advanced. On the 1
st,
Henry made a day trip by boat from Greenwich to see how they were
coming along. He was pleased enough with what he saw to return twice,
and on both occasions with company. On about the 5
th, he was met at the Tower by the French ambassador, to whom he showed the
Jewel House
(Chapuys calls it ‘the treasure room’) – though without, according to
Chapuys, ‘giving him sight of its contents’. A few days later, Henry,
with a small suite, took Anne herself to the Tower. Once again French
ambassador turned up with despatches hot from France. This time the
ambassador accompanied the royal party on their inspection of the
Jewel House.
Its contents had just been reorganized and reinventoried under
Cromwell’s supervision and Henry showed them off with delight. He even
gave the ambassador ‘one of the finest gold cups’ as a present. Chapuys
could not discover whether the gift had been made to reward the
ambassador for his news, which he had whispered privately to the King,
or whether it had been ‘to please the Lady [Anne]’.
Anne herself,
however, was not there only to act as lady Bountiful to the French
ambassador. Instead, almost certainly, she had come to make a personal
choice of items of plate for her own use and that of her Household as
Queen-in-waiting. The selection is recorded in a list headed ‘parcels of
plate given by the King’s Highness to my Lady Marquess of Pembroke, in
the month of December [1532]’ and it numbered many dozens of cups,
bowls, pots, chandeliers, and spoons. The total weight was over 5,000
ounces of gilt and parcel [partly] gilt plate and the total value was
£1,200. Some of the items had previously belonged to Wolsey, while
another large group formed part of the property of Anne’s old enemy,
Sir Henry Guildford,
who had died so heavily in debt to the King that his personal goods had
been forfeit. Even enemies, she might have reflected, came in useful
when they were dead.
|
Anne and Henry at Hever Castle |
Henry would also pointed out to her other objects on the shelves of the
Jewel House,
including the Queen’s crown, sceptre and rod, which Anne would wear and
carry after her coronation in the Abbey. Then he would have taken her
to look at the work in progress on the Queen’s apartments. These lay in
the south-east corner of the Tower and they were still a building site.
But already the skeleton of her new Great Chamber and Dining Chamber was
clear. Here she would spend the night before going in procession to
Westminster for her coronation.
Now, at last, it must all have
seemed very near. And it all seemed near for another, even more pressing
reason. Also in early December Anne became pregnant. The child, for
whom Henry had longed for so many years, had to be a boy. And his birth
had to be legitimate. A new note of urgency was sounded in royal policy.
And there was a new man of the moment:
Thomas Cranmer.
|
Thomas Cranmer |
|
Rumour
has it that Anne had been Cranmer’s pupil. He cannot have taught her
during her youth, which had of course been spent in France. Instead, she
would have been an adult student of his – in late 1529, when he had
been lodged at her father’s newly acquired town palace of Durham House,
or again after his return from Italy in late 1530, when he had been part
of the King’s legal and theological team at Court. But however cloudy
these details, one thing is certain: pupil and master developed a mutual
regard, which survived throughout extraordinary swings of fortune. The
first of these was about to occur. Cranmer would make Anne Queen. But
first she had to make him Archbishop of Canterbury.
Fascinating post! A real insight into Anne and King Henry. Really enjoyed this post, and your others here. I work for a new social blogging site called glipho.com, and was just wondering if you would be interested in sharing your posts there with us? It wouldn't change your blog in any way, and I know our community would love to read through your work here. Let me know what you think!
ReplyDeleteAll the best,
Teo
يعلن توكيل جليم جاز
ReplyDeleteعن تقديم جميع الخدمات المتاحة لجميع العملاء باعلي كفاءة ممكنة وذللك علي يد خبراء ومهندسين مختصيين في صيانة الاجهزة الكهربائية جيدا .
https://www.almyaa.com/Glemjaz-Maintenance/
تعتبر شركة نقل العفش بمكة
ReplyDeleteمن الشركات العالمية المعتمدة في نقل الاثاث والحفاظ علية من التلف او الضرر اثناء الانتقال من مكان لمكان للذلك تعتبر شركة نقل العفش بمكة المكرمة
والمملكة العربية السعودية .
http://www.xn-----jtd6bya2cendpd.com
يمكنك الحصول على أفضل الخدمات من شركة صيانة يونيون اير و ستحصل على أفضل عمليات معالجة الأجهزة الكهربائية و هذا لأن توكيل يونيون اير يعتمد على فريق من المهندسين الخبرة في العمل و يمكنك أن تتصل على رقم صيانة يونيون اير و فريق خدمة العملاء سيقوم بمساعدتك
ReplyDeleteتنظيف موكيت بالبخار فى عجمان
ReplyDeleteشركة تنظيف فلل بعجمان
تنظيف فلل فى عجمان
شركة تنظيف بعجمان
شركات تنظيف بعجمان
شركات تنظيف المنازل فى عجمان
شركة تنظيف شقق فى عجمان
شركة تنظيف بالبخار فى عجمان
شركة تنظيف شقق بعجمان
شركة تنظيف منازل فى غجمان
مكافحة الرمة بعجمان
مكافحة بق الفراش بعجمان
شركة تنظيف خزانات فى عجمان
شركة عزل خزانات فى عجمان
تنظيف خزانات بعجمان
شركة تلميع وجلى رخام فى عجمان
تلميع وجلى رخام فى عجمان
شركة جلى رخام بعجمان
شركة تنظيف مسابح فى عجمان
شركة تنظيف واجهات زجاج فى عجمان