In February people’s thoughts turn to love – whether we want
them to or not – so I thought I might take a brief look at some Tudor and
Stuart love stories, though not the kind with happy endings.
Margaret Douglas in later years |
In the mid sixteenth century with Henry VIII on the throne
and no male heir, the Tudor dynasty was not secured; meaning marriages that
might challenge the throne were dangerous indeed. This resulted in a number of
sorry tales of star-crossed romances and the incarceration of some of the
noblest lovers in the land. One such lover was Lady Margaret Douglas. Born in
1515, Margaret was the daughter of Henry VIII’s elder sister Margaret Tudor and
her second husband Archibald Douglas, Earl of Angus. She lived under the watchful
eye of her uncle at the English court, eventually joining Anne Boleyn’s
household.
Margaret was a particularly romantic girl, being part of a group
of young courtiers that wrote and exchanged love poems. The love sonnet was
becoming fashionable in English court circles, as a result of Thomas Wyatt and
Henry Howard’s re-workings of Plutarch. Fuelled by notions of romantic love,
and also perhaps by the unusual example of the King who had recently made a
love match with Anne Boleyn, the young and attractive coterie around the new
Queen created a hothouse ambiance of flirtation. This was encouraged by Anne
Boleyn and would later be used against her.
Bess Throckmorton |
It is probable that the king hoped to make a useful alliance
by marrying Margaret into one of the European ruling houses, but while no
marriage was arranged it was perhaps inevitable that Margaret’s head would be
turned in this heady atmosphere. She fell for one of the Queen’s cousins: Lord
Thomas Howard whose family was exceedingly powerful. She and Thomas met in
secret, exchanging love tokens and eventually engaged in a secret betrothal. This
was a serious commitment at a time when to make such a promise in front of a
witness was a binding contract. Their betrothal remained a secret for a year,
perhaps due to the fact that the King’s attentions were entirely taken up with
the collapse of his second marriage, ending with the Queen, for whom he had
sacrificed so much, on the scaffold. With the fall of her mother the
two-year-old Elizabeth Tudor was, like her half sister Mary, deemed
illegitimate, meaning that Margaret Douglas found herself second in line to the
English throne, after her half-brother James V of Scotland. This made her
secret betrothal to one of the powerful Howards all the more dangerous, as any
male heirs from the match could potentially destabilise Henry’s position.
So when Henry, newly married to Jane Seymour, got wind of
the secret romance the erstwhile couple were clapped in the Tower, where they
continued to exchange gifts and poems. They were entirely oblivious to the fact
that Henry was forcing a new law through parliament that deemed those of royal
blood who married without consent, and those who sought to marry them, as
committing treason. Thomas was condemned to death; Margaret fell seriously ill
and was released into the care of the nuns at Syon Abbey. Some months later
poor Thomas died of ‘an ague’ still incarcerated in the Tower. Margaret, with
her beloved Thomas dead and shunted to third in line after the birth of Edward
Tudor, was released and pardoned, going on to serve the next Queen, Anne of
Cleves, and her successor the young and naïve Katherine Howard.
Lady Katherine Grey with her son, born in the Tower |
Margaret behaved impeccably in the four years following the
debacle that sent her to the Tower, but her romantic spirit had not been entirely
quashed and it was yet another Howard boy, this time Charles, brother to the
new queen, who caught her eye. But Katherine Howard was on the brink of a
calamitous fall, due to her own amorous and adulterous behaviour, and when her
household was investigated Margaret’s flirtation with Charles Howard emerged.
He was banished and she was warned in no uncertain terms by the King that
having ‘demeaned herself towards His Majesty, first with the Lord Thomas
Howard, the second with Charles Howard’, to ‘beware the third time’. She was
later happily married to the charismatic Earl of Lennox, in a political
alliance that gave Henry VIII leverage over Scotland. This marriage produced
two sons, one being Lord Darnley who was the second husband of Mary Queen of
Scots and father of Scottish King James VI who eventually became James I of
England.
Elizabeth Vernon |
A few decades later, during Elizabeth’s reign, love became
an increasingly dangerous business. The queen’s cousin, Lady Katherine Grey,
sister of the tragic Jane, secretly married the Earl of Hertford, was
imprisoned and gave birth to two sons in the Tower. The eldest, as the first
boy to be born with Tudor blood for some years, would have had a strong claim
to the throne, had Elizabeth not had him deemed illegitimate. Poor Lady Katherine
died in captivity and her sister, Lady Mary, too, was imprisoned for an
unsanctioned marriage. Elizabeth was notoriously averse to her maids-of-the-chamber
getting hitched, royal blood or not, and a number of them ended up
incarcerated: Anne Vavasour, who gave birth to the Earl of Oxford’s bastard in
the maid’s dormitory at Whitehall Palace, and Queen’s favourites, Bess
Throckmorton and Sir Walter Ralegh, were sent to the Tower. Elizabeth Vernon,
who secretly married the Earl of Southampton, had a spell in the Fleet Prison.
Other’s avoided prison but were banished from court, like Lettice Knollys who wed
the Queen’s beloved Earl of Leicester never to be forgiven, and her
daughter-in-law, Frances Walsingham, whose marriage to Lettice’s son the Earl of
Essex (another of the Queen’s favourites) was cast out from court for life.
Arbella Stuart |
Another sad story is that of the granddaughter of the
above-mentioned Margaret Douglas. Arbella Stuart was, like her grandmother, a
strong claimant to the English throne. Some championed her as Elizabeth’s heir,
suggesting her claim was stronger than that of her cousin James VI of Scotland,
as she’d been born on English soil; but it was James who won out. Seventy years
had passed since Margaret Douglas’s incarceration, when Arbella found herself
in a similar situation. Having secretly married William Seymour (grandson of
the above mentioned Lady Katherine Grey) the couple were locked up: William in
the Tower and she under house arrest in Highgate. The doughty couple managed to
both escape, Arbella dressed as a boy. Sadly William failed to make it to their
meeting place on time and Arbella was obliged to set sail without him in the
hope that they would be reconciled once on the continent. But her ship was
captured off Calais and she was returned to the Tower where some accounts say,
she starved herself to death. William made it to the Low Countries where he
spent some years as a fugitive only able to return to England after Arbella’s
death.
On that note, Happy Valentine’s Day!
For Margaret Douglas and Katherine Grey’s stories see Leanda
De Lisle’s Tudor: The Family Story
& The Sisters who would be Queen;
for the shenanigans of Elizabeth’s maids- of-the-chamber see Anna Whitelock’s Elizabeth’s Bedfellows and for Arbella
Stuart’s sad tale see Sarah Gristwood’s Arbella:
England’s Lost Queen.
Elizabeth Fremantle’s novel Sisters of Treason – out May 2014 – tells the tragic story of the
Grey sisters. For details see Elizabethfremantle.com
3 comments:
How sad it must have been to be a person whose very marriage was a political thing! Excellent post!
Most enjoyable article. I have scheduled FB & Twitter posts. I must now explore the world of Elizabeth Vernon as she may be an ancestor I don't yet know about!
After quick research, the answer is yes! I come down from the Haddon Hall Vernons while Elizabeth is a Hodnet Vernon but we all come from Sir William de Vernon who came over with William the Conqueror. How satisfying to discover this from your post. Thank you.
Post a Comment