Anne Boleyn – home-wrecker, whore, wicked stepmother, scheming bitch, witch, the woman responsible for encouraging the early years of the English reformation – or simply a woman whose fate was determined by the love or hate of a King?
About the author:
Wendy J. Dunn is an Australian writer obsessed by Tudor History. She is the award-winning author of two Anne Boleyn novels, Dear Heart, How Like You This? and The Light in the Labyrinth and The Duty of Daughters and All Manner of Things. Shades of Yellow, Wendy's fifth novel, will be published on September 7th.
Defiled is my name full sore
Through cruel spite and false report,
That I may say for evermore,
Farewell to joy, adieu comfort.
For wrongfully you judge of me
Unto my fame a mortal wound,
Say what ye list, it may not be,
Ye seek for that shall not be found.
Anne Boleyn.
(Believed written the night before her execution.)
Anne Boleyn – home-wrecker, goggled-eyed whore, wicked step-mother, scheming bitch, witch, the saintly woman responsible for encouraging the early years of the English reformation – or simply a woman whose fate was determined by the love or hate of a King? Dead for over 400 years, Anne Boleyn arouses passions even today. People either love or hate her.
Many long years ago, Anne of the Thousand Days (Geneviève Bujold evoking Anne so brilliantly) was my first introduction, to the vibrant and intelligent mother of my favourite Queen, Elizabeth I. For most of my life I have been an advocate of Anne Boleyn, speaking up in her defence.
The continuing interest in Tudor history over the last decade or more has also resulted in returning to centre stage the second and probably most infamous wives of Henry VIII. Anne Boleyn well liked the centre stage – but she deserves it for better reasons than the alternative histories presented in many films and novels.
Anne Boleyn has a ‘Public Relations’ problem. It started in her own times and remains in place even today. For centuries, writers loved misunderstanding Anne Boleyn, shaping and distorting her to their own devices. With their constant merry-go-rounding, it is difficult to determine Anne’s true face. Even Alison Plowden, a writer of many respected Tudor histories, falls into the trap of believing Nicholas Sanders – a man writing years after Anne’s death and only a young child at the time of her execution. Sanders, a devout Catholic, described Anne Boleyn as six-fingered, jaundiced, buck toothed and please let’s not forget the unfortunate large facial mole, situated under her chin in the view of all – deformities which would have identified her to the superstitious people of this period as a witch. I can't believe Henry VIII, a fastidious man of his time, could have ever been smitten with such a vision of loveliness.
Today, historians and writers of history debate about Anne Boleyn’s true character — something now shrouded in the mists of time. We don’t even know if any of Anne’s so-called portraits really depict her.
Philippa Gregory, a very respected and awarded fiction author, reinforced Anne Boleyn’s bad press in her best-selling novel “The Other Boleyn Girl.” Gregory – despite saying she believes in Anne’s innocent of the charges resulting in her execution, as well as five men accused of being her lovers – shapes a totally ambitious Anne Boleyn. Gregory suggests in her novel Anne, desperate for pregnancy to ensure she remains Queen, beds and becomes pregnant with her own brother, one of the men executed with Anne during those blood-bathed days of May, 1536.
Similarly to the Anne painted in the dispatches of Chapuys, the Spanish ambassador to Henry VIII’s court and one of the reporters of this period in Tudor history, Gregory’s fictional Anne is a woman with barely any redeeming features. But Chapuys’ diplomatic news-sheets to Spain reflect his stance as a loyal friend and champion of Katherine of Aragon, whilst Gregory writes as a fiction writer with a story to tell.
Despite his six marriages, Henry VIII was never very good at dealing with wives who forgot to be “gentle, humble and buxom,” their expected place in Tudor society, and spoke their minds. It shocked him when his first wife, Katherine of Aragon, became short-tempered about being expected to be welcoming and “wifely”. He had decided to relax in the comfort of her chambers, and well away from his very stressed mistress, when they all were living in a kind of ménage à trois.
When the bewildered king complained to Anne Boleyn of Katherine’s behaviour, he found her offering little comfort. Anne did a bit of straight talking, saying she feared he planned returning to Katherine, followed by her frustration at remaining in the role of “the other woman”:
“I have been waiting long and might in the meanwhile have contracted some advantageous marriage, out of which I might have had issue, which is the greatest consolation in this world, but alas! Farewell to my time and youth spent to no purpose at all.”(1)
Some years later, Henry discovered a permanent way of chopping his wives down to size. But in this period, before his first ‘divorce’, these two very intelligent and strong women often rendered Henry wordless. No wonder when it came time to selecting a third bride he chose the wisely humble and obedient Jane Seymour.
But was Anne Boleyn really a home wrecker? Katherine and her daughter Mary, who never forgave Anne for what she did to her mother and her own early life, probably saw her as such, as did many other women of the time. Before she became Henry’s queen, a group of women threatened to lynch Anne. (2)
The people of England loved Katherine of Aragon, taking her into their hearts when she first arrived in England as a sixteen-year-old princess to marry Arthur, the first-born son of the first Tudor King. Marrying Henry, Arthur’s brother, on his ascension to the throne, it didn’t seem to matter to the populace that, twenty years later, she had failed to provide her second husband with a living son. Queen Katherine had given them Mary, and they accepted her as her father’s heir, no doubt an offshoot of the great love they bore her mother. Like the struggle to accept Camilla in Princess Diana’s place, the English people’s great love of Katherine made it difficult for them to accept Anne as their queen.
All England had to do a lot of accepting to do before that moment arrived. In the first days of Anne and Henry’s relationship, nobody guessed Anne’s destiny lay as a crowned Queen of England, consort of Henry VIII. Her own family would have viewed the prospect beyond their wildest fancies.
Anne’s father, Thomas Boleyn (originally Bullen), who later became the Earl of Ormonde and Wiltshire, held only the rank of knight at the time of her birth. The eldest son of a man whose own father, Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, a self made man who became mayor of London, stood even lower on the rungs of English society. Thomas Boleyn, the ambitious father of Anne Boleyn, continued the uphill society climb of his grandfather.
The Tudors lived in a patriarchal society, which considered women as little more than property. The King controlled Anne’s life and that of her family; Henry’s obvious interest in her left her no other choice but to play interested, too. But Anne showed her own daughter’s characteristic of using her sex well to her own advantage. By keeping the King’s passion hot by refusing to bed with him, Anne soon showed her mettle as a different kettle of fish to his usual easy catch.
Having watched the king bed and discard her sister, Mary, Anne unsurprisingly desired to avoid a similar fate. Indeed, Anne never set out to catch a king. Rather, it seems she first wanted to wed the twenty-year-old Henry Percy, later Earl of Northumberland. George Cavendish, a gentleman of the cardinal’s household, documented this relationship, as well as later brought up during the trial for Anne’s life.
Showing all the hallmarks of young man and woman’s ‘first true love,’ both of Anne and Henry embarked upon their relationship as if unaware of how their place in Tudor society dictated their lives. There are even strong hints suggesting Anne and Percy may have pre-contracted themselves to one another, casting in shadow the legality of any future marriage entered by Anne and Percy to another party. (2) Disregarding Percy’s loud protests concerning his commitment to Anne Boleyn, Wolsey broke up their relationship, Percy’s father dragging his son back to home to marry an heiress in quick haste – a marriage doomed to failure from the start.
As for Anne and Percy?
History suggests this break-up hit them hard, and they never forgot what happened. It seems more than just a simple coincidence that the man leading the party to arrest Wolsey for treason was Percy. Anne said later that she rather had been Henry’s Countess (meaning the wife of Percy) than Henry’s Queen. When they delivered the verdict at her trial, Percy, a judge at her trial, fainted and they had to carry him out.
Cavendish believed the King commanded Wolsey to cause the original break-up after he decided on a fresher Boleyn girl to warm his bed. But people of this period rarely blamed the King for the break-up of his marriage. They saw Anne Boleyn as the young hussy, out for all she could get and aiming to replace Katherine of Aragon as queen. Henry was always good at staying in his subjects’ good books by shifting the blame to another person.
At the beginning of 1536, the heartbroken Katherine of Aragon died. The year’s beginning also saw Anne Boleyn, married to the king for three years and ‘big-bellied’ with probably her third pregnancy. Anne was an intelligent woman. She knew this pregnancy needed the result of a living son. That and only that would secure her position as Henry’s consort and keep her safe. With Katherine’s demise, and a question mark lingering even to this day over the legality of her marriage to the king, if she failed to give her husband a living son, then a death knell would sound over her time as queen. Anne Boleyn would not have realised failure to give the King a living son also death knelled her own life.
As the king’s wife, Anne experienced firsthand the same pain of Katherine of Aragon, For those born noble, Tudor mindset didn’t encourage sex through the long months of a pregnancy, so Henry VIII habitually took a mistress during the pregnancies of his wives.
Henry was a conservative man; he had done his bit, got his wife pregnant, now it was up to her to do what was expected of her and hatch out his prince. Henry probably thought a mistress was the best solution all round. For Anne, a jealous and now very insecure woman, this was hard to come to terms with; she had rudely awakened to the fact that her true worth as his queen equated to her success in the birthing chamber.
Just thirteen weeks into her pregnancy, on the very day they buried Katherine, Anne miscarried the son she hoped would save her marriage and protect her. His lustful gaze and hands already resting on Jane Seymour the previous year, Henry now lusted for a bon fide marriage to another woman,
Henry VIII said, after Anne lost her baby and her last chance to hold the king, “I was seduced into this marriage and forced into it by sorcery.”
Anne Boleyn was no witch, white or black. Protestant bishops held her in great esteem; the men dying with her were not her lovers but men staying loyal to her even when it was obvious the tide had turned against her. Sir Thomas Wyatt, the elder, the man I endeavored to give voice in Dear Heart, How Like You This?, my first Tudor novel, once said, “I could gladly yield to be tied forever with the knot of her love.”
Anne was a woman who loved her daughter, a woman who said children were the greatest consolation in the world.cShe wasn’t perfect. But none of us are. Anne had many terrible moments as step-mother to Mary, the eldest daughter of the King. But the relationship probably reflected much of Anne’s frustration in her efforts to solve the problem. The one time she tried to achieve a better rapport with Mary, Catherine of Aragon’s loyal and loving daughter slammed the door on Anne’s attempt. For Mary, there reigned only one Queen in England, and it wasn’t Anne Boleyn.
Shortly before her execution, knowing she had failed in her duty of care of Mary, Anne fell on her knees, entreating the wife of the Tower’s Constable to go in her place and beg Mary’s forgiveness. She didn’t want to die with a weight of guilt on her soul about her treatment of Mary.
I believe a lot of Anne’s ‘bad’ behaviour stemmed from living on her ‘nerves,’ grappling with the immense insecurities as consort to the king. She lacked the training of Katherine of Aragon, a daughter of a ruling queen who had ensured her daughter’s readiness to assume her own queen’s mantle. But Katherine and Anne shared a similarity. Both of them acted like lionesses with claws out when it came to ensuring their daughters’ rights.
Anne was well aware of her many enemies, one her own uncle (the duke of Norfolk) who didn’t take kindly to her Lutheran leanings and independent spirit. Most wives would struggle to behave well if their spouse expected them put up with mistresses. Especially if your husband said, as Henry VIII did when she was heavily pregnant with Elizabeth– “Shut your eyes, do as your betters had done, and endure.”
The Anglican Church owes more debt to Anne Boleyn for its inception than is ever really acknowledged. During her time as Queen, Anne encouraged men such as Cranmer, Parker, Latimer and other Protestant bishops to plant the new church in the soil of England. Latimer and Cranmer, martyred during the reign of Katherine of Aragon’s daughter, planted it with their own blood.
Yes – Anne Boleyn possessed a temper and forceful personality, a person who often spoke her mind, but as the mother of Elizabeth, could we expect any less? But she tried hard during her time as queen to be a good queen, following the great example of Katherine of Aragon.
Anne was no witch, despite the excuse flung by Henry VIII to his subjects in 1536, inferring his main reason for marrying her, and the reason to rid himself of her. His words prepared the ground for Anne Boleyn’s juridical murder on trumped-up charges of adultery. During Anne’s trial for her life, when she fought every step of the way to clear her name, Henry himself said, “She has a stout heart.”
Elizabeth I remained silent about her mother. Some writers infer her silence as her way to distance herself from Anne, and that she must have believed the political spin put in place after Anne Boleyn’s death. Yet actions speak louder than words. Throughout Elizabeth’s long reign, Anne Boleyn’s gifted, intellectual daughter surrounded herself with her mother’s kin, making them part of her inner circle. Some of those closest to her were men and women who had also been close to her mother. More poignant than this was the discovery after her death. Until days before her death, when they cut the ring from her finger, Elizabeth wore a ring containing her own portrait as an aged queen and that of a much younger woman—her mother’s portrait. It is a picture worth a thousand words.
(1) Antonia Fraser, The six wives of Henry VIII, page 169.
(2) Alison Plowden; HOUSE OF TUDOR; page 119
(3) Antonia Fraser, work cited, page 126
References:
Antonia Fraser; The six wives of Henry VIII; Arrow Books, 1998
Alison Plowden; HOUSE OF TUDOR; Sutton Publishing; 2003
George Cavendish; The life and Times of Cardinal Wolsey; Renaissance Electronic texts, Gen. Ed. Ian Lancashire; Web Development Group;