The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn (68 page)

Read The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn Online

Authors: Alison Weir

Tags: #General, #Historical, #Royalty, #England, #Great Britain, #Autobiography, #Biography & Autobiography, #Biography, #Biography And Autobiography, #History, #Europe, #Historical - British, #Queen; consort of Henry VIII; King of England;, #Anne Boleyn;, #1507-1536, #Henry VIII; 1509-1547, #Queens, #Great Britain - History

BOOK: The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn
11.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
7
Carles
8
Hall
9
Hall; Wriothesley
CHAPTER 1: OCCURRENCES THAT PRESAGED EVIL
1
Wriothesley. Although Hall dates Anne’s miscarriage to early February, Wriothesley, who was better informed, states that it occurred “three days before Candlemas.” As Candlemas falls on February 2, this suggests that the miscarriage happened on January 30. However, Wriothesley cannot have been correct in this case, for the Imperial ambassador, Eustache Chapuys, who had been at court at the time, reported on February 10 that “on the day of the interment” of Katherine of Aragon (29 January), “the Concubine had an abortion.” Warnicke is therefore incorrect in dating the miscarriage to January 19, then January 30.
2
George Wyatt;
LP
3
Wriothesley; Hall. For Anne Boleyn’s miscarriage, see also George Wyatt and Clifford.
4
LP
5
Ibid
6
Neale:
Queen Elizabeth I
7
Pollini
8
Hall
9
For Katherine of Aragon, see Mattingly; Weir:
Six Wives;
Fraser; Starkey:
Six Wives;
Paul; Luke; Hume and Strickland.
10
Ives
11
SC
12
Ibid
13
For Henry’s pursuit of Anne Boleyn, see, for example, George Wyatt;
LP;
SC and Cavendish: Wolsey. Henry VIII’s seventeen surviving love letters to her are in the Vatican Library, and have been printed in several editions.
14
Cavendish:
Metrical Visions
15
Smith:
Henry VIII;
Bernard
16
Bernard; National Archives: SPI/46; Pocock
17
Erickson:
First Elizabeth
18
Loades:
Mary Tudor
19
SC. It has been claimed recently that the Nidd Hall portrait of Anne Boleyn is based on Holbein’s portrait of Jane Seymour, but there are significant differences, not least the AB brooch worn by the sitter, and the image is entirely compatible with Anne’s verified portraits.
20
LP
21
SC
22
Cavendish:
Metrical Visions
23
The evidence for Henry’s growing disillusionment with Anne Boleyn is to be found in SC; GW and Roper.
24
Rotuli Parliamentorum
25
VC
26
Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris
27
SC
28
Ibid
29
SC;
LP;
Fraser
30
LP
31
LP;
Denny:
Anne Boleyn
32
LP
33
Aless
34
LP
35
SC; Latymer. Latymer, Anne’s chaplain, identifies her as Mary Shelton, who married Sir Anthony Heveningham in 1546, and who is the subject of a portrait sketch by Hans Holbein.
36
SC;
LP
37
Roper
38
Wriothesley. For Henry VIII’s courtship of Jane Seymour, see SC and Clifford.
39
LP
40
SC
41
For Jane Seymour’s life, see Gross.
42
SC. Jane’s portraits by Holbein and other artists bear this out.
43
Clifford
44
Warnicke: “Fall”
45
LP
46
SC
47
LP
48
Ibid
49
Ibid
50
Foxe
51
LP
52
Ibid
53
Hall
54
Vergil
55
SC
56
LP
57
Prescott; Williams:
Henry VIII and His Court
58
Loades:
Mary Tudor
59
Carles
60
LP
61
Ibid
62
Ibid
63
Ibid
64
Ibid
65
Ibid
66
Wriothesley; cf
Il Successo de la Morte della Regina
, an Italian poem of June 2, 1536, written in London, which also asserts that the shock “caused her to give premature birth to a dead son.” Warnicke’s theory that Anne miscarried on January 19 does not take account of the fact that the King’s accident occurred on the twenty-fourth January.
67
Wriothesley
68
Clifford. Sander also describes Anne Boleyn finding Jane Seymour sitting on Henry’s knee.
69
George Wyatt
70
Clifford
71
SC
72
SC; Wriothesley
73
LP
74
Ibid
75
George Wyatt
76
LP
77
LP;
SC
78
LP
79
Fraser
CHAPTER 2: THE SCANDAL OF CHRISTENDOM
1
Loades:
Tragical History
2
Burnet
3
LP
4
I ves
5
LP
6
SC
7
George Wyatt
8
Lofts
9
Loades:
Mary Tudor
10
LP
11
Loades:
Mary Tudor
12
LP
13
Ibid
14
SC
15
LP
16
Loades:
Mary Tudor;
Loades:
Henry VIII and His Queens
17
Ives and Dowling, for example
18
LP
19
Ibid
20
For Mary Tudor, the future Mary I, see the biographies by Loades, Prescott, and Erickson.
21
Warnicke: “Fall”
22
Clifford
23
LP;
Williams:
Henry VIII and His Court;
Warnicke: “Fall”
24
Lisle Letters; LP;
Ives
25
Fuller:
The Spear and the Spindle
26
SC; Starkey:
Six Wives
27
Complete Peerage
28
SC
29
Porter; Wilson:
Holbein
30
LP
31
SC
32
Ibid
33
Ibid
34
Ibid
35
Ibid
36
LP
37
Ibid
38
SC; Starkey:
Six Wives
39
SC
40
Ibid
41
Erickson:
Bloody Mary
42
LP
43
Scarisbrick
44
SC;
LP
45
SC
46
Porter
47
Ives
48
Friedmann; Loades:
Henry VIII and His Queens
49
VC
50
SC
51
Il successo de la Morte della Regina
52
SC;
LP
. The dispatches of Chapuys and Jean de Dinteville, the French ambassador, attest to Anne Boleyn’s unpopularity and her diminishing power.
53
Cited by Bernard
54
LP
55
Ibid
56
Chronicle of King Henry VIII
57
State Papers
58
LP;
Bernard
59
Carles
60
LP
61
VC; Vergil
62
SC
63
SC
64
LP
; SC
65
Ibid
66
LP
67
Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris
68
SC
69
LP
70
Loades:
Henry VIII and His Queens
71
SC
72
Cited by Mathew
73
SC
74
Ibid
75
Ibid
76
Cavendish:
Metrical Visions
77
Bernard
78
SC
79
Ibid
80
Starkey:
Six Wives
81
SC
CHAPTER 3: THE FRAILTY OF HUMAN AFFAIRS
1
LP
2
This report is dated February 25, but must have been written earlier, as Anne was at York Place by February 24.
3
Ives
4
LP
5
Statutes of the Realm
6
LP
7
Ibid
8
Ibid
9
Clifford
10
SC; Clifford
11
LP

Other books

Blindside by Gj Moffat
Legacy Of Korr by Barlow,M
Ends of the Earth by Bruce Hale
Monster Sex Stories by Lexi Lane
Hunters in the Night by Ramsey Isler
The Immortal Harvest by L. J. Wallace
Fourth Day by Zoe Sharp