6.6.25

5 Fascinating Facts About Tudor King Henry VIII

King Henry VIII by Hans Holbein the Younger. 1540. Image: Wikipedia. Public Domain.
King Henry VIII by Hans Holbein the Younger. (1540). 
Image: Wikipedia. Public Domain.

 

King Henry VIII was an intelligent, artistic and athletic man when he became king in 1509. He changed into a corpulent bearded tyrant famous for having six wives, a host of mistresses and a consuming paranoia that led a number of notable Tudors to their excruciating executions.

It’s well known that King Henry VIII went through wives like hankies. The ladies weren't all strangers to each other. Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour and Katherine Howard were their predecessors' ladies-in-waiting. You might argue that they were easy prey for Henry.

Henry's second and fifth wives, Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard, were nieces of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, a key member of the Tudor court. Henry's sixth wife, Catherine Parr, was an acquaintance of Mary Tudor, later Queen Mary I, and Mary’s mother, Catherine of Aragon, had been a friend of Catherine Parr's mother, Maud.

Bessie Blount, the mother of Henry's illegitimate son Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond and Somerset, served in Catherine of Aragon's household. Henry Fitzroy married Mary Boleyn, the 3rd Duke of Norfolk’s daughter.

Henry raised career-men like Thomas Cromwell and Thomas More to important roles and he ruthlessly destroyed them when they didn’t fulfil his wishes.

Life with Henry was like navigating an emotional minefield.

Below are 5 lesser known facts about the best known Tudor king:

1. Henry VIII Bathed Infrequently

The Tudors believed that bathing opened the skin's pores and permitted airborne diseases into the body. Henry followed the medical advice and only took his luxurious sunken steam baths sparingly. Instead, he washed with cold water in the morning, the evening, before and after dining. Henry always kept a piece of real fur next to his skin so that disease carrying fleas would be tempted towards that and not his skin.

Despite the lack of bathing, Henry's court was obsessed with smelling "sweet" so liberal amounts of fragrances, including rose oil, were used to ensure that the royal nose met with no unpleasant aromas. 

Rose oil was apt; the emblem of the family was the Tudor rose, an amalgamation of the white and red roses of the formerly warring houses of York and Lancaster. The oil would have done little to cover the stench of the human waste that lay in the cellars awaiting collection.

Undergarments were changed frequently, and outer garments were well laundered, even if the body wearing them was not as fortunate.


2. Henry's Courtiers Wore Padding To Help Him

For most of his life, Henry VIII was slim, athletic, and deemed as handsome as his grandfather Edward IV. He was unusually tall for the time at six-foot-two. After his 1536 jousting accident that restricted his movements, Henry found a way to fill his days. He ate a lot. His waist expanded to approximately 89 centimetres. His irascibility increased with his appetite. His courtiers wore padding so that their girths were as expansive as his to help him feel better about himself.

Henry understood the need to appear invincible and unattainably rich, so he spent a great amount on clothing, jewels and artwork that enhanced his image. He had an eye for the aesthetic, and portrait painter Hans Holbein the Younger designed unique pieces of jewellery for him. The king "out-blinged" everyone.


3. Henry VIII Had His Own Pewter Thrones

Henry VIII had a private toilet in each of his palaces. No one was permitted to use them except for him. The facilities were guarded by soldiers. His stool chambers contained shelves of books and they had paintings on the walls to keep him amused. 

The toilets were pewter with a velvet cushion seat stuffed with swans feathers and these were studded with gilt nails. Only the Groom of the Stool was admitted into this intimate space. His team of privy chamber attendants was urged never to talk about his visits.

Whilst on a royal progress around the country, it was expected that his hosts would provide a similarly luxurious close stool for his sole use. Even if that bankrupted them.


4. Henry Didn’t Compose Greensleeves But He Loved The Arts

We forget that Henry was a well-educated and creative man. He impressed the philosopher Erasmus as a child, and early in his reign, he wrote Defence of the Seven Sacraments in response to Martin Luther's theological text. He was a committed Catholic until he decided that marrying Anne Boleyn and having a male heir was more important than pleasing the pope.

Henry VIII's musical skills were admired. He could sight-read music, and there was a long-held mistaken belief that he wrote "Greensleeves." It actually dated from the Elizabethan era. He composed numerous songs, hymns and music and he was an accomplished poet.

His palaces housed over 2,000 tapestries, splendid pieces of art, symbolism and displays of wealth. 1519 records revealed that Henry had received a unique present: an elephant to add to the Royal Menagerie.


5. No One Wanted To Tell Henry VIII He Was Dying

You can’t blame them. It was treason to talk about the king’s death so none of his physicians were brave enough to break the bad news to him and risk an execution. Eventually, his groom of the stool, intimate servant (yes, toilet tasks), Sir Anthony Denny informed him. Ailing Henry agreed to see Thomas Cranmer, the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Henry’s last words were, “I will take a little sleep.” He went into a coma before Cranmer arrived in his bedchamber and the archbishop sat with him as he passed away in the early hours of the 28th January 1547. 

Henry had planned a magnificent tomb for himself. He never used it; the partly constructed tomb was destroyed in 1646. He still lies with his third wife Jane Seymour at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle.

He remains one of the best known, if not infamous, monarchs in British history.


Sources:

https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/greensleeves-did-henry-viii-write-song/

https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/denny-anthony-1501-49

4.6.25

Princess Beatrice: Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter

 

Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert's youngest child. Image: Public Domain.
Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert's youngest child. 
Image: Public Domain.

"Baby": Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom

On the 14th of April, 1857, Britain's Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha welcomed their ninth and last child. Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore was known within the family as "Baby."

Her christening on the 6th of June 1857 was held in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace. Her godparents were her eldest sister, Victoria, Princess Royal, her maternal grandmother, Victoire, Duchess of Kent, and King Friedrich of Prussia.

The inclusion of Mary as one of her Christian names was a tribute to George III's last surviving child, Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh, who died on the 30th of April, 1857. (She has the distinction of being the only child of George III to be photographed). Feodore was in honour of Queen Victoria's half-sister Feodora of Saxe-Meiningen, by marriage a princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg.


Prince Albert Dies When Beatrice Is 4 Years Old

Beatrice's eldest sibling Vicky was born on 21st November 1840, so there was a gap of almost seventeen years between the queen and prince consort's first and last children.

Vicky married Prince Friedrich of Prussia (Fritz) in the chapel at St. James' Palace, London, on 25th January 1858. She relocated to Berlin shortly afterwards. Their first two children, Wilhelm (the future Kaiser Wilhelm II) and Charlotte, were born before Beatrice reached her third birthday.

Queen Victoria and Prince Albert treated "Baby" differently than her siblings. She was their last child, and she was indulged and complimented more than her four brothers and four sisters, which occasionally caused resentment. Prince Albert claimed that she was "the most amusing baby we ever had."

On 14th December 1861, Beatrice lost her father. Her mother was hysterical, plunged into an all-consuming grief that saw her friend and mistress of the robes, Harriet, Duchess of Sutherland compelled to pull Victoria away from Albert's corpse in his bed.

That same night Victoria carried her four-year-old daughter from the nursery to her bed, and she wrapped her in the bedclothes that bore Albert's scent so that she could pretend that he was still with them.


Prince Henry of Battenburg: The Queen's Not Amused

That first night was an indication of Baby's destiny: She was to be a permanent comfort and companion to the queen in her perpetual mourning. Beatrice's vivacity decreased as her new role shaped her life.

Beatrice was educated according to the lesson plan that Prince Albert created for her and her siblings. She was taught English, French and German; she was noted for her tidy handwriting and good spelling and grammar.

Her four sisters' Vicky, Alice, Helena and Louise married and escaped to their own homes but not from their mother's vice-like grip. She wrote them countless scolding letters. Fifteen-year-old Beatrice became Queen Victoria's personal secretary. She even wrote her mother's dictated words into her journals so that the queen didn't have to complete the inky task herself.

There was one difference between her sisters and Beatrice: There was no younger sister for Beatrice to pass the secretarial duties to.

Queen Victoria was apoplectic when Beatrice asked for permission to marry Prince Henry of Battenberg—"Liko" to his family and close friends. Beatrice and Henry met at her niece Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine and Prince Louis of Battenberg's wedding in 1884, and they fell in love. (Princess Victoria was the daughter of Princess Alice, Beatrice's second eldest sister. Louis was Henry's brother).


Queen Victoria Versus Princess Beatrice

The queen refused to talk to Beatrice for over six months in 1884, at a loss as to why Beatrice wanted to desert her. As Beatrice's siblings entreated the queen to permit the marriage,  Victoria, feeling betrayed used curt notes to communicate with Beatrice. In November 1884, Victoria realised that "Baby" was not going to submit.

She allowed the marriage on the condition that Beatrice and Henry lived with her. This was agreed, but it was forever an irritation to Henry, who, after their 23rd July 1885 wedding on the Isle of Wight, learned quickly that Victoria still expected utter devotion and compliance from her daughter. He was of secondary importance.

Rumours circulated about Henry's suspiciously close relationship with Beatrice's sister Louise, Duchess of Argyll. Apparently, Louise once sharply told Beatrice that Henry much preferred her to his wife. There was understandable friction at the palace.


Three People in the Royal Marriage

The marriage was happy except for those unsubstantiated rumours and Queen Victoria's reliance on Princess Henry of Battenberg, as she was now formally known and Beatrice's tendency to scurry to her mother every time she called.

Despite the queen's bestowal of numerous honours and roles on Henry, including Governor of Carisbrooke Castle on the Isle of Wight and a position on the Privy Council, he yearned to resume his military career. The queen vetoed this.

The couple had four children:

  • Prince Alexander of Battenberg. From 1917 1st (and last) Marquess of Carisbrooke. (1886-1960).

  • Princess Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg, later Queen Eugenie of Spain. (1887-1969).

  • Prince Leopold of Battenberg, from 1917 Lord Leopold Mountbatten. (1889-1922).

  • Prince Maurice of Battenberg, killed at Ypres during World War One. (1891-1914).


Malaria Claims Henry in 1896

Henry longed for a break from Queen Victoria's domination, so when the opportunity presented itself he eagerly set out to fight in the Anglo-Ashanti War in Africa. (This time, Queen Victoria allowed him to join the fight for reasons best known to herself).

Within days of his arrival in Africa at Christmas 1895, he fell ill. Malaria killed him on 20th January 1896 when he was being transported back to England. He was thirty-seven years old. When Beatrice received the news, she said, "the life is gone out of me."

Henry was buried in St. Mildred's Church on the Isle of Wight, the same church where he and Beatrice were married.

Beatrice, stoically and dutifully, continued to be her mother's secretary as she raised her children. Queen Victoria increasingly relied on Beatrice, and she rewarded her daughter with the Kensington Palace apartments that she had been raised in. She also made Beatrice the Governor of Carisbrooke Castle and the Governor and Captain-General of the Isle of Wight. Beatrice held these roles until her death.


Queen Victoria's Journals

When Queen Victoria passed away on 22nd January 1901, her son and successor, Edward VII, asked Beatrice to edit their mother's journals. The queen had requested that anything that could cause offence should be removed before the journals were released to the public. All content which was deemed too passionate, too indiscreet or embarrassing for Beatrice and the king's tastes was suppressed.

The journals took Beatrice thirty years to edit. What we have to peruse today is as much as two-thirds less than the original volumes that Victoria wrote between 1831-1901.

As arthritis and age took their inevitable toll on her, Beatrice embarked on another editing project. In Napoleonic Times related Augusta of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Beatrice's paternal great-grandmother's reflections on the Napoleonic Wars.


Beatrice Laid to Rest at St. George's and St. Mildred's

Beatrice's sons fought in World War One. Alexander and Leopold returned home, but twenty-three-year-old Maurice was killed in action at Ypres on 27th October 1914.

Alexander married and had one daughter, although it was widely believed that he was homosexual. Victoria Eugenie married Alfonso XIII of Spain. She carried the hemophilia gene, and their eldest son Alfonso, Prince of Asturias, was afflicted with the condition. Her brother Leopold was a hemophiliac and he died during emergency surgery in 1922.

Eighty-seven-year-old Beatrice died on 26th October 1944 at Bantridge Park, the Earl and Countess of Athlone's property in Sussex. On 3rd November, she was initially laid to rest in St. George's Chapel, Windsor and when the Second World War drew to a close, her remains were transported to St. Mildred's Church on the Isle of Wight so that she could rest beside "Liko" the man she'd fought so hard to marry.




Sources: