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Sexual Heresy at the Court of Henry VIII
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
Scholars have long described the reasons for Anne Boleyn's execution and the nature of her guilt. Recent analyses have suggested that Henry VIII lost interest in his second wife after she miscarried of a male child in 1536 and that his secretary, Thomas Cromwell, wanted to exclude her family from positions of power at court. With royal approval, so it is claimed, Cromwell caused the queen and five men to be executed for the fictitious crimes of adultery and incest. Although some scholars have conceded that she was careless of her honour, most have assumed that Anne was not guilty of these charges. Historians have consequently adopted the cynical conclusion that Cromwell succeeded in orchestrating a wide-ranging conspiracy involving numerous people with the intention of using the legal system to kill six innocent victims in order to satisfy both his own schemes for power and the king's domestic whims.
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References
1 I am grateful to Sir Geoffrey Elton, University of Cambridge, for encouraging me to ask some very difficult questions about the relationship of the five men who were executed in May 1536, to Anne, to each other, and to a variety of people at court. This article is in great part the product of that dialogue and of his critical review of an early draft; in October 1986 a version of it was given at the British History Seminar, Huntingdon Library, San Marino, California, which was chaired by David Cressy, California State University at Long Beach; the most recent studies of Anne's fall are Ives, E. W., ‘Faction at the court of Henry VIII: the fall of Anne Boleyn’, History, XLVII (1972), 169–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Warnicke, Retha M., ‘The fall of Anne Boleyn: a reassessment’, History, LXX (1985), 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for the context of her fall see Elton, G. R., Reform and Reformation: England, 1509–1558 (Cambridge, 1977), pp. 250–72Google Scholar; Elton, G. R., ‘The political creed of Thomas Cromwell’ in Studies in Tudor and Stuart politics and government (Cambridge, 1974–1983), 11, 215–35Google Scholar.
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58 B.L., MS Otho C.x.222 in Letters and papers, x, no. 798 for Smeaton and no. 876 for the indictment. For the privy chamber see Starkey, David, ‘Representation through intimacy’, in Symbols and sentiments, ed. Lewis, Joan (London, 1977), pp. 201–4Google Scholar.
59 Ives, E. W. (ed.), ‘Letters and Accounts of William Brereton of Malpas’, The Record Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, CXVI (1976), 2 and 36–40Google Scholar, suggested that Cromwell arrested Brereton because he opposed the government's policy in Wales. But Ives assumed that the accusers were cynically using political motives for their arrests and convictions. Furthermore, Sir Edward Seymour, a competitor of Cromwell, obtained Brereton's Welsh offices. For the comment about Brereton's speech see Aymot, , ‘Memorial’ p. 65Google Scholar. Lady Worcester was probably the second wife of Henry Somerset, second earl of Worcester, and a half-sister to William Fitzwilliam, Brereton married the sister of her husband. Lady Worcester's letter referring to money she had borrowed from Anne, is Letters and papers, XIII, i, no. 450Google Scholar. See Cokayne, G. E., The complete peerage, ed. White, Geoffrey H. (London, 1959), XII, iiGoogle Scholar. That the ladies had no recollection of any intimate contact between the queen and either Sir Thomas Wyatt or Sir Richard Page during the relevant two-year period may have been the reason they were released when the others were executed. For a discussion of her relationship to Wyatt, see Warnicke, Retha M., ‘The eternal triangle and court politics: Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn, and Sir Thomas Wyatt’, Albion, XVIII, 4 (1986), 565–79CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Brereton was probably not well known to Rochford's associates; see Poems of Thomas Wyatt, pp. 157–8.
60 In Calendar of state papers Spanish, IV, i, 586, Chapuys said that Wingfield's widow, who was married to Nicholas Harvey, was with Anne at court. She could only be the widow of Sir Richard Wingfield, as Ives, , ‘Faction’, pp. 173 and 187–8Google Scholar, tentatively identified her; for the evidence at the trial see Sir John Spelman, p. 71; for her life see the biographies of her husbands, SirHarvey, Nicholas and Tyrwhitt, Robert in History of parliament: the Commons, 1509–1558, ed. Bindoff, S. T. 3 vols. (london, 1982)Google Scholar; for Harvey, , see also Collins peerage of England, ed. SirBrydges, Egerton (London, 1812), IVGoogle Scholar; for a letter of Anne to her, see B.L. Vesp. F. XIII fo. 198; and Letters and papers, v, no. 12.
61 Elton, G. R., Reform, pp. 251–4 and 280–1Google Scholar; see also R. M. Warnicke, ‘The Fall’.
62 For Anne's comment see B. L., MS Otho C. x. 2 24 b; for Cranmer's, letter, see Letters and papers, X, no. 792Google Scholar; and Burnet, Gilbert, The history of the Reformation of the Church of England (Oxford, 1816), 1, 364–7Google Scholar. The bishops to whom Anne was referring may have included Canterbury, Worcester, Ely and Sarum. See William Latimer, fo. 30; Alexander Alesius found Cranmer in tears over the plight of Anne. See P.R.O., SP. 70/7.
63 For treason trials see Elton, G. R., Policy and police, pp. 274–326Google Scholar; and ‘The rule of law in sixteenth-century England’, Studies, 1, 260–84.
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