I am delighted to share with you a guest post by Nancy Bilyeau, author of the historical thrillers The Crown and The Chalice. I have had the pleasure of reading both of Nancy’s novels and I cannot recommend them highly enough. They are completely engrossing and true page-turners and today you have the opportunity to go into the draw to win The Chalice!
Book Description:
(PS. The ebook of The Chalice is on sale for $2.99 in North America on Amazon US & Barnes & Noble until 30 June.)
Competition Closed
Conditions of Entry
For your chance to win an autographed hardback copy of The Chalice you must be subscribed to On the Tudor Trail’s newsletter (if you are not already, sign up on our homepage).
Then simply leave a comment after Nancy’s guest post, ‘The Death of Elizabeth Boleyn’, between now and 4 July 2013.
Thanks to Nancy Bilyeau’s generosity, this giveaway is open worldwide!
Don’t forget to leave your name and a contact email.
Good luck!
The Death of Elizabeth Boleyn by Nancy Bilyeau
On Lambeth Road, on the south bank of the River Thames in London, is the elegant Garden Museum, offering visitors lush gardens to walk through and an array of horticulture tools to examine. The shop sells books, kits, soaps, embroidered bags, and thumb-pot waterers. Somewhere beneath the shop floor—no one knows exactly where, since there are no markers or plaques—lies the body of Elizabeth Boleyn, the mother of Henry VIII’s second queen and grandmother of one of England’s greatest rulers, Elizabeth I.
Her present obscurity is not a shock; there is no irony to this. Instead, her unmarked grave is the outgrowth of a life remarkable for its silence amid the noise–the style, the wit, the fiery ambition and brilliant allure of the Boleyn family.
How did Elizabeth Boleyn feel about her striving husband, Thomas; her notorious daughters, Anne and Mary; her erudite son, George? Was she proud to be mother-in-law of Henry VIII—and did that emotion flip to outrage and grief when Anne and George were beheaded in 1536, among the charges being that they committed incest? Or, perhaps, like her spouse, the Earl of Wiltshire, Elizabeth was grateful to survive the brutal coup that destroyed the Boleyn faction and even willing to court the king’s favor once more.
We don’t know as much about Anne Boleyn as we think we do. The movies and miniseries and novels and articles and twitter handles create the impression of a certain kind of woman: beautiful, bold, and ruthless. Someone who could steal a king from a prestigious first wife of many years’ standing. But there are surprisingly few authenticated likenesses or letters of Anne Boleyn’s, and many descriptions of her behavior come to us from the pens of her enemies.
If the facts about Anne Boleyn are minimal, they are fragmentary for her mother. One assumption is that most women’s lives from this period are not recorded. But other mothers of Henry VIII’s wives come into greater focus, with one sad exception. Queen Isabella of Castile is of course a famous figure of history; the other royal mother, Duchess Maria of Cleves, comes through in her religious choices, her relationships with her husband and children, her loyalty to her homeland. Jane Seymour’s and Catherine Parr’s mothers are present in history; we can feel their care taken for their families. Only Joyce Culpepper, wife to that ne’er do well Edmund Howard, is more of an enigma than Elizabeth Boleyn, and that is because she died before Catherine Howard reached the age of 10.
But Elizabeth Boleyn outlived Anne. She was there, in the courts of Henry VII and Henry VIII, the daughter, wife and mother of prominent courtiers. So how can there be so few mentions?
Elizabeth Boleyn does play a part in an unsavory scandal. There was a rumor that Henry VIII had an affair with her when he was young, before his marriage to Catherine of Aragon. Supposedly a man said to the king about his planned marriage to Anne that it would be a blot on his conscience, “It is thought that ye have meddled both with the mother and the sister.” The king replied, “Never with the mother.” And Thomas Cromwell leaped in, “And never with the sister.” (Cromwell’s attempt to clear his master’s reputation notwithstanding, Henry VIII’s affair with Mary Boleyn is accepted by historians.)
Elizabeth Boleyn was at least 11 years older than Henry VIII and giving birth to nearly a child a year during the last decade of the reign of the old king, Henry VII. The prince was kept under close watch by his father; he married at the age of 17. So any adulterous affair between the two seems improbable.
But then the Boleyns were the subjects of many scurrilous rumors. Elizabeth Amadas, wife of the royal goldsmith, is supposed to have said, “that the king had kept both the mother and the daughter” and that Thomas Boleyn “was bawd to his wife and two daughters.”
One of the worst of the anti-Boleyn rumors was that Henry VIII fathered Anne and thus he married his own daughter. Since Anne Boleyn was born most probably in 1501, when Henry Tudor was 10 years old, this is officially ludicrous.
We do know that Elizabeth and Anne Boleyn were fairly close. Anne was sent to the Low Countries and then France when very young, to receive a fine education, but that doesn’t rule out a strong bond. Lady Boleyn sometimes accompanied Anne as chaperone when her daughter was the beloved of Henry VIII. And when Queen Anne was in the Tower of London in 1536, under arrest, alternately stunned and hysterical, she said her mother would “die of sorrow.”
Two years later, Elizabeth Boleyn died. Was it of sorrow? The answer is … perhaps.
In the beginning and in the end, Elizabeth defined herself not as a Boleyn, but as a Howard. That could be the key to understanding her.
Anne Boleyn’s aristocratic blood comes from her mother’s family. Elizabeth was the granddaughter, daughter and sister of a duke of Norfolk. The Howards are considered one of the “old” families of Henry VIII’s court, but in fact theirs was not ancient nobility. Richard III raised John Howard to the dukedom in 1483, as reward for loyalty during his struggle for the crown. John was a knight’s son and, through his mother, the grandson of a duke.
John Howard died at Bosworth alongside Richard III. His son, Thomas Howard, the earl of Surrey, was imprisoned and his lands were taken. He spent years proving himself to the Tudors and buying back Howard property. This all took place during Elizabeth’s childhood. The Howards were a close-knit family, and probably the struggle to survive royal suspicion brought them even closer.
The poet John Skelton, while a guest of the Howards, wrote a poem in tribute to several young women, including Elizabeth. The poem suggests she had a potent allure. Based on the outstanding attractiveness of Anne, Mary, and George Boleyn, it seems safe to assume that their mother was lovely.
Elizabeth married Thomas Boleyn when she was 17 or 18. He was intelligent and determined—ferociously so. He set himself to climb the ladder of Tudor society: courtier, knight, ambassador, earl, all the way to Lord Privy Seal. Elizabeth gave birth to perhaps seven children (four died young) and ran his households. She may have served both Elizabeth of York and Catherine of Aragon at important occasions, but is thought to have mostly resided in the country, in Norfolk or Kent, at the family‘s castle of Hever. Although the couple must have lived apart for long periods—Thomas Boleyn traveled to France and Burgundy repeatedly for the king—there is no impression of estrangement. Many 16th century marriages worked this way.
“Most historians have felt that Anne’s father personified all that was bad about the court,” writes Eric Ives in The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn. Yet Thomas Boleyn shifts from hard to like to actively repugnant after the killing of Anne and George. He did not defend his children; in fact, he offered to serve on their jury. He left court after their deaths, yet wrote sycophantic letters to Cromwell. He lost the office of Lord Privy Seal but retained his earldom and seat on the king’s council. Incredibly, he attended the christening of Prince Edward, the child of Anne’s replacement, Jane Seymour, in 1537.
Thomas Boleyn died on March 12, 1539. He was buried in Hever Church, and King Henry VIII ordered that Masses be said for his soul. But Elizabeth was never laid to rest with him. She in fact pre-deceased him by a year; one court paper said she was “sore diseased with the cough” as early as 1536. Perhaps her children’s murders robbed her of the strength to recover and she suffered a slow decline.
Still, it was in her choice of where to die that Lady Boleyn’s voice can perhaps, finally, be heard.
She died on April 3rd, 1538. A nobleman wrote in a letter: “My lady Wiltshire was buried at Lambeth on the 7th… She was conveyed from a house besides Baynard’s Castle by barge to Lambeth with torches burning and four banners set out of all quarters of the barge, which was covered with black and a white cross.”
Before it was the Garden Museum, the building on Lambeth Road where Elizabeth Boleyn was buried was the Church of St. Mary’s. The church was abandoned in the 1970s, and sponsors moved forward to transform it into a museum. One person who was buried beneath its floor was John Tradescant, a famous gardener of the early 17th century. Before Tradescant lived and died, the church was the chosen resting place for some of the Howards. It was very near to the family’s manor house of Lambeth. A memorial plaque, now lost, honored Thomas Howard and his wife, Agnes, Elizabeth’s parents. At least one of her sisters rested beside her.
Even more significantly, Elizabeth did not die at Hever, her husband at her side. Seriously ill, she left Kent and traveled to London. Elizabeth Boleyn spent her final days in the home of Hugh Farringdon, the abbot of Reading, near Baynard’s Castle, not far from Lambeth.
Who was the abbot of Reading? Born Hugh Cook, he was a Cluniac monk who took the name of Farringdon and became abbot in 1520. Reading was one of the wealthiest abbeys in England. King Henry was the abbot’s guest in January 1521, and Farringdon later became a royal chaplain. The abbot took the king’s side during the Great Divorce, signing the Articles of Faith that acknowledged the supremacy of Henry VIII over the pope. In 1532, the king gave the abbot a New Year’s gift of twenty pounds.
It seems probable that Abbot Farringdon was known to Queen Anne Boleyn, and thus to her mother. Perhaps some sort of friendship sprang up between them and, for whatever reason, Elizabeth Boleyn turned to him when she was dying.
Certainly the other members of the Boleyn family would not have turned to a monk in their final days. Anne Boleyn, her brother and her father were all fervent supporters of church reform. The tenets of such reform were a direct connection to God in faith, without the intercession of priests, monks, and abbots. But did Elizabeth in her heart agree with this? It is possible that she did not find comfort in the church that her onetime son-in-law had created.
There is a final chapter in the life of Abbot Farringdon, and not a pretty one. Although he had conformed to the king’s will for years—unlike other monks and abbots and friars who chose martyrdom—in 1539, just after his abbey had closed, he was charged with high treason. The abbot was accused of giving money to the rebels of the Pilgrimage of Grace. This rebellion took place in 1536 and 1537, and it is inexplicable why no steps were taken against him for so long a period afterward.
Abbot Farringdon was entitled to be tried by Parliament but his death sentence was passed before trial began, by order of Thomas Cromwell. On November 14, 1539, Hugh Cook Farringdon was hanged, drawn and quartered before the gatehouse of his own abbey.
So ended the life of Elizabeth Boleyn’s friend, yet another victim in the brutal and capricious reign of Henry VIII.
Visit Nancy Bilyeau’s official website here.
I am really excited to read this! I am really getting into medieval and Tudor history and love the different variations to the stories we think we know!!
I would love to win this book! Seems incredibly interesting and I would cherish it so since I am a huge historical novel fan!
Many thanks for this wonderful and informative article. I enjoyed it very much!
I have always wondered what could be the fate of Anne Boleyn’s mother. Therefore I’m looking forward to learn more about Elizabeth Boleyn from your exciting new book … Love from Pia Bondesson
I have always been fasinated in the tudor history. i can’t wait to read more and more.
this book sounds interesting! I would love to know more about Elizabeth Boleyn 🙂
I enjoyed reading about yet another Elizabeth, very much. I wonder if Anne’s daughter was named after both of her grand mothers. I can not imagine the sorrow she must of felt after losing 2 of her brightest & vivacious children. I just wish she wasn’t overlooked by historians as she was ‘only’ a woman.
I have just discovered this wonderful site and love it ! I have loved reading about Anne Boelyn all my life so this is just fantastic and I thank you for all your work!
Thank you for the article! I love everything Tudor-related and I am especially interested in Anne Boleyn and her family!
I would love to read yet another Tudor book! I am very slowly collecting them as I can only afford to buy them at yard sales and thrift stores.
Fascinating! Would love to read it!!
Anything one reads about this period is thoroughly gripping and wrenching. You aren’t just reading about it, you’re along for the ride as you navigate its complexities. And what a ride it is!
I love any kind of historical fiction and it’s great to see different authors interpretations of characters. I love the The Tudors and reading just how shocking life was at court especially around Henry VIII. I would love to read this book and hope I win, I’ve never won anything before.
Great article. I enjoyed learning more about Elizabeth Howard. She truly was a tragic figure.
Dear Nancy,
I am now past the mid point of “The Chalice”…
My first question is…. What am I going to read next? I love historical novels and I love thrillers, and yours are the most absolute perfect combination of both.
I came upon “The Crown” in Audible.com and listened to the book while running! (if any of you love running and reading, I highly recommend audio books!). By the way, Nicola Barber is a fantastic narrator! As I said, I am now past the middle of your second book and I do not want it to end.
Since I only have your book in digital format getting a signed copy would be a treat, but mostly it would be such an honor!
Hurry up and write more, will you? 🙂
Maria
Fascinating stuff Nancy I am very interesting in women’s lives in Early Modern History, they had such restrictions placed on them so little freedom and yet there were so many remarkable and ambitious women.
I’d love to read this!
What a wonderful guest post. It’s fascinating to read all about Elizabeth Boleyn.
Thank you for the opportunity to win a copy of The Chalice.
jaffareadstoo(at)hotmail(dot)co(dot)uk
I have always wondered about Anne’s mother. What did she feel? Perhaps she did NOT approve of her husband’s meddling; thus separate gravesites. Thank you!
IF I DON’T WIN IT….I will surely buy it!! Good luck everyone!
I loved reading about Eliabeth. I think the book The Chalice sounds like my kind of read!
I love to read about this part of history, although Richard III is the one I enjoy the most, the Tutors hold many interesting stories. This site looks very interesting and I look forward to visiting it again !
I read anything and everything Tudor history…would love to win this book!
So sad, that at her final resting place, the gardener, John Tradescant, seems to be remembered more than Elizabeth Boleyn, the mother of a most famous queen, Anne Boleyn. At least he has a gardening museum there and even a gift shop too , while the memorial plaque honouring the Howard family, has been long lost and I assume not been replaced! Thank you for the giveaway.
I love to read anything and everything Tudor…would love to winthis book!
I would love to read more. It would be wonderful to win this book!
I would love to win this book. I have been reading your blog for a while now on feedly and love it. I am just starting to learn about the Tudors after seeing the tv show. I would love to learn more and get a better understanding. Hope to see many more post from you. Thanks Laura
I dislike Henry VIII more each time I read about him.
I’d love to win the sequel to The Crown!
kescah at comcast dot net
I was always curious about Anne and Mary’s mother. Great piece on her thank you.
I would like to win the book. I want to know more.
Thanks for this insightful article, Nancy. I read about Thos. Boleyn in the past, and he always sounded too ambitious for his own good.
I love anything that has to do with the English Court.
I’m a Costume Drama junkie when it comes to movies and television series
like “The Tudor’s,The Borgia’s,DeVinci’s Deamon’s”
One of my all time favourite films about Queen Elizabeth I is the
1971 film “Mary,Queen of Scots”
It was the story of Queen Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scotland who
was Elizabeth’s prisoner till her death.
Glenda Jackson played Elizabeth I wonderfully.
Infact, I think she even played her better than Bette Davis did!!!
Thanks for the post, would love a chance to win the book!
Felicia
I’m very intrigued by the synopsis. I would love to win this book. But even if I don’t win, I’m still going to get it.
Fascinating! Sometimes it’s hard to remember that historical characters didn’t exist in a universe solely populated with other notable figures, but instead were influenced by those now lost to history. I’d never thought about Anne Boleyn’s mother and her influence upon the family.
I am looking forward to reading about the woman who parented Anne and Mary Boleyn!
Wow the Tudor’s just when you think you know it all along comes some amazing piece of history thanks for sharing with us
Great article. It’s very interesting to know more about Elizabeth Boleyn.
Thanks for the fabulous giveaway opportunity.
Loved your post. I’m always interested in the mothers of the famous and infamous. Would love to read your book.
Would love to have this book, would help me to understand more of the history, plus being of descendants of William might help my daughters understand more as well
This is amazing! I’m a HUGE Tudor fan, and read man many books about them – but Anne’s mother has always been a bit of a mystery!! Thank you for sharing <3
I get my hands on every Tudor book I can. The more I read the more I am fascinated by the history. I woul love to win the book and if I don’t….I’m getting it anyway!!!
I simply would love to win this book, I have never read anything about Anne´s mother. Just gossips in fictional novels. It would be amazing to have this book!!!!
Thanks, as always for the opportunity!!!!
A warm hug!!!
I would love to win the book, not only for me, but also for my girlfriend.
We are both a great Tudor fans! thanks for the chance!
Great idea for a book. I have always been fascinated by Anne´s life. I am looking forward to reading this!!! Thanks for the chace!!!!
I was always curious about Anne and Mary’s mother. I would love to win the book. I want to know more.
Thanks Natalie and Nancy for the chance!!!
Great article, I would love to read this book!!!!
Thanks Natalie for sharing!!
It would be great to win a copy of this book, I read The Crown by Nancy, and as you say Natalie, It is completely engrossing and a true page-turner.
Excellent page, and articles!!!
It will be wonderful to read a book about Elizabeth, it is so true that little is known of her when you consider that all her surviving children became well recognised people of history.
This will, hopefully help banish the myth that Elizabeth died while her children were young, and that Anne, Mary and George had a step-mother.
I would love to win this book, but if I don’t I will be definitely buying it.
Many thanks for the post and the opportunity.
What an opportunity, if I don´t win this book, I would buy it anyway!!!
Thanks natalie for your excellents post, always updating my tudor knowledge!!!
Hi!!!!!!!!
I want to win this book!!!!! please!!!!!! please!!!!!!please!!!
I´m crossing my fingers!!!
Good luck everyone!!!!