Catherine Howard Execution: Henry VIII’s Fifth Wife Beheaded

Introduction On a cold February morning in 1542, the Tower of London witnessed one of history’s most tragic executions. Catherine Howard, barely twenty years old, walked to the scaffold where her husband, King Henry VIII, had condemned her to die. Her crime? Concealing previous relationships and allegedly committing adultery after becoming Queen of England. This … Read more

Elizabeth I’s 40+ Marriage Proposals: Virgin Queen’s Diplomacy

Introduction What if the most powerful monarch of the 16th century turned marriage proposals into weapons of diplomacy? Elizabeth I of England did precisely that, receiving over 40 marriage proposals during her 45-year reign whilst never having the slightest intention of walking down the aisle. From kings and emperors to archdukes and princes, Europe’s most … Read more

Lady Jane Grey’s 9-Day Reign: Tudor Succession Crisis 1553

Introduction In the summer of 1553, a sixteen-year-old girl found herself proclaimed Queen of England for just nine tumultuous days. Lady Jane Grey’s brief reign represents one of the most dramatic episodes in Tudor history, a period when religious tensions, political machinations, and succession disputes collided with devastating consequences. Yet the legal foundation for Jane’s … Read more

Henry VIII’s Contradictory Biblical Annulment Arguments

Introduction In 1533, Henry VIII presented what he believed to be an unassailable biblical argument for annulling his marriage to Catherine of Aragon: Leviticus 20:21, which declares that a man who marries his brother’s widow “shall be childless.” The King’s theologians argued that this divine curse explained why Catherine had suffered multiple miscarriages and failed … Read more

Henry VIII’s Anne of Cleves: The ‘Flanders Mare’ Who Outlived All

Introduction Among the many scandalous tales of Henry VIII’s matrimonial adventures, none quite matches the extraordinary story of his marriage to Anne of Cleves in 1540. What began as one of the most diplomatically important unions of the Tudor era quickly descended into what the King himself described as an unmitigated disaster, leading him to … Read more

Mary I’s Phantom Pregnancy: The False Heir of 1555

In September 1555, church bells rang across England as Te Deum services celebrated the birth of a royal heir. Foreign ambassadors penned urgent dispatches describing Queen Mary I’s labour pains, whilst courtiers whispered excitedly about the future of the Tudor dynasty. Yet no prince or princess ever emerged from the royal chambers at Hampton Court … Read more