Two utterly different queens

Today’s post is only a day late, so I am making some progress.
On February 13, 1177, Eleanor and Henry’s daughter Joanna, age eleven, wed William de Hauteville and was crowned as Queen of Sicily. It seems as if she and William had a happy marriage, although I doubt that she was thrilled about his harim of Saracen slave-girls. Yes, medieval women were realists when it came to male fidelity, but I suspect Joanna would have seen a harim as a bit much. Certainly “my” Joanna thought so. Joanna has always been a favorite of mine, the daughter most like Eleanor, and I was delighted to give her so much time on center stage in Ransom.
And on February 13, 1542, silly little Catherine Howard became yet another victim of her husband’s monstrous ego. When Henry VIII discovered that she’d had a colorful past prior to their marriage, he was so outraged that he pushed a bill of attainder through Parliament making it treason for an “unchaste” woman to marry the king, then sent Catherine to the Tower, where she was beheaded on this date. In the past, we’ve discussed Jane Grey, who paid with her life for her family’s all-consuming ambition. So did Catherine Howard, although she had none of Jane’s intelligence or education, which makes her pathetic story all the sadder. Marriage to the aging, ailing, hot-tempered Henry was more than punishment enough for any sins of her feckless youth. Despite the legend, though, she did not say that she died the Queen of England but would rather have died the wife of Thomas Culpepper. Those about to be executed in Tudor England did not make defiant gallows speeches, wanting to spare their family from royal retribution. But Catherine really did ask for the block to be brought to her the night before her execution; she wanted to practice kneeling and putting her head upon it so she would be sure to do it correctly come the morning. How pitiful is that?
16 likes ·   •  2 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 14, 2017 11:24
Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Iset (new)

Iset I would've loved to have spent more time with Leonor and Tilda too... but since I am just insatiable when it comes to history I realise it's just wishful thinking not always practical with a novel's story flow.

As for Catherine Howard, I'm in two minds about her. The sheer recklessness of her actions seems foolhardy in the extreme, and her insistence on there being no precontract with Dereham, when it could've been her way out, is baffling. On the other hand, if her birthdate was at the lower end of the range, she really would've been a child with those men, and some historians in recent years have argued very plausibly - though not definitively - that Culpeper could've been blackmailing her rather than it being a willing affair. It may be a question we can never answer.


message 2: by David (new)

David Elkin I am finally reading Time and Chance. Your ability to bring the characters to life is an incredible talent they you possess. At the part where Beckett just became Archbishop and it is like reading about an impending train wreck. Thanks so much for all your great books.


back to top

Sharon Kay Penman's Blog

Sharon Kay Penman
Sharon Kay Penman isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Sharon Kay Penman's blog with rss.