Friday 26 February 2010

Inside the Body of Henry VIII

There was an excellent program on the History Channel this week called Inside the Body of Henry VIII.
It was made last year and presented by historian Robert Hutchinson, medical historian Steve Bacon(see our blog on the Parham House study day23 September 2009)with Dr Lucy Worsley and Dr Catherine Hood.

The program looked at the health of Henry from his childhood up to his death and Henry was a tough character indeed. He was exposed to tuberculosis when young, he contracted smallpox and malaria during his lfe, and had a head injury whilst jousting when younger.
What finally made him give up jousting was the accident that knocked him unconcious for two hours in January 1536, he was 45 years old at the time, what was he doing on a horse in armour at that age? It was from this second head injury that his moods began to change and he became the tyrant and despot that history remembers him by.

The accident was gruesomely recreated by dropping at 1500lb weight from 14 feet in the air onto the carcass of a pig, yuk!
From this accident, the King did not take any more exercise but cointinued to eat as much as 5,000 calories a day and was 28(178Kilos) stone when he died, he also showed all the symptons of late onset type 2 diabetes. Lucy went round a supermarket and gathered up a typical week's food for the king, there was lots of it and plenty of alchohol too.

Robert and Steve dismissed the notion that Henry had Syphilis, there is simply no evidence in the household accounts for the purchase of any mercury which was the only recognised cure for the disease at the time and there were also no medical notes in the physicians reports either of treatment for external sores that characterises the disease.

The CGI graphics of the autopsy on the body were excellent and revealing, all in all a very well researched and presented program and well worth watching.

There was no mention of the Cushings syndrome theory(see our blog again) I must ask Robert about that the next time I see him.


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Thursday 18 February 2010

Mary Queen of Scots

18 Febraury 1587 on this day, Mary Queen of Scots was executed at Fotheringay castle and was buried at Peterborough Cathedral. The same grave digger performed the duty 50 years after he interred Catherine of Aragon. It was a grand death as Mary was dressed in a vivid crimson silk bodice and petticoat, the colour of martyrs. She gave a speech in defence of her catholic faith before putting her head on the block.

She had been a thorn in the side of her cousin Elizabeth for nearly 20 years constantly involved in plots to either get back her Scottish crown or usurp the throne of England. Elizabeth vacillated for so long before signing the death warrant and was said to be distraught when told that the deed was done.

Mary must be having the last laugh as when her son James I became King on the death of Elizabeth, he had her remains taken from Peterborough and placed in Westminster Abbey in a much grander tomb than Elizabeth's at the Abbey. It is also worth remembering that our present Soveriegn is decended from Mary as the Tudor dynasty ended with Elizabeth.

Peterborough Cathedral is on the tour itinerary of our Six Wives of one King tour.

http://www.tudorhistorytours.com/

Wednesday 17 February 2010

Rochester Cathedral

Rochester Cathedral is the second oldest in England after Canterbury, founded in 604 by Bishop Justus. Rochester lies on the direct route from London to Dover and overlooking the Cathedral is the mighty Norman keep of Rochester castle, besieged by King John in 1215. The present Knave dates from Norman times and is built of stone imported from Caen, the home of William the Conqueror in 1086.

Amung its many memorials is one to Charles Dickens who mentions the Cathedral in his writing, there is also Colonel John Chard VC Royal Engineers, hero of the battle of Rorkes drift in the Zulu wars.

The Cathedral plays a prominant role in the Tudor story, with not one but two of it's bishops becoming martyrs after being executed by the monarch. Bishop Fisher, stalwart defender of King Henry's first wife Catherine of Aragon, was beheaded 22 June 1535 on the orders of Henry VIII for refusing to acknowledge that the King was head of the Church in England. Bishop Fisher died as a catholic, curiously Bishop Ridley died as a Protestant, executed by Mary 20 years later 16 October 1555. Ridley was burnt at the stake during Bloody Mary's reign of terror against protestants and he had the double misfortune to have supported Lady Jane Grey during her 9 days as Queen.

Henry VIII first met Anne of Cleves here in the Bishops Palace within the precincts of the Cathedral, that meeting led to Henry saying "I like her not!" but was it him that said the she was the flanders mare? That line probably came much later on. (see our blog of 27 December). The Cathedral holds Tudor festivals with music and dancing from the period and of course Henry gets to meet with Anne again.

Tudor History Tours visits Rochester during the Elizabeth I tours on four occasions during this year. See our tour program on our website for further details.

www.tudorhistorytours.com

Wednesday 10 February 2010

Eltham Palace

Eltham Palace, the boyhood home of Henry VIII and what a truly unique place it is. It's really two palaces in one seamlessly joined together, but you step from one world to another in the blink of an eye.
It is the first place ever that I have been instructed to put on blue plastic overshoes before entering to protect the floors. Recorded in the Domesday book of 1086 as being owned by Bishop Odo the half brother of William the Conqueror. The Palace has changed hands many times, it was owned by Edward II from 1305 and Charles I was the last king to visit here. After the Civil War the place began to decay and fell into a state if decline and disrepair.

The Palace was largely rebuilt in the 1930's by Stephen and Virginia Courtauld in a magnificent Art Deco style with some incredible marquetry inlaid panels and the master bedroom has hand painted relief wall paper that would make you feel like you were sleeping in Kew gardens.
Step through a doorway into the Great Hall and you are transported back over 500 years to when it was built in 1480. The Hammerbeam roof was the third largest built at the time after Westminster Hall and Hampton Court Palace. It was lucky to survive a direct hit from a German bomb in 1940, you can still see the scorch marks on the minstrel gallery floor.

Half a dozen gardeners were hard at work preparing the grounds for the spring, when the place will be a blaze of colour. Much of the Old Palace ruins can still be seen within the grounds especially along by the sunken rose garden. With the bridge crossing the moat you can easily imagine Henry VIII as a boy fishing for the huge carp that lazily swim there.

A really remarkable place and I look forward to the spring time when the weather is warmer and the gardens are in full bloom.


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Monday 1 February 2010

Don't lose your head

On January 30th 1649 Charles I parted company with his head. The Tudor connection here is that he was born in 1599 when Elizabeth was still on the Throne of England and it was Charles's father James I that followed her onto the throne.
It's incredible to think that after Elizabeth reigned for 45 years, it took less than that time, less that two generations, for the country to tear itself to pieces in a civil war. Even more incredible is that the after being King for 24 years Charles should lose his head after losing the war.

Curiously, long before 1649 when the population was more religious and more superstitious, it was considered horrendous bad luck if Lady Day 25th March ( the annunciation, when the Angel Gabriel told Mary that she would bear the Christ Child 9 months later) fell at Easter. The last time that happend was...1649. Check your diaries we're OK this year.

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