The Foreign Courts That Created Anne Boleyn

The Foreign Courts That Created Anne Boleyn

Anne Boleyn didn’t arrive at Henry VIII’s court as an inexperienced girl dazzled by a king. She arrived as someone who had already been shaped inside two of the most sophisticated Renaissance courts in Europe. In this second episode of my Anne Boleyn series, we go back to the years that formed her: first to Mechelen, to the court of Margaret of Austria, regent of the Low Countries and one of the most powerful women in Europe - her court a cultural powerhouse famed for learning, art, music, and the rituals of courtly life. And then to France, where Anne served Queen Claude for nearly seven years, witnessing queenship up close and immersing herself in the Renaissance. Along the way, we’ll explore:
  • why Margaret’s court was called Europe’s “premier finishing school”
  • Anne’s own letter from abroad and what it reveals about her formation
  • the French court of Francis I and the Renaissance world Anne moved in
  • major events Anne may have witnessed, including the Field of Cloth of Gold
  • and the courtly love culture Anne absorbed abroad, and how that style of sociability would later be used against her in England
If you want to understand why Anne stood out when she returned home, and why Henry VIII saw her as more than a fling, you have to start here. Watch Episode 1 here: https://youtu.be/rF5zNyct0Lo #AnneBoleyn #TudorHistory #HenryVIII #Tudors #Renaissance #HistoryDocumentary #WomenInHistory #TudorEngland #FieldOfClothOfGold #FrancisI #ClaudeOfFrance #MargaretOfAustria

Episoder(999)

History Got This Wrong: Anne Boleyn Was Never “Too Low” for Henry Percy

History Got This Wrong: Anne Boleyn Was Never “Too Low” for Henry Percy

Was Anne Boleyn really too socially inferior to marry Henry Percy, heir to the powerful Earldom of Northumberland? For centuries, Anne Boleyn has been portrayed as an ambitious social climber, a woma...

23 Feb 7min

Anne Boleyn’s Last 18 Days: The Fall That Shocked Tudor England

Anne Boleyn’s Last 18 Days: The Fall That Shocked Tudor England

In May 1536, Anne Boleyn went from Queen of England to execution in just eighteen days. It remains one of the most shocking political collapses in English history - a moment that destroyed families, ...

19 Feb 5min

The Secret Promise, The Poet, and the Myths: Anne Boleyn Before Henry VIII

The Secret Promise, The Poet, and the Myths: Anne Boleyn Before Henry VIII

In 1522, Anne Boleyn returned to the English court, and within a few years, she was already at the centre of political tension, whispered promises, and poetic legend. Long before Henry VIII began his...

17 Feb 25min

Mary I’s Pregnancies Explained: London Celebrated a Prince… But There Was No Baby

Mary I’s Pregnancies Explained: London Celebrated a Prince… But There Was No Baby

In 1555, London celebrated the birth of a prince. Church bells rang. Te Deums were sung. Birth announcements were prepared. Only… there was no baby. Mary I didn’t just believe she was pregnant, she...

13 Feb 9min

The Truth Behind “Bloody Mary” -  A Beginner’s Guide

The Truth Behind “Bloody Mary” - A Beginner’s Guide

When you hear the name Mary I, you probably hear one phrase: “Bloody Mary”. A queen of fire and fear. A religious fanatic. A failure compared to Elizabeth I. But that version of Mary is a shortcut, ...

10 Feb 38min

Mary Boleyn’s Lost Years (1513–1522): What the Sources Actually Say

Mary Boleyn’s Lost Years (1513–1522): What the Sources Actually Say

What really happened during Mary Boleyn’s lost years? Between 1513 and 1522, Mary Boleyn, sister of Anne Boleyn, slips in and out of the historical record, leaving behind one of the most debated gaps...

7 Feb 18min

Anne Boleyn’s Lost Future: The Marriage She Almost Had

Anne Boleyn’s Lost Future: The Marriage She Almost Had

When Anne Boleyn returned to England from France in late 1521, she wasn’t coming back for love, ambition, or a crown. She was being recalled for politics. Her return was prompted not by royal intere...

3 Feb 25min

The Strangest Tudor Cures (And the Ones That Actually Worked) - A Beginner’s Guide to Tudor Medicine

The Strangest Tudor Cures (And the Ones That Actually Worked) - A Beginner’s Guide to Tudor Medicine

Hare brains. Hedgehog testicles. Mouse skin. Live pigeons. Tudor remedies are famous for sounding grotesque, and ridiculous. But were they really nonsense? In this second part of A Beginner’s Guide ...

30 Jan 8min

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