Tudor History Challenge XI

Tudor History Challenge XI

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The questions are here and the answers are below (no cheating!)

1) Who said: “I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of a king of England too”?

2) Who was this priest describing - “a tyrant more cruel than Nero, for Nero destroyed but part of Rome, but this tyrant destroyeth this whole realm”?

3) “If my head would win him a castle in France, it should not fail to go” was said of Henry VIII, but who said it?

4) “Much suspected of me, nothing proved can be, quod Elizabeth the prisoner” - The Lady Elizabeth, future Elizabeth I, was said to have etched this on a window during her house arrest at Woodstock, but why was she a prisoner?

5) Who is being described in these words: “For her behaviour, manners, attire and tongue she excelled them all...”?

6) Who wrote to their former tutor saying: “I cannot marvel at thee and lament the case that thou sometimes was the lively member of Christ but now a deformed imp of the Devil”?

7) That homicide and unnatural tyrant which now unjustly bears dominion over you” Who said it and who was it about? 2 points

8) “Little man, the word ‘must’ is not to be used to princes” - Who said this?

9) “When I think again that you shall depart from me again it makes my heart die to think what fortune I have that I cannot always be in your company” - who wrote these words in a letter and to whom? 2Points

10) Who was apologising for their eyesight, and therefore poor handwriting, with these words: “I beseech you to pardon me, for verrayly Madame my sight is nothing so perfitt as it has ben”?

11) Who wrote: “Princes at all times have not their wills, but my heart being my own is immutable”?

12) Who ended a letter “Lastly, I make this vow, that mine eyes desire you above all things” and to whom were they writing? 2 points.

ANSWERS -------

1- Elizabeth I to the troops at Tilbury, August 1588. 2- Henry VIII during the Pilgrimage of Grace Rebellion 1536 3- Sir Thomas More 4- Mary I and her privy council believed that Elizabeth was involved in Wyatt’s Rebellion 5- Anne Boleyn, described by Lancelot Carles, secretary to the French ambassador 6- While she was in the Tower, Lady Jane Grey wrote this to her former tutor, Thomas Harding, who had converted to Catholicism. 7- This is how Henry described Richard III in letters sent to those who were in support of his claim to the throne. 8- Elizabeth I said this to Robert Cecil, her Secretary of State, when she was dying and he advised her to take to her bed. 9- Catherine Howard to Thomas Culpeper 10-Henry VII to Lady Margaret Beaufort 11-Mary, Queen of Scots, to Ambassador Randolph 12-The dying Catherine of Aragon to her former husband Henry VIII.

Episoder(999)

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 i...

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Mary Tudor and the Will to Fight

Mary Tudor and the Will to Fight

Mary Tudor is often remembered through a single, brutal label: “Bloody Mary.” But in the summer of 1553, she revealed a very different side of herself. In this second part of my series on the two tou...

17 Jan 9min

Lady Jane Grey and the Will to Rule

Lady Jane Grey and the Will to Rule

Lady Jane Grey is usually remembered as a tragic pawn, a frightened girl forced onto the throne by ambitious men. But that story simply doesn’t hold up. When Jane was told she was queen, she wept an...

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The 1553 Succession Crisis: A Beginner's Guide

The 1553 Succession Crisis: A Beginner's Guide

Three Monarchs - 13 Days - One Crown   In July 1553, England experienced one of the most volatile succession crises of the Tudor period. In just thirteen days, the crown passed from a dying teenage ki...

13 Jan 30min

The Homes That Shaped Anne Boleyn

The Homes That Shaped Anne Boleyn

Before Anne Boleyn left England for the European courts, before Henry VIII, before scandal, drama, queenship, and tragedy... there were two places that shaped her earliest world, places that were home...

10 Jan 8min

When was Anne Boleyn born? 1501 vs 1507 and Why It Matters

When was Anne Boleyn born? 1501 vs 1507 and Why It Matters

Was Anne Boleyn thirty-five when she died… or just twenty-eight? Because the answer completely changes how we read her downfall in 1536. I’m historian and author Claire Ridgway, and in this companion...

8 Jan 18min

The Making of Anne Boleyn: Her Family, Upbringing and Early Life

The Making of Anne Boleyn: Her Family, Upbringing and Early Life

Anne Boleyn is so often remembered at the height of drama, standing at the centre of Henry VIII’s court, caught in politics, passion, and tragedy. But Anne did not appear from nowhere. Before the sca...

6 Jan 30min

When Christmas Really Ended: Twelfth Night & Epiphany in Tudor England

When Christmas Really Ended: Twelfth Night & Epiphany in Tudor England

Christmas in Tudor England wasn’t a single day, it was a season. And Twelfth Night was its final, glittering crescendo. In this final episode of my Tudor Advent and Christmas series, I explore how Tu...

5 Jan 5min

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