The Banker Who Tried to Overthrow Queen Elizabeth I

The Banker Who Tried to Overthrow Queen Elizabeth I

The Ridolfi Plot Explained He wasn’t a soldier, a spy, or a nobleman, but a Florentine banker who nearly toppled a queen. In 1571, Roberto di Ridolfi masterminded one of the boldest conspiracies of Elizabeth I’s reign, a plan backed by the Pope, Philip II of Spain, and Mary, Queen of Scots. His goal? To invade England, overthrow Elizabeth, and restore Catholic rule, all funded through secret banking channels. But one intercepted letter at Dover changed everything. Join me, historian Claire Ridgway, for the true story of The Ridolfi Plot, a tale of spies, Spanish gold, and the banker who talked too much. #ElizabethI #TudorHistory #RidolfiPlot #MaryQueenOfScots #TudorConspiracies

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April 11 - Victory for Anne Boleyn, finally!

April 11 - Victory for Anne Boleyn, finally!

On this day in Tudor history, 11th April 1533, Good Friday, King Henry VIII informed his council that Anne Boleyn, the woman he'd married in January 1533, was his rightful wife and queen, and should b...

10 Apr 202011min

April 10 - The Gregorian Calendar versus the Julian Calendar

April 10 - The Gregorian Calendar versus the Julian Calendar

On this day in Tudor history, 10th April 1585, Pope Gregory XIII died from a fever. He was succeeded by Pope Sixtus V.   Pope Gregory is known for his reform of the calendar. He introduced what is now...

9 Apr 20206min

April 9 - Catherine Willoughby's second husband

April 9 - Catherine Willoughby's second husband

On this day in Tudor history, 9th April 1582, Richard Bertie, member of Parliament, evangelical, and second husband of Catherine Willoughby (other married name Brandon), Duchess of Suffolk, died at Bo...

8 Apr 20208min

April 8 - The Second Martin

April 8 - The Second Martin

On this day in Tudor history, 8th April 1586, leading Lutheran theologian Martin Chemnitz died in Braunschweig in Germany. He was aged 66.   Martin Chemnitz is known as the Second Martin, with the mor...

7 Apr 20206min

April 7 - Robert Aske, the rebel leader

April 7 - Robert Aske, the rebel leader

On this day in Tudor history, 7th April 1537, Robert Aske and Thomas Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy, were sent to the Tower of London.    Both Aske and Darcy had been involved in the Pilgrimage of Grace rebel...

6 Apr 202010min

April 6 - The serial secret husband

April 6 - The serial secret husband

On this day in history, 6th April 1621, in the Stuart period, Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford, died at Netley in Hampshire. He was aged around 81 at his death.   Now, Hertford is known for his se...

5 Apr 202011min

April 5 - The Pope was wrong...

April 5 - The Pope was wrong...

On this day in Tudor history, 5th April 1533, the English Church's legislative body, Convocation, ruled that the pope was wrong and that Henry VIII was right, i.e. it ruled that the Pope had no power ...

4 Apr 20203min

April 4 - William Strachey and Shakespeare's The Tempest

April 4 - William Strachey and Shakespeare's The Tempest

On this day in Tudor history, 4th April 1572, William Strachey, writer and historian of Virginia, was born in Saffron Walden in Essex, England. Strachey's account of the 1609 shipwreck of the Sea Ven...

3 Apr 20205min

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