Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society - Anne Boleyn | Secret Lives of the Six Wives
Episode Date: November 22, 2024How did Anne Boleyn go from being a commoner to being the Queen of England?As soon as she arrived in the Tudor court she stood out from the other beautiful women who were throwing themselves at Henry ...VIII, but made him wait for seven years before they eventually got together.In the second episode of our limited series, Secret Wives of the Six Wives, Kate is joined once again by Tudor export Nicola Tallis, to help us find out more about the woman who helped alter the future of England.What made some say that she seemed more French than English? And what happened to make her meet her bloody end?Find out more about Nicola Tallis' work: https://nicolatallis.com/This episode was edited by Tom Delargy. The producer was Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long.All music from Epidemic Sounds/All3 Media.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.You can take part in our listener survey here.Betwixt the Sheets: History of Sex, Scandal & Society is a History Hit podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I lovely betwixters, it's me, Kate Lister, and you are you and you are listening to Betwix the Sheets.
And it's a very, very naughty, spicy podcast.
And because of that, I have to tell you, this is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adulty things in an adulty way.
And you should be an adult too.
So if you've snuck in here to listen to your mum's podcast without her knowing, well, be off with you.
We're not the podcast for you.
go and listen to a nice horrible histories and leave us alone.
And for the rest of you, let's get on with it.
Being a Tudor Queen was very difficult.
I mean, you got jewels and nice things, but wow, it was strict.
And if you were one of Henry the 8th wives,
well, then the rules just meant doing exactly what he said,
bending to every whim and desire, no matter how hairbrained or deranged.
But as history tells us,
That didn't always go to plan.
The women in Henry the 8th's life were smart.
She was a woman who had her own voice and wasn't afraid to use it.
Powerful.
She wanted to send Henry the Dead King's body as like a war trophy.
And rebellious.
She was a definite seductress who knew exactly how to play Henry.
But they could also be naive.
She is well aware that there is someone trying to get to the bottom of her.
previous life and she slips up.
And downright unlucky.
I think that there was no way that her life was ever going to be saved.
Who were these women that entered the volatile world of the Tudor Court?
They're known for their individual fates.
Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived.
But we're finding out who these six women really were.
And why there is so much more to them than just their husband,
a fat ginger serial killer with an oversight.
codpiece and a punch-aunt for jousting.
Join me in this mini-series
as we explore the secret lives
of the six wives.
What do you look for in a man?
Oh, money, of course.
You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you.
I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs
by just turning enough and pushing the fun.
Yes, social courtesy does make a difference.
Goodness, what beautiful time.
Goodness has nothing to do with it, Derry.
Oh, and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets,
the history of sex scandal in society.
with me, Kate Lister.
One thing that you could definitely say about Anne Boleyn
is she really set the cat among the pigeons of the Tudor Court
and then some.
Not so much set the cat among the pigeons
as ripped off all the pigeons' heads
and put the cat on the throne.
What that woman did was bonkers.
And to say that Henry VIII changed the course of English history
just so he could get his leg over Anne,
well, that would be an understatement too.
But was all of this a measure?
of just how charismatic and captivating Anne Boleyn was.
How did this unholy mess affect poor old Catherine Aragon,
who we heard about in the last episode?
And what were the wild accusations that Henry concocted
to get rid of Anne once his affections had waned?
Because they always do.
They always do betwixt us.
In this second episode of our mini-series,
The Secret Lives with the Six Wives,
I'm joined once again by the Rather Marvel,
Trudeau expert, Dr Nicola Talis, and she is here to help us get to know Anne Boleyn a little bit better.
So without further ado, let's do this.
And welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets. It's Nicola Talis. How are you doing?
I'm back. I'm great. You're back.
Yeah, I'm doing good. How are you?
I'm, well, I mean, this is the one that people are waiting for, I think. This is the mini episode on
Anne Boleyn. And try as we might, there is no escaping the magnetism of that woman,
even however many hundreds of years later, it still is. If we do any subject on Anbelin
history hit across any platform that we've got, it'll be a big hitter. People love her.
I know, she is kind of like this magnet that people are drawn to. Which really is. Why do you think
that is? I think that there are lots of reasons, really. I think. I think.
people feel a real injustice over the way in which she met her death and feel like they really
want to kind of fight her corner in that respect. And I think also that there is this real
kind of sex appeal about her. She is quite sexy and particularly when you think about
Catherine of Aragon, maybe slightly dowdy, like Anne is polar opposite of that. Could you imagine
And how pissed off Catherine of Aragon would be to know that a podcast on Anbelin got far more hits than the one on her.
Did Josh be fuming?
I know.
And all the merch as well, right?
Like, you still get the bags, the T-shirts.
I mean, it's everywhere.
Yeah, I know.
Amblin Mania.
Well, King Henry VIII certainly had Anbelin Mania, possibly the first person to have had this.
because he lost his shit completely about this woman.
Yeah, yeah, he was completely obsessed with her.
And she really played on that.
She was a real, real smart cookie.
She knew what she was doing.
And she really knew how to dangle the carrot and keep it there.
And, yeah, she was a definite seductress who knew exactly how to play, Henry.
So let's talk about,
where she came from them, because one of the points that you made in the last episode that
I hadn't considered is that she was a commoner. I suppose that's because, for like a pleb
like me, she seems really posh. But in regal circles, they actually looked down on her.
Yeah, she definitely didn't have any royal blood, although she came from a reasonable background.
She, but it wasn't royal by any stretch. She's the daughter of Sir Thomas Berlin and his wife, Elizabeth
Howard and Elizabeth Howard was the daughter of the second Duke of Norfolk. So, you know,
there's some good blood there for sure. But yeah, she is a commoner. And despite that,
she had quite a nice lifestyle. She was raised in a castle. So it wasn't too bad at all. But
there's no comparison with Anne and Catherine of Arrigan, for example.
Well, yeah, we should do a bit of a recap of poor old Catherine, just in case people listening to
this and didn't catch the last episode. She marries Henry the 8th. Everything is going rather well
for a few years until it's not. Yeah, exactly. And that is really exacerbated when Ambelin
comes onto the scene and she arrives at the English court in 1522 and by 1526, Henry is head over
hails for Anne.
I wonder if Henry was having problems in his marriage before Anne had turned up.
Like, I wonder if, like, maybe it would have fallen apart anyway.
Yeah, he was definitely so-called having doubts about the validity of his marriage as a result
of Catherine's first marriage to his brother, Prince Arthur, and had it or had it not been
consummated, Catherine would always say, no, it hadn't been consummated.
Henry would harbour suspicions that it had.
So, yeah, there were problems.
And, of course, Catherine had, in Henry's eyes, failed in her duty to provide him with that crucial male air that he needed.
She had had six pregnancies.
And sadly, the only child who'd survived was one daughter, Mary.
So in Henry's opinion, that marriage with Catherine, there were suspicions.
the reasons why this son hadn't materialised,
and he felt that perhaps it was because of this earlier marriage with Arthur.
And you mentioned last time there was a biblical verse, wasn't there,
that he keeps harking back to?
That's it. It was Leviticus,
and that said that basically,
he who uncovers his brother's nakedness shall be childless.
So Henry really used this as the key
to really kind of reinforce his need to separate from Catherine.
So there's definitely marital discord a brewing.
But if Anne hadn't arrived,
I suspect they would have just probably carried on as they were
because he had mistresses.
He had loads of mistresses.
But there was something about Anne, wasn't there?
Oh, there was definitely something about Anne.
She was truly extraordinary.
And what we have to remember as well is that her own sister
had been one of these mistresses.
I know.
Oh, it's all just Jerry Springer madness, isn't it?
It's people marrying into their brothers.
She often gets forgotten about, doesn't she?
Mary Bollin, tell me about her and how she met Henry.
Yeah, so Mary Beline was a member of Catherine of Aragon's household.
So she would have been, I know, it's all kind of weird and all very close, isn't it?
Yeah, it is.
That's kind of how it was.
We don't know a lot about her affair with Henry VIII, but it is likely that it
resulted in the birth of a child, a daughter named Catherine. And after this, or probably after
this, Henry seems to have lost interest and discarded her. So this was something he'd already done
before with at least one other woman as well who'd had a child by him. So Anne had seen this.
She'd seen first hands the way in which the king had treated and discarded women when they'd
served his purpose basically.
And she was determined that that was not going to happen to her.
And she held out for more, even when Henry offers to make Anne his sole mistress.
So no other mistresses but her.
And basically, yeah, exactly, queen in all but name.
Anne's like, uh-uh, no, I'm not having that.
It's marriage or nothing.
So she makes it very clear.
What do you think it was about Anne that was different about the other?
Because he's surrounded by beautiful women.
There are parents literally flinging their daughters in front of him
in the hope that he'll fancy them and make them his mistress.
What was it about Anne that was different,
apart from the fact that she wouldn't shag him,
but he must have been interested in her before that.
Yeah, I think it was something about her in terms of her personality
rather than her looks.
Because certainly in terms of looks,
Nobody at the time really thought that she was a conventional beauty.
She was dark when the fashion was for blondes.
And she had this kind of swarthy olive complexion when it was fashionable to be pale.
Certainly nobody by 16th century standards considers her to be exceptionally gorgeous.
But I think it's the fact that she had this real elegance and sophistication and confidence
about her, which she'd gained whilst she was abroad during her youth. Because first of all,
she had spent some time in the court of Margaret of Austria, where she had, you know, been educated,
and then she had gone to France where she'd served in the household of Queen Claude. So
she had picked up this real style and sophistication during her time abroad. And in fact, when she comes
back to England, somebody actually says that you'd never have taken her for an English woman,
but more a French woman, because she's got these really smart, polished manners,
and she just really oozes style and charisma.
And I think that it's really that that really grabs Henry's attention
and sets her apart from other women at court.
She's really smart to work out that the role of the royal mistress is notoriously precarious.
It's predicated entirely on the king fancying you.
And if anyone thinks back to their dating history of how quickly you can go from,
oh, but I love them to how fast that can happen.
And then your entire career is actually dependent on that.
I mean, it's terrifying.
But she was smart enough to work that out that, no, if you sleep with him
and then you've given him what he wants,
then he will probably just cast you off.
Yeah, exactly that.
like Anne believed that she was better than that
and that she deserved more than that.
And I think very quickly she recognised the passion
that Henry felt for her and she really, really played on that.
So she knew what she was doing
and she felt that there were really high stakes to be played for.
She recognised that weakness in Henry's marriage with Catherine of Aragon
and I think that it's not that long before she perceives an opportunity there.
I'll be back with Nicola and Anne after this short break.
I've sometimes wondered, I don't know how, what you think of this,
but I've got a little theory is that maybe her gameplay of like,
well, no, we're not going to have sex, I won't be a mistress, we're not going to have sex.
Maybe she just genuinely didn't want to be his mistress, but it's the king.
It's like she's in this awful position of like, what are you going to do?
Turn down the king and he's trying to cheat on his wife and he's promised her all this stuff.
Maybe she just genuinely didn't want to.
think that there's definitely an element of that to begin with. I mean, Henry at this point, he's still
quite attractive. He's starting to get bigger. How old was he, ish, at this time? So by this
point, he's in his 40s. At this point, many people do still consider him to have lots of promising
physical attributes. So he's not, he's not the giant gross monster that we see kind of later on in life,
dragging around an ulcerated leg. That's not the thing yet. But I think to begin with,
I'm not sure that Anne particularly was attracted to him. I think that that's something that
maybe does come along a little bit later. Yeah. And the weirdest thing is that she's in court
as Catherine of Arrigan's lady in waiting, you know, like her official friend, I suppose.
It's so weird. What on earth must Catherine have been thinking of this, that she's got to hang out
with this woman that she knows her husband is trying to get away with.
And it's, oh, God.
I know.
I mean, yeah, inwardly, I'm sure Catherine must have been absolutely fuming.
Must be.
But outwardly, she carries on very much as normal.
She shows Anne no kind of signs of animosity.
She's very polite to her.
So she is very much still acting as a very, very classy queen at this point.
I think for quite a while she was convinced that,
and would go the same way as all of these other women and that Henry would tire of her.
So what does it look like then when Henry the 8th is desperately trying to get you to be his mistress?
What does wooing look like?
I mean, today we've got text messages and you up texts at 3am.
I'm going to assume he's not doing that.
But what does he do to try and woo and seduce Anne Boleyn?
So Henry's seduction technique comes in the form of letters and presence.
And he writes her a whole series of these letters that we've still got.
Unfortunately, we haven't got Anne's replies.
Those were destroyed.
But in these letters, some of them are quite explicit.
Interesting.
Yeah, they really are.
He talks about the fact that he'd like to kiss her pretty duckies.
So basically he wants to kiss her boobs.
Right.
And, you know, and he's sending her presents.
He's sending her bracelets that have got an.
an image of him included in their design.
Well, how would you receive that today if someone sent you a text saying,
I'd like to kiss your pretty duckies and here's a necklace with me, in it?
I don't know, I think that might be restraining order time.
It's quite intense, isn't it?
It's weird.
But not for him.
This was completely normal for him.
Yeah, and you can kind of see his desire and his desperation for Anne growing through these
letters.
So I think she probably, even though we don't have her responses,
I think she probably kind of gave him just enough to encourage him to carry on with this.
And this kind of tactic of keeping Henry at arm's length, it works.
And it works for years.
The play hard to get tactic, I mean, it's a dangerous one, anyone out there thinking of giving it a go.
But generally people want what they can't have.
And if they think that if someone has to do a bit of chasing, it can be an interesting.
interesting dating technique, but not for years and years, and that's what this is.
Yeah, it's really intense. And I think that it does actually put quite a lot of strain and a lot of
pressure on Anne. God, it must do. Of course, nobody expects the annulment between Henry and
Catherine of Aragon to drag on for as long as it does. So that is the reason why Henry is
kept at bay for such a long time, because nothing less than Queenship will do for Anne. But,
Yeah, it puts a huge toll on her and their relationship, actually.
And we know they do have a couple of fallouts.
There is stress.
And I mean, surely that would be the same for anyone in that situation.
It's a completely unprecedented and weird situation for anyone to be in.
I'm actually thinking about it, the longer this is going on,
it's like the king has got, well, no, he doesn't have that much to lose
because he can just sod off again and be the king.
But Anne, the longer this is going on, the longer this is going on,
the longer she isn't marrying somebody herself and having her own children.
And back then, that was a woman's security.
She needed to do that.
So the longer that this is dragging on, the older she's getting,
the less her own marriage prospects are increasing.
That must have been very stressful.
Yeah, definitely.
There's this real sense from Anne as well that her youth is kind of escaping from her
because she's probably born in 1501.
So by the 1530s, she's in her 13.30s, she's in her 13.
probably. And by that time, if you've not had a child, you're considered to be quite old to
even be thinking about it. So yeah, there is this real sense that time is running away and the
stakes are really, really high for Anne as well. Because if this doesn't work out, what's she going to
do? What is she going to do? If that hadn't worked out, who knows what would have happened to her?
I mean, she gets this sort of piece of security, I guess, in 1532 when Henry creates her
Marquist of Pembroke in her own right.
Okay, well played.
Yeah, exactly.
That's kind of like the first official sign, I suppose, that marriage isn't far away
on the horizon and that things are hopefully going to work out for her.
You know, she's got her own income from this as well.
So that's quite good for her.
But yeah, I think in terms of, I mean, there wasn't really any other option for her.
If it didn't work out, it had to work out.
But it must have crossed over at a certain point of like, well, like she's all in now.
This has got to pay off.
And the other thing I didn't quite realize about Amblin,
because she's often painted as this terribly sexy seducer and all the rest of it.
But not only was she incredibly intelligent, but she had real ideas about religious reform.
I mean, it's not entirely because.
of her that Henry abandoned the church. But those ideas about Protestant reformation,
they are coming from Anne. Yeah. So Anne had probably been influenced in these ideas whilst
she was in France and she was at the court of Francis I, whose sister Marguerite is one of the
key reformers of the day. And Anne knows her. She's probably influenced by her. And then Anne shows
these books to Henry, one of which is called the obedience of a Christian man. And this really kind
of advocates the idea that it is not the Pope, who is the head of the Catholic Church. And that's
sought to be something that, you know, Anne uses to influence Henry. So one of your main
focuses of research is not just these Tudor Wives, but the jewelry that they wore, telling their
lives and looking at who they were through their jewelry, which is fascinating. But Anne Boleyn,
tell me about some of her most famous jewelry. When I'm thinking of it, I think the big B that she's
got. Tell me about that. What was that? Yeah, that big B. And I always think if Anne was here today,
she'd have done quite nicely out of royalties from that, you know, because it's available in all of the
gift shops at the Tower of London and Westminster Abbey. And anyway, yeah, it's kind of
of iconic and an iconic part of Anne's identity. And that was the purpose of it. It was a bee
proclaiming Anne's pride in her Berlin roots. And people always ask me, well, what happened to that
bee? And the answer is, I don't know for sure. We don't know. Is it vanished? It's vanished. And I think it
was probably melted down and turned into something else because it was so personal and so specific
that probably there wouldn't really be anyone else who wished to wear a bee,
particularly after Anne's death.
But she really liked those kinds of initial jewels,
and she had several pieces in her collection.
And I think that that's just really interesting
because I often think of Anne as being a trend setter.
I should say, actually, that trend, it didn't begin with Anne
and it didn't end with Anne, but people still wear initial jewels today.
It's still something that's very, very popular.
And I think that she definitely had a hand in shaping that. And we know she loved her bling.
I mean, who doesn't? But Anne really did. And Henry's constantly giving her gifts of jewelry.
And these particular ones, I think, showed how much her Berlin identity, aside from being
Queen of England, really meant to her. She was proud of it. Okay. So when is it make or break?
When do they actually get married? I mean, what is even the,
timeline with this. He breaks, does he marry first and then break with Rome or does he break
with Rome first? And where's Catherine in the midst of all of this? It must have been absolute
mayhem. Absolutely mayhem. Chaos. Nobody really knows what enough's going on. So Catherine has
actually been banished in 1531. And then what we see happening is that Anne and Henry marry secretly
in January 1533. I'm sure that's a good sign. Secret marriage is, hmm.
Secret marriages, yeah, but what's happened is that they've consummated the marriage by this point,
and Anne is newly pregnant, so they have to be married now.
Okay, okay.
And then what happens is then a few months later in the May,
that is when the marriage between Henry Deake and Catherine of Aragon is formally declared,
none and void, and then Anne becomes queen publicly.
And then she's given this coronation, this magnificent coronation on the 1st of June.
And everybody at that point is expected to celebrate and be happy about this.
Of course, they're not because love for Catherine of Aragon is still very strong.
And at Amberlin's coronation, it's really quite funny because everywhere, in all of the decorations,
we see Henry and Anne's initials combined everywhere, H.A.
Well, some of the crowds in the coronation procession used this as a way of mocking Anne by saying,
ha, ha, ha, so it doesn't go down well.
No, it wouldn't.
I mean, that's the thing, in it is like you can bully the courtiers and you can surround
yourself with people that think this is a great idea.
But ultimately, you're not going to convince the public at large.
They were very much team Catherine.
Yes, exactly.
So Anne's really fighting a losing battle.
from the start. And the only thing that gives her confidence at this point, I think, is the baby that
she's carrying, which is confidently expected and predicted will be that coveted boy.
The amount of pressure in this, like he's not only as he divorced his wife, the much beloved
Catherine of Aragon, no precedent for this before, and married, Anne Boleyn, who's a commoner,
but he's broken with Rome. It's like, like, that's like Brexit times a billion.
It's like torn Europe apart.
And all that to get married,
the pressure on them must have been insane.
And Anne knows, well, she's done it now.
She's given it up.
She's had sex for them now.
Like, you've got to have this baby.
Yeah, it's a huge amount of pressure.
It's terrifying, actually.
And yeah, I think that that, I mean,
there must have been that worry in her that, well, hang on a minute.
What if this isn't actually a boy?
what if this doesn't actually go to plan?
But I think that that thought actually never really crossed Henry's mind at all.
No, Hila thought of it as this is all falling into place.
This is clearly God himself saying that this is a great idea.
It's clearly going to be a boy.
Yeah, exactly that.
And then, of course, sadly, it's not a boy.
Did they have a happy marriage?
I know they've been, how long were they doing this dangling courtship for it?
Was it seven years?
Was it longer than that?
Yeah, it's a long time.
So, as I say, he sort of, he becomes.
She becomes really interested in Anne in 1526 and then it's 1533 by the time that they're married.
So that's the whole kind of dangling carrot thing.
And then I wouldn't say that it was a happy marriage because...
How could it possibly be a happy marriage?
I think also it's on Anne's part.
She doesn't make that transition from being in charge, like having all the power and the control
as effectively a mistress without the sex.
to wife very well.
She doesn't do that at all.
And this is where we see the differences
between her and Catherine of Aragon
becoming really, really clear
because where Catherine had been prepared
to look the other way
when Henry's off having his affairs
and's not prepared to do that.
Oh, right.
She's really fiery.
So that causes conflict with Henry.
He doesn't like that at all.
So basically all these qualities in Anne, her passionate nature, her kind of self-confidence,
all of these things that he'd really loved and that had inflamed him when she was his mistress,
they really begin to repel him when she's his wife.
And it doesn't take that long at all for him to tire of her.
See, if they'll do it with you, they'll do it to you.
That is a very old lesson.
And Anne should have known that.
I'll be back with Nicola and Anne after this short break.
Who was he having affairs with that made her mad?
Well, with Anne's own ladies.
Of course.
I shouldn't laugh, but there is a part of me there.
I think that's just Team Catherine of just like, well, Anne, sorry,
but you sort of reap what you so love.
Yeah, exactly that, exactly that.
So it's interesting.
And then I think she kind of reaches this point where she thinks,
well, okay, if he's going to have mistresses, then perhaps he can at least have ones that are sympathetic to me.
And there's some evidence that she tried to shove one of her cousins under Henry's nose in a bid, you know, hopefully that Henry would then be kinder towards her.
So where does this all start to go wrong then?
Like how does Anne misplay this particular game?
Because she's very, very smart.
I think that it's interesting what you said there is that she just wasn't able to try.
to be in a wife because the role of a wife and a queen is just to put up and shut up
pretty much. Yeah, yeah. So what happens is that in the beginning of 1536 and Miss Carries of
a child that has all the appearances of being a son and that is devastating both to her and to
Henry, because thus far, all that she's achieved in terms of producing children is exactly the same
as Catherine of Arrigan. They've got one surviving daughter in the form of Elizabeth.
And by this point, Henry's passion for Anne has long since faded and he's begun really pursuing
one of her ladies in waiting in the form of one Jane Seymour, who will come to, I'm sure.
And Anne at this point also has really earned the enmity of Henry's chief advisor, Thomas Cromwell. And they've kind of had different views over religious policy, mostly the dissolution of the monasteries. And with this kind of latest failed pregnancy, Henry's well and truly tired of Anne. And it's probably under Cromwell's auspices that a plot is engineered to,
remove Anne and then replace her with Jane. And so it comes to light, apparently, that Anne has been
not only plotting the King's deaths, but also that she's been engaging in several affairs with men
around the court and more crucially, someone closer to home, in the form of her own brother.
These are mad charges. I mean, they really are, even by the standards of the day. I mean, they're
through him witchcraft there as well, didn't they? And all kinds of stuff. I suppose just as a
start of question to all of this, why didn't Henry just find some way to annul it? Why didn't he just go,
I don't want to be married to you anymore? Why was there this need for this spectacular
string of accusations to really demonise her? Why couldn't you just, because that's what he tried
to do with Catherine of Arrigan. Just go away. Just go away. And I'll give you some money.
I think really that is kind of the answer. He'd been through all of this before with Catherine of
Barragan. He'd seen the way in which that had played out. Catherine had not gone down quietly.
And he'd gone to such great lengths to marry Anne Berlin in the first place that actually
only the most terrible of charges and terrible of reasons could be used as justification
to remove her after all of that. And so that's why they really needed to be things as
disgusting as killing the king and as having an affair with your own brother to be able to
ensure that Anne couldn't escape. Was there any seed of truth in any of these accusations at
all? Or was it all jumped up nonsense? Yeah, exactly that. It's all completely falsified.
I mean, we can see later on when evidence of these charges are brought to light and Anne is
accused of having sex with some of these men in certain places, that she wasn't even in those
places at the times that these events were supposed to have taken place. So it is all
completely concocted and fabricated. And she was never going to get away with this, was she?
And it's almost like we're going to come up with so many things to accuse you of treasonous things
that something is going to stick. Yeah, exactly that. I mean, she had no chance. She had
absolutely no chance. I think that there was no way that her life was ever going to be saved.
And I think that really execution was ultimately the only way out of it.
Do you think that she saw any of this coming or was this just a huge shock and surprise?
Was she just like arrested one day and had no idea that this was coming?
Yeah, I don't think that she saw it coming at all.
Wow.
I think that she knew that something was a foot because a couple of days,
before she was arrested, she had spoken to her chaplain and asked him to keep an eye out for
her daughter, if anything were to happen to her. So she's obviously worried that there is going to be
something coming to light. And she knew she was aware that she had had a dangerous conversation
with one of the men who would be accused of adultery with her and that this had been overheard.
So I think that there were signs that she was worried. But yeah, what happens next in terms of
suddenly being arrested, taken to the Tower of London, and then the news that all of these men
and her own brother have been sent there to join her as well. I think it comes as a complete bolt
out of the blue to her. And she stams the ground too. We were talking in the last episode how
Catherine of Aragon didn't bud. She doesn't bud Jesus. She doesn't give any ground to this and refuses to
assent to any of it. Yeah, exactly. Anne is a strong character and she,
also isn't prepared to admit to things that are nonsensical and that she quite clearly hasn't done.
So no, she really does stand her ground on this. Like, there's no headway to be given whatsoever.
She doesn't admit to any of these charges at all.
Wow. And she's found guilty, obviously.
She's found guilty. And unfortunately, then the sentence for that is to be burned or beheaded at the king's will.
Yeah, I know.
And I think she was worried for at some point that actually perhaps she would be burned
and was fearful of the fire.
But that course doesn't happen.
Henry, as a special favour to her, sends to, I mean, good old bloke that he is.
Yeah, yeah, cheers, mate.
I know.
I know.
Sends to France for a special executioner who uses a sword to come to England to perform the task of removing
his second wife's head. And yeah, I think he considers this to have been quite a merciful
last act on his behalf for the woman that he'd once been prepared to move heaven and earth
for. And he didn't attend the execution, did he? He wasn't there. No, he wasn't there.
No doubt he would have heard about it afterwards because there were enough people who knew Anne,
well, who did attend, including actually Henry's illegitimate son, the Duke of Richmond,
and he was there in the crowd watching.
So who knows, he might have gone back and told Dad about it afterwards.
And how did Anne meet her death then?
I think you would have had to have dragged me kicking and screaming
and shouting obscenities about the king to the scaffold.
But she actually went, which was pretty dignified.
She was, she was really dignified.
She was determined to make a good end.
And I think also, let's not forget that, like Catherine of Aragon,
she's got a daughter.
So she recognised that there was a need to,
to keep her safe, to keep her well and in the King's good graces. So she does make this short
speech in which she actually says quite nice things about Henry. Yes, she does. Far too nice,
really. Yeah, far too nice. But I think that that's all very much with her daughter in mind.
And then she has her head removed with a single clean blow of the French executioner's sword.
What happened to her head? We wasn't put on a spike, was it?
No, the head wasn't put on a spike, but no, it was actually put with her body into an old arrow chest.
So clearly a lot of thought and care had gone into that.
And then her remains were interred in the Chapel of St Peter, Advuncula, and the Tower of London.
And that is where they remain to this day.
We haven't really touched on her relationship with Elizabeth, her daughter,
who would obviously go on to be one of the greatest monarchs.
But were they close?
Did they ever close?
She wouldn't have been there, would she?
She wouldn't have been watching that.
No, no.
So Elizabeth isn't even three years old at the time that Ambelin is executed.
And she probably wouldn't really have had any memories of her mother either.
But it is clear that Anne did really dote on her daughter.
And even though she didn't raise her as such, I mean, she wasn't there every day doing her nappies.
Elizabeth was put into the care of other people, a whole household of nursery staff.
We see that Anne was busy buying Elizabeth expensive gifts of clothes.
And I think that this tells us that she was basically styling Elizabeth as a younger
version of herself.
And she was proud of her daughter and she wanted her to be seen and accepted as Henry the 8th's legitimate air.
and she was really eager to kind of enforce that view.
And she believed that her daughter did have a right to rule after her father.
So final question then, and you might have just answered it,
but what do you think Anne Boleyn's legacy is?
I mean, it has to be more than just, you know,
a jumped-up trollop that seduced the king.
She's far more complex than that.
What do you think her legacy is?
Well, I think that there's two things.
I think first of all, yes, there is Elizabeth.
There's no escaping from that.
She gave us one of our greatest monarchs,
a female monarch who showed strength, character, determination.
And actually, I think that that is what Anne's other legacy was, or is,
is a woman who wasn't afraid to make her voice heard in a man's world
and who did try to wield power and assert power in her.
own way and yeah who ultimately had a king eating out of the palm of her hand. So you have to be
pretty extraordinary to be able to do that. So she was a woman of immense character and we shouldn't
forget that. Nicola, you have been marvellous to talk to once again. Thank you so much and I will
see next time for Jane Seymour. Can't wait. Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Nicola for
joining me. And if you like what you heard, don't forget to like review and follow along
whatever it is that you get your podcasts. If you'd like us to explore a subject, or maybe you
just wanted to say hi, then you can email us at betwixt at history hit.com. We've got episodes
on everything from pubic hair finally coming your way after many, many requests for that
particular topic, as well as the next installment in this limited series. And who else would it be?
It's James Seymour. This podcast was edited by Tom Delagie and produced by Stuart Beckwith.
the senior producer was Charlotte Long.
Join me again betwixt the sheets,
The History of Sex Scandal in Society,
a podcast by History Hit.
This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.
