Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society - Kateryn Parr | Secret Lives of the Six Wives
Episode Date: December 20, 2024At the time, surely Kateryn Parr had her reservations about being Henry VIII's sixth wife?Aside from being a tyrannical maniac who'd just beheaded his last wife, Catherine Howard, he was getting old, ...angry and his ulcerous leg was getting smelly.However, Kateryn was smart - she was the first queen to be a published author - and she loved the glitz and glamour of her new position.What was her life like before Henry entered the picture? How did she narrowly escape being sent to the tower for heresy? And why was her marriage after Henry so controversial?In the sixth and final episode of our limited series, Secret Wives of the Six Wives, Kate is joined by Tudor export Nicola Tallis, to help us find out more about the woman who would thrive as a queen and go on to live to survive Henry VIII.This episode was edited and produced by 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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Hello, my lovely betwixters.
It's me, Kate Lister.
I am back once again with Bertwix the sheets
and you are back once again with your listening ears on.
Hurrah!
But before we can go any further, I have to tell you,
this is an adult podcast,
spoken by adults to other adults,
bad, adulty things,
and an adulty way covering a range of adult subjects
and you should be an adult too.
We call that the fair do's warning
because once we've said it to you,
if you continue listening and you happen to get offended,
well, tough, that's kind of on you
because fair do's,
we did tell you.
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 Eighth's wives,
well, then the rules just meant doing exactly what he said,
bending to every whim and desire no matter how airbrained or deranged.
But, as history tells us, that didn't always go to plan.
The women in Henry the Eighth'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.
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 oversized codpiece and a penchant for jousting.
Join me in this mini-series as we're excited.
explore the secret lives of the six wives.
Oh, money, of course.
You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you.
I make perfect confidence of whatever my boss needs by just turning it up and pushing the fun.
Yes, social courtesy does make a difference.
Goodness, what beautiful time. Goodness has nothing to do with it, Jerry.
Hello, and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the History of Sex Scandal in Society with me, K. Lister.
I can't quite believe it, but we are here.
The finale of our limited series, The Sixth and Final Woman,
who's etched in the history books for being Henry VIII's last wife, Catherine Parr.
He was only 55 when he died, you know.
How many more could he have squeezed in if he'd clocked up another decade or two?
But Catherine Parr was the final one.
After all of the chaos and the tragedy of the women that came before her,
there seems a very regal calm about Catherine Parr.
Dare I say it?
A dignified end to a story which,
thanks to the bloated tyrant she married,
a man, by the way, who married so many women
that three of them were called Catherine,
had many indignant moments along the way to put it mildly.
Despite her having two prior marriages to Henry,
Catherine Parr fit right in as the Queen of England.
How did she use her power to become an influential leader
and stepmother to Mary Elizabeth and Edward?
And as the last woman standing when it comes to playing the Henry games,
what became of her after he died?
In this final episode of Secret Lives with the Six Wives, I am joined by, of course,
author and impeccable Tudor expert Dr Nicola Tallis to help us get to know Catherine number three a little bit better.
Without further ado, let's do it.
Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets. It's Nicola Tallis.
How are you doing?
I'm absolutely brilliant, thank you Kate. It's so nice to be back again.
For our final instalment, and we've got to be.
got to the end, to the final one, the one who outlived, if it had kept going, God knows
how many wives you would have actually had. Yeah, I know. I often think that myself. I wonder if
Catherine thought that too. Yeah. But Catherine Parr, not to be confused with Catherine Howard,
who he looked at in the last episode. So to paint the picture of where we've got up to,
Catherine Howard lost her head in quite dramatic circumstances,
and it all came out that she hadn't been a virgin when she married Henry
and she'd been, well, they said she'd been carrying on with other people.
Today we would have said that it was a child abuse, but okay.
And there was some, well, there was an admission that she'd been fraternising,
I suppose you'd say, with Culpeper, even if it wasn't actually sex,
It was meeting and flirting and trisps and sneakiness that you shouldn't be doing when you're the queen.
So she loses her head and by all accounts Henry was gutted about it.
He was really upset.
If only there was some other way that he could not have ordered his wife's head to be cut off.
I know.
I know, right.
I mean, he is absolutely devastated at the loss of his fifth wife.
And I mean, he could have perhaps been forgiven for thinking that marriage wasn't for him at this point.
A lot of other people must have been. A lot of other people around it must have been thinking,
look, you've had a really good go at this bud. You've had five cracks of the whip now.
Maybe this just isn't for you. Well, yeah, quite right. But again, Henry's still fixated on this idea
of having another child. It's still ongoing. Yeah.
Okay. So despite what other people must have been thinking, he decides, I need another wife.
But just imagining his advisors around him, it's like, shit.
shit, not this again.
Okay, so how does Catherine Parr even get dragged into this?
Who is she? Where is she from?
Was there any suggestion that she would ever have been queen?
No, absolutely not.
And she's quite an unusual choice of bride for Henry in lots of respects,
because by the time she comes to his notice, which is in 1543,
she has been widowed twice herself.
So she's already got her own experiences of marriage.
And she was the daughter of Thomas Parr and his wife, Maud Green,
who Maud Green had actually been a lady in the household of Henry's first wife,
Catherine of Aragon.
And in fact, Catherine Parr had probably been named for Catherine of Aragon as well.
So there's this kind of strange link there too.
And yeah, Catherine is widowed twice.
Her second husband dies in March 1543.
And it seems that within a very short space of time,
Catherine is at court.
She's at Henry's court here.
She catches his eye.
And before long, he is determined to make her his wife.
Does this not seem like there's some hypocrisy in this?
He's just cut his last wife's head off.
for not being a virgin when they got married.
And now he's really interested in a woman that's been married twice.
Yeah, I know.
It seems like a really strange thing to do.
But I think that with Catherine Parr,
she was more mature than his last wife, Catherine Howard.
Catherine Parr is in her 30s at this point.
And she's proved herself to be a good wife to her first two husbands.
She hasn't had any children.
However, she does play the role of staff.
debt mother to her second husband's children from his first marriage. And I think that there was
something in that that quite appealed to Henry. Let's not forget, he's got three children of his own,
Mary Elizabeth and Edward, who have all been left without mothers. So I think that whole idea of
having a positive female role model to look after his children as well would also quite have
appealed to him. But it's clear as well that he was quite physically attracted.
to Catherine as well. So this precedent that Catherine said of being a wife and being a wife
successfully without cheating on our husbands effectively, I think was something that quite
upheld to Henry. It's weird though, isn't it? Because if he's still hell bent on getting a male
air, that he would go for a woman that was in a 30s, today very young Ida said, but by the
standards of the day, if that's really what he's interested in, then you could have gone younger. And also
somebody that's been married but has never had children. Like her fertility must be in question.
It seems like an odd choice for him. Yeah, it does in that respect. I think her second husband,
he was older than Catherine. So perhaps they may not have necessarily expected to have
children together, who knows. But there's this view with Catherine Parr that Henry might have
viewed her more as a nursemaid because of the fact that he's not in great health. But
actually that isn't true at all. We know that Catherine was busy doing things to try and make
herself sexually attractive to Henry. So she clearly expected that to be an important part
of their relationship. Like she buys these special lozenges to make her breath sweet and she buys
perfume and she tries to ensure that everything about her is enticing. So clearly she is
expecting to have a physical relationship with Henry.
And how old is Henry at this point? And what state is his health in?
I mean, his health is in a terrible state. He's in the bin, isn't it? Yeah, exactly. He is,
I mean, his eyesight is failing as well, which is no reflection on Catherine, I should add.
And he is still suffering from this ulcerated leg. He's huge at this point. He's put on so much
weight and he can barely walk, which makes it ten times worse. So he's definitely no fine physical
specimen. And he's in his 50s, by contrast to Catherine, who is in her 30s. So he is definitely
not particularly physically attractive by now. And how much time has passed between Catherine Howard
losing her head and Henry finding Catherine Parr and setting this marriage up? It's over a year, which is
almost quite a record.
It's quite restrained by Henry's standards, isn't he?
It really is actually.
He's done quite well to leave it this far.
And I think it's because after Catherine Howard died,
there was no really obvious candidate to fulfil this role.
And it's only when Catherine Parr herself becomes available
following the death of her second husband,
that perhaps Henry starts looking at her in that way.
but she also by this point was in love with somebody else.
Oh dear.
We have to have to mention that.
Who was she in love with?
She was in love with a gentleman called Thomas Seymour,
who was the brother of wife number three, Jane Seymour.
So she was quite attracted to him.
He was younger, more like her in age.
And she seemed to have been very, very fond of him.
And that feeling seems to have been reciprocated in terms.
And then Henry just steps in the way and makes it clear that he expects Catherine to marry him instead.
I'm just wondering, how does she get away with this?
But Catherine Howard didn't because that Catherine Howard fancied Culpepper.
Yeah, I know.
But I think at this point, nothing could actually happen with...
Oh, she was smart enough just to let it go then.
Yeah, like Henry makes it clear that he quite fancies Catherine.
and yeah, she's smart enough to know.
She later says, oh, I did really want to marry Thomas,
but God basically told me that I had to marry Henry
and that I was destined for greater things.
So I think she also maybe realized Henry's health isn't that great.
He's older.
Yeah, that maybe this marriage won't ask for too long.
All right.
So what was Catherine Parr like?
Do we have records of it?
Was she, because they're all so strikingly different, all of these women.
It's kind of hard to even get a handle on what Henry's type was.
Was she devoutly religious?
Was she fiery?
Was she ducyle?
Was she into arts and crafts?
What was she like?
Oh, Catherine is totally fabulous.
There's so much to like and admire about her.
She was someone who really, really cared about her appearance.
I mentioned those things about what she did to make herself attractive.
but she really, really loved clothes.
She really, really loved jewels and finery.
And she was also very scholarly.
So she'd been very, very well educated.
And she had a great interest in books.
She also just loved everything about the trappings of queenship.
And she seemed to be interested in everything.
She loved music as well.
She loved poetry.
she had a lot in common with Henry in that respect in terms of their scholarly interests, I suppose.
And intellectually, she was quite a good match for him, I would say.
Oh, that's interesting.
Okay.
And what about a jewellery?
Because I know that's your specialist area of research.
What kind of bling was Catherine rocking?
I'm so glad you asked Kate.
It's really nice to talk about it.
Yeah, she loved bling, particularly diamonds.
She really loved diamonds.
Well done.
Yeah, quite right.
she wasted no time in putting her own stamp on her jewelry collection. And she was busy ordering things
that really reflected her personality, I would say. So we know that she commissioned this very
special crown brooch that we can see in portraits of her that was made largely of diamonds.
And that really reflected her interest in royalty and being part of the royal family. And she also
ordered a brooch that contained images of herself and Henry. And she had a number of diamond
rings as well and beautifully lavish pendants, things that she really loved to show off. And
something that I also think is quite interesting and reflective of Catherine's personality is that
she spared no expense in covering all of her everyday items in jewels as well. So even the
the blindings of her books had jewels on them.
I mean, it's almost like she thought, well, I've got all this money.
What am I going to do with it?
Oh, yeah, I'll just add a few diamonds to my book cover.
Oh, I love that.
Yeah.
So she's quite extravagant in her own way then.
She's so extravagant.
In her first year of being queen, she orders 117 pairs of shoes.
Holy hell.
Wow, well done.
Yeah.
Because she has this reputation as being sort of like the nursemaid queen of like
of her pushing of a frail Henry around and kind of being like this rather.
subdued companion who, after looking at Henry's dating past, is just going to, well,
do what most of us would do, which is just shut up. But she seems to have had quite a lot of
character and quite a lot of pizzazz about her. Yeah, she definitely did. I mean, this was a woman
who, yes, Henry wouldn't have been her first choice of husband, but once she is his wife and
she's put into that role, she really excels at it. She's got character. She is not afraid to make
her voice heard in what's very much a man's world at this time.
So she has got this kind of quiet confidence about her
and this real sense of knowing who she is
and wanting to show people who she is.
I mean, even her toilet is covered in crimson velvet.
Oh, I like her.
I like her.
This is somebody who is going to absolutely make the most of this quite,
quite bizarre situation, actually, I would have said,
is that she's suddenly,
the fucking queen.
Like how has this happened
and married to a lunatic as well?
So we may as well, yeah, put a velvet on the toilet seats.
Do we know how they met, how, or when they met?
Or was it just one of these, like she was at court
and he fancied her stories?
Yeah, we don't know exactly how she met.
There was some suggestion that perhaps Catherine
had been part of the household of Henry's eldest daughter, Mary.
But that is disputed.
We don't know if that was the case.
She was just somebody who does seem to have been at court on occasion and someone who just caught his eye.
Wow.
It's interesting to sort of wonder what he was looking for at that point because he was constantly in pain.
He'd been heartbroken.
He's been king for a long time.
He's not doing very well.
He's fucked things up with, well, I won't say fuck things up, but he's split from Rome,
fucked things up depending on your perspective, I guess.
you sort of get the sense that maybe he was just looking for a bit of peace and quiet
or maybe I've got that wrong.
Well, I feel like he was not necessarily looking for a bit of peace and quiet.
I think that he was looking for a wife who was mature,
as Catherine was considered to be,
who could provide a bit of stability for his children and be a good role model to them,
which Catherine definitely was.
and yeah, who could offer him a bit of companionship,
but who he was also attracted to.
I think we do have to remember that he clearly was physically attracted to Catherine.
They did share a bed and Henry was still hopeful that they would have children,
which obviously they don't.
But I think Catherine really ticks a lot of boxes for Henry at this point in his life.
And he did see her as someone who wasn't going to screw him over,
who would just provide him with everything that he needed in his later years.
I'll be back with Nicola and Catherine after the short break.
Did she get on with his kids?
That's another crucial piece to this game, it seems to be, how you treat his children.
Yeah, yeah, she got on brilliantly with all of his children.
They all adored her.
Mary, the eldest, there was only four years between her and Catherine.
So the dynamic of that relationship is a bit different.
It's more like friends.
But with Edward and Elizabeth, who are still young children,
so Elizabeth is just about to reach her 10th birthday at the time that Catherine
marries Henry and Edward's four years younger.
So these are two children who are very much in need of a mother.
And Catherine was delighted to provide that and fill that role for them.
And she really did care for them.
And they adored her in turn.
And she was a published author as well, wasn't she?
Yes.
Yes.
The first Queen of England to publish, well, not just one book,
but two books under her own name and another one anonymously.
So, yeah, she was incredibly clever.
She was, there was a lot to admire about her.
She wasn't afraid to put her thoughts on paper.
And these are all religious works, the books that she published.
But yeah, she's definitely really, really intelligent.
and extraordinary.
And these books are bestsellers.
So there's clearly a demand for them.
And Catherine was obviously very proud of them
because she ordered copies of these books
to give as presents to her family and her friends.
So she was obviously somebody
who was not only huge intelligent in her own right,
but wanted other people to see that and benefit from that as well.
She was very popular but not popular.
with everyone because there were some plots against it, weren't they?
Yes, yes. In 1546, so the last year of Henry's life, these plots to remove Catherine
come to light. And these are really under the auspices of Stephen Gardner, who was Henry
the 8th Bishop of Winchester. And he was fearful of Catherine, really, because Gardner was very much
a Catholic religious conservative
and there were
rumours swirling that Catherine was
basically a secret Protestant.
So even though Henry
has removed himself and England from...
I was just about to say what?
Yeah, I know. So it's quite confusing
but even though Henry has removed
England and himself from
papal authority in Rome
and established himself as head
of the Church of England, he is
still very much a Catholic at heart.
It's only the authority of the Pope that he objects to rather than the religious beliefs themselves.
So Henry's Catholic at heart and there are people at court like Gardiner who are also Catholic.
But it's feared that Catherine has got religious leanings which are far too radical than those that Henry believes in,
that they're more in keeping with the Protestant movement that's been taking hold in Europe.
And that's a dangerous thing to be in England at this time.
And Gardner really uses this knowledge of Catherine's supposed religious beliefs
to try and poison Henry's mind against her.
And he's saying, well, look, your wife, she's arguing with you about theology here.
These conversations that you're having about your religious views, these scholarly debates,
Catherine's actually arguing.
she's actually a heretic and she's dangerous. You should get rid of her.
And in fact, to begin with, Henry sort of goes along with this. He believes that this is the case
because he believes that in some respects Catherine's become too big for her boots. They are having
these conversations about theology and he is worried that Catherine has got heretical views.
So he issues this warrant for her arrest. So very, very radical. And
fortunately for Catherine Gardiner supposedly drops this warrant and it's picked up by one of
Catherine's ladies who rushes to her and says my goodness your majesty look what I found and
Catherine realises being of course very aware of the fates of Anne Berlin and Catherine Howard
before her albeit for different reasons but realizes that her life is under threat at this point
and is determined not to go the same way.
And so she goes to Henry
and she basically says to him,
I'm really sorry, of course you're right.
Of course I don't have beliefs
that are odds with yours.
What do I know?
I'm just a silly woman.
Like, of course,
I'm more than happy to go along
with what you think
and what you believe,
which is a smart move
in the circumstances, really.
Smart move.
And she succeeds where Catherine Howard fails.
She sees her husband face to face.
And that's all it takes. Henry believes what Catherine tells him, and he refuses to send her to the tower.
And she's okay. She's let off and they become friends again.
That's a fucking close call, though.
Very close call. Yeah, very close call.
Wow. And what happened to the guy that was trying to get a ousted?
Well, Henry makes it clear that he's not too happy with him by any means, because Gardner arrives to confront Catherine with a replacement.
with a replaced warrant by this time,
having realised he's lost the first one.
And Catherine is with Henry at this time.
And Henry flies into a rage and basically says,
like, this is ridiculous.
You've tried to remove my wife from me.
She's done nothing wrong.
And Catherine is spared.
Wow.
God knows very much in disgrace at this point.
There's no other action taken against him,
but it's made clear to him that he's not to point his wrath in Catherine's direction
any longer.
that's a narrow escape there, Catherine.
So Henry's getting, he's getting older and older and weak and sicker and sicker
and he's not in the best of health.
Was she not ruling in his absence, but was she kind of stepping into,
was she involved in the sort of the politics and the role of the country,
or did she just sort of keep it back to just being a queen?
Well, she is given an opportunity to take part in the politics of the country
when in 1544 Henry decides to invade France.
He wants one final stab in his life at military glory.
And as he's done before with Catherine of Aragon,
he now entrusts the government of the realm to his wife, Catherine Pard.
And so Catherine becomes regent, following the footsteps again,
Catherine of Aragon, she becomes regent of her husband's realm whilst he is away.
And this is a time that Catherine seemed to really excel.
and she really shone in this role
and she really took her responsibilities as regent seriously.
She doesn't have to face the same kinds of things as Catherine of Aragon
so there's no war with Scotland and there's none of that.
But we do see her.
She attends all of Henry's council meetings,
which can't have been particularly interesting, I wouldn't think.
No, no.
Well done.
She has all of her royal stepchildren around her,
well so that they all get the opportunity to see a woman wielding power, which is, I think,
something that's quite important in the case of the girls. And she signs all of her letters,
Catherine, the Queen, Regent. So it's something that clearly matters a great deal to her and that
she takes great pride in. Wow. And that sounds like she had a pretty big influence on Elizabeth
and Mary, who would be queens in their own, right? Yeah, definitely. I think.
let's not forget that at this point, there hadn't really been any precedent for female rule before
at all. And I think that this was a really important and strong example for both Mary and Elizabeth
of how a woman could assert her authority when given the opportunity and do it really, really well.
So yeah, I think that both Mary and Elizabeth do learn some really important early lessons from their stepmother.
So she outlives Henry and we should talk a bit about Henry's death and so like what happens and where where she is in all of this.
Yeah. So Henry dies in January 1547 and was it was it a sudden death or was it sort of like, yeah, we've seen this.
Yeah, it was something that had been building up really for months. I mean, I think nobody wanted to tell Henry that he was going to die.
That's not something that you do until right at the end in any case.
But people had witnessed a decline in his health.
They had seen it coming.
And Catherine wasn't with him at the time that he died.
She hadn't seen him since the previous month.
And she had been pretty much kept separate from him.
She largely at the behest of Henry's advisors who'd been trying to set the wheels in motion for what was going to happen next.
And we know that Catherine was hoping, perhaps even expecting that she would become region after Henry's death, because his son Edward is nine at this point. So it's quite clear nine-year-old boy can't rule on his own. And having done so well in her earlier role as Queen Region, I think it was only natural for Catherine to expect that she might be given a leading role. But there were other people in the realm that had different ideas.
and those included Henry himself and because he ultimately believed that it was always preferable
to have a man in charge rather than a woman.
Okay.
And he makes his will on the 30th of December 1546 and in this he makes it clear that there
isn't going to be any place for Catherine in the governance of the kingdom.
Brilliant.
He does leave her very generously provided for though.
He gives her lots of money and she,
She's allowed to keep and use all of her jewels for the rest of her life.
Not bad.
Yeah, so there's some nice perks to it.
But yeah, when Henry breathes his last, Catherine isn't there.
I'll be back with Nicola and Catherine after this short break.
And so what happens to her afterwards then?
She's, I mean, you know, she's kind of, she won.
I know you should look at it like that.
Like that, but given his past dating record, like, yeah, she's outlived him.
she's a widow for the third time, only now she's considerably better off.
Yeah, exactly that.
And in some respects, it seems like Catherine also thought that she'd won
because it's probably only weeks after Henry's death that she remarries.
And she does it secretly, though, because officially she's supposed to be a morning for Henry VIII.
That's risky.
It's very risky.
But she goes back to her former flame.
Thomas Seymour who she's always really had a soft spot for.
And to begin with, it's an affair.
He's snuck in and out of her house.
And within a very, very short space of time,
they do marry secretly.
It's still so secret.
In fact, no one knows exactly when this happened.
But it is shortly after Henry's death.
And I think it's almost like at this point,
Catherine thought, well, I've been married three times.
The last time I didn't really want to marry.
but God told me that I should do my duty.
Now I'm going to marry someone who I actually want to marry
and I'm going to marry for love and good honour.
Okay.
Okay.
See, I don't think I would have got married at that point.
I would have just been like, no, no, I'm done now.
Men haven't been particularly useful to me.
But she did fancy him for a long time, didn't she?
Yeah, I think there's no denying the fact that lust comes into this a lot.
She really, really fancies Thomas Seymour.
And I think who can begrudge her
about a little bit of happiness
on a personal note at this point.
Wasn't this the same Thomas Seymour
that tried it on with Elizabeth?
Yes.
Yes.
Scali work, see?
Not good.
So Catherine does end up getting her heartbroken
because Elizabeth came to live with Catherine
after Henry the 8th's death.
And then Thomas comes along too
and he begins,
as we would term it today,
abusing Elizabeth.
And to begin with, Catherine tries to turn a blind eye to what's going on.
And then, bizarrely, she joins in.
And, yeah.
Oh, oh dear.
We're told that she tickles Elizabeth in bed along with her husband one morning.
And on another occasion, she holds Elizabeth down whilst Thomas cuts her gown,
is not great from Catherine's perspective.
No.
And then the real crunch point comes when, on one occasion,
Catherine stumbles across Thomas and Elizabeth when Elizabeth is sat on Thomas's knee
and she's got her arms about his neck.
And it's at that point that Catherine, who's pretty upset by this point,
but realises that things can't continue and that Elizabeth's going to have to go.
Yeah.
Oh, dear.
Oh, that's not good, is it?
How old was Elizabeth when that was happening?
Elizabeth's 14.
Elizabeth's 14 and Catherine's 36.
So, yeah, it's, and to make matters worse, Catherine was by now pregnant with her first child.
So it's not good.
And what happens to Catherine after this?
I don't even know how her story ends.
Yeah, so Elizabeth is banished from the household.
Catherine and Thomas seem to patch up their marriage and they move, they leave London,
they go to Thomas's country estate of Soudley Castle in the Cotswold.
and it's there that Catherine gives birth to her first child, a baby girl,
who's named Mary after her eldest stepdaughter.
And to begin with, it looks as though Catherine will recover.
But very sadly, it didn't take long for her health to deteriorate.
And yeah, and she fell into this state of delirium and she died five days after giving birth to the baby.
And did the baby survive?
Probably not.
The baby probably survived until she was about two years old.
And from that point on, she disappears from the records.
So it's almost certain that she died young.
Yeah.
That's a rather sad end, isn't it?
But what do you think is Catherine Powell's legacy?
Like we think of her as the one who survived,
the one who kind of won.
But is her legacy bigger than that, do you think?
Definitely.
I think so.
I think that we can credit her with having had a tremendous influence on the upbringing and the shaping
of one of our very first queen regnance, Elizabeth I first. Probably also Mary, but Elizabeth is the one
who really does it quite successfully. And I think that a lot of this comes from Catherine and those
early lessons and that care and nurture that Catherine had shown her. I think Catherine is
the one who really sets the precedent for showing that a woman can wield power and do it successfully.
Absolutely. Oh, I've loved talking to you about all of these queens. And Catherine Pard seems a lot more
sparky and plucky than I ever thought that she was. She definitely was. She was someone who bought a lot
of glitz and glamour, I think, and we should credit her for that. Yeah. And if people want to know more about you
and your work, where can they find you?
They can come along and follow me on my social media platforms,
which are X, Instagram, threads and TikTok,
and they can check out my website, Nicola Tallis.com.
You have been marvellous, and I've thoroughly enjoyed this series.
Thank you so much for come in to talk to us
about the six wives of Henry VIII.
Thank you for having me, Kate.
Thank you for listening,
and a big, huge final thank you to Nicola
for joining me the whole way through this mini-series.
Couldn't have done it without you.
And if you like what you heard, please 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 hello, then you can email us at betwixt at history hit.com.
With the Christmas period coming up, we will be dusting off our episode on the real Charles Dickens with none other than Miriam Margulies.
And we will be looking forward to a new year of more filthy and fascinating histories with you fabulous people.
This podcast was edited and produced by Stuart Beckwith, the senior producer was shown.
Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheet for the history of sex scandal in society,
a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.
