Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society - Royal Sex: Elizabeth I
Episode Date: July 25, 2025Was Elizabeth I really a virgin? When we talk about queens being remembered for their sex lives, we absolutely have to mention the woman so often remembered for her lack of one.Kate is joined by Profe...ssor Anna Whitelock, author of ‘Elizabeth’s Bedfellows: An Intimate History of the Queen’s Court’ and, more recently, ‘The Sun Rising: James I and the Dawn of a Global Britain’.This episode was edited by Tomos Delargy. The producer was Sophie Gee. The senior producer was Charlotte Long.Please vote for us for Listeners' Choice at the British Podcast Awards! Follow this link, and don’t forget to confirm the email. Thank you!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.All music from Epidemic Sounds.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.
You are you, I am me, and this is Betwicks the Sheets.
But before we can go any further together,
before I can let you wander off into this podcast,
all vulnerable and prone to attack,
I have to tell you.
This is an adult podcast book about adults about adulty things
and an adulty wake of a range, adults of being adult too.
And in particular, this episode does contain references to child abuse.
Right on with the show.
It's the 9th of August, 1588, and England has been sparring for a fight for well over a year.
Ships have been built and ports have been armed against the fleet of over 100 Spanish galleons that have been sent to overthrow.
Our Queen Elizabeth I think not. I think not.
Now at Tilbury, near the mouth of the River Thames, we await a possible attack.
Armour clinks on tired bodies and men mutter to one another, but then,
a hush falls. Through the ranks comes a small procession. An earl holds the sword of state aloft.
A page carries a helmet with white plumes on a gilded cushion and atop a huge white horse.
There she is. It's Elizabeth I herself. She wears a white velvet gown. Her torso is
coarseted in steel, but her head is bare. She addresses the gathered troops and gives the legendary speech.
I have come amongst you as you see it this time,
not for my recreation and disport,
but being resolved in the midst of heat and the battle
to live or die amongst you all,
to lay down my life for my God and for my kingdom and for my people,
my honour and my blood even in the dust.
I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman,
but I have the heart and stomach of a king.
Oh, good stuff, isn't it?
Elizabeth was a warrior, a fearless leader and a skilled politician,
but her brand was all about virginity.
And so we remember her as the Virgin Queen.
What do you look for 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 it up and pushing the funny.
Yes, social courtesy does make a difference.
Goodness, what's beautiful time.
Goodness, I have nothing to do with it, dearie.
Hello, and welcome back to Petwix the Sheets,
the history of sex scandal and society.
With me, Kate Lister.
With Henry VIII as a dad and Anne Boleyn as a mum,
Elizabeth I was off to a slightly rocky start,
but despite this,
and after losing her mum to the executioner's sword
when she was just two years old,
and being declared illegitimate by her father,
and being imprisoned and put under house arrest by her sister,
Elizabeth became one of our most famous and successful queens,
ruling for a stonking 44 years.
She is most definitely a complicated and complex character.
But being a virgin was very much at the forefront of Elizabeth's branding.
I mean, explorers were even naming lands after that.
Thank you very much, Walter Arleigh.
So what was all this virginity stuff about?
Today, we are being joined by none other than Anna Whitelock,
professor of the history of monarchy at City St. George's University
of London. Have you got your ruffs on, everybody? Let's do this. Hello and welcome to
Betwigs the Sheets. It's only Anna Whitelock. How are you doing? I am very well. Hello. How are you?
I'm so excited to be talking to you. This is one of my most favourite subjects.
Elizabeth I first. Lizzie. Lizzie. But before we get to her, you are a professor of the history of
monarchy. So you're a great person to ask the question, what is it about the Tudors that
so fascinates us, seemingly more than any other group of royals, and I'm as guilty of it as
anyone else? Why? It's a really good question. I think it's partly because for the first time,
in terms of historical sources, we have stuff about them as people, as well as about all the
various sort of politics and wars and events going on around them.
We actually know about their sex lives, which of course is something that always
captivates people.
And then the first time we sort of have monarchs becoming something like celebrities.
The ubiquity of their image takes off.
We think about, you know, the way in which images of like Henry Day, that big Holbein image
where he has his leg standing akimbo with a very prominent cod piece.
We have the Virgin Queen.
picture of Elizabeth, otherwise known as the Armada portrait, where she has a very strategically
prominent bow at her groin, making a very deliberate and profound statement about her virginity
as being a source of political power. And so I think it's something about, they became the
kind of pinups of monarchy in a way. We know something about the personal and the political.
And I think it's that that really captivates people. And as you say, I mean, you can't move an inch
without coming across a new film or book or, dare I say, podcast on the Tudors.
And that demand never seems to dry up.
I think this sex does seem to go at the heart of what we think about this particular group of people.
I don't know if they saw themselves like that.
But yeah, Henry with his big codpiece, Elizabeth with her, no thank you.
I'm not having sex with anybody.
Oh, ho, ho.
Stuff.
I wonder if they saw themselves like that as well, that they're a sexy brand.
I mean, that's a certainly sexy way of putting it.
I mean, in a slightly more unsexy way, I would say that actually monarchy is all about succession.
Yes.
And of course, succession is ultimately about sex and producing the next generation, the air, and hopefully monarch's having a spare too.
So actually, it is really important.
And in the Tudor period, it becomes the stuff of politics.
Because if we think about the Tudor period that, you know, first of all, Henry the 8 marries his brothers, his dead brother's wife.
Weird.
Yeah.
He later then says, you know, the marriage wasn't consummated.
Also weird.
Yeah.
And then he, of course, has a relationship with Anne Berlin and then, you know, multiple wives, of course, we know, infamously.
we then have a boy king who isn't of an age to produce an air.
We then have a succession crisis.
We then have a woman, Mary, an unmarried woman.
And women at the time would believe to be more sexually sort of voracious than men, actually.
And so it really was the case that men or women rather needed to be married to kind of protect their reputations.
And so the absolute expectation was that Mary would marry.
She had to politically and sort of in terms of,
sort of sexual reputation and also to preserve the succession. But she has phantom pregnancies.
She doesn't produce an air. And then of course, Elizabeth. And Elizabeth, her sex life becomes
the stuff of politics, quite literally. First of all, whether she is menstruating. Her menstrual
cycle was the stuff of diplomatic correspondence, quite literally. Because of course, you have
an unmarried queen when she became queen in 1558.
she's a big marriage prospect, but only if she can essentially produce an heir because otherwise, you know, her value is far less as a marriage partner. And so all the potential princes of Europe want to know if she is fertile, first of all. And so details about her menstrual cycle form the stuff of correspondence. But then, of course, is she chased? And again, the issue of reputation, sexual reputation comes at stake. And of course, her enemies who are Catholic,
say her mother who had the Ambelin who had the title, you know, The Great Whore,
he's Elizabeth, she's the little whore.
And the argument was like mother-like daughter, just as Anne Boleyn was accused of adultery,
including with her brother, actually so Elizabeth is promiscuous,
not least with Robert Dudley.
And so her reputation is sort of undermined.
She's slandered by Catholics who want to suggest that actually she's sort of not chased
and therefore not a good marriage prospect.
And so we have this whole kind of discussion across Europe again
is the queen a virgin and so on.
And then of course, at what point does the queen get to an age
where she's actually post-menopause or she's not going to produce a child
and therefore is she or is she not actually worth a marriage?
And then at that point you have the creation of this amazing image of a virgin queen
which was a triumph of spin really
and was trying to make a virtue out of the first.
fact that you had a post-menopausal unmarried queen on the throne, which was a dead end in
terms of the succession. And so hence you have all this stuff about, yeah, but she's married to
the realm. It's an act of great self-sacrifice to be a virgin and trying to make that something
of a political strength when in fact, of course, it was in reality at great weakness.
So that whole virgin queen married to the country, I'm not interested in a husband, just the English.
that wasn't part of her game plan from the very early ages.
That was something that came in later in life.
Yeah, I mean, it's a really interesting, you know, question
because obviously, dear Elizabeth, intend to marry,
the expectation was that she would marry,
not least because she needed to produce an heir.
Mary's marriage to Philip of Spain had proved ultimately to be unpopular
in that Mary went to war with France on her husband's behalf.
although beyond that and before that, actually Philip was broadly welcomed as the male element in government.
So it's not true to say, you know, the Spanish marriage was entirely unpopular.
But I think by the end of Mary's reign and given the fact that England had joined Phillips' war with France,
there was a sense of caution about who she was going to marry.
And basically the various candidates, no one person secured the unanimous support of her.
her counsel. So it was always, well, he's too young, he's too Protestant, he's too Catholic, he's
too French, whatever. And then time went on. She was also, I think, infatuated with Robert Dudley.
I mean, one of the great questions. And when I, when my book Bedfellows came out, I did a tour in the
UK, but also in America. And it was amazing. So I went to some very prestigious places to give
talks and after dinner speeches. And they all wanted to know, did they or didn't they? And I
I guess I ended up maybe because it was America. I ended up with a sort of Bill Clinton,
Monica Lewinsky kind of, you know, defense of maybe, you know, sort of perhaps not full sexual
relations, but perhaps something else. Of course, we don't know is the bottom line. But certainly
people paid much of their relationship, both to slander the queen, but also I think it was an
explanation in part as to why she didn't focus on any one candidate. And then it got too late. And then, yes,
to answer your question directly, there was a sense, well, actually, let's make a virtue of the fact
that she's really old and post-menopausal. And so it was at that point, not the beginning,
as you suggest, that this construction of the Virgin Queen came in as...
Interesting. It's, yeah, it really is as a sort of sense of, you know, this is total political
spin, making a strength out of a profound weakness. I wouldn't blame Elizabeth at all, though,
just listening to that catalogue of sexual disaster that surrounds this woman,
from her mother losing her head to her father, philandering, to Mary's just like,
oh, that marriage happened to everyone obsessing about her menstruation.
I wouldn't blame her at all if it was just a decision of like, no, do you know what,
sod this?
I don't want to have sex with anybody.
This is too, I've seen what can happen here.
And it seems to be a bit of a disaster all round.
Do you think there was any of that in it?
Or do you think she's actually intended to get married?
Or do you think at some point she just thought,
now I'm all right, actually?
Well, I think some of that did play a factor.
I mean, it's really dangerous to kind of, you know,
end up being kind of historical psychologists and try and project back.
It's fun, though.
It is fun.
But actually, you know, notwithstanding that kind of warning,
at the end of the day, you know, whether it be 500 years ago or not,
these are people.
And her mother had met a very bloody end on charges of
adultery. We know about how things have been with her dad, as you say. We also know about an account of
Elizabeth having engaging or perhaps being abused really by stepfather Thomas Seymour. And there's
various accounts of this. In David Stark's book, for example, Elizabeth's apprenticeship years,
it opens with this whole discussion of the sort of 12, first senior old Elizabeth, sort of playing these
games with Thomas Seymour with him coming into her bedchamber, slapping her bottom essentially,
and then Thomas Seymour Catherine Parr holding down Elizabeth as they sort of cut bits of her
night clothes off. It's not good. Yeah, I mean, really not good. So, you know, that also very
possibly had a bit of an effect on her too. So I think there are reasons why she would have found
male relationships quite difficult. And then, of course, she was also navigating
a very male political world as a woman. And although she wasn't the first queen, she was a
unmarried queen and there never had been an unmarried queen before. Let's talk a bit about Thomas Seymour
because this might help us get to the ultimate question that we're all interested in. Was she
really a virgin? And now we're going to get into the way. How do you define it? What counts?
But let's talk about Thomas Seymour and what you think was going on there.
Well, I mean, so Thomas Seymour,
was the husband of Catherine Parr, Henry's final wife, as it were. And there are accounts of
Thomas Seymour wanting to marry Elizabeth and, you know, in fact, sort of asking her to marry him
when she was sort of 13. And then, as I say, there are these accounts that following Thomas Seymour's
marriage to Catherine Parr, Henry VIII's widow, Elizabeth started living with Catherine.
Thomas, of course, moved in and joined them.
And then Elizabeth would start to receive early morning visits from Thomas Seymour
and descriptions talk about he would make as though he would come at her.
So he would sort of come at her and she would shrink back.
There's an account that the next day she got up early so that he wouldn't find her in bed.
But he did arrive and she was there.
She was still only dressed in her sort of night dressed.
And he had arrived in his nightgown and accounts described him bare,
any slippers.
And then the account describes her, him striking her on the bat or the buttocks
familiarly.
And in another time, he climbed into bed with her.
I mean, this is, this is by any other, you know, this is an account of abuse, really.
Grooming, isn't it?
It is.
It's grooming.
And Catherine Parr, Elizabeth's stepmother, on one occasion joined Seymour,
to together tickle Elizabeth in bed.
So, yeah.
I mean, it's very, very unseemly.
And I think this can't have, you know, not had an impact on the sort of 13, 14, 14 year old Elizabeth.
Absolutely.
No, it's a really unsettling episode in this young girl's life and would absolutely have had an effect.
It kind of comes out and it creates like a little mini scandal, doesn't it?
I mean, it's handled and she moved past it, but it's there.
Exactly.
It's on her hinterland.
She's only 1314.
it's just after her father's death.
So yeah, I think it's really formative.
And then, of course, she lives through the period of her sister,
her half-sister becoming queen,
following her brother's premature death.
She, for a time, was in the tower, of course,
during the reign of her half-sister Mary.
So she then has a number of years of real stress and risk and danger.
I mean, she was the kind of figurehead of opposition.
during the reign of her sister Mary.
And then comes to the throne.
And, you know, she was attractive,
precocious as a young child, accomplished, successful.
She could dance.
She could play music.
She could write.
She was smart.
She was intelligent.
She was attractive.
She was crazy smart.
Like she could do a Sudoku in seconds.
She could speak loads of languages.
She was interested in sciences.
And she was a hottie as well.
Yeah.
I mean, she really, really was. She was a 20-something, you know, becoming queen. And yes, Mary the first had been queen before, and I'm always keen to make that point. You know, she was the first Crown Queen of England. But Elizabeth then stepped into Mary's shoes as an unmarried queen. Mary, of course, married a year into her reign. Elizabeth doesn't. And Elizabeth, you know, then proceeds to rain for very many decades. And also,
The challenge for a female monarch, which I really sort of thought a lot about when I was working on Mary
and then becomes the sort of great challenge for Elizabeth is, you know, male monarchs, they have to provide an air.
We all know that that's the job. You know, it's about succession. It's about providing an air and a spare ideally.
What a female monarch has to do is actually not only provide an air, but they have to produce an air.
In other words, their body actually has to be doing.
the producing. So their body is at stake and involved in the very real stuff of politics
and succession in a way that male monarchs are. And so the level of the degree of scrutiny
on, you know, first Mary, and Mary had undertaken this sort of humiliating process of, you know,
thinking she was pregnant, withdrawing into a chamber. Everybody going, hurrah, hurrah, there's a
baby and then going, oh, there's not. And then actually it was all on a false alarm because she had a,
you know, a phantom pregnancy. Awful.
Elizabeth then comes to the throne, she is susceptible to kind of migraines, she's susceptible to
digestive problems, it seems that she has pretty irregular periods, all of these things are
written about, and she has to navigate that. And yes, she has clearly an attachment to Robert Dudley,
who of course is married, then whose wife is found dead in suspicious circumstances, which in a sense,
if it wasn't a no-go option before that. He certainly was then. And I think it was a kind of
remarkably sort of full of sexual conspiracy, you know, the court of Elizabeth. Is the queen,
isn't she? Who's she going to marry, isn't she? And all that was at risk, which was a great
deal was, of course, her chaste reputation because, you know, it was so important, the power of an
unmarried woman, especially obviously a queen, only existed as long as they had a reputation for chastity.
If that was undermined in a way that, of course, it wasn't for a man
because if you're a king who sleeps around, that's a sign of virility, political power,
hence Henry's very prominent cobpiece, Henry VIII.
Absolutely fine, have as many mistresses as you like.
Very, very different rules for a woman,
which makes, you know, being a queen regnant even harder.
I'll be back with Anna after this short break.
We've got to talk about Robert, Rob, Bob, Bobby.
Yeah.
A lot has been made about him.
Who was he? And what is your take on what this relationship was between them?
I mean, it is one of the great did they did, didn't they, of history.
He was undoubtedly a favourite of Elizabeth.
He, of course, was the Earl of Leicester.
His father was the Duke of Northumberland who had sought to prevent Mary the first coming to the throne.
So he was very much sort of involved with that.
Robert Dudley had sort of emerged at the beginning of Elizabeth's reign
as one of her closest male companions.
He was appointed to the role of Master of the Horse,
which, if you remember the Queen Victoria Mr. Brown film
with Billy Connolly.
He was her master of the horse.
So basically it's a very close position
of sort of male intimacy with a female monarch.
So this is somebody who's helping the Queen on and off the horse
who's accompanying them.
So it's a really, it's a close relationship.
One of the closest you can have.
as a queen regnant to a male courtier.
So they had that relationship.
He became the Earl of Leicester.
He became a significant landowner in the West Midlands.
And he became one of her sort of leading statesman.
And he was attractive and glamorous in a way
that her other kind of leading men were not like William Cecil,
who was just a very good person, an admin person, as it were.
But it was clear that Elizabeth and him had a very,
flotatatious relationship.
They were clearly sort of attracted to each other
when his wife, the Earl of Lester's wife, Amy Robsart, died
and she was found dead at the bottom of a flight of stairs
just two years after Elizabeth Succession.
It all looked a little bit convenient.
And of course, suddenly he was, you know, technically free to marry.
But immediately, rumours kind of suggested that actually, you know,
there was foul play at stake.
She was bumped off.
or she just fell down the stairs?
I think it's very hard to note.
I mean, I don't think there's persuasive evidence
to say that she was murdered.
It doesn't seem like a good plan.
Like it didn't pan out if the plan was,
we'll shove her down the stairs so we can get married.
That just, well, no, you won't now
because now it just looks like she's been murdered.
Well, exactly.
Well, exactly.
I mean, it was always a long shot,
the prospect of him marrying Elizabeth.
Oh, was it?
Because, well, because in a way,
you generally, marriages, of course, at the time,
are ways of brokering foreign alliances.
So, you know, the big alliance that in a way shored up the Tudor dynasty
and underwrote the Tudor dynasty right to the point of the Spanish Armada
was the Spanish alliance.
And the Spanish alliance had been established when Henry the 7th had married
his elder son, Prince Arthur, to Catherine of Aragon,
who then, of course, was married to Henry VIII.
So foreign alliances of generally what are achieved through marriages
and marrying an English nobleman wouldn't have secured a foreign alliance
and therefore sort of foreign recognition,
but also would very likely have just created a faction a court.
But that's not to say that lots and lots of people perhaps thought he was vying for the Queen's hand
and this was certainly what ambassadors were talking about.
And it seems to that Dudley, you know, Dudley wanted to marry Elizabeth,
but really his efforts got nowhere.
And although Elizabeth, when she got very sick with smallpox,
did agree to Robert Dudley if she died being protector of the realm,
actually there was a great deal of relief when she recovered.
And gradually, he's kind of moved out a little bit
from the kind of immediate sphere around her.
So certainly a male favourite,
certainly had apartments next to hers,
certainly he had an influence that was unmatched.
Certainly there was a kind of flotation,
but ultimately the stakes were too high
for there to be anything meaningful between them
and certainly not really a prospective marriage being in any way realistic.
Given the fact that everything that this woman does, thinks, says
and every aspect of her body is under intense scrutiny,
is there any chance, in your opinion,
that she could have snuck out from her bed
and done the deed with Robert Dudley
and then snuck back in again,
or would somebody somewhere have noticed and said something?
I mean, it is possible.
Elizabeth would have bedfellows,
as was the title of my book,
which were literally people who, women,
who would sleep either next to the queen in the same bed
or at the kind of bottom of the bed
or the side of the bed on a truckle bed,
a small pull-out bed.
And they were there to tend to the fire,
to help her dress,
but they were also there for propriety, basically, to be able to attest to the fact that there was no shenanigans going on.
Well, of course, you know, we all know what close female friendships are like.
Yeah, I mean, you'd want your best friend to have you back there, wouldn't you?
I'll just go, look, I'll just go and make a sandwich in the kitchen.
Well, I mean, there is.
I mean, although her governess, you know, Kat Ashley was very proper and she was there at the time of the goings on with Thomas C.
and made Elizabeth very aware that this really did,
this was really problematic for her reputation.
Elizabeth was also surrounded by women closer in age to her.
And as you say, I mean, one of the things that I've always been really keen
to sort of reintroduce into the narrative of the reign of queens,
both Mary and Elizabeth, is the role of female intimacy as political intimacy.
So historians talk a lot, and this was the work of the sort of infamous historian David Starkey,
talked about political intimacy under Henry the 8th, and he would say things like, you know,
the people that the king went jousting with or played tennis with who hung out within his privy
chamber, you know, they were his mates and they were people that he really trusted. And they are as
important, if not more important than the privy councillors who would sit around the council
table all day. But then the argument used to go, yeah, but when you have a female monarch,
well, you can't have relationships to political intimacy because all the private apartments,
are filled with women and not men anymore, well, then women can't be political intimates because
women aren't political players. And I think, you know, actually in truth, women were really important.
They had access to so much information. You know, they were bribed by foreign diplomats because
they had that access and information. And they saw what went on and they could defend and protect
the queen accordingly. So yes, I mean, it's possible that she had allies among her women who would
allow her to do what she wanted and have some kind of dalliance with Robert Dudley. I think that
is possible if that's what Elizabeth had wanted. I mean, the reality is we will we all never know.
And that's what's so endlessly fascinating about it. And it continues to captivate people.
It's kind of quite remarkable. Maybe it wasn't sexual. Maybe they couldn't get married,
but it sort of doesn't mean that they weren't in a relationship and didn't love each other.
We sort of have this obsession with, well, if you're not having sex, it's not official
somehow, but they seem to have had a very strong bond between them.
Yeah, I think that's very true.
And I think also, I mean, you could argue that because it was a kind of forbidden
relationship in terms of any full sexually intimate relationship, that that made it
more attractive, that there was something that was kind of exciting about it.
Elizabeth was a woman who had a huge amount of men wanting to give her advice.
She had so many men around her at court that, like, you know,
you know, in so many ways we can't get in the head of somebody 500 years ago,
but in some ways we kind of can.
I mean, we can imagine that this is a young woman who is both, you know,
absolutely the centre of power,
but is also being manoeuvred in all kinds of directions.
And who she could trust, who she could have fun with
must have been also part of the stuff of politics.
And so I think we have to see the relationship as a key part of her,
as it was, you know, in terms of her trusting and being attracted to Robert, whatever form that
attraction took. So we've got at this point quite a young Elizabeth. She's very beautiful.
She's super smart. She's Queen of England. I mean, that, wow. If you want a wife,
she's a very, very tempting option. She must have had suit as flinging themselves at her.
Robert Dudley just sat there having a bit of a sulk to himself. He's a no-go. But who was?
vying for her hand in marriage and was there ever any serious contenders?
There was, I mean, there was, as you say, I mean, she was a huge prospect.
I mean, basically, there was a whole cast of characters because the bottom line is, as you say,
she's the Queen of England, she's a big deal.
Perhaps the first and perhaps most surprising, perhaps not suitor for her, was Philip of Spain.
Oh, him again.
Yeah, I know.
Just to keep it in the family, he was, of course, her brother-in-law or anything.
ex-brother-in-law. He had been married to Mary. And so when Mary died, first of all, Philip,
I think probably with these fingers behind his back, because he really didn't, you know, hoping that
she'd say no, but because he wanted to preserve the alliance with England and potentially
hope that he would persuade Elizabeth from moving back into a Protestant direction, he offered to
marry Elizabeth. So he's an ex-sister-in-law. So Philip of Spain was one candidate. There was also
Eric of Sweden. Eric the 14th of Sweden. Sweden was a Protestant country, so that kind of made sense.
He negotiated for her hand for the first few years of his reign. But then she wrote to him and
said that she actually didn't reciprocate his feelings. She rejected his advances. So it was kind of
quite a personal rejection in a way. And in the end, Eric kind of eventually married one of his
mistresses. He actually began to appear to be quite insane and eventually was dethroned by his brother.
So he probably wouldn't have been a good, yeah, exactly, good call.
Good call, Elizabeth.
Then there was the Archduke Charles of Austria.
Religion was an issue there because Elizabeth was Protestant and Charles of Austria, Catholic.
So although Elizabeth kept him kind of dangling for a while, ultimately she rejected his advances.
And then I guess the other one sort of laid her on in the rain, which was beginning to be at the time when really she was past her best in the sense of being past her child.
barren years was Francois, the Duke of Anjou, the French heir to the throne, could have been
very good, you know, an alliance of England and France. It doesn't seem like many people would
have wanted her to marry a foreigner. Some of her Elizabeth's advisors believed it was likely to
lead to some kind of religious discontent. There would be a big Protestant massacre, the
Bartholini's Day massacre in France, so there was sort of anxiety about that. They did become
close. He came over and he actually courted her in person. Oh. And she,
she perhaps rather unoriginally, but rather offensively, called him her frog.
Nice, Elizabeth. Well done.
Yeah. There was actually a 22-year age gap. So there was a bit of a dally.
People did for a while think she would marry him. And it was actually at that point that suddenly people started talking about, oh, no, let's celebrate virginity.
That's actually the most important thing here. And it was a kind of intervention going, come on, Elizabeth.
Why in hell would you be marrying this guy? You're not going to have any children. It's a dead end for the country.
and that's when we begin to see, yes, the kind of styling of virginity
and the image of the Virgin Queen coming to the fore.
Wasn't Enjou, wasn't he the one that there was lots of rumours about his sexuality?
Absolutely.
Was that just a smear campaign?
Well, there was always, yeah, I mean, that was part of it.
I mean, there was a lot of opposition to the prospect of this marriage,
to a French guy, to someone who was 22 years, you know,
there was an age gap for 22 years younger,
that it was ultimately would have put England in a very,
vulnerable position to France. So yeah, I think everything was kind of thrown at him in terms of
slander and smear to try and dissuade the queen. In the end, of course, she didn't go ahead with the
marriage. So she wasn't short of suitors. She kept her parliament and her council who were constantly
begging her to marry basically on hold for most of her reign, refusing to engage with the question
and in fact stop, you know, preventing them or trying to prevent them from raising it with her.
and she had all these various suitors that she sort of dallyed with for a while
but ultimately dropped them and ended up unmarried.
At any point did she make a big announcement of like, right, I'm not getting married,
that's it, stop nagging me, or did the question just stop being raised eventually?
Yeah, I mean, I think the question stopped being raised
and she really lent into this idea of the Virgin Queen.
And one of the things, I mean, I mentioned before this amazing Arlada portrait,
which of course was a portrait to celebrate the story,
the Spanish Armada defeat of 1588.
But actually, so much of it is a statement of
attempting to sort of celebrate Elizabeth's power,
a time when, sure, the Spanish Armada had been defeated,
but actually England and Elizabeth were pretty weak.
I mean, England had a queen who was, what,
in her kind of 50s on the throne, she was unmarried,
it was a political dead end.
And so this really kind of ambitious refashioning,
and aligning of the body politic, in other words, the realm, England that had proved impenetrable
and its coastline had not been penetrated by the Spanish armada. A parallel was drawn with that
and the queen's body, quite literally, that the queen too had her body was also impermeable
and had been also unpenetrated. And that together, you know, there was this kind of sense of
virginity being a sign of ultimate strength and unity of the queen and her realm. And that's why you have
this Armada portrait, not just celebrating the defeat of the Spanish Armada as it does, but actually
in the background is the defeat at the Spanish Armada. And in the foreground is this massive image of
Elizabeth in many ways comparable to that Holbein, big Legs Akimbo, prominent codpiece image of Henry
the 8th. But actually, the most profound statement is the bow.
at her groin, and whereas female bodies and sexualised sort of depictions of Queen's bodies
was absolutely not done. Here it was quite deliberately because it was like, look, she's a virgin
just like England's impenetrable boundaries and borders, and that this alignment was drawn.
And it was at that point that she really was celebrated as a virgin queen. And of course,
there was also this mask of youth whereby images that showed the Queen ageing were outlawed.
and in fact this kind of face pattern was inserted into portraits,
which we think her portraits were,
I mean, essentially her ladies sat for portraits wearing her clothes,
but a face pattern was inserted not to so that she didn't show that she was aging.
And that by the end of her reign then,
we have this image of a verging, ageless queen, the white face, etc., etc.,
which ultimately was a massive cover-up,
because what she really was underneath was actually quite weak, postmenopausal, unmarried,
and the realm was going nowhere.
There was no air, and she also refused to name an air.
So it really was trying to make a virtue out of a position of profound weakness.
It was a big part of her brand, wasn't it?
The Virgin thing.
It was like Joan of Arc, I guess, is like virginity becomes this strength.
Yeah, absolutely.
And what's really interesting is, of course, you're dead longer than you're alive.
And the James I first succeeds Elizabeth.
And just a few years into his reign,
so three years after Elizabeth had died,
Elizabeth's body that had been buried with her grandparents,
Henry the 7th and Elizabeth of Bjork,
so the founders of the Tudor dynasty,
Elizabeth, at her request, had been buried with them in Westminster Abbey,
in the Henry the 7th Chapel.
So she was in a vault with her grandfathers.
parents and it was the kind of ultimate top spot because you wanted to be with the founders of the
dynasty. James, who of course was establishing the Stuart dynasty when he came to England as King of
England and Scotland in 1603, he decided that he wanted that spot for when he died and he also
wanted to kind of undermine Elizabeth's reputation. So what he did was he ordered that her
body be dug up and moved. James. And it was crazy. Yeah. It was crazy. Yeah.
and it was moved to the far aisle of the chapel
where Mary the first had been buried.
And her coffin was pretty much sort of just dumped there
and there was no kind of monument, no tomb.
He put Elizabeth's body on top
and he then did build a monument
and he kind of acknowledged Elizabeth there
and did a sort of statement of her achievements.
But he also wrote in Latin,
partners both in throne and grave,
here rest we two sisters in the hope of one resurrection.
So in other words, what he did is actually create a kind of mausoleum of Baron Tudor Queen.
And as if to underscore the point, he moves his mother's body, would you believe?
Mary Queen of Scots, of course, who was executed by Elizabeth I, buried at Peterborough Cathedral.
He moves her body down the A1, as it were, and she is then buried on the other side of the aisle in Westminster Abbey,
in a line of fertile women.
So in other words, women who have kind of passed on the dynasty done their deed.
And so her position is reinstated.
So in fact, it's sort of like he exposes the reality of Elizabeth's virginity.
You can dress it up as you like, but just like Mary the first was barren,
didn't have any children.
So too Elizabeth was.
And those two women are kind of shunned on the side aisle.
and his mother is in a line of fertile women on the other aisle,
which I think he's pretty scound,
that's pretty amazing and a bit of royal tomb raiding there.
Elizabeth would have been absolutely fuming, wouldn't she?
I'll be back with Anna after this short break.
So the million-dollar question then that I've got to ask you,
and I know you're going to say, we just don't know,
was she actually a virgin?
Did she go to her grave having never experienced sexual contact?
Well, of course we don't know.
And she also didn't want her body opened up in death.
She didn't want her body to be, as was the practice, opened up, the organs taken out, filled with preservatives.
And some people say, well, actually, was that because she had some kind of physical impediment that meant that she didn't want to be discovered, that she perhaps was the reason why she didn't want to marry and didn't want to have children?
Or did she not want there to be evidence of, in fact, that she wasn't a virgin?
We don't know.
I mean, we just, we don't know.
I mean, if I had to bet on it, I would say she was a virgin,
but I've got nothing to base that on,
other than the stakes were pretty high for her
if she had got pregnant
or being discovered to have lost her virginity outside of marriage.
But that's not to say she didn't decide to risk it.
I think we can say with some confidence that she had,
not lovers as in physical lovers,
but people that she loved romantically.
Yeah, I think that's fair to say.
And I think, you know, she was a woman, of course,
who lived right through to her 60s.
So, I mean, you know, she'd lived pretty long and full life.
So for her not to have had sex at any point,
perhaps would have been pretty remarkable.
But perhaps proved to be the case.
We ultimately won't know.
We won't, will we?
Anna, I have got a quiz for you.
I've written one.
I've written one. Don't worry.
This is insanely easy.
What I have done here is I have trolled the deepest, darkest corners of the internet, Reddit forums and history facts, Facebook pages to find as many claims about the Tudors as I can.
And I found 10.
And you can just say true or false.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
So, look, I've got my flashcards and everything.
So number one, Elizabeth I first.
was actually a man.
I mean, false but interesting
and there was all kinds of stories about that.
And do you know what?
That is a question that I got asked a lot
when I was in America on tour.
Really?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
There was this whole idea
that she'd been swapped.
That's it, yeah.
As a sort of child
and that she'd grown up,
in fact, as a man,
and that's why she didn't marry
and it was all her disguise.
So it sounds bonkers,
but it's a story that has got a long history.
Mm-hmm.
It was this whole mid-19th century kind of grave that was found in the mid-19th century and this whole thing about the Bisley boy legend.
That's probably what you came across.
Yeah, that's so...
So, yeah, really fascinating, but no evidence to say it was true, but I love the idea of it.
It was fashionable for Rich Tudors to paint their teeth black because Elizabeth had black teeth.
Not that I know of.
Yeah.
Did she actually have black teeth?
Is that true?
Is that her teeth rotted away?
She did like sweet things, kind of sweet things, custards, and
all of that. So she did have bad teeth.
Okay. Mary Boulin and Blynn's sister
was shagging the King of France before she
was shagging Henry VIII. Very possibly.
Possibly. Yeah. Marmalade was invented for Mary
Queen of Scots. Oh, I don't know.
I don't think that one is true.
Okay. What I saw about that one was
people going, no, that's not true. Yeah.
Anne of Cleves was ugly.
Flanders Mayor, that's what Henry VIII was alleged
to have said about her. So, yes,
that's the argument. Anna Nalde because they never had sex.
Elizabeth I first had a bath once a year whether she needed it or not.
Well, that is also said.
And certainly people bathe very irregularly and certainly not like we do.
So that is probably close to being true.
People believe that actually almost wearing cottons was the thing that would absorb the bad odours and stuff.
So you didn't need to wash like we do.
So very possibly true or at least something like that.
Certainly not a shower a day kind of a girl.
No, no, no, no.
Henry the 8th wrote green sleeves for Anne Boleyn.
Yeah, Henry the 8th was a great musician and composer
and yeah, green sleeves is linked to him.
I mean, there's no evidence that he in fact wrote it,
but certainly it's long been attributed to him and Anne Boleyn.
So whether he played it for, whether he wrote it,
it's very associated with him.
So we haven't landed the evidence that, you know, his composition,
but certainly very much.
much alive in legend of popular culture that it was one of his compositions.
Henry VIII had syphilis?
Yeah, I mean, he had all kinds of things.
I mean, he had gow, oozing legs.
Yes, I think probably syphilis too.
Throw that one in there.
You'd be surprised if he didn't.
Oh, this is a good one.
Ambelin had six fingers on one hand.
Is that true?
I have not seen evidence of that.
No.
I think this is all part of the kind of folklore about her.
So I haven't seen evidence.
I think we're sort of slightly in the idea of myth territory.
And finally, this is a very strange one.
There was a spy who worked for Elizabeth I first with the code name, 007.
Oh, now, people did have spy names.
And so very possibly people had different initials.
And I think her kind of astrologer advisor, John Dee, had 007.
That's bonkers.
Yes, that is very possible, yeah.
It's great, isn't it?
That's incredible.
And those were the 10 weirdest claims about the shooters that I could find on the internet.
Thank you very much.
Great questions.
They're hard to disprove one by the other because they're just kind of out there.
Things take on their own life just by being repeated lots and lots of times
and actually trying to find the evidence to prove or disprove is quite difficult.
But that doesn't stop them being out there as part of the legend.
No.
Anna, you have been wonderful to talk to.
Thank you so much.
And if people want to know more about you and your work, where can they find you?
So I have a website. I'm on X and I'm also pop up on various podcasts and television programs and do various bits of commentary on the monarchy. And my latest book is called The Sun Rising, James I'm the First and the dawn of a global Britain and a bit of a kind of global adventure story about the emergence of Britain around the world.
Thank you so much for coming to talk to me. I've thoroughly enjoyed myself.
Pleasure. Thank you so much for having me.
Thank you for listening and thank you to Anna for joining us.
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.
We've got a whole load more queen sex coming your way this month, featuring none other than Queen Victoria, Maria Antoinette and Catherine the Great.
Just what did those fabulous ladies get up to betwixt the sheets?
This podcast was edited by Tom Delagie and produced by Sophie Jee.
the senior producer was Charlotte Long.
Join me again,
betwixt the sheet of the history of sex scandal in society,
a podcast by History Hit.
This podcast contains music from Epidamic Sound.
