Dan Snow's History Hit - The Rise and Fall of the Boleyns
Episode Date: May 25, 2026We trace the extraordinary rise and fall of the House of Boleyn. From humble Norfolk tenant farmers, the Boleyns used everything from wool trading to the diplomatic service to climb to the heights of ...Tudor power.Novelist and historian Philippa Gregory joins us to explain this family's dizzying ascent, and how their path ultimately led to tragedy, betrayal and execution.Philippa's book is 'Boleyn Traitor'.Produced by Mariana Des Forges and Peta Stamper, and edited by Dougal Patmore.We need your help! Let us know what you want from Dan Snow's History Hit by filling in our anonymous survey here: https://forms.gle/PvgayWLkWGjYT4St6Dan Snow's History Hit is now available on YouTube! Check it out at: https://www.youtube.com/@DSHHPodcastSign 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 also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi folks, welcome Dan Snow's history hit.
It's that Berlin girl.
Her childhood home is a place of pilgrimage.
The sight of her execution receives flowers every year on the anniversary of her death.
Her fans tattoo their bodies with a design of her creation.
Blind, uncontrollable passion for Anne Berlin drove a king to upend the politics and the religion of Western Europe.
And it seems that even after 500,000 people,
years, many of us are still captivated. And it's not just Anne Boleyn. Her sister was a lover of the
king. Her children, possibly royal bastards. Their forebears also are an intriguing story of social
and economic advancement in the late Middle Ages. Proof that merit and luck could take you from the
village to the palace. And for all those reasons, that is why the House of Bolin has come to
symbolise a story, a Tudor story of ambition and talent and sex and intrigue and hubris.
We got Anne Berlin, Queen of England's 1533 to 36.
She helped to transform the religious settlement in Britain and beyond.
She paid for it with her life.
But Anne's story did not begin at the Royal Court.
It began generations earlier with a hatmaker in Norfolk with big dreams.
He was called Geoffrey Berlin and he was a sort of artisanal worker.
He turned to merchant and he was a merchant.
he did very well. He became Lord Mayor of London, and he bequeathed his fortune to his heirs.
And among those heirs was his great-grandson Thomas Berlin. He was a courtier. He mastered the
dangerous dance of Tudor politics, and he helped his family rise through that talent and his
usefulness to his sovereign, and he built up a web of powerful alliances. And eventually he discovered
that his daughters were his most potent weapons. Today we're going to talk all about that, folks.
We're going to talk about the rise and fall of the House of Berlin. How they got to the very
very apex of political power, and how in the glittering but deadly world of Henry the 8th's court,
that ambition, that soaring arc of success, led to their ruin.
We have got a fabulous guest to talk us through this wonderful story,
to help us navigate through the perilous world of the Tudor Court.
We've got Philippa Gregory!
She is a celebrated novelist and historian.
Best known for her vivid portraits of women in history,
particularly those of the Tudor and Platanginia eras.
she has written the iconic books like the other Bolin girl and the white queen.
But she's not just an astonishingly good novelist.
She has got a PhD in 18th century literature.
So she knows what she's talking about.
Her novels have been adapted for film and TV,
and she's also written acclaimed works of non-fiction,
so we're very lucky to have her on.
Her latest book, Bolin Traitor,
tells the gripping story of one particular character
and all those themes of ambition and betrayal and survival in Henry VIII's Court.
She chooses the vessel Jane Berlin.
a figure that we'll be hearing about in today's episode,
so you can hear a bit about that too.
You'll listen to Dan Snow's history here.
Settling as we trace the rise and fall of the House of Bolin.
Philippa, thank you so much to come back on the podcast.
It's been far too long. Good to see.
Dan is lovely to see you. How are you?
Very good indeed.
And I'm excited about the Bolin family.
But first of all, I'd like to know,
how could we be sure about their existence
and their goings-on pre-the-lustrous when they produced a Queen of England briefly?
Well, they're Nouveau.
So they're great ones for recording their various rises.
So they start off in Norfolk as tenant farmers.
They're not very grand at all in about the 1300s.
And what we know from them there is that they endow a few churches
and they start to rise.
They start to make money.
Sheep farming.
Don't tell me.
Britain's the Saudi Arabia of wool in the medieval period.
That's all we seem to do.
We're just pumping out wool.
It is all we do.
It is all we do.
anything that we're really, really specialist at because of the rain, loads of grass, and, you know,
a very, very unintelligent domesticated animal. So, like, what can I say? It just suits us temperamentally.
Yeah, we finally find an animal that will do what we ask it. Well, and also, we're not asking much
of it. Basically, once it's bread, all you're doing is cutting its coat off when it's too hot. So it does it
good. It's a symbiotic relationship. It's a partnership. Well, that's good. I never thought about
that is. And so the Bolin family, they're farmers, and they're just good at, I suppose,
they buy more and more land, like the Grand Spencers of Princess Dana fame, the same sort of
thing going on. You just slowly, over the generations, well-managed farms, you get bigger and wealthier.
They get wealthier and wealthier. And the first one we really notice gets himself knighted and
become lawbearer of London, which is really the nouveau way rate to rise, that you are in the
company of merchants who recognize wealth and who respect wealth. And then they
promote you to a civic position. And the position of being Lord Mayor of London is, of course, very grand
because London is, as it were, a separate, political and civic, almost principality. So you get to hobnob
with the court, and that's really your big rise. You're an aristocrat of trade, I suppose. So you're not
sort of a member of the old martial aristocracy, and you haven't risen up through the church, but you can do it
through sort of trade and money in London. Yes, particularly London. I would think any big city you
could rise in civic terms, but London is really, because you're right next door to Westminster,
and you have lots of hobnobbings with the King, and you have a lot of influence in Parliament
because you're co-cited fundamentally. And then what the Bolins do is, for two generations,
they marry very well. So they marry into the old Norman families. Yes, because they're penniless.
They need the cash. Well, I wouldn't say penniless. I mean, they own half of England.
But what they really don't mind is new money and this authority coming in.
And anyway, it's only their daughters.
It's not their sons they're giving away.
So basically, the Bolins then marry, I mean, ultimately the Howards,
but also into the Ormond's aristocracy.
So that's how you get, when you get to Thomas Berlin and Berlin's father,
you get this chap who's got a very wealthy background on his own account,
and he's got a very posh wife and a very posh mother.
And so he's got these aristocratic connections,
but he's not the oldest son of an ancient noble house.
He's not got that sort of background,
but what he has got is the confidence of a man
who earned his own money and has married well.
And of course he then moves into the diplomatic service,
which is the absolutely classic sideways step.
So you become important at court.
you're basically doing a lot of admin and you're basically using a lot of your business skills as a diplomat,
but you're not visibly in trade in the same way.
Okay, so I should just quickly mention the Howard family.
You mentioned that they are the dukes of Norfolk.
I mean, they are the apex predator of the 16th century world.
So, as you say, very, very posh relations.
So diplomacy, is that the sort of thing that men of independent means would offer their services to the king
and say, look, I can go and represent you in Antwer?
and the courts of Europe, I speak languages, I'm cultured refine, I mean, represent you well. And what does
that mean? Are they kind of negotiating trade deals? Like what sort of stuff are diplomats doing in this
period? Well, they're doing trade deals, but also they're going to the courts and representing the
king at the court. So if there's an alliance in the offing, they're the ones who go and say,
shall we do a royal visit? What do you want? What's your attitude to the Pope or Spain? So basically,
you've got a few key countries which you have to either be formally in alliance with or formally
enemies with. So Boland goes to the French court quite often. Obviously his French is very good.
Obviously he has connections because of his trade background and also because of his now aristocratic
connections. So he's in a very good position to go there and just be super charming and put the
point that the English want. So you'd have things like exchange of prisoners.
if there'd been, or joint policy on parrots, if you had difficulty, actually with trade negotiations,
taxes and tariffs, he'd be doing stuff like that.
And then ultimately, when it really, really matters, he's organising things like the King's Visit the Calais.
Okay. So important, but we're not talking a senior, senior officer of state.
And if I hadn't been for his daughter, we probably wouldn't have heard of him particularly,
or I mean, scholars like you had done, but I wouldn't have heard him.
Humble brag. I think we would have heard of him as one of the court functionaries who do things.
I mean, what if Anne Boleyn hadn't been Queen, would Thomas Cromwell have risen?
But say Thomas Cromwell had risen, he would have been reporting to Thomas Cromwell about overseas trade and overseas responsibilities.
It remains minor but significant.
Yeah. Thomas Boulin, as you've said, marries into the Howard family.
Again, it's on both sides, as we talked about. He gets her kind of aristocratic.
pedigree. She marries a refined gentleman with lots of money. So it sort of works on both sides.
Absolutely. Absolutely. And also she brings with her property. So they have by then,
Blickling Hall. She brings, they buy Heva Castle later. It's a reasonable match. And it happens.
We're very familiar with it throughout the 18th and the 19th centuries when you see trade
getting aristocratic ambitions and values from marriage and where you see aristocratic,
perhaps topping up their wealth through trade.
But there isn't that snobbery about it, I think, in this century, in the way that there is later on.
So there's a real acceptance that this makes complete sense for the two of them.
And they seem to be quite happily married.
There's no great scandal.
And they have three children, George first, and then Anne or Mary subsequently.
We're not even now entirely convinced which girl comes first.
and in my opinion, it's an historical fact which would be nice to know,
but it's not an historical fact that would make any difference to the story.
So he's got his wife, he's got a family, he's climbing.
He is.
And of course the white hot hope is George,
who is the eldest son of this combination of aristocracy and wealth,
whose father is a diplomatic court,
who is young and handsome and fit
and make sure that he buddies up with the young Henry VIII
and jouse with.
him and is one of the so-called minions, basically lads about all together. And George is going
to, undoubtedly, as he gets older and more senior, take over a lot of the diplomatic roles,
but he'll do it with a bit more heft behind him because his father was a diplomat before him,
and he's personal friends with the King of England. So there's this clear upward trajectory
of the Billings, which they expect to really finalise and complete and confirm with George.
So it's quite a big thing to get your son in the way of the king.
That's everything, yeah.
I can imagine that going on at the moment with young Prince George in some school in Windsor.
So various families hurling their children in his way.
Absolutely.
I'm trying to figure out where he'll go to university to send their girls there.
Yes.
Okay, so Thomas does well to get in that sort of inner circle, right?
So Henry the 7th goes, oh yes, you know, any nice young lads around court,
feel free to play with my son Henry.
That's how it works.
Yes, absolutely.
And of course, because Henry himself, Henry Gait himself, comes to the throne so very young,
he's not very much guided by older, wiser heads.
He's just picking the people who, you know, joust well and who he admires and who he likes.
So some of his friends are very unsuitable.
But George is not a particularly unsuitable young man and is married quite young in his 20s
to a maid of honour to Catherine of Aragon.
So she's at court as well.
Her father's lands run alongside George's.
They get her for a very, very, very cheap dowry because her father's not very astute.
And he marries Jane Parker, daughter of Lord Morley.
So it's not that Henry the Eighth's Eyes caught one Bolin girl or the other one.
He was actually friends with George first.
They were jousting buddies.
Absolutely.
And Mary Berlin is at court as made him waiting to Catherine of Arragona.
And then she's married to Henry's friend, another friend of Henry's at court, quite young also.
while Anne is in France.
And George's closeness to Henry VIII
is highlighted by the fact
he's promoted, he's become a knight of the bath
and he takes part in the coronation festivities
of young Henry the Eighth.
So he's a very close buddy.
I mean, as you say, it's a very glamorous court.
It's a very young court.
There's no sign at this point
of Catherine of Aragon's dowdiness
and a hair shirt and general sorrow.
They're newly married, newly crowned,
everything to hope for, and for Catherine in particular, this is the end of years of poverty and
hardship in England as the unwanted widow of the previous heir. Now, suddenly, she's Queen of England.
Henry, they call him the handsomest prince in Christendom. If you didn't know what was going to happen,
you would think it was Camelot. It's just lovely. It's just absolutely full of very, very glamorous
young people, having a ridiculously good time using a lot of the metaphors of chivalry,
because they're very keen on Arthur.
So you've got lots of jousting
and, I would say general, you know, chivalry nonsense,
people falling in love with people and writing them poetry
and people falling out of love and writing poetry about it.
And it's very, very attractive.
So there's a glittering court life of young, good-looking folks,
doing sport, for having fun, bit of politics, bit of socialising,
all marrying each other, great fun.
Why is Anne in France?
Her father very cleverly gets her a place with Margaret of Savoy at the French court as a preparation for her to be a lady-in-waiting or wife of somebody pretty important in the English court or even probably the French court.
He sent her away quite young. We don't know exactly how young, but quite young.
And she learns French and she's brought up in this very, very cultured, very educated pro-reform of religion court in France.
She comes home to England and literally wows everybody the minute she walks in because France is famously stylish and cultured and fashionable.
And she walks in and everybody goes like, who's this? Who's this new girl?
And in 1522 is that bizarre moment where the men attack a castle and there's a sort of pageant.
They attack some sort of castle and the women defend the castle.
Yeah, we've got a record of it.
But they're doing this pretty well every month, certainly every feast day.
This is the mask. This is the great tradition of the mask. You have a lot of scenery, you have a lot of moving, big, big scenery parts. The castle, the Chateauvert in this story, is a wheeled-in, enormous structure with the ladies inside the castle defending the virtues, and they are attacked by the king's men, and they are defended by the king's choristers who throw sweets and little toys and little presents. And the men finally capture.
the castle. Everyone's disguised. You've got this big, big, heavy emphasis upon disguises,
and everyone pretends not to know it's Henry until I'm masking time when he takes his mask off
and everybody goes like, good heavens, who is this handsome stranger? It is the king. And it's just
playing with what they have anyway, which is privilege and wealth and youth and beauty.
It's just a celebration of that, which they do, I must say, over and over and over.
no wonder he becomes a megalomical narcissist. I mean, I would. I mean, it's astonishing. If that's your
day-to-day activity, it's ridiculous. Okay, so Sister Mary becomes mistress around the time of this
Chateauvair pageant. She becomes the mistress of Henry VIII. We know her part. We know she's
wearing a green gown. She's a young married woman, but Henry takes her as his mistress,
and nobody complains about it very much at all. In fact, nobody complains about it at all. She has
a baby who's called Catherine, which is a sort of bit of a backhanded compliment, you would think
to Catherine of Aragon, the queen, who she was a lady in waiting to. Then she has another baby,
Henry, named obviously for the king. And we don't know to this day whether he is of the king's
fathering, but he's never claimed by the king, who doesn't then know that he's not going to get
loads more babies. And he's accepted by her husband, Kerry. And so just when he's,
she's actually in childbed, in confinement, and takes the eye of the king and fundamentally seduces him from her sister,
who is at that moment in bed giving birth to his son. So it's a bit brutal in terms of sibling rivalry.
We don't know how much it's an agreement among all the howards that there should always be a Howard girl in the King's eye,
because that is the route to power and influence and popularity at court.
But certainly by then, George becomes less the golden boy in the hope of the Bolins
and more and more the assistant and supporter and protector and promoter of first one sister and then another.
So from George's point of view, it's a bit of a miserable downsizing.
From their point of view, it doesn't really matter, as long as in this court,
which is entirely focused upon one man, a young man and the whims of a young man,
all that matters is that he thinks that your family is the best thing since...
Odd for George.
Thomas the dad, he's promoted at this time, isn't it?
I mean, he's now very, very, very serious role.
He has made it, hasn't he?
He's at the apex of the Royal Court.
Is that connected to the fact that his daughters are so popular?
Well, all these kids are so popular at court.
I mean, he's obviously a talented guy as well.
Does Henry promote him?
Yeah, he's a talented guy, but you see that he gets grants of lands.
firstly when Mary starts sleeping with Henry
and then he gets a big grant of lands when she has her baby
then there's another grant of lands and titles when she has her second baby
and then when Anne takes his eye you then have basically
Anne being part of policymaking and the first sorts of things she puts in place
is the suggestion that the king should be able to get a divorce from Catherine of Aragon
And she is absolutely determined that she's not going to be his mistress as Anne was.
She sets her heart with extraordinary ambition on being his wife.
You listen to Dan Snow's History Inn.
Don't give up on ostracia. There's more coming.
So the wider family doing very well because Henry becomes absolutely infatuated with Anne.
He really does.
There's a period of time when everybody gets the sweat.
And actually Mary Berlin's husband dies in the same.
sweat and Anne has it and is desperately ill. And Henry doesn't see her because he's completely then
and thereafter, paranoid about his health. He's terrified about being sick. But he sends her a stream of
letters promising eternal love and hoping desperate for her health. He sends her his own position.
It's very, very clear that this is a man, as I think probably narcissists do, who has just
become obsessed with winning the unwinnable thing, the thing that he thinks will make his life
complete. And he sets himself to that. And it costs him an extraordinary amount in terms of
England's peace, in terms of his relationship to all the other monarchs, in terms of his
relationship to the Pope, in terms of his relationship to his own religion and to God. It's a very,
very, very costly passion that Henry feels. And he just seemed to
go through it with a ruthlessness, which is later bodes no good to anybody.
Yeah. Do you think Thomas Berlin and Dad, did he ever dream? What state she started to dream with
Anne might get the big prize, might actually become queen? I mean, that's the unimaginable.
He would have been perfectly happy for her to remain as or do her time as a mistress, would he?
I don't think he would have wanted her to be a mistress if she'd been a single woman,
because that's much worse for her reputation. I think the complacency about Mary being a
mistress is because she's a married woman at the time. So in a sense, her honour is in her husband's
keeping. It's not Bolin honour anymore. But when he thought that she was going to be queen, I would
imagine was a good deal after she thought it was possible. So probably the first person who she shared
the ambition with would be George, who I think was closest to both of them and was acting as go
between for a lot of this material. I think the hopes were very high. Of course, in between all of this
that we haven't even mentioned is Anne gets into disgrace trying to marry Henry Percy. So she's not good
enough for a Duke in the eyes of Thomas Woolsey or her father or her uncle Thomas Howard. So there's a
real sense that that's too high for her to aim. But lo and behold, she comes back to court after a period
of exile. Everybody is just very, very taken with her. She seduces the king, not sexually, but certainly
emotionally, and the next thing, the girl who wasn't good enough to be Duchess of Northumberland,
is heading to be Queen of England.
Wow.
I mean, I think for a long time, nobody thinks she'll do it.
And I think for a long time everybody thinks that she is bound to give in,
that she'll just parley the best deal for it and then have sex with Henry.
And you would think that that happened.
She gets a very, very, very good title, and she gets a huge grant of land.
I think at the same time she gets a promise of marriage.
And then they have sex at some time when they visited the King of France at Calais,
probably on the way home.
And then they're married in secret.
Once they are married, the grip of the Bowlin family at court gets even firmer.
Thomas's father is ennobled, made Earl of Wiltshire.
And presumably accompanying that is, well, wealth, but also further responsibilities.
Yes.
he becomes very, very major in the King's Council, but they all do. So when there's next mission to
France, George Berlin does it. George Berlin becomes very, very significant in terms of international
diplomacy and very, very significant in terms of still going between the King and the Queen
in terms of advice. What becomes the main object is to finalise and establish the legality of
the marriage, which.
takes place initially in secret and then there's after that there's a coronation but the legality of
the marriage and the absolute importance of the succession because anne is certain that she's
going to have a boy and part of the promises she gave to the king undoubtedly is that she will
give him a boy which katherine varraghan has failed something like 1112 times to do
Catherine Varaghan only ever has one child, one surviving child, Princess Mary.
So next you have this massive legal changes, which are the Act of Supremacy and the Act of Succession,
which is one establishes Henry as leader of the Church of England, now reformed,
so it's not the Pope anymore, it's Henry.
And the other establishes the right of Anne's children to be illegal heirs.
We're obviously covering a vast amount of ground here.
but continuing to focus on the sort of family, the house of Bolin.
It presumably success inspires jealousy before Anne's fall.
There must be lots of whispers at court about this family of upstarts who are doing quite well
and insinuating themselves and certain themselves into all sorts of important positions.
Well, they undermine themselves as well in that there's only three siblings, Anne, George and Mary.
Mary, once she's out of the king's bed and interest, she literally seemed to do all she can
just to get out of court altogether.
And she marries someone that nobody's ever heard of very much, Stafford.
And she goes and lives with him in the country.
She falls out with Anne, I believe, because when she comes to court, Anne can see that she's
pregnant.
They cannot make a good marriage with her because she's had the cleverness to marry somebody
relatively unimportant straight away.
So she's of no use to the Bolins in terms of power-broking a woman as a pawn.
And she's no use to the Bolins in terms of being attractive to.
to the king because they don't want him diverted. So she retires to the country to Essex actually
and doesn't significantly come back as a power player at all. So now there's just two of them,
but two of them and George's wife, Jane, Jane Bullen. And so the three of them are responsible
for maintaining the attraction and the power of the queen. And that is against a constant stream
of new ladies in waiting and new maids in waiting at court,
who have learned from Anne that one of the ways to get enormous riches for your family
and enormous success and possibly the top job is to seduce Henry,
even though he's married to somebody else.
Nobody has ever seen divorce as a sort of marital choice before.
Queens have been put aside,
but mostly for being infertile or for the marriage being annulled in some way or another
for religious grounds.
Nobody has ever just said,
I want a new wife,
and I think I'll have one before.
So once the floodgates were opened,
this is a possibility.
Everybody goes like, well,
and of course, most notably,
the Seymours are in that queue,
as are, as it turns out,
other Howard girls.
There are the Shelton's
who obviously are at court
and who have affairs with Henry.
So there's this sort of backlog
of young women
turning up at court
to try the chances
really. So the Bolins have that as a personal problem, but as a political problem, Cardinal Walsy
fails to deliver a religious agreement on the divorce and is ruined as a result of it and then
dies. And Thomas Cromwell is the person who says he can deliver the extraordinarily huge
religious, financial, legal and political changes necessary to guarantee the succession of
Anne's children and herself as Queen.
Did Cromwell like the Boulins or was it just convenient because he knew that Henry was temporarily obsessed of one of them?
I don't think Cromwell would allow his likings or dislikes to come into it really.
I think he's a very astute political player.
I think when the Bollins have clearly got all the bases covered, then he works with them.
He saw what happened to Thomas Walsy when he failed to work with them.
But I think Thomas Cromwell is very, very, very active and instrumental in the trial of George and
Dan, which leads to their death. So he doesn't like them in the sense that any liking stands in
the way of the most expedient thing for Cromwell. Well, let's come on to that trial, because
Anne fails to have a healthy son. She has a daughter, Elizabeth, who people may be familiar with,
Princess Elizabeth, who will become Elizabeth first. She miscarries a boy. She's pregnant for a third
time. She gets pregnant a fair a few times. And the third time, she miscarries a boy in 1536. And it does
appear at this point, Henry starts to believe that, well, he falls out of love and believes that,
in fact, he was bewitched by Anne, and this is God's punishment on him. Yeah, it's not as unreasonable
to them as it is to us in that there is a belief that miscarriage and any form of defect at birth
or stillbirth is a consequence of the woman being either illegally sexual or a witch. So,
the mere fact of two miscarriages, one of which is reported as being malformed, as they would say then,
the mere fact of that casts a huge shadow over Anne's reputation. It suggests either that she's
undertaking forbidden sexual practices or that she's engaging in witchcraft. The stillbirth is the
proof of the other. So that's really, really, really problematic before you start. And
Anne's enemies, of course, who are everyone who is Roman Catholic, so that's a good half of the country,
everyone who supports Queen Catherine, so that's a whole chunk of people, everyone who supports
her daughter, Lady Mary, who Anne has been bullying mercilessly, and everyone who supports other
people like Jane Seymour. So by being the tallest poppy by far, they have got a real set of
enemies lined up against them, and at the first whisper of trouble, there is enormous trouble.
and Cromwell goes about collecting evidence against Anne.
I think other people are giving evidence too
because it's so nonsensical,
as good a lawyer as Cromwell would not have bothered with it.
But basically there's this kind of explosion of titletal and gossip
and she's seen doing this and she's seen doing that.
Somebody says that she keeps her page smeaton in a cupboard
and that somebody fetches him for her to have sex with him
when she asks for marmalade.
I mean, it's just impossible.
But because the mood against her is so strong, the ludicrous nature of the charges are not enough to prevent the lords, including her uncle, including Jane Boulin's father, all the lords of the land sitting on her trial and finding her guilty and sentencing her to, I think, initially be burned as a witch, subsequently commuted to be executed.
So it's an extraordinary show trial, and George Billin's trial comes their eyes.
after and he's found guilty too. Of course.
He listened to Dan Snow's history hit. The best is yet to come. Stick with us.
So Anne and George, brother and sister, both found guilty. He is found guilty of having sex
to his sister. Yes. Shocking. What's Thomas Berlin doing at this time? The Earl of Wiltshire.
I think he's excused from sitting on his daughter's trial, but her uncle's there. Certainly the
family turns out there. He retires rather promptly, rather quietly, to Heaver Castle with his
wife, Elizabeth, and keeps his head down. And the survivor, the extraordinary survivor from this
story is the heroine of my new novel, Bolin Trader, who is Jane, Jane Parker, married to George,
who is said by some people to have given evidence against him. Her name isn't on the witness record.
I don't believe she actually gave sworn evidence. But she certainly, I think, reported to Thomas
Cromwell of the atmosphere and the activities of the Queen's rooms. So she's on, in a sense,
Cromwell's side of history at this point. And I'm sure of that because when the Bolins dashed
heva Castle and stay very quiet, actually until their deaths, Jane is promoted to be Lady
Seymour's Lady in Waiting, Queen Jane Seymour's Lady in Waiting. There's a special law passed in
Parliament to improve her very bad dowry. So she ends up owning Blickling Hall and being immensely
independently wealthy. And she is at Jane Seymour's side when she gives birth. She's there at
the christening of the baby prince. And she's there at Jane Seymour's funeral of all the
Bolins, the one that we pay the least attention to, is the one who literally rises like
a phoenix out of these ashes and goes on to a brilliant career.
How interesting. You say she reported to Cromwell on the sort of the vibe of Anne Boleyn's inner circle.
The suggestion that Abilin was practicing witchcraft and having sex with her brother and all this kind of stuff, probably unlikely.
But there was enough fun, sexy, naughty flirtatiousness to just give Cromwell something to go on.
I mean, I think what we're saying is we noted earlier this sort of chivalric, we'll call it the historical term,
Folgerall, generally dancing about and disguising and dressing up and wearing masks and kissing,
corners and swearing eternal love and then fancying somebody the next day. That's going on all the
time. I suggest in the novel Bolin Trader that this gets more and more heated because the urgency
to tell the king that Anne is the sexiest woman in the palace becomes more and more serious as he
starts looking at other women and as she starts becoming the very not sexy figure of a woman
who cannot carry a baby, as opposed to being the very sexy figure of a woman who has not yet
been seduced. So I think the intensity of the compliments and the heat of the sex play gets more
and more strong. And in turn, that can be used very easily by Cromwell to say, this is a
hotbed of misbehavior and adulterous promises. And Queen Anne's rooms are not.
not being managed as a queen's room should be kept. And I think that may be the case. And one of the
problems it solves is why, on the one hand, you have people saying that she has a genuine interest
in religion. She has a genuinely devout attitude to the reformed religion that she helps bring
into England and that she initially instructs her ladies and waiting in her maids to behave very,
very respectfully and very devoutly. And then at the end of it, you have this court dissolving
in charges of the most bizarre sexual behavior and adultery. And I think it's because the game
of chivalry gets toxic. Yes, she eventually gets caught up in this Game of Thrones.
Well, it is literally, it's a Game of Thrones. So she goes from being Jane Seymour's lady in waiting
and right-hand woman, which is a pretty abrupt and extraordinary transition, if you think about it.
And then she works for Anne of Cleaves, but I think all the way through she is working for and
with Thomas Cromwell and reporting to him what's going on in the Queen's rooms.
And we see that she's paid very, very highly by somebody for doing something.
And I think it's Thomas Cromwell for spying on the Queen's.
When Thomas Cromwell wants rid of Anne of Cleaves because she has failed to please Henry,
it is Lady Rochford, she is by then, but it's Jane Berlin,
whose signature is second on the witness evidence that says that the king is not consummating his marriage
and that Anne of Cleves doesn't know what she's supposed to do and is unfit, fundamentally, therefore, to be Queen of England.
She's Anne of Cleve's chief advisor as her chief lady in waiting.
I think she probably advised her to take the money and go and be glad that she'd still got her head on.
And Anne of Cleves does just that and retires, as it happens, to Heva Castle and to other places around England,
which lots of people will know because there's lots of Anne of Cleves pubs everywhere.
And then Jane just moves smoothly on to be lady in waiting at the court of her cousin, Catherine Howard.
And it's there that it all starts to go very wrong again.
Thomas Cromwell is executed on the day of Catherine Howard's wedding day, a coincidence which means nothing to Henry VIII, who is fell up with him by then, but which really signals, I think, the end of Jane having an advisor who knows the ins and outs of court.
and from her point of view, someone who knows what the king is thinking and tells her before anything happens.
In addition to that, she's in the almost impossible job of trying to organise a 16-year-old, very spoiled, very ill-educated, 16-year-old girl as Queen of England,
in a court which is now established as one of flirtation and adultery.
and Catherine Howard either already abused and groomed or prematurely sexually experienced,
I think probably already abused and groomed.
Falls in love, I think, for the first and probably last time in her life with Thomas Cole Pepper,
another friend of Henry's, handsome young friend of Henry's.
Of course, the friends are getting younger as a king is getting older,
The friends stay at a dazzlingly handsome mid-20s as the king gets older and older.
He's now old enough to be Catherine's grandfather, Buddy Marissa anyway, and he calls her his rose,
and he thinks she's going to give him a son.
And I think Jane, without advice, absolutely unable to control the steam-trained passion of Catherine for Thomas Culpeper,
tries to be a duenna and stay with them in their meetings.
but in fact is therefore just literally implicated in their adulterous affair.
So when the king finds out about it, which is unlucky because they might have got away with it,
but when the king finds out about it, ultimately he executes Thomas Cole Pepper,
someone else named as her lover, Thomas Colpeper's friend who's done absolutely nothing,
and Catherine Howard, and most wrongly, Jane Bolin.
But that is not the end of the Bolin family.
Let's just quickly check in. Anne Boleyn's mum died shortly after her execution, having lost her son and daughter so quickly.
But old Thomas Bolin, the Earl of Wiltshire, he dies as well. But the House of Bolin, oddly, I suppose it does continue with Queen Elizabeth.
The First, of the First, absolutely continues with Queen Elizabeth first, who keeps a miniature of her mother, Anne Boleyn, by her throughout her life.
and whose extraordinary high reputation in the regard of subsequent Protestant historians
means a complete revaluation of Anbelin, which means a complete revaluation of the Bolin family,
which really rises Anne Boleyn to this idea of virtuous reformer, queen, wrongly done to death by
terrible people like Thomas Cromwell, and indeed her sister-in-law, Jane, who then gets the blame
for this execution, which she probably had very little to do with.
So, yes, you end up with, as we believe, a virgin queen,
and that is the end of that line of the Berlin family.
Of course, Mary Berlin survives.
Well, that's it. I've intrigued because of Mary Berlin surviving,
and these children who are likely to be Henry's,
and they go on and have very illustrious marriages
and really do remain at the pinnacle of British aristocratic society
for the rest of time.
Absolutely. Yeah, they're all over.
So the Henry, the little baby Henry, grows to be Henry Carey, who is Elizabeth the first acknowledged cousin and highly regarded advisor.
Hang on, but that's a bit strange.
Cousin on both sides, interestingly, mother and father's side.
Or half brother.
Oh my God, you're right.
Half brother and cousin.
Yes.
Interesting.
Okay.
He never makes any claim to being an heir to the throne.
He never makes any claim to being a Tudor.
which is smart of him because Elizabeth has this unfortunate tendency
to throw her eyes into the tower or execute them.
The tuners are rather jealous about that.
So he wants to keep his head on his shoulders.
Yes, she was.
And he never says a word until the instructions in his will
and his tomb, which you can see in Westminster Abbey today,
is the tomb of a royal bastard.
Really?
Yes, apparently.
You have to be much, much better informed about heraldry than I am,
but I was told that by one of the custodians at Westminster Abbey
who pointed out the heraldry on the tomb,
which is as close as he wanted to go to telling Elizabeth
that he was her half-brother,
which was wait till he was safely dead and then make the claim.
I'm dead already.
Wow, so the House of Bolin had a pretty big crisis,
but it endures, well, it endures to this day.
It endured.
I mean, what's extraordinary is if you count descent down the maternal line
which, of course, as a feminist, I think you should always have your eyes open.
Far more reliable, if you don't mind me saying.
It's only the tent that matters, as far as I'm concerned.
It's the only one you can be sure of.
Exactly.
But, yes, so through Catherine Mary Berlin, you get Catherine Carey.
Her daughter is then Letitia, who marries Nolice and becomes Dudley's wife ultimately as well.
So, I mean, they really are woven through.
What's really rather horribly lovely is that Letitia is, if you see,
a portrait of her. She's red-headed. She's creamy-skinned. She's green-eyed. She's very, very beautiful.
She looks very, very much like a young Elizabeth I first. And she comes to Elizabeth the first court,
just as Elizabeth is not looking like a young Elizabeth first. She's looking like an older Elizabeth
first. And Elizabeth hates her. And I'm sure that there's a family resemblance there, which is, of course,
that she is Elizabeth's half-sister's daughter. And then she nicks Elizabeth's favourite as well.
And then she takes Elizabeth's favourite as well, yes.
And she's never allowed back at call her after that.
Well, what a drama. Thank you.
I mean, Philippa Gregory, I should have known you were going to spin a good yarn.
I mean, what was I thinking as I logged onto this call?
But that was absolutely brilliant.
And tell everyone what the new book is called.
Well, the new book is about Jane Berlin that we've been talking about,
who is really the survivor from the Billings.
And it's called Bolin Trader.
And it's out now.
And I loved writing it.
You know, you would think that I had said enough about
Berlin's already, but I'd never dealt in any detail or with any empathy with Jane Berlin. And I've
literally found a new Berlin to love. Well, amazing. And I hope there's many more that you will learn
to love and keep punching out those wonderful books that we all enjoy so much. Thank you very much,
Philippa Gregory, for coming on the podcast. Thank you, Dan. Thank you very much to Philippa joining us.
She is an extraordinary tandem. Just brilliant to have her on. Always fascinating to return to the
Chuda Court. What a place.
And thank you for listening. And if you've enjoyed this episode,
don't forget check out Philippa's latest book, Bolin Trader. It's available right now.
See you next time.
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